I've been trying to avoid posting in this whole conversation, especially since there seems to be nobody (as of late) posting the other side(s) of the argument. Apparently I failed, because now I'm replying.
Chris wrote:RedQueen.exe wrote:Unfortunately the old testament is full of awful, awful examples. The god of the old testament is a vain tyrant, with little to distinguish him from modern day dictators.
Just to take one story, the Great Flood, what percentage of the human species did God kill? 99.9%? Are there others who are admired for killing a large percentage of the human species?
Then there is the problem of God's inaction in the face of evil. Several years ago, there was
a case of two teen friends. One of them walked into a restroom to see his friend sexually assaulting a 7-year-old girl. He said and did nothing to stop his friend. The girl was later found killed in that same restroom. There was universal condemnation of the teen who saw the crime in progress yet did nothing. Presumably, any omniscient God also saw the crime in progress and did nothing. The standard defense of the God who allows evil to happen is that to stop evil would be to destroy free will. However, the teen who did nothing and others in similar situations have responsibilities to act, and we can assume that those actions would not destroy the free will of the criminals they hinder. So why doesn't God stop evil - at least the worst cases of it? If someone could have stopped the Holocaust, knew it, and yet did nothing, we would condemn that person. Was God unable to stop the Holocaust, or unwilling?
I see a little bit of inconsistency in your argument.
Do you know the context of the whole "Noah's Ark" and "Great Flood" stories? All the people of the earth were behaving immorally (to put it nicely) and had turned away from their God. Thus, he punished them by destroying all of them via the flood, except for Noah and his family because Noah found favor with God.
And yet you say that God isn't doing anything to stop "crime".
If they could speak to us now, then they'd probably say that God certainly didn't find favor in their eyes for killing them, but they would probably admit that they realized (in retrospect) that what they were doing was wrong. The views of "right" and "wrong" vary from person to person; it's an opinion-based issue. With regards to what is defined as "right" and "wrong", the only opinion that matters in the end is God's.
Another point I should make regarding the Christian beliefs: we exist to serve and glorify God, not the other way around. Unfortunately, not every Christian lives this fact, thus indicating that many Christians are hypocrites. But what religion doesn't have hypocrites? Anyway, moving on.
If everytime somebody did something wrong God came in and dealt justice to that person (a.k.a. death), then He'd start gaining a very bad opinion amongst the people. "But, he only stole one fruit! Why'd you have to kill him?" (Parallels to Adam&Eve eating the fruit of the forbidden tree were unintentional; I just used the first example that came to mind.) Actually, there will come a time when that will become the justice system again, for 1000 years, but it won't happen until the Lord returns in his full glory.
There are other sides to the story that you can't argue against until you understand them. Changed lives, for example. Sometimes God will take the 'worst' people, and bring them to their knees in order to get them to understand Him, and when the world sees their change(s), it glorifies God in a much brighter light than if he had just said, "Alright, let's kill all the rapists, the drug abusers, the adulterists, the murderers, the burglars, the liars, the jealous people, and the children who don't obey their parents." For some people it's mental, for others (like my father and my uncle) it's physical. Some people will allow God to change them. Others will harden their hearts and continue to their self-inflicted doom.
Until you understand all sides of the debate, you'll never be able to properly support your own arguments against everybody else's arguments.
As for the mother who lives righteously and is close to God, yet her son chooses to draw away from God.... It's not thought of in Heaven. She'll mourn for him on Earth, but when she gets to Heaven there is no more weeping, hurt, pain, darkness, sickness, shame, etc, but there will be eternal joy and peace and love forever. It's a difficult concept to grasp, really, but that's another conversation. The people who end up in Hell are there because of their own choices and actions.
One thing I'm inferring from your arguments
that I could be wrong about based on the fact that you haven't brought Satan into the equation at all is that you understand that evil doesn't come from Satan, but from the human heart. Satan merely aggravates it, the great Tempter.
I'd say more, but my mom is whisking me away to eat.