Friday, January 30, 2009

A New World View

In my Perspectives on Death & Dying class on Wednesday night, we were talking about the notion of God. A lot of this was simply a logic game based on assumptions of a God who is omnipotent, omniscient, and all-loving. The concept of evil had a lot to do with whether such a combination was truly possible. My professor claimed it came down to how you define the three assumptions. Things like whether omniscient means knowing everything from the past and future or only all of the present and past. I beg to differ with his logic. I did not bother bringing it up in class for two reasons. First off, I never like getting into these discussions in a class rarely is the other person in the argument capable of putting together a proper argument. Secondly, he already had preconceived notions about everything. If you say something different than he is used to hearing, he will adapt it to something similar that he has an argument for.

Anyways, a portion of this discussion was a mentioning of two main themes in the Bible. The theme for the Old Testament was a notion of creation while the New Testament is characterized by love. Cool. The popular topic during our discussion was the idea of freedom. The idea to create something. Supposedly, God made us in his image by allowing us to create things as he did. This took form in free will and our ability to perform bad (not good, but not necessarily evil) choices. This broke down into why an all-loving God would allow us to make poor choices knowing their results. I guess if he does not know the future, he does not know the outcome, but how smart do you have to be to figure out the consequences for various things, particularly when you know everything, and I do mean everything, that has ever happened?

The purpose of this was trying to determine why an all-loving God would allow evil to persist. The topic which spurred the whole discussion was Alzheimer's. My thinking this whole time was following the idea that from creation we got the independence to choose, or create, our own suffering and pain. This was supposed to be from the good, all-loving nature of God. What if it simply came out of the fact that the ability to create is the greatest power? God had the power to create and made us in his image by allowing us the power to create. With said power, we chose to create these vague notions of good and evil which have been discussed over the millennia. Maybe we also created the concept of omnipotence and omniscience. That being said, if one has the ability to create anything, include other powers, then in theory, they are omnipotent. This comes from the ability to create the power to be omnipotent or to create the ability to be omniscient.

I extrapolated the idea of creation being the only thing in the beginning. If this is the case, then we created good and evil. It carries over then to examine what else we might have created. One thing that came to mind were the ways in which we define success, fairness, justice. Almost all of our abstract ideas suddenly need to be reconsidered. In the new light, it comes down to an individual deciding which ones he likes or dislikes, which ones to keep and which to throw away. Personally, I feel honesty, respect, and cooperation become the dominant factors. Humankind has made it to where it is because we work together better than any species on this planet. We could fight amongst ourselves trying to gain something over our rival, but ultimately we end up with less because the struggle is costly to everyone involved.

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1 Comments:

Blogger Suzy From Austin said...

Shawn, God does know the past, present, and future. He knows what evil we will create and the consequences we will bring upon ourselves. Is punishment evil? Am I being evil towards my kids when I punish them? No, I am teaching them. God allows bad things to happen as punishments. We are also allowed to choose evil, just like Satan chose to leave heaven. We also have the choice to choose God. God doesn't force us to serve Him. He is a loving God who loves us through all that He does.

January 31, 2009 at 10:53 AM  

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