this post was submitted on 20 May 2025
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As simple as possible to summarize the best way you can, first, please. Feel free to expand after, or just say whatever you want lol. Honest question.

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[–] Libra@lemmy.ml 7 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I don't believe in the Christian god because there are too many contradictions and I don't think the divine truth is corruptable. Anything so corrupt it doesn't even agree with itself cannot be divine truth.

[–] Manmoth@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 day ago (2 children)
[–] Cethin@lemmy.zip 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

If you're serious, there are so many. Here's one of the first results I found in a search, but you can find so much writing on it if you want to, which if you actually believe you're following the "truth" you should look into.

One of the most common fundamental contradiction arguments is the Judeo-Christian god is defined as omniscient and omnipotent, all knowing and all powerful, as well as benevolent. If this is true, why is there evil in the world? He's omnipotent so must have the power to make a world in which it doesn't exist, and he must be aware of whatever will happen in the world he creates, since he's omniscient, and must not want evil to exist since he's benevolent.

These cannot all be true. If they were then he'd create a world that satisfies his goals that does not have evil, which he must be capable of doing if he's omnipotent. If evil must exist to accomplish his goals then he isn't omnipotent. If he can't detect evil will exist then he isn't omniscient. If he wants evil to exist then he isn't benevolent.

[–] Manmoth@lemmy.ml 0 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I viewed your link and randomly selected 4-5 of the "contradictions" and basic knowledge of the bible and historicity dispelled them. I'm not going to go through all 50. Sorry you get out what you put in lol. But I've heard many of them before and highly recommend the "Whole Counsel of God" podcast which walks through scripture verse by verse and addresses the most common Catholic, Protestant and Post-Modern critiques of scriptural "contradictions" which are typically due to bad theology, poor historicity, translation errors, cultural ignorance etc etc It's also a great way to learn scripture in a deeper way.

If God exist why bad thing happen

This is a meme in Christian apologetic circles because non-Christians always think it's a big own when it is really just a demonstration of a lack of understanding of what Christianity is actually about -- Redemption. The story of how the world enters a fallen state is explained in Genesis. The fact that the world is fallen is critical to Christian theology and the process of sanctification.

God does not play by your rules. The struggles we face on Earth (often of our own creation) are for our salvation. This is what the bible and church tradition teaches.

I have a more expanded response in this thread here for some other points -- https://lemmy.ml/post/30390799/18750134

[–] Cethin@lemmy.zip 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

This is a meme in Christian apologetic circles because non-Christians always think it's a big own when it is really just a demonstration of a lack of understanding of what Christianity is actually about -- Redemption.

It being a meme doesn't mean there isn't a reason for the argument. Redemption from what? Whatever it is, God had control over it happening. Why did it happen? He is trivially capable of creating a universe where there is no need to be redeemed. Why is one where redemption required the one he chose to create? Dismissing something as just being a meme does not actually answer the question.

God does not play by your rules. The struggles we face on Earth (often of our own creation) are for our salvation. This is what the bible and church tradition teaches.

The point is, God knew we would create the struggles. Is he omniscient? He knew it would happen. Is he omnipotent? He could have created a situation where it doesn't happen. Is he benevolent? He wouldn't want it to happen.

Yes, this is what the church teaches. I'm well aware. Does it make sense?

[–] Manmoth@lemmy.ml 0 points 23 hours ago (1 children)

It being a meme doesn’t mean there isn’t a reason for the argument.

I understand. I'm more commenting on how it's usually framed as a gotcha as if Christians have never thought of this before.

Redemption from what? Whatever it is, God had control over it happening. Why did it happen? He is trivially capable of creating a universe where there is no need to be redeemed. Why is one where redemption required the one he chose to create? Dismissing something as just being a meme does not actually answer the question.

The real answer to what is essentially the Epicurean "Problem of Evil" lies in Freedom and Love. God created human beings with genuine freedom, because only freely chosen love is real love. This means that the possibility of rejecting the good (e.g. evil) is not a flaw in creation but a necessary precondition for freedom.

The point is, God knew we would create the struggles. Is he omniscient? He knew it would happen. Is he omnipotent? He could have created a situation where it doesn’t happen. Is he benevolent? He wouldn’t want it to happen.

Yes. He is omniscient, omnipotent, and all-good. But benevolence doesn’t mean preventing every possibility of suffering. In the Orthodox view, God’s goodness is shown not in preventing freedom, but in enduring suffering with us, and transforming it into life and healing. God knew the risk of creation, yet chose to create and then chose to redeem through suffering love. That’s not negligence—that’s the Cross.

Yes, this is what the church teaches. I’m well aware. Does it make sense?

Not in a tidy, rationalistic way—and Orthodoxy is okay with that. There’s a deep apophatic element to the theology: the idea that not everything about God can be explained in human terms. But what does make sense in experience is the way the Church helps us encounter God through prayer, sacraments, and love. Evil isn’t ignored—it’s faced head-on, and transformed in Christ.

[–] Cethin@lemmy.zip 1 points 22 hours ago (1 children)

I understand. I'm more commenting on how it's usually framed as a gotcha as if Christians have never thought of this before.

I think the questioning of it originally comes from Christians, so obviously that isn't the case, nor is it what I'm saying.

The real answer to what is essentially the Epicurean "Problem of Evil" lies in Freedom and Love. God created human beings with genuine freedom, because only freely chosen love is real love. This means that the possibility of rejecting the good (e.g. evil) is not a flaw in creation but a necessary precondition for freedom.

The flaw here is he's all powerful. If you believe the Adam and Eve story (and even if not it makes a good small case argument) he created the garden, created the tree and fruit, created the serpent, knew they'd eat the fruit, knew he'd damn them for it and they'd suffer for it, and chose to do this anyway. He trivially could also have created a world where they chose not to. Even when given the freedom of choice, he knows what choice will be made (since time is not relevant to him) and can set things up to create any outcome.

God knew the risk of creation, yet chose to create and then chose to redeem through suffering love. That’s not negligence—that’s the Cross.

It's not a risk. He knew what would happen. He created something where this specific thing is what would come to be with fill awareness and decided that's what he wanted, if it's true. It's not negligence, it's indifference to suffering. There is no other option for it than that, since he could choose to have made something where it didn't exist. Maybe we can't imagine what that would be, but that's what it means to be omnipotent.

But what does make sense in experience is the way the Church helps us encounter God through prayer, sacraments, and love.

Yeah, that's fine if it helps you. However, every religion has this claim, so it isn't evidence that it's correct. That's fine. Faith is by definition belief without evidence.

[–] Manmoth@lemmy.ml 0 points 21 hours ago (1 children)

The flaw here is he’s all powerful. If you believe the Adam and Eve story (and even if not it makes a good small case argument) he created the garden, created the tree and fruit, created the serpent, knew they’d eat the fruit, knew he’d damn them for it and they’d suffer for it, and chose to do this anyway. He trivially could also have created a world where they chose not to. Even when given the freedom of choice, he knows what choice will be made (since time is not relevant to him) and can set things up to create any outcome.

You're right to point out that God knew what would happen. In Orthodox theology, this is acknowledged—but it's essential to distinguish foreknowledge from predetermination. God's knows the outcome of free choices but doesn't coerce them. His foreknowledge does not violate our freedom.

More importantly, God is not only omnipotent but all-good. And since God is the source of all goodness, the possibility of choosing anything other than God is the possibility of choosing evil—which is, by definition, a lack or distortion of the good. If we are to love God freely, we must be free to reject Him.

Therefore yes, God could have created a world where Adam and Eve never fell—but that would not be a world of genuinely free persons. It would be a world of perfectly programmed beings, and Orthodoxy insists that freedom is essential to personhood. Without it, love isn't possible.

Also, it's important to clarify: Orthodoxy does not teach that God "damned" humanity for the Fall. The consequence of sin is death and corruption, not divine vengeance. God's response was not punishment but a rescue mission—the Incarnation. The “Tree of Life” returns in the Cross.

It’s not a risk. He knew what would happen. He created something where this specific thing is what would come to be with fill awareness and decided that’s what he wanted, if it’s true. It’s not negligence, it’s indifference to suffering. There is no other option for it than that, since he could choose to have made something where it didn’t exist. Maybe we can’t imagine what that would be, but that’s what it means to be omnipotent.

From our human perspective, it may seem this way. But God did not create evil or suffering—He permitted it as the cost of freedom, because only through freedom can there be love, growth, and communion. What matters is not just that suffering exists, but how God responds to it.

And His response is not indifference, but sacrificial love. In Christ, God enters our suffering, takes it upon Himself, and opens a path to life. The Cross is not God watching suffering from a distance—it’s God partaking and being the example for all of man for our sake.

Yeah, that’s fine if it helps you. However, every religion has this claim, so it isn’t evidence that it’s correct. That’s fine. Faith is by definition belief without evidence.

While it may not mean much to you I would be remiss not to defend Orthodoxy here. Faith isn’t blind belief or wishful thinking; it's trust grounded in revelation, history, and experience. The resurrection of Christ, the lives of the saints, the enduring wisdom of the Church—these are not “proofs” in a modern empirical sense, but they are reasons for belief.

Furthermore I don't know what your standards for evidence are but I encourage you to look at arguments like the Transcendental Argument for God. It argues that universals like logic, reason, and math are only justified if God exists. (e.g. X (God) is necessary for Y (logic, math etc). Y therefore X.)

If you deny God’s existence, you must account for the reliability of reason, logic, and abstract universals like mathematics. If these are simply “self-evident,” then you’re assuming the very thing your worldview has no means to justify. Furthermore without a transcendent source of rationality, why assume logic is binding or that it applies universally?

Believing in God is foundation to a worldview that relies on universals the alternative is arbitrarily granting yourself self-evident axioms.

[–] Cethin@lemmy.zip 1 points 20 hours ago

Therefore yes, God could have created a world where Adam and Eve never fell—but that would not be a world of genuinely free persons. It would be a world of perfectly programmed beings, and Orthodoxy insists that freedom is essential to personhood. Without it, love isn't possible.

I think you misunderstand. He could create a world where they freely choose to not fall. It's not predetermination, like you say. It's premeditation. He must have wanted them to fall, because that's what he knew would happen and he set it up so they would choose that. If I set up a tripline that activated a trap then tell someone to go where it'll be tripped, that's something I did, even if they chose to follow it.

He's all powerful, so he must necessarily be able to create a world with free will and free choices, but also one such that we always genuinely choose the right thing. It doesn't require us to be programmed beings. Rather it requires foreknowledge, planning, and capability of the designer, and a desire for this to be the case. It doesn't matter if we can't imagine that world. He's omnipotent. He can create it, but chose not to.

From our human perspective, it may seem this way. But God did not create evil or suffering—He permitted it as the cost of freedom, because only through freedom can there be love, growth, and communion. What matters is not just that suffering exists, but how God responds to it.

Again, he designed it knowing the results, with the ability to create absolutely anything, even things we can't imagine. The problem with the human perspective is we assume this is the way things must be, but with omnipotence it allows literally anything to be possible, including total freedom, but also where every choice made is good. That is necessarily true, if he is omnipotent.

He can create a world where every person gets into heaven, by choice, even if they have the ability to make choices where they wouldn't, since he's omniscient. It's like setting up domino's. You don't program how they fall. You just set things up so they fall as planned, but you're omniscient and omnipotent, so you never make a mistake. All dominos fall perfectly into place exactly as you want, because you know the outcome of everything you place.

While it may not mean much to you I would be remiss not to defend Orthodoxy here. Faith isn’t blind belief or wishful thinking; it's trust grounded in revelation, history, and experience. The resurrection of Christ, the lives of the saints, the enduring wisdom of the Church—these are not “proofs” in a modern empirical sense, but they are reasons for belief.

They're proofs that every religions claims equally, yet (for most) only one can be correct. That's the big issue.

Furthermore I don't know what your standards for evidence are but I encourage you to look at arguments like the Transcendental Argument for God. It argues that universals like logic, reason, and math are only justified if God exists. (e.g. X (God) is necessary for Y (logic, math etc). Y therefore X.)

If you deny God’s existence, you must account for the reliability of reason, logic, and abstract universals like mathematics. If these are simply “self-evident,” then you’re assuming the very thing your worldview has no means to justify. Furthermore without a transcendent source of rationality, why assume logic is binding or that it applies universally?

First, I don't deny any gods existence. We both lack the brief on most gods. I just don't believe in one more than you. I don't claim to have knowledge on any of their existences, except insofar as them not being internally consistent. I'm an agnostic (not knowing) atheist (lack of belief). I don't actively believe anything about any gods.

The reliability of logic and mathematics are as reliable as the axioms they are founded on. No further and no less. There isn't a thing universal about them. They are not a part of reality that we wandered across. They're made up by humans to be useful tools. This seems obvious because both have come into existence in different forms in different places and times. If they were universal they would always appear in the same form.

[–] Libra@lemmy.ml 3 points 1 day ago (2 children)

I see a fair amount of Christian-related posts in your post history so I'm gonna go ahead and suggest that this is probably a conversation you don't want to have. I'm trying not to be an asshole here, but I am very well read on the subject of Christianity, so suffice to say that contradictions exist, they are widely known, and I find Christian apologia on the subject wholly unconvincing.

That said, if I'm really the person you would like to go on this journey of discovery about your religion with then I will take you, but I can't say that you are very likely to enjoy the results.

[–] Inaminate_Carbon_Rod@lemmy.world 1 points 12 hours ago (1 children)

As a Christian I would like you to try to rock my world.

[–] Libra@lemmy.ml 1 points 8 hours ago

You are welcome to read the thread below, I've laid out my issues here, but it looks like we might get a proper conversation going if you want to keep reading.

[–] Manmoth@lemmy.ml 0 points 1 day ago (1 children)

I'm an Orthodox Christian our theology (which is that of the first thousand years) is likely different from anything you take issue with from Catholic or Protestant traditions in regard to soteriology, ecclesiology, sanctification etc

It's great that you have interest in Christianity but Orthodoxy leans on 2000 years of scholarship and tradition. With all due respect you're not going to ask any new questions or bring up any novel points. I don't claim to be an expert but have Orthodox resources I can draw from.

[–] Libra@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Fair point. I am not very familiar with Orthodox Christianity at all, save a little of the very early history. You also sound fairly well-educated on the subject, which makes you twice over not the usual kind of person who responds to my comments about religion.

So, first, let me apologize for making assumptions; the usual kind of person I get is an American evangelical protestant who hasn't read most of his or her own bible and is of the opinion that anything important for them to know would be whispered on the wind directly into their ear by god himself, so they have a pretty dim view of learning in general, but also of learning about their religion in specific. That's clearly not you. My bad.

Second, it's my understanding that Orthodoxy (probably not the right word, my bad) uses fundamentally the same scriptures as Catholicism and Protestantism, with some additions to the Old Testament. My issues come from the bible's descriptions of god, events, and people, so I'm going to assume there's enough common ground that my these translate to Orthodoxy as well as the others. Please correct me if I'm wrong.

I have 3 core issues with Christianity:

  1. Original sin: imposing the consequences of one person's actions on others is called collective punishment and it's a war crime, and needless to say baking a metaphysical war crime into the very heart of a religion - its origin story - is just not ever going to fly with me. It certainly doesn't help that this is further complicated by #2.
  2. Omniscience/free will: either god is omniscient (lit: all knowledge, which includes perfect knowledge about the future) and free will is impossible so we can't choose to love god, or he isn't omniscient. His claims about moral authority are held together by this linchpin, and honestly either way it falls doesn't look great. If we can't choose to love god then punishing us for 'choosing' otherwise is effectively god punishing others for his own crimes since he made us unable to choose otherwise, so we're right back on the war crimes train. If he's not omniscient then he doesn't have a plan, can't judge sin in the hearts of men, etc. Is he even still a god at that point? Also that would make him a liar, which again is not a great foundation upon which to build a claim to moral authority.
  3. Vengeful/loving god: the Old Testament is full of examples of god as an angry, petty, vengeful tyrant, only for him to change his ways or something in the New Testament and be all about love. There are exceptions in both, obviously, so I'm referring to general trends. I think Jesus had some great ideas (best summed up by Bill & Ted as, 'Be excellent to each other'), but the rest reads like infantile revenge-porn. And I'm not buying that 'hate the sin, love the sinner' thing either (that's probably an evangelical thing), because god sure wasn't raining fire and brimstone and calling for the wholesale slaughter of the sins, that was inflicted upon the sinners. And their sin mostly seems to boil down to not believing in god.

These, to me, seem like unsolvable, unavoidable paradoxes. I see two paths when faced with them:

  1. I'm forced to admit that the 'perfect eternal Divine Truth' is neither perfect nor eternal (re:god's nature purportedly changing) and therefore also not true.
  2. What is being passed off as divine truth was either created or corrupted (which doesn't necessarily imply malicious intent; simple error will suffice) by flawed humans and thus is also not true.

I don't begrudge people who believe or find comfort in it, mind you, but it's not for me. I'm searching for Truth, not a search for 'it's probably not true but I guess it's a nice idea?'

[–] Manmoth@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (1 children)

First of all “Orthodoxy” is accepted as a shorthand referent to Orthodox Christianity so no issues there.

Secondly no worries on the assumptions I also anticipate Protestant hand waving when it comes to certain topics such as canonicity.

Now for your core issues…

  1. Original Sin - This is where Orthodoxy is different from everyone else. The Orthodox perspective is that the guilt of Adam and Eve’s sin is theirs alone. The consequence of their sin, death, is inherited however. This factors into the sotieriology (e.g. salvation doctrine) of the Church. The nature of man entered a state of fallenness due to the sin of Adam and Eve. Since God cannot be in the presence of sin Adam and Eve had to be expelled from the garden. This expulsion brought with it struggles such as the pain of childbirth, toil, hunger, sickness etc. This is, however, a mercy because despite entering a fallen state humanity has an opportunity to sanctify itself in this life and rejoin with God in death. This is a unique feature to humanity. Heavenly beings are in a static state. It is why Satan is jealous of humanity because the state of his soul cannot be changed and he will be eternally damned. The human soul can no longer change its spiritual state when this life ends. Human beings for all the struggles they have on earth can persevere in their faith and enter the Kingdom when they repose.
  2. Omniscience/Free Will - This is a false dichotomy and is highly dependent on what you mean by free will. Just because God knows all things doesn’t mean he orchestrates all things (e.g. foreknowledge ≠ predestination). God is incomprehensible and operates outside of time. This is part of what makes God a transcendent all powerful being. Furthermore because the Orthodox don’t believe in Original Sin the theological allowance for how man moves and works in the world is different. Man can live in the world and freely choose between Good and Evil. Salvation is achieved through a process of working together with the Holy Spirit in all aspects of life. This process is called Theosis.

Orthodoxy doesn’t conceive of God’s knowledge as something that competes with human will. Because God is not bound by time, His knowledge isn’t predictive—it’s participatory. We remain free precisely because God allows our freedom to unfold within His omniscient love. This is the mystery of synergy with the Holy Spirit.

What we perceive as logical already presupposes the existence of God, because logic itself depends on the existence of objective truth. If God is bound by created laws, He ceases to be God; He is the source of all order, not subject to it.

  1. Vengeful/loving god - This is primarily a postmodern critique of scripture by people like Richard Dawkins although ancient Marcionites and Gnostics love this critique as well. The Orthodox wholly reject this critique as a shallow reading of scripture that does not take into account the context of passages in and of themselves or scripture in its entirety. While God does render punishment in the Old Testament he is also endlessly loving despite being heartbroken by the wayward sins of his people who repeatedly abandon him for other Gods that can’t save them. There is love and wrath in both the OT and the NT. (e.g. OT - Jonah, God saving Nineveh when they repent; NT - Jesus over-turning tables of Money Changers) This is more of a squishy critique than the other two so I’m not sure what else to add.

Two paths forward…

I’m forced to admit that the ‘perfect eternal Divine Truth’ is neither perfect nor eternal (re:god’s nature purportedly changing) and therefore also not true.

The revelation of God is one that compounds on the past. Creation, Expulsion, Punishment, Enrichment, Liberation, Exile etc until you reach God incarnate in the form of Jesus Christ who uses the history of human failures to illustrate the grace of God and the establishment of a new covenant that saves all people. This is a logical progression.

What is being passed off as divine truth was either created or corrupted (which doesn’t necessarily imply malicious intent; simple error will suffice) by flawed humans and thus is also not true.

I haven’t seen a compelling case that divine truth has been fundamentally corrupted. It seems more a result of your sentiment than a critical analysis.

I recognize you may disagree with the points I adequately communicated or have questions about ones I failed to describe well. I am a fallible human after all 😂. You may find that many of the contradictions you’re grappling with don’t exist in Orthodox thought in the same way they might in some Western traditions. I’d encourage looking into Orthodox apologia for a perspective not burdened by the theological inheritances of later Western heresies like penal substitution or strict determinism..

An aside about "war crimes" -- I will not expound on this too much because it's a whole separate topic but be wary of using a modern lens when assessing the ancient. You're smuggling in a moral framework to critique a metaphysical one. It's easy to forget that secular ethical ideas such as "war crimes" typically find their origin in Christian morality to begin with (at least in the West). What is the epistemic justification for Good and Bad in a world where everything is relative? Philosophically it is an arbitrary critique without grounding.

[–] Libra@lemmy.ml 1 points 15 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago) (1 children)

Re:Orthodoxy - fair enough.

Original Sin

The Orthodox perspective is that the guilt of Adam and Eve’s sin is theirs alone. The consequence of their sin, death, is inherited however.

Ok, that's an interesting take. If man is not guilty of the sin of Adam then why does he bear the consequences of the act? Why punish someone for something you don't believe they did?

Since God cannot be in the presence of sin Adam and Eve had to be expelled from the garden.

Yeah but then he followed them around? Adam praises god on the birth of his sons, they give offerings to god and even talk to him, etc. And if Adam's sin is transmitted to all mankind then Cain and Abel were sinful too, so it kinda seems like god didn't have a problem being in the presence of sin?

This is, however, a mercy because despite entering a fallen state humanity has an opportunity to sanctify itself in this life

This doesn't fly with me, because god created Adam and Eve as they were and they (assuming omniscience) couldn't choose to do otherwise. So not only is god punishing them for a sin of his own making, he's punishing everyone else despite, in the Orthodox version, them not being guilty of that sin. And then to call pain and suffering a mercy because it gives us the 'opportunity' to 'earn' back what you took? Nah, I'll take a hard pass on that one. Sin but not guilt is kind of worse actually. It's like telling your kid, 'I know your brother was the one who took the cookie, but I'm going to spank you for it too.' See also: pettiness and tyranny.

Heavenly beings are in a static state ... the state of [Satan's] soul cannot be changed

If it was static, how did it change from 'angelic' to 'damned' or whatever after his act of rebellion? Was it the act itself that somehow changed the unchangeable, or did god decide to rewrite reality just this once? If that's the case, rewriting someone's soul just so you can eternally punish them for one mistake is kind of a dick move.

Free Will

This is a false dichotomy and is highly dependent on what you mean by free will.

I don't think so, though I concede that there might be definitions of free will that render it thus, I'm using the pretty common definition of having the ability to make choices.

Just because God knows all things doesn’t mean he orchestrates all things ... foreknowledge ≠ predestination

I whole-heartedly disagree, foreknowledge precisely equals predestination. He doesn't have to orchestrate things; merely knowing ahead of time that I will turn left instead of right at the next intersection means that it is definitionally impossible for me to turn right. If I was able to turn right anyway that would definitionally preclude foreknowledge: you can't know that I turned left if I turned right.

God is incomprehensible and operates outside of time.

Even if I grant this for the sake of argument, humans do not operate outside of time so foreknowledge of human futures, again definitionally, must necessarily be knowledge about the future of the time that humans operate in. But even if that wasn't true, if god exists outside of time then he also definitionally exists outside of causality and cannot influence or be influenced by human choices within time, which precludes foreknowledge of human futures.

Furthermore because the Orthodox don’t believe in Original Sin the theological allowance for how man moves and works in the world is different. Man can live in the world and freely choose between Good and Evil. Salvation is achieved through a process of working together with the Holy Spirit in all aspects of life. This process is called Theosis.

Ok, I'll take your word for it, but according to the most widely-accepted definitions if man is free to choose then god cannot have forenkowledge of those choices.

Because God is not bound by time, His knowledge isn’t predictive—it’s participatory. ... We remain free precisely because God allows our freedom to unfold within His omniscient love.

If he's not outside of causality (as implied by the participatory element here) then he's not outside of time, because those two things mean effectively the same thing. You say he allows it out of love, I say he allows it out of lack of foreknowledge, because that's the only thing that is logically consistent.

What we perceive as logical already presupposes the existence of God, because logic itself depends on the existence of objective truth.

Logic doesn't presuppose god, it merely presupposes consistency. Objective truth can arise from the structure of reality itself without requiring a divine source. We have mountains of evidence that logic is internally self-consistent; that's not the case for pretty much any holy book I've read.

Vengeful/loving God

This is primarily a postmodern critique of scripture by people like Richard Dawkins

That doesn't render it invalid. Also: primarily, but not uniquely as you point out; I was personally puzzling over this stuff back in the 80s before anyone but the editors of a few science journals had ever heard of Richard Dawkins.

The Orthodox wholly reject this critique as a shallow reading of scripture that does not take into account the context of passages in and of themselves or scripture in its entirety.

I don't dispute that he is also loving, I dispute that he is exclusively loving as of the New Testament. He just goes on and on about how vengeful and angry he is in the OT, and there's some of that in the NT too, though I think it's all said by others since (IIRC, it's been a while) god doesn't really have a speaking part in much of the NT. Also I don't think you get to send your PR team out to call you a 'loving god' after slaughtering innocents and children (and advocating the same) over and over again.

NT - Jesus over-turning tables of Money Changers

I wouldn't count that as wrath, and I also wouldn't attribute it to god. We know he's capable of turning those tables over himself if he wanted to, but he didn't. :P

This is more of a squishy critique than the other two

That's fair, it's definitely more of a vibe-check thing, I'm not sure there's much space to discuss there.

(cont, TIL lemmy doesn't have that high of a maximum post length.)

[–] Libra@lemmy.ml 1 points 15 hours ago

Two Paths

The revelation of God is one that compounds on the past. Creation, Expulsion, Punishment, Enrichment, Liberation, Exile etc until you reach God incarnate in the form of Jesus Christ who uses the history of human failures to illustrate the grace of God and the establishment of a new covenant that saves all people. This is a logical progression.

Which is kind of my point. A logical progression of revelation implies change over time in god's plan, actions, or relationship with humanity. But a truly perfect, eternal, unchanging truth wouldn't require progression or revision. If the Divine Truth was perfect and eternal and true, why did it need changing? Evangelicals talk about the 'new covenant' all the time, but humanity isn't any different now than it was then, why did we need a new one? Seems like either god changed or the truth wasn't eternal.

I haven’t seen a compelling case that divine truth has been fundamentally corrupted.

Corrupted might not be the right word, but we have examples of, say, King James commissioning his own bible to support the divine right of kings. But aside from that, human fallibility plays a part in the transmission of this truth, and anyone who has played a game of telephone in grade school can tell you how that tends to go: you line up the whole class, whisper something into the first kid's ear, they whisper into the next, and what started out as 'Billy can't come to school today because he's sick' comes out the other end as 'little Billy died' or whatever. Even if you assume each person in the chain intends to transmit it faithfully people make mistakes, there are disputes over word choice and changes to meaning over time in translation, there are newly-discovered ancient texts that cast new light on the ones we had, etc. I don't know about fundamentally corrupted, but if the perfect eternal truth is all of those things then something else has to account for the paradoxes, and if we're assuming the literal existence of god then that leaves only human fallibility.

I recognize you may disagree with the points I adequately communicated or have questions about ones I failed to describe well. I am a fallible human after all 😂.

Me too man, I'm just here to have an engaging conversation and learn a little something. All we can do is do our best to own mistakes and not be shy about admitting fault.

You may find that many of the contradictions you’re grappling with don’t exist in Orthodox thought in the same way they might in some Western traditions. I’d encourage looking into Orthodox apologia for a perspective not burdened by the theological inheritances of later Western heresies like penal substitution or strict determinism...

That doesn't surprise me. What little I know of the early history of Orthodoxy is that there was an early, pretty severe schism over some fundamental stuff that sent the two churches in very different directions. I am curious to know more, though, so I hope you stay and keep the discussion going. I admit that (probably because the way I fell out of Christianity and then into a long but fortunately-ended period of atheism) that Orthodoxy was never really on my radar in my religious studies. But I am a more curious person than I once was with considerably more free time, so I'll do some poking about and see what I can find. ;)

An aside about “war crimes” ... be wary of using a modern lens when assessing the ancient.

That's entirely fair. I don't think I was intentionally doing it but there may have been some subconscious stuff going on there. My intent, and perhaps I should've chosen a better tool, was to use the terminology of modern ethics to convey the weight of my distaste for the idea of punishing one person for another's crime in any context.

What is the epistemic justification for Good and Bad in a world where everything is relative? Philosophically it is an arbitrary critique without grounding.

I don't think everything is relative, nor do I think god is the only source of morality. Even without modern utilitarian concepts like least-harm, it's pretty clear that ancient human cultures had a concept of justice that depended on the simple and self-evident truth that causing intentional harm to others is bad. It may have been applied unevenly and inconsistently, but. And hell, even a toddler with barely a grasp on language, much less culture or philosophy, can tell the difference between getting bitten by the kid you bit and getting bitten by some kid because she thought you bit her. They're unhappy at being bitten in either case, but - and I've seen this in my nieces and nephews - they get downright angry when they feel that sting of injustice, even if they can't describe it.