I think it was from a work by C.S. Lewis that I remember an attempt was made against this problem. If memory serves, it's argued that prayer isn't futile, because even though God has already accounted for what will happen, you choose whether or not — you know what, never mind. It's harder to put up with formulating a response when you're not someone who already buys the theological framework it's supposed to defend, and therefore that such a person would more than willingly accept despite how bad it is, as long as "it at least resembles a band-aid to an injury, the injury being to the theological framework that's been built up", to quote from an IM conversation I had with a friend.Pray for anything. But! What about the Divine Plan? Remember that? The Divine Plan. Long time ago, God created a Divine Plan. Gave it a lot of thought, decided it was a good plan, put it into practice. And for billions and billions of years the Divine Plan has been doing just fine. Now you come along and pray for something. Well suppose the thing you want isn't in God's Divine Plan. What do you want Him to do, change His plan? Just for you? Doesn't it seem a little arrogant? It's a Divine Plan! What's the use of being God if every run-down shmuck with a two-dollar prayer book can come along and fuck up your plan? And here's something else, another problem you might have: suppose your prayers aren't answered. What do you say? 'Well it's God's will. Thy will be done.' Fine. But if it's God's will and He's going to do what he wants to anyway, why the fuck bother praying in the first place? Seems like a big waste of time to me. Couldn't you just skip the praying part and go right to His will?
Anyways, here are the thoughts I typed earlier tonight:
Where am I wrong here? What did I miss? What are your guys' thoughts on this Divine Plan subject? I've searched relevant subjects, but seeking better results, I was motivated to submit this thread.It was 19 May 2008. I was reading James' The Varieties of Religious Experience, when, on page 160, I saw quoted from Professor Starbuck's manuscript collection the following from a case of a woman who had undergone a "counter-conversion", or change from religious orthodoxy to infidel: "... I heard the story of a brute who had kicked his wife downstairs, and then continued the operation until she became insensible." Then it hit me: I'm expected to believe not only that God allowed cases like that because of "respect" of "free will", but that God must not be held answerable because those incidents are part of His perfect plan, as perfect a plan as can possibly be formulated by an omnipotent, omniscient deity who is not only loving, but is "love". When he created Man, he foresaw all things, including these cases that repulse us all, and the sole force of which has and continues to even turn some of us away from Christianity and religion in general. It has already come to pass in His mind before it has come to pass. Whatever this plan is, it must be one hell of a plan. Too bad none of its advocates will have to answer for it, much like President Bush will get to step to the side before we see if a perfect illustration of a lost cause will turn into a victory.
It strikes me as a weak theistic concept, a dodge to the undodgeable. What is the plan? Do we even want it? Why is suffering necessary for it? Are there really no superior means to realizing it? Oh, no, there's no other way to work in the awesome food dishes God has in mind, right? And why should we automatically be subject to his plans, or subject to his authority at all? God shouldn't even need us to be of service to Him. We're just supposed to have faith, that God knows the answers. No, thank you.
A fundamentalist Christian troll at my forum thinks of me and fellow heretic members as people who think they're the center of the universe and have excessive pride, like Christian apologists of popular Christian apologist books. I don't know about that. I'm not the one who has all the complex but terribly broken set of constructs set up that I more than willingly adhere to anyway to explain away the intellectual and emotional troubles some people have with some of the assertions of my beliefs just so I can feel relieved about my own. You think I like being in the religious minority? That I think it's cool? I'd like nothing more than to accept what the majority do so I can fit in, but I can't because I'd be lying to myself about what I think about the actual arguments.