The point was not what the ends are, the point was acts to get to those ends.
The question is whether or not you can reasonably forsee the consequences of your actions. If you can, then taking into account all of the consequences, it is moral to make a choice based on the best outcome. For God, who could presumably see every consequence of his action, the best choice -- the moral choice -- might
appear to be immoral to us who are limited to only seeing relatively immediate consequences.
By our standards no ends justify an immoral act to achieve those ends. A good end does not make the immoral act moral. Just that an immoral act was commited to achieve a good end.
You're stating things backwards. No act in and of itself is moral or immoral. It is only immoral if it is not the best action to perform under a given set of circumstances. Killing someone is immoral in most situations (where it is called "murder"), but not in certain other situations such as self-defense.
But that does make evil good. Evil is still evil.
Like I said, an act in and of itself is not good or evil. It is good or evil depending on the circumstances. Stealing is usually immoral, but probably not immoral if it saves a life.
So having evil around is a consequence of having free will.
Free will is good. And whatever it takes (Having evil around) to get free will is justified. Therefore (having) evil (around) is justified.
But isn't evil mutualy exclusive of good?
No, evil is not mutually exclusive of good. Evil and good can and do coexist. Some would say that evil is necessary for good to exist.
In actuality was is moral and immoral depends on society.
But some argue that god's laws are immutable. whatever god says goes no matter what.
Maybe some believe that God's laws are immutable. Others believe that the laws in the Bible are generalities, based on the most common forseeable circumstances of an action, but may vary depending on the actual forseeable circumstances. For example, I believe that most would agree that many laws can be broken to save a life.
Few believe that the rules that apply to us (which assume that we can't know the full consequences of our actions) also apply to God, since God is all-knowing.
Which means there is a difference between murder and killing. So if god murders does that mean the murder becomes moral because god is committing the murder?
It's a nonsensical question. Since murder is defined as immoral (unjustified) killing, then if God committed murder, it couldn't possibly be moral by definition. Now if you're asking if God kills someone and it
seems like murder to us, is it necessarily murder, then the answer is no. Just because it
seems like murder to us due to our inability to forsee the full consequences of the action does not mean it's murder. Specifically, the full consequences of the action may serve a greater good that we are not aware of.
So if god kills in self defence the killing will be moral and justified. Who does god need self defence from?
I didn't mean to imply that God kills in self defense? I was providing some examples where killing is justified for us humans. Presumably, there are examples where killing is justified for God as well.
So if god kills for punishment the killing is moral and justified.
Yes, presumably so.
So what transgression does god consider worthy of the punishment of death?
I wouldn't know since I'm not all-knowing, but I imagine that if the consequences lead to a greater good, God might be justified.
So if god kills in a war the killing is justified. who does god war with? and who is getting killed?
Again, I wasn't meaning to imply that God wars with anyone -- it was just an example of a justified killing that would not be considered "murder."
-Bri