How did God begin?

11,469 Views | 143 Replies | Last: 10 mo ago by Rudyjax
AGC
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kurt vonnegut said:

AGC said:


Dunno if I'm entirely with you. People reject messages all the time. You certainly wouldn't be an exception, nor does your rejection reflect on God the way you seem to believe (surely an all powerful God could simply grant me this one secret thing that only I know and can't really articulate fully - which I don't feel an unfair description because I think words fail all of us in these encounters and expressing what they need to be). That is ultimately where you land in all of this based on what you post: it's His obligation to reach you in your way and if you don't perceive it or accept it, well, it's still going to be His fault since He's the all powerful one.

That's not such a logical conclusion as it is avoiding agency in the matter and washing your hands of any action. In this scenario you could deny any and every proof and grant yourself a clean conscience, even if you decided to do so spitefully, say due to a relative's painful death or other life experience. You could decide He must give you a billion dollars. It's hostage taking really, and not all that thoughtful in the end.

And if you are wrong about the Christian God, does everything above not also apply to you? I don't know if you consider any possibility that you are wrong in a meaningful way. Maybe you will respond to this by saying something like "I'm sure that I'm wrong about some specifics about God and there is a lot I don't know or understand." But, sometimes statements like this can be genuine but often times I think that they are a false modesty.

I read your second paragraph as a rejection of the idea that my beliefs and values are honest and sincere. My first reaction to it is "Well, F U too." I'm fine with you disagreeing with me, but I don't know why you go through all this effort discussing this topic with me if you think this little of me.

And yes, If God wishes for us to have a certain message, I believe its on Him to deliver it. And its on us to listen. The problem with listening though, is that when there is nothing to listen to, we all hear what we want to hear.

A father with 10 young children tries to teach his children the rules of the house. So, he tells one child and none of the others. Eventually 2 of the other children adopt the rules and 7 decide that the others are making it up and if Dad wants us to follow certain rules, he could just tell us all. And you chalk this up to the 7 children intentionally disobeyed their father instead of a grossly negligent father that failed to provide remotely clear direction to anyone other than his one 'chosen' son. Do you really feel it is unreasonable for a child to expect clear communication from their father?

Yes, it's on the father to communicate. When 70% of your creation does not understand what you want them to understand, then you have failed to communicate. Don't make this about me. I'm only one of 5.5 billion here.



I think when you listen and set your own terms for what is acceptable, you're not truly listening or listening in good faith. You wouldn't talk to your wife that way: "you didn't tell me you wanted affirmation and affection, you just asked if I thought the dress made you look fat" (I hope - this is somewhat an attempt at levity). That's been part of your argument here: it has to be said in an unquestionable way (that is entirely subjective and dependent on you). It makes you the most important person in a conversation and relationship which is incompatible with our God. As Christians we view talking to God as something done with humility; we bow our heads, we kneel, etc. We come before God, not saying we have this thing to offer that He really covets and thus should give us what we want, but asking what He wants.

Rather than delve into the parenting analogy, let's examine the Bible for those who see miracles but never come back. Christ feeding the masses. Healing the lepers. It's constant - people treat God like an exchange and leave when they get what they want. You have more exposure to God than the average person on earth and demand yet more while trying to put yourself in the same shoes as them (last paragraph - "don't make this about me"). You're not really comparable to an undiscovered Amazonian people group.

I appreciate your restraint in not outright calling God evil but some of that seems implied in saying that you're just here standing up for the 5.5 billion. What an evil God, that so many don't believe. I assume you think they're all going to hell or hopeless without a Bible. I've not posited any of that but again I think you're speaking out of turn when you speak for them to say that they don't know God. You haven't met them and it's somewhat condescending to think that if you don't believe or haven't heard, that they can possibly have either or they haven't had a fair shake.
kurt vonnegut
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AG
AGC said:


I think when you listen and set your own terms for what is acceptable, you're not truly listening or listening in good faith. You wouldn't talk to your wife that way: "you didn't tell me you wanted affirmation and affection, you just asked if I thought the dress made you look fat" (I hope - this is somewhat an attempt at levity). That's been part of your argument here: it has to be said in an unquestionable way (that is entirely subjective and dependent on you). It makes you the most important person in a conversation and relationship which is incompatible with our God. As Christians we view talking to God as something done with humility; we bow our heads, we kneel, etc. We come before God, not saying we have this thing to offer that He really covets and thus should give us what we want, but asking what He wants.

Rather than delve into the parenting analogy, let's examine the Bible for those who see miracles but never come back. Christ feeding the masses. Healing the lepers. It's constant - people treat God like an exchange and leave when they get what they want. You have more exposure to God than the average person on earth and demand yet more while trying to put yourself in the same shoes as them (last paragraph - "don't make this about me"). You're not really comparable to an undiscovered Amazonian people group.

I appreciate your restraint in not outright calling God evil but some of that seems implied in saying that you're just here standing up for the 5.5 billion. What an evil God, that so many don't believe. I assume you think they're all going to hell or hopeless without a Bible. I've not posited any of that but again I think you're speaking out of turn when you speak for them to say that they don't know God. You haven't met them and it's somewhat condescending to think that if you don't believe or haven't heard, that they can possibly have either or they haven't had a fair shake.
Sorry this is long. I do try to pare it down.

I think the argument of 'you didn't listen hard enough or the right way' only goes so far. There is a difference between someone intentionally not paying attention and someone who tries to listen and arrives at different conclusion from you. At some point this argument becomes more about your fear that maybe you could be wrong. If you are not willing to admit that you are wrong, then clearly anyone that hears something different or hears nothing must not be doing it right. I must be wrong. Its impossible for you to be wrong. Right?

I appreciate your analogy about talking with your wife. However, 18 years of very happy marriage has taught me a different lesson about communication. And that is that the absence of clear and direct communication between partners always results in miscommunication and resentment. We both went through times in our marriage where the other would do something / not do something that would make the other upset. Not intentionally and certainly not with any malice, but these things are inevitability with two people living that close. What we both quickly learned is that nothing gets better until you get it out in the open. Expecting the other to pick up on clues and hints to understand what we are supposed to do is a recipe for failure.

Of course, my wife and I are equals and this communication dynamic works for us. I think that you propose a different communication dynamic with God where we are not equals. God is all powerful and all good. And I am an impure, pitiful, flawed, sinful, stupid, blind, broken sack of garbage unworthy of His love and attention who must approach Him on hands and knees while averting my eyes. I'm not suggesting that God should make us all equals. It just seems to me like you've invented a God that made a bunch of impure, pitiful, flawed, sinful, stupid, blind, broken sacks of garbage. In which case, it should be no mystery why 70% are too stupid to figure out what we are supposed to be doing.

Well, that was my attempt at levity. . . . Really, I want you to just consider something. Just as my wife and I would do things unintentionally do annoy the other, maybe that is how I am acting toward God. And the only way to get past this is to get it out in the open. Clearly. Directly. Honestly. I'm here and ready!

Now, please do not read this as me being angry at God or as an indication that I feel I should be able to tell God what to do. This is simply a reason why I don't believe the Christian God exists. There is a clear disconnect between what Christians say God is and what He wants and what He does.

I do not know what you mean when you say I have more exposure to God than the average person. Certainly, I have access to far more information. But its not just coming from one source. I am now exposed to many versions of Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, Agnosticism, Atheism, Janism, Harry Potterism, the weird Farsight mind reading nonsense. . . ism, Materialism, paganism, and Flying Spaghetti Monster-ism. Had I been alive a couple thousand years ago, the only religion I would be aware of would be my own. And maybe, if I were educated, I might have some slight understanding of my neighbors religions. Today I can see it all. And its not clear - its a beehive with a thousand different buzzes. Christianity isn't the only bee telling me to listen up, threatening me with Hell, or offering me salvation.

The undiscovered Amazonian tribe is a whole different problem. An entire civilization of people completely unaware of your God, Christ, those miracles, or any of it. Isn't the fact that they are unaware of your God a problem? In fact, the only way people outside of a tiny area became aware of your God was through a painstakingly long process of spreading of ideas and globalization. This is exactly the problem of a CEO of a company implementing a new policy and deciding only to tell one person and hoping it spreads. It doesn't make sense.

When I read the Bible, I think some of God's actions are 'evil'. I am able to divorce what I read from what you say you believe. Therefore, I do not conclude that you worship an evil God.

I definitely don't speak for the 5.5 Billion non Christians. I am only asking we don't forget about them. If it is your God's hope that people come to know him and the vast majority do not know Him, we might ask 'why'? The answer that makes the most sense to me is that your God doesn't exist. And maybe I'm wrong. If God wants to set me straight, I'm here all day!
Tramp96
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Andrew Dufresne said:

Trying to fathom the beginning of all things always mind f***s me.

We can't fathom it.

God is infinite. We can't fathom infinity. We can't even fathom the Trinity, to be honest. The finite cannot contain, nor comprehend, the infinite.

But think about this...could God even be God if we could comprehend Him?

He has revealed to us that which He wants us to know. At some point we just have to take it face value.

Rudyjax
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AG
Fear of the unknown and death.

That's why.
 
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