Retarded Christian mother nearly ends her and her kids life, justifies it by using gods will

TheLightOfMyLife

TheLightOfMyLife

im so stupid
Joined
Feb 28, 2025
Posts
4,372
Reputation
10,472


Why are they like this?
 
  • JFL
  • +1
Reactions: Sonneillon, Serial Coomer, Gonthar and 3 others
her perspective contradicts free will

I think I recently read a verse that said attributing to God what isn't his is blasphemous or something like that.
 
  • JFL
  • +1
Reactions: Gonthar and TheLightOfMyLife
religion shuts off some people's brains it's sad
doesn't have to be the case, when I was an athiest, by brain was more shut off than it is now as a christian.

believing in the blackpill and being an athiest just turns you into an apathetic & pessimistic bastard given enough time.
 
her perspective contradicts free will

I think I recently read a verse that said attributing to God what isn't his is blasphemous or something like that.
I’m still not sure how Christians justify the idea of free will ngl and I’ve never heard anything convincing in favor of it.
 
  • +1
Reactions: Sonneillon
believing in the blackpill and being an athiest just turns you into an apathetic & pessimistic bastard given enough time.
realistic ≠ pessimistic . accepting that the world is unfair doesn't make you pessimistic imo
 
  • +1
Reactions: MongolTurk and TheLightOfMyLife
Mf you were arguing with me the other day when I said religion is brainwashing nonsense. You people are contrarians just for the sake of it
 
  • Hmm...
  • +1
Reactions: Sonneillon and TheLightOfMyLife
Mf you were arguing with me the other day when I said religion is brainwashing nonsense. You people are contrarians just for the sake of it
link me where i did that because I fucking hate religion
 
  • Love it
  • +1
Reactions: Sonneillon and Serial Coomer
accepting that the world is unfair doesn't make you pessimistic imo
You're right, but eventually that will lead you to being pessimistic about your own life and circumstances, because you too will find yourself in the "unfair" position if you aren't already in it, and since you've already accepted that "the world is unfair" you will have also accepted your unfortunate fate.
 
  • +1
Reactions: kisuke
Mf you were arguing with me the other day when I said religion is brainwashing nonsense. You people are contrarians just for the sake of it
 
Ohhh
I was making a joke in that thread dude. I thought that was pretty clear by how I framed it as pretty retarded.
 
  • +1
Reactions: Sonneillon, aladdinmaxxer and Meteor21
I’m still not sure how Christians justify the idea of free will ngl and I’ve never heard anything convincing in favor of it.
what do you mean justify? We believe God gave it to us because our faith is only valuable and genuine if we choose to have it even though we have the free will not to.
 
  • +1
Reactions: TheLightOfMyLife
Ohhh
I was making a joke in that thread dude. I thought that was pretty clear by how I framed it as pretty retarded.
I kinda thought but you kept doubling down
 
  • +1
Reactions: TheLightOfMyLife
you will have also accepted your unfortunate fate.
personally i don't think that's a bad thing , acceptance is better than coping in my opinion , because deep down we all know when we are lying to ourselves and it doesn't solve anything
 
  • +1
Reactions: MongolTurk
personally i don't think that's a bad thing , acceptance is better than coping in my opinion , because deep down we all know when we are lying to ourselves and it doesn't solve anything
I personally have genuine faith in an afterlife and in God, but to each their own
 
  • +1
Reactions: kisuke
what do you mean justify? We believe God gave it to us because our faith is only valuable and genuine if we choose to have it even though we have the free will not to.
Yeah, but doesn’t your god also know everything about how everything will turn out always and forever? How does that work with free will?
If you choice exists as something crystallized, is it not the only choice you ever could have made? I see christians just say “dude even though god knew you would make the choice, you still had a choice!!” but I don’t really see how that makes sense, since that “choice” was always going to happen and therefore wasn’t much of a choice, because you were never going to make any other choice. That choice was set in stone the moment the initial conditions of the universe were set
 
Yeah, but doesn’t your god also know everything about how everything will turn out always and forever? How does that work with free will?
If you choice exists as something crystallized, is it not the only choice you ever could have made? I see christians just say “dude even though god knew you would make the choice, you still had a choice!!” but I don’t really see how that makes sense, since that “choice” was always going to happen and therefore wasn’t much of a choice, because you were never going to make any other choice. That choice was set in stone the moment the initial conditions of the universe were set
God knows what choice we will make, but we still make the choice. Why would he intervene? that would contradict free will

The choice wasn't destined to happen so to speak, you could've chosen to do something else, but you didn't.

God's perception doesn't operate in the bounds of time so to say that the choice was set in stone the moment the universe was set just because God knew what you're choices would be at that time, isn't accurate imo.
 
  • +1
Reactions: TheLightOfMyLife
her perspective contradicts free will

I think I recently read a verse that said attributing to God what isn't his is blasphemous or something like that.
In school we learned in religion class that absolutely everything happens because of God's will, even a car running for example: when you start the car, God commands the car's battery to flow an electrical current and cause a spark in the engine, he then orders gasoline to flow and ignite in the cylinders, he orders then the pistons to move, the wheels to rotate and the car to start running, etc. - all this happens only because God wants it!

There's even a famous religious story about a Christian man who was in the army back when Romania was still communist and religion was frowned upon. Because of his faith, he was bullied around by his sergeant and one day he was ordered to move a car from the courtyard from one place to another, while all the other soldiers watched. He said he doesn't know how to drive a car, but the sergeant told him to just pray to God if he really believes in him, and he would have no problem then. The guy then said a little prayer, entered the car and moved it to the other place, while everyone was shocked and showed him that the car had no engine. The guy explained that only thing you need is faith and nothing is impossible then, even driving a car with no engine. Then everyone kneeled and praised God...
 
  • Hmm...
  • JFL
Reactions: MongolTurk and TheLightOfMyLife
God knows what choice we will make, but we still make the choice. Why would he intervene? that would contradict free will

The choice wasn't destined to happen so to speak, you could've chosen to do something else, but you didn't.

God's perception doesn't operate in the bounds of time so to say that the choice was set in stone the moment the universe was set just because God knew what you're choices would be at that time, isn't accurate imo.
I'm not exactly following how that works.
How can it be known what choice I will make, yet still be a choice that I truly made? How could I make any other choice if that is the case?
Even if god is not subject to the bounds of time, I am. So that when the universe was created, god did know everything that would happen, and everything within the world that is subjected to time would have been known to follow from that beginning point in time. Given these conditions, at any given state in time, the state of another time would have been known and everything in between would have been the only possibly path that could have been taken, for if a different path were taken, that would not have been what god knew in this version of the universe.
 
  • Hmm...
Reactions: MongolTurk
In school we learned in religion class that absolutely everything happens because of God's will, even a car running for example: when you start the car, God commands the car's battery to flow an electrical current and cause a spark in the engine, he then orders gasoline to flow and ignite in the cylinders, he orders then the pistons to move, the wheels to rotate and the car to start running, etc. - all this happens only because God wants it!

There's even a famous religious story about a Christian man who was in the army back when Romania was still communist and religion was frowned upon. Because of his faith, he was bullied around by his sergeant and one day he was ordered to move a car from the courtyard from one place to another, while all the other soldiers watched. He said he doesn't know how to drive a car, but the sergeant told him to just pray to God if he really believes in him, and he would have no problem then. The guy then said a little prayer, entered the car and moved it to the other place, while everyone was shocked and showed him that the car had no engine. The guy explained that only thing you need is faith and nothing is impossible then, even driving a car with no engine. Then everyone kneeled and praised God...
You were taught wrong, God did not want Adam & Eve to disobey him, he didn't want sodom and gomorra to be in the state they were, and Christ didn't want to be crucified, it was necessitated because of the sins that man chose to commit. This is my opinion anyway

Some bad things may be God's will, but not all of them(also my grandfather told me a similar story from when he was in the soviet union about a muslim kavkaz who did the exact same thing but with a tank(my family is of muslim kavkaz origin)) I guess embellished religious stories are universal
 
Last edited:
  • Hmm...
Reactions: Gonthar
I'm not exactly following how that works.
How can it be known what choice I will make, yet still be a choice that I truly made? How could I make any other choice if that is the case?
Even if god is not subject to the bounds of time, I am. So that when the universe was created, god did know everything that would happen, and everything within the world that is subjected to time would have been known to follow from that beginning point in time. Given these conditions, at any given state in time, the state of another time would have been known and everything in between would have been the only possibly path that could have been taken, for if a different path were taken, that would not have been what god knew in this version of the universe.
Would you have this same confusion if somebody were capable of reading your mind and could therefore predict what you were going to say because you thought of what you were going to say before you said it? Would you then argue that it was not possible for you to have, on your own accord, chose what you were going to say merely because somebody else could read your mind and predicted what you were going to say. Whether or not this individual could read your mind or not, you would have thought to say the same thing; thus, the ability of this individual to read your mind did not impact what you said but they were still able to predict it. This is a very abstract conversation so I apologize if it's very cumbersome.
 
  • +1
Reactions: TheLightOfMyLife
Some bad things may be God's will, but not all of them(also my grandfather told me a similar story from when he was in the soviet union about a muslim kavkaz who did the exact same thing but with a tank(my family is of muslim kavkaz origin)) I guess embellished religious stories are universal
Hmmm...I've seen on some Muslim sites various similar stories and parables about faith, kindness, love, etc. that I've read before and were actually initially Christian, Buddhist, etc., they seem to plagiarize a lot...:feelsthink:
 
  • +1
Reactions: MongolTurk
Hmmm...I've seen on some Muslim sites various similar stories and parables about faith, kindness, love, etc. that I've read before and were actually initially Christian, Buddhist, etc., they seem to plagiarize a lot...:feelsthink:
plagiarizing is the muslim signature move
 
  • JFL
Reactions: Gonthar
Would you have this same confusion if somebody were capable of reading your mind and could therefore predict what you were going to say because you thought of what you were going to say before you said it? Would you then argue that it was not possible for you to have, on your own accord, chose what you were going to say merely because somebody else could read your mind and predicted what you were going to say. Whether or not this individual could read your mind or not, you would have thought to say the same thing; thus, the ability of this individual to read your mind did not impact what you said but they were still able to predict it. This is a very abstract conversation so I apologize if it's very cumbersome.
Predicting is not the same as knowing. I can predict the weather and be correct most of the timet, but I never know. I can build a model and say that tomorrow we will have a high chance of sunshine, and then it can end up raining frogs(of course, weather is usually thought of as a chaotic system, which should be deterministic and it can be imagined that if only one were able to keep track of all the variables it could be known, but this is obviously not something that can be proven at present).

So is it that god is something of a statistician and can reliably predict what we will do to a high degree of accuracy and precision based on what is known, but still does not known what state the system will be in at any given moment? Just that certain realities are more probable than others?

On the other hand, if someone knows exactly what I will say when I will say it, then yes, I would say that I do not have any choice in what I say, because they know what will happen. There will be no surprise, it will be like reading a book in which everything is written clearly on the pages and nothing changes.
 
  • +1
Reactions: MongolTurk
On the other hand, if someone knows exactly what I will say when I will say it, then yes, I would say that I do not have any choice in what I say, because they know what will happen. There will be no surprise, it will be like reading a book in which everything is written clearly on the pages and nothing changes.
I don't understand why you perceive free will to be contingent on surprise/privacy. It's not like reading a book, because the words on a book have already been written, it's like opening a book that writes itself but you know what it will write because you know the book so intimately and you created it and yada yada.

My main point is, you knowing or not knowing what the book will write next has no impact on what the book will write. God's knowing of your decisions doesn't mean he made the decision, and if he didn't make the decision, then something clearly had to(i.e you).
 
  • +1
Reactions: TheLightOfMyLife

Similar threads

BWC_virgin
Replies
44
Views
2K
BWC_virgin
BWC_virgin
Sloppyseconds
Replies
13
Views
729
(-__-+)
(-__-+)
incelhunter
Replies
20
Views
756
sorrowfulsad
sorrowfulsad

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top