Should we declare gods public enemy # 1.? Do you understand why we call immoral gods, “Gods”?
Not all gods are immoral but our mainstream ones are definitely that.
God’s law, should he/she/it ever show up, --- is supposed to become earth’s law, imposed by force, --- as need be, --- and the religious way, --- instead of sound moral arguments.
God is demonstrably not moral.
One of the more important commandments to us is that of not killing humans. God kills humans.
I assume that that law would be high on our commandment list; commands to a slave from a master. Yet God exempts himself from that good law and does this evil will and kills humans.
That commandment is a subjective position and as I can think of a few instances where killing a human would be the moral thing to do. That commandment is thus immoral.
I do not think it’s a good idea to give an obviously and demonstrably immoral Gods respect but many theists do.
The power to make human laws should never be given to our immoral gods. Especially Yahweh and Allah, who I think are the bottom of the barrel on morals.
Human law seeks to be moral and humane and should never be putrefied by the immoral Gods that mankind has create in our image.
To do so would be insane.
So tell me please, --- fellow religionist and believers, --- something I do not understand.
Why you and I call our gods, “God”, --- when he is such an immoral character, --- fictional or not?
Are we such immoral entities ourselves? I am immoral. Are you?
Regards
DL
P.S. When you reply, I might have to do this to those who will not answer from the heart and try to use their holy book of myths and turn to preaching.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3O1_3zBUKM8
Remember also my fellow religionists and believers, all clergy of all faiths are liars. God himself told me this when he told me to think more demographically.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vjRy29R4gP8
The stereotypical serpent flits tongue not so forked as he had hoped.
I sympathize with your need for reassurance. That being said, in this issue of
Pacifiers For Atheists an genuine attempt will be made to pick yours up off the floor for you and place it snuggly back on the high chair tray. Disclaimer: if you throw it back down there again, on the floor is where it shall remain, for your own good.
God
is beyond morality and yet, God
is morality embodied; an all encompassing
"Over-Spirit". God is also a hierarchy of Spirit and Flesh and Matter. We mortal transients in this physical, living world were created in the physical
and spiritual image of God as temporary living beings who first embodied a part of the living God ignorant of right and wrong; good and evil. That ignorance was shattered rather quickly not long after our creation. From that point forward to the present, we have existed generation after generation "in the know" so to speak, of the difference between primal/fundamental right and wrong; good and evil.
With the awareness of right and wrong came the indelible, inherent, indwelling spirit of
free will. With the God given internal scales of free will we mortal humans can embody either good or evil through our choice of actions. However, there was and
is a catch. Acting on our free will results in
consequence for whatever behavior we choose. Action; reaction. Cause; effect. You could go out among your fellow mortal humans this moment, harm thousands of them and
justify away the practice of your free will in this manner however you chose.
But there would be consequences; you, as a mortal
created living being would pay one hell of steep price.
Perhaps, so would your next several generations pay a price for your actions as well.
God is an
"Un-Created" being--the
first embodiment of actionable sentience. Like it or not (you can't do a damn thing about it either way), God is our first and ultimate Father and authority figure. What tendency is first among early childhood behaviors? Questioning our father's ability to do things he commands us not to do. But why can our fathers do things they tell us not to do? Because when we are young children our fathers
have more wisdom and understanding about the workings of the physical world. God being the first, most authoritative Father imaginable knows better--has more wisdom of our world, the entire universe; of the physical
and spiritual layers of both. His knowledge and wisdom is infinite; ours--even at the height of our nuclear/information Age, is pathetically finite. Perhaps if our race lives and experiences the physical and spiritual worlds for another few billion generations our collective species knowledge will equate to a drop or two in the oceans of God's wisdom.
So how, as children, do we often justify to ourselves and to others our bad behaviors? We justify lighting up that cigarette because dad smokes, right? We cross the street without looking both ways because that's how dad crosses it. But do we really know better than our fathers? What about biological or adoptive mortal father's who abuse us? I would argue that such pathetic excuses for earthly fathers still retain greater wisdom than ourselves--their children--as there is great wisdom in the genetic material handed down to us at conception. That wisdom includes a small part of the Logos present since our species creation, and it also includes tens of thousands of years of instinct. There's just no way any single individual one of us can "know better" than that primordial aspect of what is handed down to us from our biological fathers. You dig?
Much like our biological fathers "knowing better" than we do as children and adults, God, as ultimate father and authority figure, and in the context of our race as His children, cannot hope to ever know better or possess more wisdom. Not wanting to admit to or recognize the existence of an ultimate authority figure in our lives is understandable, and yet we do so every day as sons and daughters who obey and love our parents to some degree (honor they mother and father), and as law abiding citizens of our respective societies and communities.
True obedience to authority, however, originates within ourselves. Yes, we have free will and yes some societies allow us more personal freedom than others. However, without the foundation balance of personal responsibility (or self-editing our own behaviors), free will can only lead to consequences for bad actions which will eventually swallow our lives whole. At the very top of the hierarchy of personal responsibility
is God. But there are many, many layers of it in between us here living on the terra firma of the mundane and the Father both within us and without of us and in all things around us.
Morality begins with us and ends with God.
And lastly: God, as the ultimate Father and authority figure stands outside out mortal philosophies or understanding of moral and amoral, right and wrong, good and evil acts, because His choices to do whatever act are for reasons we cannot comprehend
but can certainly guess at as theologians have been doing for millennia. The acts of men cannot be blamed on God, only on the exercising of other men's free will for the benefit or harm of the rest of the world. God has given us free will. The consequences for how we use it are on us. However, as ultimate Father, can we not strive to understand how He would from time to time discipline us--His children--and intervene on our behalf, for own good whether we like it or not, understand his reasoning or not?
End of the day, accusations against God are like arrows flung into the abyssal darkness of the unfathomable. Trying to "hurt" God's feelings is akin to pummeling the ocean's surface with your fists. On the other hand, attempts to sever another person's faith from God are just as futile; once a man or woman has accepted God from without to that part of God inherent within, and has begun on the lifelong path to eternal salvation, whether or not he or she stops believing matters not. Leaving God then is forever a choice out of their hands; forever in the hands of the Eternal.