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Struggles by Non-Christians
I am starting to hate free will
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<blockquote data-quote="VCR-2000" data-source="post: 77082263" data-attributes="member: 415812"><p>I don't see God in a fatherly or familial kind of way, he is more like this distant, unseen figure who we can't comprehend and is not bound to our human logic, so this gives him free reign to do just whatever he pleases with us, no matter how stupid, sad, etc. it seems to us. He is not obligated to anyone and we can't possibly understand what he is doing. Not like a two-way reciprocal relationship between real friends.</p><p></p><p>And why does he seem ineffective or not willing to stop evil before it takes everything over completely? Why judge everyone at once at the end instead of giving justice during our lifetime? Some things I can forgive and forget because their effects are reversible. It's like having a very expensive and valuable watch that was destroyed or stolen, and the watchman could not return or recreate it again the same exact way the old one was.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="VCR-2000, post: 77082263, member: 415812"] I don't see God in a fatherly or familial kind of way, he is more like this distant, unseen figure who we can't comprehend and is not bound to our human logic, so this gives him free reign to do just whatever he pleases with us, no matter how stupid, sad, etc. it seems to us. He is not obligated to anyone and we can't possibly understand what he is doing. Not like a two-way reciprocal relationship between real friends. And why does he seem ineffective or not willing to stop evil before it takes everything over completely? Why judge everyone at once at the end instead of giving justice during our lifetime? Some things I can forgive and forget because their effects are reversible. It's like having a very expensive and valuable watch that was destroyed or stolen, and the watchman could not return or recreate it again the same exact way the old one was. [/QUOTE]
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Struggles by Non-Christians
I am starting to hate free will
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