Apart from it does follow from when you say,
No, it doesn't.
Apart from it does follow from when you say,
... which perhaps wraps up this diversion and lets us get back to the primary point.
The Bible supports the idea of cataclyms being used for punishment and for non-punishment, both. So the existence of a cataclysm is not enough, by itself, to know whether God is unhappy with some person or group.
A question for AvalonXQ (or other Christians frankly)... if there is an apparent cruelty, wrongdoing, or contradiction in the bible... after due considerations of context, is the answer EVER that, having passed through human hands, part the writing is just plain wrong as to the actual word/will of God? Did none of the people involved in putting together the bible ever slip something of their own in, or make a mistake that was never corrected?
I think to those Christians who are strongly committed to the idea that the Bible is the perfect and infallible word of God, the answer has got to be no.
How about to you? I'd prefer not to debate a straw literalist.
I don't believe that the problem of evil has ever been a serious problem for christianity.This is called "the Problem of Evil".
I'm am inerrantist, yes. I accept the possibility of translation and transcription errors in copies but hold the original texts to be flawless.
Apart from when you disagree with what the text actually says....
Apart from when someone tries to convince me the passage says something that it doesn't.
Newsflash: believing whatever the Bible says doesn't mean believing that it says whatever you argue it says.
Or, according to you, what the words mean.
... which perhaps wraps up this diversion and lets us get back to the primary point.
The Bible supports the idea of cataclyms being used for punishment and for non-punishment, both. So the existence of a cataclysm is not enough, by itself, to know whether God is unhappy with some person or group.
Would you unpack this because I can find it to be a serious problem. God does not appear to have the avoidance of harm to life as his no. 1 priority. The only thing that makes any sense to me is that God is more interested in people's character and that there must be something beyond this life to make up for the unfairness that some people suffer (eg some awful genetic conditions).I don't believe that the problem of evil has ever been a serious problem for christianity.
You've pretty much got it. No, avoidance of harm is not God's no.1 priority. The story of Job shows that God is just fine for harm to happen to people if it's done for a good reason. And yes, God allows evil because people have to be free to choose to be good people.Would you unpack this because I can find it to be a serious problem. God does not appear to have the avoidance of harm to life as his no. 1 priority. The only thing that makes any sense to me is that God is more interested in people's character and that there must be something beyond this life to make up for the unfairness that some people suffer (eg some awful genetic conditions).
I'm am inerrantist, yes. I accept the possibility of translation and transcription errors in copies but hold the original texts to be flawless.