This sounds a lot like the logical problem of evil. No philosophers that I know of still defend it, preferring instead to argue for a probabilistic argument instead. The reason is that even the possibility of God having sufficient reason to allow evil is enough to shatter the logical argument. This is an overly simplistic objection.MAGSolo wrote:Christian worldview involves believing in a God that is good/benevolent, omnipresent, and all powerful. If God is good/benevolent, he would despise evil and seek to prevent it. If God was all powerful, he would prevent evil. A good/benevolent and all powerful God is not reconcilable with a world where abject suffering and evil are prevalent and have always been prevalent. Therefore evil and suffering are not reconcilable with a Christian worldview. One cannot be capable of stopping/preventing evil, consciously choose not to do so, and still be considered good. So God is either not good, not all powerful, or he doesnt exist.RickD wrote:MAGsolo, since you made the statement, prove :Evil and Suffering are irreconcilable with a Christian worldview.
Mother Theresa died an atheist
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Re: Mother Theresa died an atheist
“The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting; it has been found difficult and left untried.” -G.K. Chesterton
Re: Mother Theresa died an atheist
Seriously? We're back on this subject with you again?MAGSolo wrote:Christian worldview involves believing in a God that is good/benevolent, omnipresent, and all powerful. If God is good/benevolent, he would despise evil and seek to prevent it. If God was all powerful, he would prevent evil. A good/benevolent and all powerful God is not reconcilable with a world where abject suffering and evil are prevalent and have always been prevalent. Therefore evil and suffering are not reconcilable with a Christian worldview. One cannot be capable of stopping/preventing evil, consciously choose not to do so, and still be considered good. So God is either not good, not all powerful, or he doesnt exist.RickD wrote:MAGsolo, since you made the statement, prove :Evil and Suffering are irreconcilable with a Christian worldview.
Let us proclaim the mystery of our faith: Christ has died, Christ is risen, Christ will come again.
Lord I am not worthy that you should enter under my roof, but only say the word and my soul shall be healed.
Lord I am not worthy that you should enter under my roof, but only say the word and my soul shall be healed.
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Re: Mother Theresa died an atheist
To echo others, this view has been discredited quite a bit.MAGSolo wrote:Christian worldview involves believing in a God that is good/benevolent, omnipresent, and all powerful. If God is good/benevolent, he would despise evil and seek to prevent it. If God was all powerful, he would prevent evil. A good/benevolent and all powerful God is not reconcilable with a world where abject suffering and evil are prevalent and have always been prevalent. Therefore evil and suffering are not reconcilable with a Christian worldview. One cannot be capable of stopping/preventing evil, consciously choose not to do so, and still be considered good. So God is either not good, not all powerful, or he doesnt exist.RickD wrote:MAGsolo, since you made the statement, prove :Evil and Suffering are irreconcilable with a Christian worldview.
In its simplest critique we have the fact that Good CAN come out of an evil act and base don that alone, God may have sufficient reason to allow evil.
Then there is the doctrinal evidence that states suffering and evil are to be EXPECTED in this world as a result of free will and man's fallen nature and God's will NOT to force man into obedience and worship of Him.
There are many other answers to this "issue" but in short the fallacy in that argument is that it presupposes the evil and good can exist without each other to define each other.
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Re: Mother Theresa died an atheist
MAGSolo wrote:Christian worldview involves believing in a God that is good/benevolent, omnipresent, and all powerful. If God is good/benevolent, he would despise evil and seek to prevent it. If God was all powerful, he would prevent evil. A good/benevolent and all powerful God is not reconcilable with a world where abject suffering and evil are prevalent and have always been prevalent. Therefore evil and suffering are not reconcilable with a Christian worldview. One cannot be capable of stopping/preventing evil, consciously choose not to do so, and still be considered good. So God is either not good, not all powerful, or he doesnt exist.RickD wrote:MAGsolo, since you made the statement, prove :Evil and Suffering are irreconcilable with a Christian worldview.
How many times must you be told, God is NOT responsible for the suffering in this world, WE are, stop trying to shift blame from yourself and the rest of humanity.
We made this mess through our own will and volition.
If God prevented evil, there would be no freewill, no thought, no you.
Dan
1Tim1:15-17
Here is a trustworthy saying that deserves full acceptance: Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners of whom I am the worst. But for that very reason I was shown mercy so that in me, the worst of sinners, Christ Jesus might display his immense patience as an example for those who would believe in him and receive eternal life. Now to the King eternal, immortal, invisible, the only God, be honor and glory for ever and ever.Amen.
Here is a trustworthy saying that deserves full acceptance: Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners of whom I am the worst. But for that very reason I was shown mercy so that in me, the worst of sinners, Christ Jesus might display his immense patience as an example for those who would believe in him and receive eternal life. Now to the King eternal, immortal, invisible, the only God, be honor and glory for ever and ever.Amen.
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Re: Mother Theresa died an atheist
Says who? You.MAGSolo wrote:Christian worldview involves believing in a God that is good/benevolent, omnipresent, and all powerful. If God is good/benevolent, he would despise evil and seek to prevent it. If God was all powerful, he would prevent evil. A good/benevolent and all powerful God is not reconcilable with a world where abject suffering and evil are prevalent and have always been prevalent. Therefore evil and suffering are not reconcilable with a Christian worldview. One cannot be capable of stopping/preventing evil, consciously choose not to do so, and still be considered good. So God is either not good, not all powerful, or he doesnt exist.RickD wrote:MAGsolo, since you made the statement, prove :Evil and Suffering are irreconcilable with a Christian worldview.
Also, define evil, conditioned on benevolent God not existing.
The reality is what you state is exactly the opposite. Apart from a transcendant, benevolent God, there is no way to define "evil" in the sense you are using it.
Or there is another option you refuse to consider, and thus you are wrong.So God is either not good, not all powerful, or he doesnt exist.
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Re: Mother Theresa died an atheist
This topic on Mother Teresa being an atheist is just toooo stupid, so I won't even address it.
Anyway, I was in a Walmart Superstore today (in the USA) and noticed that TIME has a a magazine out that is a pictorial biography of Mother Teresa. There is also quite a lot of copy in the magazine as well. The price is $12.99. I didn't buy it today but I think it would make a nice gift.
FL
Anyway, I was in a Walmart Superstore today (in the USA) and noticed that TIME has a a magazine out that is a pictorial biography of Mother Teresa. There is also quite a lot of copy in the magazine as well. The price is $12.99. I didn't buy it today but I think it would make a nice gift.
FL
Hold everything lightly. If you don't, it will hurt when God pries your fingers loose as He takes it from you. -Corrie Ten Boom
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If they had a social gospel in the days of the prodigal son, somebody would have given him a bed and a sandwich and he never would have gone home.
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Re: Mother Theresa died an atheist
She was neither an agnostic or an atheist. She went through what the mystics call the dark night of the soul, and the article is typical of pro secular misrepresentations of what she went through.MAGSolo wrote:the article said she died with her doubts, had stopped praying and all that. Her doubts seemed pretty severe so if not a complete atheist, she was agnostic.Im not an atheistSays who? You, an atheist?
Throughout her dark night she never stopped praying at all.
If magsolo is an atheist it's no wonder why he doesn't understand the dark night of the soul, but some of the greatest saints in Christian history went through this test . In the bible it specifically says not to trust your feelings when it comes to your faith. Mother Teresa did not either. It's amazing that she was being tested this way and still Desired to please God every second of her life and this is why she is considered a saint by millions.
Faith is a call to action, trusting God even in complete darkness.
She was as far away from being an unbeliever as you can get. In fact she was the complete opposite, and from what I heard she had passed through the dark night before she died. Most of the Christian saints went through it for 2 to 8 years but Mother Teresa went through it for almost 60 years, yet God sustained her work even with the agony she had. Been suffering with. I applaud the catholic church for releasing her diary as it helped many others who also went through this dark night.
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Re: Mother Theresa died an atheist
I agree totally furstentum, it is total ignorance. To me she had an advanced faith that could move mountains.Furstentum Liechtenstein wrote:This topic on Mother Teresa being an atheist is just toooo stupid, so I won't even address it.
FL
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Re: Mother Theresa died an atheist
Linkie workie for me.RickD wrote:Linkie no workie.MAGSolo wrote:At best she was strongly agnostic, but I think this shows just how strong the problem of evil and suffering are when you are face to face with it on a daily basis for years. Evil and Suffering are irreconcilable with a Christian worldview.
http://www.cbsnews.com/2100-18563_162-3199062.html
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Re: Mother Theresa died an atheist
When I make claims, especially controversial claims, I try to research everything thoroughly. The idea that Mother Theresa died an atheist is pure conjecture without support, and in fact the evidence is strongly against it. What's called the "dark night of the soul" as bippy mentioned, is what many believe was happening with her throughout much of her life.
You also have to assume that the Catholic Church is made up of nothing but hypocrites who want to cover up and construct a Saint. I think rational people know better and understand that there's been thorough, honest investigations into all of this. If Catholics who have investigated the matter much more than the media at large or myself thought that Theresa was an atheist, would she be on the road to Sainthood? Catholics take Canonization seriously, you'd think skeptics would grant them that.
So all in all, I don't think there's a leg to stand on with this particular claim.
You also have to assume that the Catholic Church is made up of nothing but hypocrites who want to cover up and construct a Saint. I think rational people know better and understand that there's been thorough, honest investigations into all of this. If Catholics who have investigated the matter much more than the media at large or myself thought that Theresa was an atheist, would she be on the road to Sainthood? Catholics take Canonization seriously, you'd think skeptics would grant them that.
So all in all, I don't think there's a leg to stand on with this particular claim.
Young, Restless, Reformed
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Re: Mother Theresa died an atheist
Exactly Narnia, but then again skeptics like Mag will see what they want to see, and if they did a bit of research they would have known that Mother Teresa had a spiritual advisor and always participated in the eucharist and was obedient till the end, and never ceased in Praying. The dark night of the soul was one of the reasons why the church wants to canonize her, not in spite of it.narnia4 wrote:When I make claims, especially controversial claims, I try to research everything thoroughly. The idea that Mother Theresa died an atheist is pure conjecture without support, and in fact the evidence is strongly against it. What's called the "dark night of the soul" as bippy mentioned, is what many believe was happening with her throughout much of her life.
You also have to assume that the Catholic Church is made up of nothing but hypocrites who want to cover up and construct a Saint. I think rational people know better and understand that there's been thorough, honest investigations into all of this. If Catholics who have investigated the matter much more than the media at large or myself thought that Theresa was an atheist, would she be on the road to Sainthood? Catholics take Canonization seriously, you'd think skeptics would grant them that.
So all in all, I don't think there's a leg to stand on with this particular claim.
Re: Mother Theresa died an atheist
Wrong, she admitted herself that she stopped praying. Please stop making stuff up.bippy123 wrote:She was neither an agnostic or an atheist. She went through what the mystics call the dark night of the soul, and the article is typical of pro secular misrepresentations of what she went through.MAGSolo wrote:the article said she died with her doubts, had stopped praying and all that. Her doubts seemed pretty severe so if not a complete atheist, she was agnostic.Im not an atheistSays who? You, an atheist?
Throughout her dark night she never stopped praying at all.
If magsolo is an atheist it's no wonder why he doesn't understand the dark night of the soul, but some of the greatest saints in Christian history went through this test . In the bible it specifically says not to trust your feelings when it comes to your faith. Mother Teresa did not either. It's amazing that she was being tested this way and still Desired to please God every second of her life and this is why she is considered a saint by millions.
Faith is a call to action, trusting God even in complete darkness.
She was as far away from being an unbeliever as you can get. In fact she was the complete opposite, and from what I heard she had passed through the dark night before she died. Most of the Christian saints went through it for 2 to 8 years but Mother Teresa went through it for almost 60 years, yet God sustained her work even with the agony she had. Been suffering with. I applaud the catholic church for releasing her diary as it helped many others who also went through this dark night.
Re: Mother Theresa died an atheist
It doesnt really matter what people "believe" she was going through when she explained in her letters precisely what she was going through; a loss of faith. You clearly just have no idea what you are talking aboutnarnia4 wrote:When I make claims, especially controversial claims, I try to research everything thoroughly. The idea that Mother Theresa died an atheist is pure conjecture without support, and in fact the evidence is strongly against it. What's called the "dark night of the soul" as bippy mentioned, is what many believe was happening with her throughout much of her life.
You also have to assume that the Catholic Church is made up of nothing but hypocrites who want to cover up and construct a Saint. I think rational people know better and understand that there's been thorough, honest investigations into all of this. If Catholics who have investigated the matter much more than the media at large or myself thought that Theresa was an atheist, would she be on the road to Sainthood? Catholics take Canonization seriously, you'd think skeptics would grant them that.
So all in all, I don't think there's a leg to stand on with this particular claim.
Jesus has a very special love for you. [But] as for me — The silence and the emptiness is so great — that I look and do not see, — Listen and do not hear.
Darkness is such that I really do not see-neither with my mind nor with my reason-the place of God in my soul is blank-There is no God in me
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Re: Mother Theresa died an atheist
This is a false view shared by many atheists and agnostics. And most key is that they view actions of evil only within the context of what is happening now, in the short term, and not in terms of what God's ultimate and eternal objectives are. In God's plan, evil is temporary, often is used a tool for good, will be punished, and will one day will be carried out no more. And as we are finite beings, many of God's purposes are not currently knowable or understandable.Christian worldview involves believing in a God that is good/benevolent, omnipresent, and all powerful. If God is good/benevolent, he would despise evil and seek to prevent it. If God was all powerful, he would prevent evil. A good/benevolent and all powerful God is not reconcilable with a world where abject suffering and evil are prevalent and have always been prevalent. Therefore evil and suffering are not reconcilable with a Christian worldview. One cannot be capable of stopping/preventing evil, consciously choose not to do so, and still be considered good. So God is either not good, not all powerful, or he doesnt exist.
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Re: Mother Theresa died an atheist
I dont think mother theresa is agnostic.I think shes just confused about her feelings.maybe she wants a feeling that is more defined literally.shes not aware that by helping the poor,subconsciously means how she loves God.since mother theresa are sorrounded by people who suffers it might trigger some form of depression on her part.(reason for being negative)Its so depressing to see people suffers.It happens to me I question my faith.Im not contented of the way I feel.I want to feel something more ,that I cannot really explain what kind of faith I want to achieve,I expalined this to my Pdoc 3 yrs ago she told me that even priests cannot feel the faith Im talking about.I think faith is complex.Its like asking what really happiness and love means.but onething Im sure: with all complexity of life at the end all points to God.I believe there are no atheist in the foxhole.