@Guerrilla:
Hell was created by God, but it was never intended as a place for humans, instead it was created purely for satan and his demon cohorts… When man fell he came under the dominion of satan and therefore his curse, condemning him to spiritually be apart from God… God never wanted man to fall, but he did… A loving God wouldn’t have created a way out… I want to see the “whacky” responses to that… :wink:
I still don’t think that refutes the omnipotence that frood was indicating. I’d call what you are describing at the least negligence. For instance, let’s say Bush was completely altruistic in his invasion of Iraq to free Iraqi people. Yet, he didn’t think of the consequences of the invasion and whether he’d keep it together. Subsequently, life is worse for Iraqis, where many are dying each day. Therefore, something can be said of Bush’s negligence.
The very definition of omnipotence is all-knowing. Knowledge not limited by obscurity, time, etc. If we are God’s children, then he knowingly permitting his kids to suffering is pretty sadistic.
@cyan:
froodster, may God forgive you for he is a merciful one without evil there is no good. that is why God created hell. for one has no apprecation of good if they do not experince the bad times as wel(yin and yang). Have you ever noticeed the ssimilarity between Abrahamic and far eastern relgions(toaism).
Yet you acknowledge that God has deliberately made evil exist. What would that make him? I agree that you can’t know good w/o evil, but you are even saying that God wants you to experience hell to know how good heaven is. And Eastern religions and Abrahamic faiths are not that similar. Especially Taoism.
@Guerrilla:
Evil is only a preversion of Good, it didn’t exsist in the beginning… And if God wasn’t merciful we would all be robots, unable to choose our own destinys… What you are referring to wouldn’t be the mercy of God, cause it isn’t his choice if you choose him it would be yours… So in fact it is the opposite of Eastern Religions if, and only if, your definition of them is “God-and-the-lightning-bolt”… He cannot condemn you to hell you choose that yourself… In fact it his desire that no one perish, but that decision in the end is not his…
There’s not much of a choice. Everyone dies. No exceptions. So the choice is really an ultimatum: “God, or no God (and suffer).” Pretty limited choice there.
@M36:
No. Do not even begin to equate hell to war. Hell cannot be compared to anything we expierience.
And how would you know this?