• db0@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    6 months ago

    You forgot the actual Epicurean belief. God(s) exist but they don’t give a fuuuuuuuuuck.

    Epicurus was the first deist.

    • kromem@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      Really more an atheist.

      Don’t forget that not long before him Socrates was murdered by the state on the charge of impiety.

      Plato in Timeaus refuses to even entertain a rejection of intelligent design “because it’s impious.”

      By the time of Lucretius, Epicureanism is very much rejecting intelligent design but does so while acknowledging the existence of the gods, despite having effectively completely removed them from the picture.

      It may have been too dangerous to outright say what was on their minds, but the Epicurean cosmology does not depend on the existence of gods at all, and you even see things like eventually Epicurus’s name becoming synonymous with atheism in Judea.

      He is probably best described as a closeted atheist at a time when being one openly was still too dangerous.

      • hswolf@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        wouldn’t that be more like an agnostic than an atheist?

        since atheist believes that gods don’t exist

        • kromem@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          since atheist believes that gods don’t exist

          This is a common misconception.

          Theist is someone who believes God(s) exist(s).

          An atheist is someone who does not believe God exists. They don’t need to have a positive belief of nonexistence of God.

          Much like how a gnostic is someone who believes there is knowledge of the topic.

          And an agnostic is someone who believes either they don’t have that knowledge or that the knowledge doesn’t exist.

          So you could be an agnostic atheist (“I don’t know and I don’t believe either way in the absence of knowledge”) or an agnostic atheist (“I don’t know but I believe anyways”) or a gnostic atheist (“I know that they don’t and because I know I don’t believe”) or a gnostic theist (“I know they do and I believe because I know”).

          Epicurus would have been an Agnostic atheist if we were categorizing. They ended up right about so much because they were so committed to not ruling anything out. They even propose that there might be different rules for different versions of parallel universes (they thought both time and matter were infinite so there were infinite worlds). It’s entirely plausible he would have argued for both the existence and nonexistence of gods in different variations of existence given how committed they were to this notion of not ruling anything out.

          But it’s pretty clear from the collection of his beliefs that the notion of a god as either creator or overseer of this universe was not actively believed in outside of the lip service that essentially “yeah, sure, there’s gods in between the fabric of existence, but not in it.”

          The Epicurean philosophy itself was very focused on the idea that the very notion of gods was making everyone sick, and that they offered their ‘cure’ for people to stop giving a crap about what gods might think or do.

      • kent_eh@lemmy.ca
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        6 months ago

        It may have been too dangerous to outright say what was on their minds,

        That alone has held back a lot of progres throughout the centuries.

      • shneancy@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        imo every religion ever is a cope. All of those elaborate ideas about supernatural beings and alternate planes of existence to somehow cope with the fact that one day the good man, and the evil man, will both die and rot just the same.

        It feels incredibly unjust for good men to die the same way evil men do, and for a lot of people that’s too much to handle. We as humans have such a strong sense of “fairness” that we attempted to structure our entire society around the idea of justice for all, and so by comparison nature feels cruel and unfair, you can either learn to live with that, or tell yourself really really hard that it’s not the end :) after they die the good man will be happy! and the evil man will get the punishment he deserves!

        now layer that with milenia of different ideas about what qualifies you as “good” and “evil” and you’ve got religion.

        This is my personal opinion, and honestly I don’t mind nor care how the other person deals with their existential dread, as long as they aren’t bigots about their way of coping.

  • oxomoxo@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    All religion is not about logic or reason, rather it is about identity. You can join a club for scale model trains, and you can join it for the only reason that you want to and because you enjoy it. You then identify as a member of the train club. It becomes part of your identity.

    Religion is similar except it adds a dogma and doctrine that defines your entire world view. To lose this world view is to lose your identity. People would rather die than lose their identity because psychologically one’s identity is synonymous with their life.

    The only way a person will lose religion is if they have decided for themself that it’s time for change. Much like an addict, it a personal identity change. You have to say to yourself, I am no longer an alcoholic or I am no longer a Mormon. There is no amount of convincing, rationality, evidence or influence that can change a person until they are ready and willing. It’s transformative and traumatic. You just have to accept those who are lost to it.

  • Match!!@pawb.social
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    6 months ago

    This is always bizarre because “evil exists” is taken as a given and I don’t think it does. Evil is just a judgment call made by humans about the intentional and uncoerced actions of other humans; nothing less volitional than that can be argued as evil.

    • untorquer@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      You can simply replace evil with suffering, or ig a christian context might say sin? The point is the paradox is a structure, if any choice of word makes it work, then it works.

    • Zagorath@aussie.zone
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      6 months ago

      Evil is just a judgment call made by humans about the intentional and uncoerced actions of other humans

      Cancer is not an intentional and uncoerced action of other humans.

      Earthquakes and tsunamis are not intentional and uncoerced actions of other humans.

      If an omnipotent and omnibenevolent god existed, there would be no justification for these.

  • LesserAbe@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    To nibble further at the arguments for God: free will is absurd.

    If god is all knowing and all powerful, then when he created the universe, he would know exactly what happened from the first moment until the last. Like setting up an extremely complex arrangement of dominoes.

    So how could he give people free will? Maybe he created some kind of special domino that sometimes falls leftward and sometimes falls rightward, so now it has “free will”. Ok, but isn’t that just randomness? God’s great innovation is just chance?

    No, one might argue, free will isn’t chance, it’s more complex than that, a person makes decisions based on their moral principles, their life experience, etc. Well where did they get their principles? What circumstances created their life experience? Conditions don’t appear out of nowhere. We get our DNA from somewhere. Either God controls the starting conditions and knows where they lead, or he covered his eyes and threw some dice. In either case we can say “yes, I have free will” in the sense that we do what we want, but the origins of our decisions are either predetermined or subject to chaos/chance.

  • Promethiel@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    The problem my agnostic ass meets with good ol’ Epi is the disingenuousness inherent in assuming “Godly” rationale to “human logic” semantics. My dude, people can’t agree on human meaning and I’m supposed to make assumptions on God?

    Why test if It knows the result of the test?

    Geez Epic Manster, I know they didn’t have spring mattresses in your day but the mattress factory also knows the result my mattress should have gotten at testing but tested it anyways…because the testing provides the necessary shape.

    I still maintain my agnosticism and keep my two extremes whenever I don’t feel like just being sure it’s all bullshit anyways:

    If God exists, it doesn’t care for our suffering for reasons wholly beyond us (like a greater suffering of its own and why not, it’s shit all the way down).

    God exists, cares, is a bit sad, but we’re all fucking mattresses where the cosmos is gonna poke, prod, and simulate fucking atop of us until we reach the appropriate factory required settings.

    I already had coffee tho, so the middle atheist ground is in effect; none of it real, nothing matters except trying to not be total cockwaffles so everyone else can enjoy their nihilism too.

    • shikitohno@lemm.ee
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      6 months ago

      The problem my agnostic ass meets with good ol’ Epi is the disingenuousness inherent in assuming “Godly” rationale to “human logic” semantics. My dude, people can’t agree on human meaning and I’m supposed to make assumptions on God?

      I think the idea here is that this deity being perfect would give some sort of absolute underpinning to the universe, having been designed by an intelligent mind. If it’s made in this systemic way, even if we don’t currently comprehend it properly, given enough time, we should be able to figure out at least some of the rules, providing insight into the nature of things and the mind of the universe’s creator.

      I know they didn’t have spring mattresses in your day but the mattress factory also knows the result my mattress should have gotten at testing but tested it anyways…because the testing provides the necessary shape.

      The mattress factory isn’t claiming their process is infallible, though, and they have QC exactly because they admit this and don’t want a factory defect to get out to customers. That’s a big difference from the omnipotent, omniscient deity being spoken of in the paradox here.

    • Queen HawlSera@lemm.ee
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      6 months ago

      God having different morals makes a lot of sense. If you’re a super being that knows most people are going to end up eternally in a pleasurable afterlife at the end of the day, what’s a little temporary suffering while we meet?

      Just saying, going to work isn’t so bad when I know I get to go home, maybe a grab a pizza with the money I earned on the way back.

    • Agrivar@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      I already had coffee tho, so the middle atheist ground is in effect; none of it [is] real, nothing matters except trying to not be total cockwaffles so everyone else can enjoy their nihilism too.

      This might just be the most British summation of my own beliefs I’ve ever read.

  • orangeboats@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    You see, shit like this is why I think some of the Eastern philosophers like Xunzi hit the mark on what “God” is: God is not a sentient being, God does not have a conscious mind like we do, God simply is.

    Of course, those people didn’t call this higher being the God, they called it “Heaven”, but I think it’s really referring to the natural flow of the world, something that is not controlled by us. Maybe the closest equivalent to this concept in the non-Eastern world is “Luck” – people rarely assign “being lucky” to the actions of <insert deity here>, it simply happens by the flow of this world, it is not the action of an all-knowing, all-powerful deity. But like I said, it’s merely the closest approximation of the Heaven concept I can think of.

    The side effect coming out of this revelation is that, you can’t blame the Heaven for your own misfortunes. The Heaven is not a sentient being after all!

    • miridius@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      So wait the argument is that yes, by human definition, God is evil, but that he thinks all the atrocities in the world are totally awesome? That doesn’t make him less evil

      • skulblaka@startrek.website
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        6 months ago

        More like, on the scale of mortal vs god, the things that are important to us either aren’t important to god(s) or may be so insignificant to be actually imperceptible.

        As a thought experiment, say you get an ant farm. You care for these ants, provide them food and light, and generally want to see them succeed and scurry around and do their little ant things. One of the ants gets ant-cancer and dies. You have no idea that it happened. Some of the eggs don’t hatch. You notice this, but can’t really do anything about it. So on, and so forth. Now - think about every single other ant you’ve passed by or even stepped on without even noticing during your last day outside the house. And think about what those ants might think of you, if they could.

        Now an argument that a god is omniscient and all powerful would slip through the cracks of this because an omniscient god WOULD know that one of their ants had ant-cancer and an all-powerful one would be able to fix it. But the sheer difference in breadth of existence between mortal and god may mean that such small things are beneath their attention. Or maybe he really does see all things at all times simultaneously down to minute detail. We don’t know. It is fundamentally unknowable to mortals. Our scales of ethics are incomparable.

        We also don’t know if the ethical alignment of a god leans toward balance rather than good. It would make sense, in a way, if it did. Things that seem evil to us are in fact evil, but necessary in pursuit of greater harmony. Or in fact even necessary to the very function of the universe from a metaphysical perspective. If we assume the existence of a god for this argument it leads to having to assume an awful lot more things that we can’t really prove or test one way or the other. But one thing that seems pretty self evident is that the specific workings of a god are fundamentally unknowable to mortals specifically because we are not gods. We don’t have a perspective in which we can observe it so any argument made in any direction about it is pretty much purely conjecture by necessity.

        • theonyltruemupf@feddit.de
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          6 months ago

          Ants are a bad example though as ants lack the physical capabilities to feel emotions, they don’t have self awareness and may not even be able to feel pain. Also we didn’t create ants and their properties.

          • hangonasecond@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            It’s an analogy, not an example. We are significantly further from a theoretical, all powerful, all knowing god than we are from ants. The scale of sentience from “inanimate object” to “all powerful god” is likely to have us mistaken for inanimate object. So the analogy serves its purpose, but of course the specifics are different.

            • theonyltruemupf@feddit.de
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              6 months ago

              The analogy is not good then. If we are talking about the Christian god, it is specifically told that he created humans and their properties. That is equivalent to us creating our own species of ants through genetic manipulation. Ants that feel pain and sorrow, plan for the future, form meaningful bonds with each other, make art and so on. Then we also (on purpose !) make it so some of them are depressed enough to kill themselves because they can’t take the pain anymore. Make some die of cancer in a week-long, painful battle.

              No ethics commission would ever let that experiment pass. Either god has nothing to do with the christian one or doesn’t exist.

        • Girru00@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          Wut?

          You keep repeating that the “scale of ethics” is incomparable but flip flop between “theyre not omnicient or omnipotent”… “but maybe they are”

          And what does “balance” have to do with ethical behaviour without you begging the question.

          “If we assume the existence of god, we have to assume a lot of other things too” and…???

          Ultimately you spent a lot of time stating the cop-out argument of “its beyond us mere mortals”. To which I can fairly respond… no.

          • skulblaka@startrek.website
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            6 months ago

            To which I can fairly respond… no.

            You can’t, though. Or, well, you can say it all you want but that doesn’t make it true. I’m pretty certain that cats and dogs and bugs also think they’ve got humans figured out and I guarantee you they definitely, definitely don’t, because it’s physiologically impossible for them to understand. They’re just not equipped for it. Just like mortals wouldn’t be equipped to understand the perspective of an immortal, all-encompassing being, it’s impossible for you to accurately place yourself in that perspective.

            The ant farm thing was a little hamfisted but I think the analogy still stands for the purpose I introduced it for.

            And what does “balance” have to do with ethical behaviour without you begging the question.

            It is a possible explanation for the existence of evil. As in, the post we’re arguing in the comments of right now. Nowhere in there did I ever say “this is the way things are”, only “this is a possible explanation for a question we cannot definitively answer”.

            If we assume the existence of god, we have to assume a lot of other things too" and…???

            Please explain what part of that doesn’t make sense.


            This is all theoretical anyway, if a god existed your understanding of them would be limited to whatever they decide you’re able to understand of them anyway, so the argument is largely academic regardless of feelings or underlying truth. The point I was trying to make here is that the difference in the sheer scale of existence between a mortal and a god is such that we may be as ants to them. We possibly could not understand them no matter how hard we try - we’re just not biologically equipped for it - and some things that we consider important may be so unimportant as to never even get noticed by a god. But none of this is provable or even falsifiable so it’s all a thought experiment anyway.

  • lemmydripzdotz456@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    The solution I have heard before that I thought was the most interesting would add another arrow to the “Then why didn’t he?” box at the bottom:

    Because he wants his creation to be more like him.

    He’s just a lonely guy. He made the angels but they’re so boring and predictable. They all kowtow to him and have no capacity for evil (except for that one time). Humans have the capacity for both good and evil, they don’t constantly feel his presence, and they’re so much more interesting! They make choices that are neither directly in support of or opposition to himself. Most of the time, their decisions have nothing to do with him at all!

    Humans have the capacity to be more like God than any of his other creations.

    • Katrisia@lemm.ee
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      6 months ago

      That would fall under the “then God is not good/not all loving”. You described it as if it were a privilege, but the capacity of evil causes indescribable suffering to us and to innocent beings such as small children and animals. If God lets all of this happen just because he wants some replicas of himself or because he thinks it is such a gift to be like him despite it, he’s an egotistical god.

      Also, if he gets bored of pure goodness, blissfulness, and perfection, then it was never pure goodness, blissfulness, and perfection for him. Those things, by definition, provide eternal satisfaction. So he either never created that (evil branch again) or he cannot achieve those states even if we wanted to. If he cannot achieve those states even if he wanted to, if he lacks enjoyment and entertainment and has to spice his creation from time to time, then he’s not all powerful.

      Also, many people argue the necessity of evil as a requisite for freedom. If God needs to allow evil so we can be free, then he’s bound to that rule (and/or others): not all powerful.

    • Honytawk@lemmy.zip
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      6 months ago

      If humans aren’t predictable to this god, then that god isn’t all-knowing.

  • McLoud@lemm.ee
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    6 months ago

    How can one experience pure joy without the contrast of sorrow? Stop trying to personify God. Try smoking DMT, then call yourself an “athiest”.

    I dare you

    • Farid@startrek.website
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      6 months ago

      Wait, so experiences you have while disabling your faculties responsible for rational thinking should for some reason overrule decisions made while you’re not under influence and in sound judgment? What kind of advice is that?

      - Cats can speak English, dude, trust me. Once I got real high and totally understood everything this cat was telling me.

      • McLoud@lemm.ee
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        6 months ago

        No specific religion, but I saw evidence of a beautifully designed, perfect “machine” all around me. I felt in tune with some sort of higher power, whatever you want to call it.

    • usualsuspect191@lemmy.ca
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      6 months ago

      You don’t need to experience bad things to enjoy good ones… They are separate unlinked things. Like you don’t need to have tasted sour in order to have the ability to taste sweetness.

    • shneancy@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      as a fellow psychedelics enjoyer - I’m an atheist. I can understand how psychedelics could cause you to become a believer of some religion or overall spirituality. But my man, you were on drugs. Yes they’re great tools for self growth and really fun too, but everything you saw came from within your head. You’ve found within yourself the need for a belief that there’s a diety or some sort of grand plan behind it all sure, but you did not find god.

  • abbadon420@lemm.ee
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    6 months ago

    Does “all powerful” really mean all? I mean, a lìfe sentence is only about 30 years. Since it’s all just social constructs (and even if it isn’t) the precise meaning of the word could different that you’d think.

    Maybe god was all powerful until they created free will and found that they made free will stronger than themselves. But since god made free will, god is still all powerful.

    Like humans making machine learning. We can only influence it, not control it. Does that mean we are not in control? No, we could simply pull the plug.

    God could also simply pull the plug, but likely doesn’t want to because we are their creation. It’s only a last resort.

    Anyways, that’s my two cents.

    • NeptuneOrbit@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      I agree that “all powerful” is an ambiguity here. For example, the famous “can he make a boulder so heavy he can’t move it?”

      There will always be paradoxes in the universe. So you’d have to go to each respective believer to figure out what “all powerful” means. Maybe making a utopia is impossible.

      Philosophy is fun

      • Zloubida@lemmy.world
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        6 months ago

        Indeed. Omnipotence doesn’t mean to be able to do impossible things, thus God can be at the same time omnipotent and loving and create a universe in which evil exists, as it is a condition to freedom.

      • abbadon420@lemm.ee
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        6 months ago

        Philosophy is indeed fun, because philosophers know it’s only theory. Religion is a lot more advanced than just theory. Religion is basically the first instance of quantum computing.

        Every religion has it’s own truth, but every religion is the only truth. Thus truth can clearly have different states.

        Religion is all states at once, but depending on it’s observer, it is only one truth at any given time and place. When two states interfere with each other, (when they get onbserved at the same time and place), you can get disastrous consequences, e.i. war.

        • TankovayaDiviziya@lemmy.world
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          6 months ago

          All religions claim to be the truth, yet contradict each other. One religion believes in only one god while others believe in more than one. One religion believe this is how the world was created, then another says differently. If all religions can’t even agree on the fundamental basics, then none of them are true. Moreover, scientific discoveries have already disproven many of the religious claims.

  • Sotuanduso@lemm.ee
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    6 months ago

    Have you considered that maybe God, who is love according to the Bible, designed this universe to be a complete demonstration of love? How can you fully demonstrate love if you don’t show what it means to love someone who’s evil and considers you an enemy, or someone who doesn’t even believe you exist, or someone who once thought they knew you but were being deceived by people with evil motives?

    • BaroqueInMind@lemmy.one
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      6 months ago

      If God created this universe as a demonstration of love, then why the fuck is there sections of the book where he wipes out entire families with disasters because he got angry?

    • theonyltruemupf@feddit.de
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      6 months ago

      I have considered that. There is a lot of evil (or suffering) that nobody directly causes and especially not because they’re evil. Why is there depression for example? Or cancer?

      • Sotuanduso@lemm.ee
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        6 months ago

        As for where it came from, it was all brought about with Adam and Eve’s first sin, which infected all of creation with decay. You could write a creepypasta about that. Depression’s a bit more complicated because it’s a thing in the mind, and there’s a case to be made that it’s often more directly a symptom of a separation from God, knowing on some level that something’s missing - but I don’t think that can be said of all depression. Either way, it still ultimately stems from the first sin.

        As for why it should exist for a time, it’s again necessary to be able to demonstrate love in those circumstances. It’s easy to love someone who’s always having a good time, but it’s divine to see your love and support help to pull someone out of depression, or to comfort someone who knows they don’t have long to live. (This isn’t just about the love God pours out, but also the love He inspires in His people.)

          • Sotuanduso@lemm.ee
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            6 months ago

            It’s the same reason death in general exists, and it’s the best explanation I’ve got if you’re looking for theology and not biology.

        • theonyltruemupf@feddit.de
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          6 months ago

          Why would a loving god punish unrelated people thousands of years later with cancer and such for a harmless sin that he must have known Adam and Eve would commit?

          • Sotuanduso@lemm.ee
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            6 months ago

            Why should sickness exist at all? Why can people die when killed? Why do bad things happen to good people? Why isn’t life like Heaven for people who haven’t done anything wrong?

            That’s the way it originally was, but sin messes things up. And it’s in our very nature. Nobody can say they’ve done nothing wrong because everyone has at least one concrete sin they’ve committed, often several.

            There’s no such thing as a “harmless sin.” It has to be black-and-white or else people will try to weasel themselves out of accountability (“I’m only lying, it’s not like I’m killing anyone.”) Similarly, you can’t good-person your way out of being a sinner. Even if you could stop sinning all on your own, if you’re not going to repent for what you’ve done, the guilt is still there.

            …Also, as previously stated, you can’t fully demonstrate love if you don’t show what love is like in hardship.