I'll avoid pulling out the catechism for now, since I'm not trying to parse words, but I use omnibenevolence to go with the other two omnis but as a synonym for "all-loving" which is bandied about the Roman Catholic Church at least with amazing regularity. My experience indicates it is a common descriptor in other christian denominations.I would tend to agree with that, but then maybe I don't get what "omnibenevolence" means. Is that a canonical term in a sect I am not familiar with?
The reason it is a poor analogy is that it is an incomplete analogy given what I am saying.Darth Rotor said:I love my kids. I have occasionally punished them. I realize that is a poor analogue, given my own limitations, but I don't see love and something other than spoiling the object of your affections as inconsistent.
You took your kids as they came to you and have dealt with them within the limitations of your toolset. You have no responsibility for the quality of the genes in your children. Hence any shortcomings they have and any shortcomings you have in raising them are simply an artefact of the system in which you have been placed.
The christian god has no such escape clause. He could create his children in any manner he chose (omnipotence), and could choose from an infinite set of perfect ones (omniscience). He chose a manner that results in less than perfect children.
So far it is not inconsistent. It becomes so when we add omnibenevolence. If the creator could have created us in a way that gave us all perfect happiness (he could) and in a way that avoided pain (he could) and in a way that still had us knowing about and accepting all his love and wisdome and perfection (he could) then what is the reason for him failing to do so?
It doesn't. It means being all loving. A creator who creates us in the way we are created and causes the pain which is caused (or allows us to cause it, if you prefer) is either not omnibenevolent or not omniscient or not omnipotent.Darth Rotor said:If omnibenevolent means treating the human race a la spoiled and pampered children, that hardly fits with having to make a choice.
Further, a creator is not all-loving if the love is conditional, which the christian god's love is. All-loving means all-forgiving. It is clear in christianity that multitudes will not receive that final forgiveness.
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