Frozenwolf150
Formerly SilentKnight
- Joined
- Dec 10, 2007
- Messages
- 4,134
My response to that is, if God can arbitrarily decide what is good and evil, then there is still no objective moral standard because it's based on God's changing whims. God can, and HAS, made murder illegal on Friday but legal on Saturday (e.g. stone the Sabbath breakers to death). Sure, it's a commandment that you shall not murder, but how shall you not murder when God says you shall murder in so many other places and times? If God is this consistent, there's no reason to follow such a capricious monster as a moral exemplar.When confronted with Euthyphro's Dilemma, religious people of my acquaintance won't see it as a dilemma at all. They will unhesitatingly say that it's the first. It's good because it is commanded by God. God is the ultimate arbiter of what is good and evil. He gets to do that because he's God.
Interestingly, the Jewish interpretation of that story is that it was written to mark an end to the practice of human sacrifice, which was quite common among tribal cultures of the time. God wasn't so much telling Abraham to sacrifice his son as he was demonstrating the new custom of sacrificing animals instead. Had Abraham been following the existing customs, he would indeed have killed Isaac. It's analogous to the Mosaic law of "eye for an eye" and how it was intended to limit punishment and retribution to fit the crime, as opposed to the previous practice of escalating violence until everyone ends up dead.This is the point of the story of Abraham and Isaac. Abraham was perfectly ready to kill his son, just because God told him to. Since everything that God does is good by definition, there is no evil in killing your own son if it is done at God's command.