Emery wrote:More importantly, however, is the debut of our
Stryper video transfer to Youtube, approved by none less than Stypertube itself! Post a comment on the Youtube page and tell the Stryper boys how much they need to come on our show.
Well now I have listened to the podcast and watched the Stryper video.
You know in all the podcast there is one critical question that I do not see addressed, and that is what is justice? Is it the same thing as this childrens idea of fairness that every child in the family gets an equal share of the goodies? Do we, in fact, all have to be exactly the same for there to be any justice? I cannot understand how anyone can even contemplate that question without a feeling of utter horror. I think that justice is about seeing the natural and logical consequences of our choices come to fruition, like when you stick your hand in a fire and you get burned. Well many have this feeling that certain things are wrong to do, and I think justice is when we find out exactly why they are wrong.
To Emery's implied question, like Scott I say, yes this justice that the Christian worldview provides is important. The belief that our choices and actions must have consequence that cannot be escaped is absolutely central to my belief in everything in Christianity.
But to Emery's quetion about whether everything can be fixed, I reply that justice isn't about fixing things, but rather making them worthwhile. The very suggestion that Emery makes that the only way to fix things is to erase them, I think is very very wrong. To forget some miserable suffering time is NOT justice at all but just the opposite -- practically an insult. Justice is NOT about making the bad things go away, but about seeing the good triumph and overcome them, and that does not happen if they are forgotten.
To Emery's question about whether you have to be a Christian to get this justice, my answer unlike Scott, is an emphatic no, because of course I utterly reject any so called "party line" and I always have -- of that there is no question.
Emery asks the question, what if the fundie Christians are right? I would have to ask what Emery means by that? Because what I suspect he means, is what if we die and find ourselves confronted with the senario described by the fundie Christians? Well for me that is like asking what if the Nazis take over my country? Do I change what I believe because of that? NO! I fight for what I believe, no matter what happens. And so if I am confronted by Tony's big bad gunman rapist god then yeah I want nothing to do with its "heaven" and yeah I will be with the atheists in its "hell", but I will continue worshping my God in exactly the same faith that I have now. In other words, my answer is that no matter how "right" they might look in any particular circumstances, this cannot change the truth that they are wrong for all the same reasons that both the atheists and I say that they are wrong.
Emery puts forth this bizarre argument that because most people don't see in the Bible what Emery and Scott and I would call justice, that this is a reason to be suspicious of the book. This is basically the same arguement that I saw from another atheist in the forum based on this rather bizarre premise that if God really is behind the Bible then it would not be disputed, to which I responded that this is just like the creationist argument that if evolution was really true then it would not be disputed. These kind of arguments make no sense. They are all basically saying that everyone should think in the same way. WHY? Why should they? Why should everyone have the same idea of justice? Why should everyone see the same thing in the Bible? WHY SHOULD EVERYONE BE THE SAME? WHY?
I am trying to see the logical structure of this arguement, in order to dig out the hidden premise.
A) Christianity promises justice.
B) What 95% of the Christians see in Christianity is not what Emery would call justice.
C) Therefore Emery must find the promise of justice in Christianity to be suspect.
Is the hidden premise something like the following?
D)The fulfillment of the promise of justice in Christianity depends what most people understand of Christianity.
What happens if we apply this logic to science for example.
A) Science promises to discover the truth.
B) What 95% of the people see in science is not what I call truth.
C) Therefore the promise of truth in science is suspect???
I am afraid that what I find suspect here is Emery's argument.
Emery asks Scott if God created hell? My answer is, absolutely NOT! I only believe there is a hell because I can see it in the world. I see people creating it themselves. Thus I know that it is people who create hell not God.
Emery asks if even one person goes to hell then is justice served? My answer is that going to heaven or hell has absolutely nothing to do with justice. It is absolutely clear to me that in Christianity at least, heaven and hell are not reward and punishment for the good and bad things you have done. I believe that justice is something completely different that awaits in both heaven and hell, and that in both places we will have cause for thanks for every good thing we have done and cause for regret for every evil thing we did.
Emery asks how does forgiveness fit into all of this? My answer is that forgiveness is offered to everyone who wants it. But forgiveness is not about escaping the consequences of ones actions, but about whether you want a relationship with God or not. Is that not what forgiveness is always about? Whether you want a relationship with that person or not?
Next Scott seems to puzzles over why things in the Bible are the way that they are, but I must admit that I do not find them quite so puzzling. The fact that it was written so long ago does explain it to me. Mankind has changed a great deal and it seems quite obvious to me that the Bible has played a significant role in those changes, and in those changes I see all the reasons required.
Emery complains that he feels tired just listening to Scott struggle with Christianity and thinks it would be easier to just throw it all out. But I don't think this is any different from the way that the fundies have chosen to make things simple and easier for themselves by throwing science out the window. Both throw out all the good those things have to offer because they don't want to make the effort to deal with the hard parts.
Scott says no, because the gospels are way cool. But I find that answer really disappointing because while I would quite agree that gospel story is the very best thing that Christianity has to offer the world, the things that I find to be way cool in the Bible is a great deal more than just the gospels.
When Scott says that all of his doubts and questions are just in the theology and not in the practice, I want to suggest to him that perhaps he needs to absorb the philosophy of pragmatism into his theology.
I guess I have to agree with Scott that there are some fundamental differences in the athiest practical ethos, especially when I hear them trying to argue with me that there is no such thing as unselfishness, and that's when I too have to wonder if atheists really can so easily reproduce the self-sacrifice that lies right at the heart of the Christian ethos.