Orion said:
No, your example fails . . . because the governor never professes a deep dying love for any of those convicts. My example doesn't fail/breakdown. Regardless of what any of the kids have done, you will choose to love one of them, and hate the other three, punishing them for being born.
If God loves all men, he does not love them equally. He might love some enough to save them, and others he loves enough to give them a little more time, but then will still judge them.
I dont love everyone the same. I love my wife and my children and would probably give my life for them. I love my friends, but would probably not go as far as I would with my family.
So then, if the governor of my illustration "never professes a deep dying love for any of the convicts" that would be true to life. Well, at least he professes a deep and dying love for at least two of them.
Orion said:
If you believe that this system that god setup is actually ethical, then I question your ability to reason morally. You may see this as me "bashing your integrity", but look at what you said you believe IS ethical!
Let me say that, for the record, the story of adam and eve is a fictitious story. But for argument sake, let's say it wasn't, and I was there, instead of Adam. I would have been the one without the "knowledge of good and evil". How could I have made a "choice to do evil" if I hadn't been given THAT knowledge? The whole story is nothing better than a setup. If I knew that it was wrong to "eat that fruit", then I would have already been given the knowledge of good and evil, . . . .so the tree would be redundant.
I perceive that we disagree on what good and evil actually is. You seem to think that there is a moral objective standard apart from God that God must live up to. I would say that God himself defines good and evil. Without God, there is no such thing as good and evil.
Now to the story of Adam and Eve. I think you mis read the story. Eating of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil is not evil in and of itself. If Adam had passed the test, and not eaten of the fruit, then I believe God would have ordered him to eat of the tree. What made the eating of the tree evil was that God had ordered him not to eat of the tree. So in disobeying God, Adam learned the difference between good and evil, but he learned it from the perspective of evil. Had he obeyed, he would have learned it from the perspective of good. The tree itself was not a magical tree that can impart a certain knowledge. The tree was probably any ordinary tree. It was the command that made it a tree of knowledge of good and evil.
Because God is God, he can order Adam not to eat, or to eat. Adam was a mere creature and owed obedience to his creator.
***I see a huge gulf between us. It is too obvious that my theology is God centered, yours places man in the center of the universe. I see all creation as revolving around God, you see it as revolving around man. If you are an atheist, you are true to your presuppositions. If you are a theist, how can you have such a small God?
Orion said:
I must comment to this point you made, "and been able to choose good, we would not have chosen good. It is true we cannot help being evil, but that is irrelevant." So, as you stated, God created us to be evil, just as Adam was created to fall. It was all part of the plan. And it is of the uttmost relevance that, for how we were made, god takes that and punishes FOR it. However, he [god] doesn't have to answer for the things he did, right? Innocent babies killed in the flood or via maurading Hebrews. Their life was taken from them, . . . which would be unethical. So, . . . why is it that god can do whatever he wants?
Again, when you illustrate, you always point to sinless, innocent babies. Of course that is something I cannot agree to. Are babies under sin? If they are under death, they are under sin. Death entered into the world through sin (Romans 5). In Adam all die. If the baby that died were in Adams shoes, they would have done the same thing as Adam. The baby that dies in the flood is no more innocent then Adam, or Stalin, or Hitler. We are all guilty.
I notice in every illustration you make we have a great distance of understanding of human nature. First you mentioned the parents with 4 innocent children, now the babies in the flood. It is way to obvious that you do not believe in sin, or the evil nature of mankind.
I think the differences between us go far deeper to irreconcilable presuppositions. There are no innocent babies in the flood, no innocent children in the basement, and no innocent men in the world. We are all as guilty as Adam of rebellion before God. We all would have done the same thing as Adam. We will all be under the judgment of God and his judgment will be just. But his lovingkindness will be shown to some of us who have faith. Yet even then, it is totally by grace, for he gives faith. We are all too sinful to get it ourselves.
Will you tell me you really don't deserve that judgment? You are really not that bad? There is always someone worse. But who draws that line, you or God?