Christianity makes sense to me.

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Metatwaddle
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Post by Metatwaddle »

Turin wrote:
Kanastrous wrote:So, don't look for 'coherence' or 'reality;' look to history and anthropology to see where the idea originated. Trying to tack on a rational explanation afterwards seems like the worst kind of religious apologetics.
Knowing Discombobulated, I'm thinking it's just a thought experiment, not an actual attempt at apologetics.
Yeah, it was. :) Unfortunately, it seems to have backfired. I'll attempt to clean up after myself, because it has garnered quite a few critical responses.
You might be approaching it from the wrong angle.

The whole 'Father sends son (himself) to Earth to die for humanity's sins' is rooted in the concept of the scapegoat; the old Leviticus gag where the High Priest would ceremonially transfer the burden of the people's guilt to an animal which was then driven out of the community to symbolize the removal of that guilt (or to 'really' remove it, depending upon the degree of your belief in the idea).

For a new religion growing out of Judaism and looking to attract followers, the scapegoat concept was already widely familiar and therefore a useful recruiting tool.

So, don't look for 'coherence' or 'reality;' look to history and anthropology to see where the idea originated. Trying to tack on a rational explanation afterwards seems like the worst kind of religious apologetics.
As I said to Turin, it wasn't an actual attempt at apologetics or even an attempt to find the origin of an idea; it was more of a thought experiment. If you like you can think of it as a RAR! with "What if the Christian God weren't omnipotent?" and then giving him the benefit of the doubt. Even then, I'm not sure if it works. I don't particularly care if Paul or any of the gospel writers had this idea before; in fact I'm fairly sure they didn't, because if they had they'd realize it doesn't work particularly well and stop writing.

But you make an interesting point. I had forgotten about the scapegoat ritual. I'd guess that when Paul came up with his theology of Jesus suffering so that humans don't have to, he had that sort of thing in mind. According to my Googling, the Greeks used to practice a similar ritual, so the idea must have already been ingrained in the cultural consciousness. (If it were just a Jewish Levitical ritual, it wouldn't have helped Christianity spread outside Israel.) If you proposed the idea to someone who'd never heard of Christianity or the scapegoat, they'd probably be completely baffled by the idea.
What unredeemed sins? It's not as if humanity today is somehow less "sinful" (according to Biblical standards) than they were thousands of years ago. The only way this works at all is if Jesus was some type of sacrifice that he was supposed to use in place of sending down another Flood or something. He couldn't exterminate humanity again so he sent in a substitute. Still pretty silly either way.
According to a lot of people, we're actually more sinful today than we were then. Because of the gays and the secular humanists, doncha know. :) Anyway, your suggestion is the sort of thing I had in mind, except I was thinking more along the lines of sending everyone to hell (which is obviously overkill to anyone with a brain, but whatever). It doesn't matter who suffers, as long as someone does.
The problem with that line of thinking is that it suggests there is something higher than God, who is supposed to be the final authority in everything. Not exactly consistent.
Not with normal Christian theology, no. I was trying on the possibility of God not being the ultimate authority and not being all-powerful: someone who can't just wave his hand and absolve sins and let people into heaven, because he has to conform to a higher, harsher ideal of justice. But as I said earlier, I don't think even that allows for a justification of God sending himself/his son to die, because no legitimate conception of justice could consider it just for an innocent person to suffer and guilty people to be absolved.
Most justice systems also use human standards. Some all powerful being like God is anything but human, so what he considers "justice" would be radically different from what humans consider it. So we have no real way of knowing whether or not people are actually getting what they deserve even with the retarded laws he's passed down due to the sheer amount of inconsistencies and alien thinking behind them.
I think even a very powerful being would agree that if you're trying to achieve justice, following the law and being moral (however morality is defined) should be rewarded with joy and pleasure, and breaking the law and being immoral should be punished with unpleasantness. That's a pretty basic conception of justice. (Also, a perfectly benevolent being should also be guided by the principle that if you can increase happiness and decrease suffering at no expense to anyone at all, then you should do it. But if the Biblical God is perfectly benevolent, then I'm the Easter bunny.)
I think the larger point you've missed there is that "by canon," the law itself is defined by God. So the idea that God answers to a higher authority is moot. But you knew that.
Yeah, I suppose that's another reason why the idea breaks down. I had been vaguely entertaining the possibility that there could be another higher authority and arbiter of justice, but that doesn't work either. Even though the Bible doesn't necessarily paint God as all-powerful, it doesn't allow for a higher authority than God. After all, every conception of justice requires laws, and as long as we stay within the context of Christianity, the laws we're working with are the Ten Commandments, which have to have been made by God, because the laws are all about him. If they were made by whoever runs the justice system (I picture the justice-system people as the Auditors from Discworld for some reason), those people probably wouldn't give two shits whether God was included, and they certainly wouldn't put him in the very first commandment.

Which is a long-winded way of saying you're right. In fact, I'm very glad you pointed it out, because I've been trying to have an argument like this one with another atheist, who basically said, "Well, God can't beat iron chariots, so maybe he can't absolve sins by waving his hand. Is he still an asshole for sending himself/his son to die, and for setting up Christianity as we know it?" My last two posts were based on that proposition.

Now I have at least two separate ways to rebut him. :D
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Post by SirNitram »

CaptJodan wrote:I don't really swallow the whole "Jesus suffering in place of us" thing anyway. What suffering?
Suffering is a later add-on in an attempt to justify what it was in originality: The biggest sacrifice of all time. Ritually offering up plants is nice. Flaying a chicken? Okay, you can know the future. Oxen? Hey, your fields will come up nice! 50,000 of your slain foes? Righteous, dudes, you can have a great time.

A deity-incarnate? Okay. Everyone gets a clean slate.

It was blood sacrifice. Just the biggest one eva.
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Post by wautd »

Zuul wrote:Omniscient god makes humanity knowing precisely what will happen, then gets angry when it does and curses all of humanity for 4000 years when suddenly the great unchanging god changes its mind and becomes its own son to die to change a rule it made. Oh, but he didn't die, he's alive again, so any asserted "sacrifice" is pretty minimal. It's like if you sacrificed your car for the environment and then buy a new car that's the same. And he'll be back any day now. Time flies on 2000 years and now we can still hate gays for no reason! Whee!
Brilliant :lol:
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Post by Zixinus »

Or do girls just not exist on the internet?
Girls? Certainly. People that lie in order to gain some sort of weird superiority in a situation where they cannot argue properly so they resort to "I am a crippled person you should have sympathy for" idea? Certainly.

I certainly do not find it impossible that she is who she says to be.
...The person telling you she's female isn't sufficient reason to believe otherwise?
Why does everybody believe that I don't believe that she is a she? I have no problem with the idea that girls/women use computers and the internet.

The "mother of children" is what I hold some scepticism about, but again, I do not find it impossible that she is telling the truth. I have seen people lie about themselves in order to induce respect in their opponent and undermine their will to argue by emotional appeal.
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Metatwaddle
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Post by Metatwaddle »

Zixinus wrote:
...The person telling you she's female isn't sufficient reason to believe otherwise?
Why does everybody believe that I don't believe that she is a she? I have no problem with the idea that girls/women use computers and the internet.

The "mother of children" is what I hold some scepticism about, but again, I do not find it impossible that she is telling the truth. I have seen people lie about themselves in order to induce respect in their opponent and undermine their will to argue by emotional appeal.
Actually, I was talking to Zod when I said that. Anyway, you probably know that nobody on SDN would respect a mother who can't debate any more than we'd respect anyone else who can't debate. Whether or not Basic Model has lurked enough to know that is a different matter, but she obviously has lurked enough to know that we can be tetchy about people who jump up and go "I LOVE JESUS, DO YOU?".

Oh, and one other thing:
Girls? Certainly. People that lie in order to gain some sort of weird superiority in a situation where they cannot argue properly so they resort to "I am a crippled person you should have sympathy for" idea? Certainly.
Since I don't feel like venting my spleen at someone right now, I am going to assume that your intent was not to equate being female, or being a mother, with being crippled. If I'm incorrect, please let me know.
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Post by Zixinus »

Since I don't feel like venting my spleen at someone right now, I am going to assume that your intent was not to equate being female, or being a mother, with being crippled. If I'm incorrect, please let me know.
That's a strange conclusion. No, that is not what I meant.
I merely used "cripple" as a example where people want to induce sympathy and/or respect towards themselves.
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