Trump Card
Y'know, I have noticed that every single argument about God seems to continually declare repeatedly, if not focus entirely on is the seemingly immutable "fact" of God's beneficence: that God is always good.
The question I ask is how can we know that? I'm always being told how we cannot know God the way we know things on Earth, but if this is true, how can we be sure about whether he is good or not? That seems to be mixing and matching metaphysical qualities in order to obtain or retain a paragon.
And because God is good, we seem to let any old thing just slide right past us...that there are no REAl worries because God's in charge and he's taking care of everything, for the good of mankind.
Where do we get this from? Let's run over our sources.
1) The Bible
Written so long ago that the language is dead; revised countless times by countless people with personal/political agendas; translated into one tongue and then another, possibly obscuring true detail...and even THEN, think of the people who wrote it (or documented it, whichever): ancient people with no concept of technology, personal hygiene or physics; people who thought disease was caused by evil spirits or divine judgment. Not a reputable source.
2) Religious figures
People who devote their entire lives to endorsing the concept of God, God's rule and God's will. They've even given up basic human necessities at times in order to worship. Not to mention that many of them (in ALL religions) were fascists, racists, sexists, psychopaths, sadists and pedophiles over the centuries. I smell bias right there.
3) Word-of-Mouth
This is like a centuries-old game of telephone. Where one person says one thing and it keeps getting twisted or distorted wither by mistake or intention. Now play this game over a few thousand years in over half-a-dozen languages with players like parents and authority figures who have a knack for altering the truth for their own means...makes one suspicious. If all we had to go on for global influence was someone's word, you;d want some real proof before you bought into it.
AND EVEN THEN...
Even if all these things DIDN'T factor in, even if God WAS good, there still remains one major question:
SO WHAT?
I'd like to know. If God does exist and IS good and IS shaping our lives for the better, why? WHAT GIVES HIM THE RIGHT? Really, what gives him the right to do as he pleases with other people's lives?
We use terms like "God the Father" and "Divine Right", and I ask, where they came from?
If there is a divine right, God made it. Like everything else in existence, God made everything, including the laws. Which means that the only divine right (including rulership/ownership) that exists is what he made himself. Otherwise, that would mean there were laws before God made the world and he was bound to them rather than willing them into existence. So basically, every right or divine entitlement in existence would mean God made it and he made it for himself. And he did this because he COULD. Even if he wanted to, he COULD or COULD NOT by his will alone. In our country, we made certain that we were entitled to the PURSUIT of happiness, not necessarily the acquisition of it. It sems as if God deliberately doesn't have as altruistic a notion seeing as how his will issues forth orders or "suggestions" for no other reason than his own want. Maybe he WOULD have our best intentions in mind, but rarely if ever do these intentions exclude his WILL, his WANT.
And as far as fatherhood goes, let me say something here. I can be the father of a child, and that child owes me its life to my allowing it to be born. Does that mean I have the right to treat it as I please? To make it live its life according to my will, which I only have because I can think for myself and I feel I can impart because I created him/her? We condemn people who do that to children because it is disrespectful and demeans the individual person; so what the hell do you think we should consider of what God is asking for us to do? All children grow up at some point and have to live their lives independently of their parents...it doesn't mean you cut them off, but it does mean that you live your own life and make your own decisions and no longer obey your parents.
Religious people all over the world are told that their purpose is to "serve the will of God", but WHY? Why should we do that? Because he's God? Because he gave us the world? What excuse is that? What kind of a life is it to live with free will if his unrequested "generosity" is going to be dangled above our heads every step of the way, reminding us of what he "did" for us?
In this consideration, God seems to be an arrogant bastard who does what he wants simply because he can and we try to follow suit because he has more power than us.
If all of what he has done is true, I don't recall any Biblical passage where God actually asked humans if they wanted all this before he went ahead and did it; He never mentioned if we would be willing to determine for ourselves if the gift was worth the price. I know that by this rationale it ould mean he'd have to create us first to get our opinion if we want to be created, but the fact that he creates us anyway would show his disrespect for our integrity and our opinion.
So I say, "So What?" So what if God created the world and humans? Does that give him the right to do anything he wants because his will has power behind it? If that is so, then it is hardly a noble venture, even if he DID want to do something nice; good intentions can always backfire and make things worse.
P.S.: To 46and2, if God DID have confidence in us by giving us the world, why would he interfere so goddamn much and not let us make our own way without his rigid (and in some cases, obsolete) and rather simplistic morality codes? Maybe so that we'd never get far enough without him, which would be the sign of an insecure personality.
Y'know, I have noticed that every single argument about God seems to continually declare repeatedly, if not focus entirely on is the seemingly immutable "fact" of God's beneficence: that God is always good.
The question I ask is how can we know that? I'm always being told how we cannot know God the way we know things on Earth, but if this is true, how can we be sure about whether he is good or not? That seems to be mixing and matching metaphysical qualities in order to obtain or retain a paragon.
And because God is good, we seem to let any old thing just slide right past us...that there are no REAl worries because God's in charge and he's taking care of everything, for the good of mankind.
Where do we get this from? Let's run over our sources.
1) The Bible
Written so long ago that the language is dead; revised countless times by countless people with personal/political agendas; translated into one tongue and then another, possibly obscuring true detail...and even THEN, think of the people who wrote it (or documented it, whichever): ancient people with no concept of technology, personal hygiene or physics; people who thought disease was caused by evil spirits or divine judgment. Not a reputable source.
2) Religious figures
People who devote their entire lives to endorsing the concept of God, God's rule and God's will. They've even given up basic human necessities at times in order to worship. Not to mention that many of them (in ALL religions) were fascists, racists, sexists, psychopaths, sadists and pedophiles over the centuries. I smell bias right there.
3) Word-of-Mouth
This is like a centuries-old game of telephone. Where one person says one thing and it keeps getting twisted or distorted wither by mistake or intention. Now play this game over a few thousand years in over half-a-dozen languages with players like parents and authority figures who have a knack for altering the truth for their own means...makes one suspicious. If all we had to go on for global influence was someone's word, you;d want some real proof before you bought into it.
AND EVEN THEN...
Even if all these things DIDN'T factor in, even if God WAS good, there still remains one major question:
SO WHAT?
I'd like to know. If God does exist and IS good and IS shaping our lives for the better, why? WHAT GIVES HIM THE RIGHT? Really, what gives him the right to do as he pleases with other people's lives?
We use terms like "God the Father" and "Divine Right", and I ask, where they came from?
If there is a divine right, God made it. Like everything else in existence, God made everything, including the laws. Which means that the only divine right (including rulership/ownership) that exists is what he made himself. Otherwise, that would mean there were laws before God made the world and he was bound to them rather than willing them into existence. So basically, every right or divine entitlement in existence would mean God made it and he made it for himself. And he did this because he COULD. Even if he wanted to, he COULD or COULD NOT by his will alone. In our country, we made certain that we were entitled to the PURSUIT of happiness, not necessarily the acquisition of it. It sems as if God deliberately doesn't have as altruistic a notion seeing as how his will issues forth orders or "suggestions" for no other reason than his own want. Maybe he WOULD have our best intentions in mind, but rarely if ever do these intentions exclude his WILL, his WANT.
And as far as fatherhood goes, let me say something here. I can be the father of a child, and that child owes me its life to my allowing it to be born. Does that mean I have the right to treat it as I please? To make it live its life according to my will, which I only have because I can think for myself and I feel I can impart because I created him/her? We condemn people who do that to children because it is disrespectful and demeans the individual person; so what the hell do you think we should consider of what God is asking for us to do? All children grow up at some point and have to live their lives independently of their parents...it doesn't mean you cut them off, but it does mean that you live your own life and make your own decisions and no longer obey your parents.
Religious people all over the world are told that their purpose is to "serve the will of God", but WHY? Why should we do that? Because he's God? Because he gave us the world? What excuse is that? What kind of a life is it to live with free will if his unrequested "generosity" is going to be dangled above our heads every step of the way, reminding us of what he "did" for us?
In this consideration, God seems to be an arrogant bastard who does what he wants simply because he can and we try to follow suit because he has more power than us.
If all of what he has done is true, I don't recall any Biblical passage where God actually asked humans if they wanted all this before he went ahead and did it; He never mentioned if we would be willing to determine for ourselves if the gift was worth the price. I know that by this rationale it ould mean he'd have to create us first to get our opinion if we want to be created, but the fact that he creates us anyway would show his disrespect for our integrity and our opinion.
So I say, "So What?" So what if God created the world and humans? Does that give him the right to do anything he wants because his will has power behind it? If that is so, then it is hardly a noble venture, even if he DID want to do something nice; good intentions can always backfire and make things worse.
P.S.: To 46and2, if God DID have confidence in us by giving us the world, why would he interfere so goddamn much and not let us make our own way without his rigid (and in some cases, obsolete) and rather simplistic morality codes? Maybe so that we'd never get far enough without him, which would be the sign of an insecure personality.



