Theocrat
Member
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2007
- Messages
- 9,550
Rebuking Ridicule
I'm still surprised that "atheists" think they have the moral audacity and philosophical justification to judge any action in the Bible as immoral, given the fact that they have no objective basis to judge anything as moral. Why should Christians accept your moral compass as the ultimate standard for morality? What puts your moral authority above that of the inerrant, infallible, and inspired word of God?
"Atheism" teaches that there is no objective morality, nor is morality made of molecules in nature. So I don't even understand how they make moral judgments and expect those judgments to be taken seriously in terms of their own worldview. You say the Bible is immoral for God telling His people to wipe out an entire nation, but so what? Who cares what you think about that? You are not the final authority to judge God (not to mention you fail to give those passages any serious theological exegesis to explain themselves). Period.
In order to judge between good and evil, you need an absolute standard to differentiate good from evil. That necessitates a moral law, but you can't have a moral law without a moral Lawgiver. You deny that such a moral Lawgiver (God) exists, so you can't have a moral law. If there is no moral law, you can't differentiate between good and evil. So what is your complaint?
And I am not surprised, but still disappointed, that someone should bring up Christian-bashing in a thread that asserts that without God one cannot be moral and would be prone to killing others, when others are only logically disputing the immorality of the very book and diety that is supposed to provide us that moral compass to not commit murder.
I'm still surprised that "atheists" think they have the moral audacity and philosophical justification to judge any action in the Bible as immoral, given the fact that they have no objective basis to judge anything as moral. Why should Christians accept your moral compass as the ultimate standard for morality? What puts your moral authority above that of the inerrant, infallible, and inspired word of God?
"Atheism" teaches that there is no objective morality, nor is morality made of molecules in nature. So I don't even understand how they make moral judgments and expect those judgments to be taken seriously in terms of their own worldview. You say the Bible is immoral for God telling His people to wipe out an entire nation, but so what? Who cares what you think about that? You are not the final authority to judge God (not to mention you fail to give those passages any serious theological exegesis to explain themselves). Period.
In order to judge between good and evil, you need an absolute standard to differentiate good from evil. That necessitates a moral law, but you can't have a moral law without a moral Lawgiver. You deny that such a moral Lawgiver (God) exists, so you can't have a moral law. If there is no moral law, you can't differentiate between good and evil. So what is your complaint?