Perce,
Several points here. Jesus is the ultimate revelation of God to man. He truly shows us what God is like.
A faith assertion, not an argument.
Secondly it is possible that religion evolves or as Jesus put it. The spirit will lead you INTO all truth.
A faith assertion, not an argument.
Thirdly. After the fall imafraid everything becomes infused with immorality. Gods will being an environment that is paradise. So I'm afraid we are mainly into lesser or greater evils
A faith assertion, not an argument.
And finally you are majoring on the OT Now I've been accused of cherry picking but to cherry pick the whole OT?
So which bits of the books you think to be “holy” do you think are wrong, and how do you decide about that?
That is some feetbut sadly not impressive. Of course unless you are a moral realist criticising ANY morality cannot be reasonably seen as anything but arsepull.
An assertion you refuse to justify with an argument.
Any claim that morality is a form of aesthetic ism is highly suspect. I MO
As you a can’t or won’t justify your opinion with an argument, it’s worthless.
What I am saying is that after the fall of Man the world itself is never not infused with moral wrong.
A faith assertion, not an argument.
Divorce by any accounts shows that where it occurs there has been human incompatibility and human alienation and yet, it is often the lesser of two evils.
Incoherent irrelevance.
Those who supported the decision to drop the atom bomb in WW2 argue it avoided a land invasion. Again one had to be the lesser of two evils.
And that might be why we see bad things happening in the OT.
Hang on – just now you asserted that citing the OT was “cherry picking”. Now you’re saying it’s in play, but that your god (apparently of the omnis remember) couldn’t arrange things such that no lesser “evil” was necessary.
Perhaps you should decide which horse you’re backing here?
Since I get accused of wanting to hand wave the bad stuff away. I will say I am prepared to own this lesser evils idea
So you’re “owning” a god not competent enough to eliminate a lesser evil option entirely then. Fair enough – its your blind faith claim after all.
It is also alternatively possible that these laws were passed by people who didnt actually realise they shouldn't just be making laws about slavery but abolishing it. On the other hand there must have been Israelites who didnt want slaves on moral grounds and were within the rules not to have them.
So people behaved exactly as you’d expect them to given the circumstances of the time and if there was no god at all to tell them what's right and wrong then? Again, “god” is your faith claim so you can fill that space with whatever you like, but you're making claims about this god with implications I don’t think you’d like.
So the point is I find nothing anywhere to say that God saw slavery and thought that it was good.
Nice bit of weasel wording there. If this god of yours thought slavery was bad, why wouldn’t “He” say just have said so in the books he supposedly “inspired”? After all, isn’t that how “He” supposedly chose to lay down “His” moral rules for the guidance of “His” playthings?
But he is and has been dealing with fallen human beings on a personal local national and international level.
Highly incompetently it seems. Again though, that’s just another faith assertion but not an argument.
Maybe if you actually tried to make an honest-to-goodness argument just for once you’d provide some reason not to dismiss your ramblings and musings out of hand. How about for example finally telling us why human-made morality would be “redundant”? Surely you must have something in mind to justify the claim?
Anything at all?
No?