The first few quote blocks were directed at other people, but I'm including them anyway because they speak volumes about the ignorance and petulance that seems to accompany fundamentalist apologetics.
Christianity was prominent in 17th and 18th centuries; so were inventions. Where we disagree is that I believe this is not coincidence, you believe it is. If you don't believe in God, you must believe that a great many things are the result of simple "coicidence"; like us being here, for instance.
Wow, two strawmen stacked right on top of each other.
If we're debating about whether God is evil, we must assume, first, that God is real. If we assume God is real, then we make the same assumption about his actions, including dying for our sins, healing the sick etc.
Only then can we debate whether he is evil or not.
Now, I've given you some examples of Gods deeds. Either He is good or evil. Which is it?
I've already proven this wrong. God could be a fictional character or an abstract concept that influences people's lives. Debating the merits of his actions does not require agreement with the implicitness of his existence. Also, your last statement is a black and white fallacy.
If a scientist contradicts the laws of logic, is he a scientist?
In the same way, if a Christian contradicts the laws of his own religion, he is not a Christian as Jesus describes.
I've made this statement many times already, even before you gave me the list, and it's one of simple logic. The Bible itself makes this statement about the Christian as opposed to the man who falsely claims to be one.
(snip)
*Redefine* Christians? The Bible itself describes what a Christian should be, and in all my words here I've not once strayed from that description. If you can point out a quote of mine that implies otherwise, please do so.
Within Christianity there are many competing groups, each claiming to be the one true religion. It's strange that you'd be able to draw the lines between true and false Christians with such absolute certainty when even Catholics, Protestants, and Orthodox Christians can't decide amongst themselves. How many "true Christians" are there in the world, exactly? It's surely a lot less than the 2 billion most apologists point to when they claim the popularity of their faith.
When it comes to the definition of Christianity, most of the time the practical approach is taken, in that anyone who calls himself a Christian and uses Christian dogma (perverted or not) to justify his actions should be called a Christian. How do you know for a fact that your own beliefs aren't a perversion of what God intended? Why should anyone take your particular interpretation of the bible at face value just because you say so?
All of these quotes in your examples say basically the same thing: God judged the world, therefore He's evil. God punished someone for doing wrong, therefore He's evil.
But actually these examples avoid the reasons that God Himself stated for making the judgements He did.
I'll give you an example of the kind of thing that site does:
In the Bible God might say something like: "I have heard the cries of the persecuted that rent the skies from this particular city; I have heard those who moan in agony as they are violated by the sexually immoral; the blood of the murdered ones cries out to me, and all of this pain and tyranny can no longer be ignored: now I will rise from my Throne, and now I will answer them; the evildoers can no longer be forgiven, but they will be delivered to destruction, and those who were crushed I will save from the hand of the wicked."
The site you mentioned takes an example like this, tears out all of what God says until a specific verse is left (eg. God destroyed this particular city) and then says "Look everyone! God destroyed this city because there were a few men there who were gay! He's obviously an evil tyrant!" leaving out the fact that the said gay men were rapists.
Wrong. You couldn't have picked a worse example to make your point. God killed all the men, women, children, and animals, for the sake of punishing a gang of angel rapers. For the record, they weren't gay, they were rapists. You might get away with conflating rape with homosexuality on religious apologetics sites, but you won't get away with it here.
God does this again and again, ordering his followers to destroy everything that moves, including children and babies, in order to punish those people for crimes that were likely invented post hoc, and many of which applied to the Israelites as well. Are you unaware of the fact that in times of war, it's common practice to demonize your enemies and render them sub-human, as justification for committing genocide against them?
If this is your evidence, Silentknight, I'm offended by it- not so much because it reufully scorns and insults everything that is my culture and religion, but more because the absolute irrationality that forms what you call evidence is so ridiculous, my dignity is lessened by having to answer to it.
If you were setting out to make a fallacious appeal to pity, you should have admitted it in the first place. I admitted that the SAB is only a superficial glance at those passages, but that's what you get when you take the bible at face value. The justifications for the divinely ordained slaughters you are advocating are
also contingent on a superficial interpretation of those passages, such as that the rival tribes sacrificed children to the wrong gods or that they were sexually immoral. If your interpretation is correct, then so is the SAB.
For the record, I don't agree with the SAB most of the time, and have even written my own debunking of its claims. If anything is lending support to its point of view however, it's the arguments coming from literalist believers.
Yes. The Bible had laws regarding slavery in the Old Testament that the Jews were to abide by. The difference between the actions of the Jews and the whites are that:
The Jews were specifically chosen by God to conquer, even shown miracles, and having the words of a true Man of God on their side. The slaves they took in war were spared from death in war, and theoretically could have also learned the more righteous ways of the Jews of the time, thus resulting in eternal Salvation. The other kind of "slave" in the times were akin to what today we would call butlers or maids. In addition, the rights of slaves were clearly defined, as were the punishment of masters for mistreating those under their authority.
The whites, on the other hand, had none of these things; no miracles, no prophet, no confirmation of God's will in any degree: however much some may have claimed to, historically, they did *not*. Instead, they had their own arrogance, and thus went against God's will and had no right to take black slaves. The Bible condemns murder of the innocent, rape, and so on. But the whites broke all of these laws. They contradicted God not only in Biblical laws regarding slavery, but also in that they had no right to take slaves in the first place, unlike the Jews- but even the Jews were placed under strict laws regarding the rights of slaves.
This is disgusting. You are trying to justify the biblical practice of slavery, after I've already shown examples of how it was barbaric, by claiming it was okay due to their "chosen" status, their claims of miracles, and the fact that slavery was better than death? Do you not see how any atrocity, no matter how horrific, could be justified in this way? The bible states that God ordered his people to save female prisoners of war for raping. This happens in Judges 21, Numbers 31, and there are instructions for rape in Exodus 20-21. Are you claiming this was okay due to chosen status, miracles, and how slavery spared their lives?
I never said everyone did it, therefore it's right. I'm saying what the Jews did was right as opposed to what the other nations did, which was wrong. Although there are instances in Biblical history in which sexual relations occure to continue a man's family line, there is no verse saying that a woman was forced to lie with a man by God's law, but we do have verses regarding God's law that condemn rape. From this we can grasp that women had rights too.
You're still running away from what you said earlier:
The Bible verses regarding slavery were made in a time and culture when slavery was perfectly legal- all nations of the world did it. But the Biblical laws, probably unlike other nations of the time, taught about the *rights* of slaves, and listed how masters should be punished for mistreating them.
Okay, so slavery was perfectly legal and all nations of the world did it. If you weren't trying to justify biblical slavery by this statement, then what point
were you trying to make? I've already proven the latter part of your statement wrong, but "probably unlike"? Are you admitting that you haven't actually compared slave laws with those of other nations at the time?
In Judges 2:14, 3:8, and 10:14 God
sells his people back into slavery as punishment for their disobedience. Based on this, one could argue that God approved of the slave laws of other nations, including the Canaanites and the Philistines.
You've provided an example here of who Gandhi was, but *no* example of how King was in any degree influenced by him. Interesting.
I assumed people knew about this, or were capable of looking it up themselves if they haven't heard of it:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Martin_Luther_King,_Jr.#Influences
http://www.stanford.edu/group/King/about_king/encyclopedia/gandhi.htm
Hitler was a clever politician. He knew that Christianity was a positive image, and claiming that he was "chosen by God" might win him those votes. But when you remember about the way he spoke about evolution *after* he had those votes, and how many Christian/Catholic slaves he took, etc. this statement rings hollow.
Again, you missed my point. If you can give Christianity credit for being the first to stand up to Hitler, which is a ridiculous argument mind you, then one could just as easily blame Christian fundamentalism for inspiring Hitler.
I suppose you're talking about two different churches? And is that latter even a Christian church? Do you have dates and names to specify and confirm this? And, most importantly, does what this church of yours say work in harmony with Bible verses? If we're debating whether God is evil, then evil actions done in the name of God must be in perfect accordance with God's own teachings, as were the words spoken by the Christians who *opposed* Hitler: they had verses to back their claims.
This is nothing more than a repeat of the "no true Christians" fallacy, which I debunked above.
Your excuses don't suffice.
I'm not making excuses, I'm trying to provide an explanation. I don't need to make excuses at all because, from my point of view, there is no God to be insulted. Are you trying to say that you believe God is so feeble and weak that words, criticism, and insults can undermine him and take away his power? If so then he's no God worth worshiping, especially if he's the same God who orders executions and genocide in the OT, and it seems to me like we should ramp up the insults against him so that we can kill it before it spreads.
Mind you, it's also impossible to "kill" God, and for the same reasons.
I suggest *you* reread the argument and you will find otherwise.
Here's the quote you were responding to.
My view, not who you asked, but....
There is evil in the world (won't cover all of it, and what I will cover is quite sufficient for me) : children are killed/mutilated/foully mistreated all over the world every day; people are harmed/ etc./killed every day. IF there was a god and IF that god allows this, THEN that god is pure evil and it is my duty to track down and do my best to destroy it.
My assumption is no god - based on evidence by lack of behavior, BUT if I ever find I am wrong on that then I will function appropriately.
fuelair was saying that there is no God, therefore he wasn't talking about destroying anything real. I don't see any advocation of a shooting spree anywhere in here. He was addressing a hypothetical and making a conditional statement. Notice the use of the word "IF"?
If this is true, then the debate should be about whether belief in God is rational, not whether God is evil, or at least about what God truly teaches. So as I said before; you contradicted yourself.
No one who treats God with such scorn and hatred could possibly not believe in Him, since their own mad hate reveals that deep down, to some degree, they *do* believe in Him, if only to resent Him.
This is a very common misconception among amateur debaters. Attacking an idea, an argument, a concept, a belief, or a group that represents a certain point of view, is
not the same as an ad hominem or personal attack. This very simple concept is one upon which the JREF membership agreement is based on, among others. Most non-believers will say "God" instead of "God of the bible / Old Testament" or "fundamentalist conception of God" in order to save time. It's generally assumed that when it comes to this sort of criticism, the specific negative aspects of God belief are being attacked. I shouldn't have to explain this.
People who conflate a disagreement of ideas with a personal attack or insult are typically those who
use personal attacks to state their own disagreements.