Taking words out of context proves just how rational you are. Is it safe to assume that your following points will be just as rational?
What did I take out of context?
"not all"? "in general"? "as a whole"? "good people"? I think this speaks for itself.
Your point?
Basically you're saying you want more examples of how Christians stood up to the Nazis before you achknowledge my point to any degree whatsoever, despite examples already given.
Nopers. This isn't my point. I'm saying some Christians decried the Nazis. Some Jews did too. Some Muslims. Hell, I'll bet some conservative Republicans decried them. That doesn't prove the nature of God as evil or good.
If we're to apply this rule to the words of people in general, then what we say doesn't make us either good or bad. So I suppose all the speeches Hitler made doesn't show him as either good or bad either?
Strawman. Not my point.
And as for not having to be motivated by religion- very true. There are many different motivations. But in this case God's will was motivation, a point which you have only side-stepped by claiming that there are many motivations.
Not at all. I have no doubt the good Reverend was motivated, in part, by his religious faith. That doesn't prove his speach is the best ever. It doesn't prove that God is good.
If you ask a Muslim, Baha'i, Hindu, Jew, Buddhist or Sikh whether or not they believe their beliefs are correct, they will tell you yes. Will you then accuse of them of saying that all other beliefs are bad?
You chose Christians to reflect the nature of God. You therefor rejected everyone else. Unless you aren't rejecting everyone else. You tell me where you want the goal posts and we can go from there.
I might ask you if your own beliefs are correct, and then demand to know whether you are saying all Christians are bad.
ROFL. This one always makes me laugh. You proceed here from a false assumption about my beliefs. Thanks for playing!
That's very brief, and no examples are provided. Still, a so-called "Christian" who is wicked, God rejects in the same way the so-called "holy" Pharisees were rejected.
ROFL. This is awesome. By this reasoning, if I can point to one Christian doing a bad thing, then your argument fails utterly! I'd say "peice of cake" but I've never been a fan of cake. Pie . . . mmmm, warm, apply pie!
First a few high-profile Christian individuals:
Jim Bakker - PTL Club scandal, theft, lies, adultry, fraud, etc.
Aimee McPherson - Adultry, faked her death, lies, etc.
Jimmy Swaggart - prostitution, adultry, lies, fraud, etc.
Peter Popoff - Debunked by our own Mr. Randi, lies, fraud, etc.
Robert Tilton - Fraud, lies, etc.
Frank Houston - rape, pedophilia
Douglas Goodman - sexual assault
Kent Hovind - fraud
Next, a few high-profile Christian groups:
Movement for the Restoration of the Ten Commandments of God - mass murder and suicide
Ordre du Temple Solaire - mass murder, suicide, fraud, embezzlement
Branch Davidians - rape, abuse, murder, suicide
The Body of Christ/Attleboro Bible Study Cult - murder
Roman Catholic Church - take your pick
Eastern Orthodox Church - more of the same
Now let's talk major events in which Christians played a major role:
Crusades
Saxon Wars
The Inquisition
The Reconquista
The Alhambra Decree
Pope Pius' issues the Regnans in Excelsis
French Wars of Religion
Marian Persecutions
Thirty Years War
I could go on and on, but I think I've established a case of Christians being pretty mean, if not downright evil, to other human beings.
And- what's this? "Better than anyone else?" Funny you should say that, disregarding the thousands of wars fought by mankind that had nothing to do with Christianity. Hitler was an *evolutionist* after all, who viewed Jews as a sub-human life-form, or an evolutionary failure, and it was on these grounds that he wanted to eliminate them.
Strawman. You set up the restrictions regarding Christians reflecting the nature of God by being His followers. I've provided examples specific to Christians actions showing that they aren't always good, and have sometimes been quite evil. But thanks for playing.
"*If* we start?" If we haven't yet started, then saying that "God must also run that gamut" is like skipping the evidence and concluding.
Hardly. If Christians, as you claim, reflect the nature of God, and they run the gamut from good to evil, then God must also.
Then God must be both good and evil. This utterly refutes you original contention, and supports my case that the actions of any set of followers is not a reflection on the nature of God. Thanks!
That's all very nice, but I said officially recognized as *one* of the greatest speeches. But I'm sure you didn't intentionally twist my words.
Citation please.
Is this supposed to be a point about whether God is good or evil, or are you just asking random questions to distract the debate?
Not random. You made claims. I'm asking questions to discover how solid those claims are. If you're honest about this discussion, you'll answer the questions. I await your response.
If we're to be logically about this, and follow the facts through, then a God who dies for the sake of mankind (even atheists) should naturally result in a good religion. A religion with "Love the Lord thy God" and "Love thy neighbour" as its foundational laws should result in good followers.
And yet, Christianity has not always been "a good religion" with "good followers", as I reflected above.
The examples of said followers I've given should proove the goodness of the religion, and the goodness of the religion should proove the goodness of God.
The examples I've given refute this.
There's your proof- it's basically what I stated before except in clearer terms. But you haven't provided any proof supporting your view that God is evil.
Fair enough, enjoy the proof above.
