Originally posted by ArenaBoy
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To former Christians: Why do you no longer believe?
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"The future is always born in pain... If we are wise what is born of that pain matures into the promise of a better world." --G'Kar, "Babylon 5"
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The biggest problem, for me, is still the one that led me away from the Christian God in the first place: the Problem of Evil.
Actually, it was the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. Which puts an interesting twist on the arguments that all morality comes from God."My in-laws are country people and at night you can hear their distinctive howl."
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Originally posted by HYHYBT View PostBut we've already HAD threads about that...
And just for clarification, let me explain the Problem of Evil:
God is defined as being omniscient, omnipotent, and omnibenevolent. Yet evil exists in the world. Therefore, at least one of the defining characteristics of God must be wrong.
I'll happily take take this to a new thread if it hasn't been covered before."The future is always born in pain... If we are wise what is born of that pain matures into the promise of a better world." --G'Kar, "Babylon 5"
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You're right, come to think of it. It wasn't precisely that, but since the argument I'm familiar with is, basically, that one of the good things God made is free will, and that free will logically must include the freedom to do wrong. And a couple of months ago there was a long thread claiming to prove that, more or less, it doesn't count as free will if God *lets* you have it."My in-laws are country people and at night you can hear their distinctive howl."
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I don't want this thread to get too far off track, so I've started a new thread on the Problem of Evil.
Now to return to our original topic, users' deconversion stories!"The future is always born in pain... If we are wise what is born of that pain matures into the promise of a better world." --G'Kar, "Babylon 5"
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