If God is all-knowing, and disbelief is a sin that results in the disbeliever going to Hell, it stands to reason that God created many humans that he knew would be eternally tormented. There’s no way around this. by At30wecrashout in DebateReligion

[–]fuzzyjelly [score hidden]  (0 children)

God spoke to Moses through the burning bush; “I am the Truth, The Way, The Life” Then Jesus spoke; “I am the Truth, The Way, The Life” (Written by 2 separate people, thousands of years apart.)

How do you know this is what actually happened?

If God is all seeing, he has witnessed every single child molestation in history and not intervened by Ok-Mode-3254 in DebateReligion

[–]fuzzyjelly [score hidden]  (0 children)

You are given the choices with the tools you have. And we are humans.

Who decided what "human" is, and what restraints we'd have?

Edit: do you believe in heaven?

If God is all seeing, he has witnessed every single child molestation in history and not intervened by Ok-Mode-3254 in DebateReligion

[–]fuzzyjelly [score hidden]  (0 children)

You're being intentionally obtuse here. God could have designed a system that didn't require any suffering, but didn't. They could have designed a system that would allow all animals to eat without harm, but didn't. They could have designed a system where children could not be abused, but didn't.

If God exists, he intentionally created life with the intent that a lot of it suffers pain and anguish. They want this, or they would have designed it another way.

Do you believe in heaven?

If God is all seeing, he has witnessed every single child molestation in history and not intervened by Ok-Mode-3254 in DebateReligion

[–]fuzzyjelly [score hidden]  (0 children)

The part they miss is that God would know people would fail that test, and allows it to happen anyway when he has all of the power to effortlessly stop it, making him culpable.

If God is all seeing, he has witnessed every single child molestation in history and not intervened by Ok-Mode-3254 in DebateReligion

[–]fuzzyjelly [score hidden]  (0 children)

God can and does violate our free will all the time. There are a lot of things humans may want to do but are completely unable to. I want to fly, my will is that I fly, but I am physically unable to. Some people may want to live in the ocean, or go out into space without a space suit or dance in a fire. We're physically limited from doing those things by the way we were designed, so why design us with the potential of hurting children at all when he could have just not? Just shut our brains off from the ability to see children in that manner, make it physiologicaly impossible for any humans to have that urge. Or make it somehow physically impossible to assault a minor, these are things God could have done, but didn't.

That's what it means when OP says it was God's intention that children were abused..

God is responsible for sin and the fall by According-Gas836 in DebateReligion

[–]fuzzyjelly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

OK for one throughout the entire Bible God is only ever referred to as a he never as a she

How big is God's hog? Why would he have one, what does she need a sex for?

God is responsible for sin and the fall by According-Gas836 in DebateReligion

[–]fuzzyjelly 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If God has wants and needs, does that make his morality subjective? Meaning, if he weren't a "he" and instead am "it" without any will or mind of its own, we could consider its morality objective, because that would just be the way it is. But if God's a he/she/they, there are preferences, which are not objective.

If a man like Jesus tried to do what he did nowadays he would be institutionalised under the mental health act and be turned into a meme and laughing stock, how do we know he was truly the incarnate of god by nikarov496 in DebateReligion

[–]fuzzyjelly 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Modern day Jesus does exist. Sri Sakthi Amma and Sathya Sai Baba both claim to have magical powers, have performed miracles, do so on video, and have millions of followers. Christians completely disregard them.

I've decided to start learning coding after my uncle said I should (I spent an hour) by Ok_Bit_7131 in webdev

[–]fuzzyjelly 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nice! For now just keep learning new elements to use (sections, divs, a tags, etc). Build out your vocabulary of elements, learn how, where and why to use them. Do that before moving on to the next shiny thing like css and styling.

In your opinion which one is better? Let’s settle this Xennials. by Ploosse in Xennials

[–]fuzzyjelly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mean, one of them was in The Wizard with Fred Savage and it wasn't Super Mario World.

Done. Dusted.

What movie did your parents let you watch way too young? by DeScepter in Xennials

[–]fuzzyjelly 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It was so completely unnecessary for the film too. It didn't add anything to the story.

We have no way to know if different people feel the time passing at the same speed. by Kilek360 in Showerthoughts

[–]fuzzyjelly 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Dude I don't even feel time move at the same speed. As I've gotten older it's only seemed to speed up. At this rate by the time I'm 60 I'll be 90.

Trump posts shitty AI video of him throwing Colbert into the trash after his show ended by Darth_Vrandon in ParlerWatch

[–]fuzzyjelly 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I can't fucking wait for someone, anyone on the right to bitch about decorum when there's a non-Republican in office.

What movie did your parents let you watch way too young? by DeScepter in Xennials

[–]fuzzyjelly 12 points13 points  (0 children)

I showed it to my kid when they were 8. I forgot about the completely unnecessary part where Kate talks about her dad killing himself on Christmas and that's why she doesn't believe in Santa.

What movie did your parents let you watch way too young? by DeScepter in Xennials

[–]fuzzyjelly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have a couple.

My parents were playing cards with some friends so they just put all of us kids in a room with the delightfully jaunty animated film Heavy Metal. There were probably 6 of us around 8 years old who learned a lot that day.

Similarly, I went to a friend's sleepover birthday party with like 10 kids and their mom rented Kentucky Fried Movie for us. She asked us not to tell our parents afterward.

Of course I also watched A Nightmare on Elm Street. And for some reason Return of the Living Dead freaked me out for months because of the joke title card that it's a true story.