believer. Also, we are made in the image of God, unlike any animal or plant that exists. Man is the only thing created in God’s image, and they are therefore so much more important and unique. People continue to ignore the value in human lives and kill each other or abort their babies before they are even born. By taking away that life, they are discounting the value of the lives they are taking…
Each individual defines God and their relationship with God differently. While that choice is up to each person, philosophers have tried to explain the complex nature of God and how this nature is presented to the self. Gassendi and Descartes have differing opinions on how God and the concept of infinity is processed in the mind, and how their seemingly inconceivable natures are best understood. Gassendi believes that God and the infinite nature are acquired over time, but can’t be completely…
with the Divine Command from a Christian perspective through the Bible. There are six approaches to critiquing conflicting moral absolutes, including Generalism, which states that there exist only general moral laws, but they are not absolute. Antinomianism bypasses the issue by maintaining that there does not exist any moral absolutes (Paul, 2013). Situationism has that only one absolute law like love should be followed. Graded Absolutism is many simple laws which at times conflict and are…
several seemingly contradictory statements. His intention was to generate a connection between the philosophical approach of time and that suggested by sacred scripture as demonstrated in Book XI in his work, Confessions. He applied the belief that when God created the heavens and the earth, He also created time itself. Nobody has attempted to acknowledge time as “changeable” until the works of Augustine, since many of us consider time as advancing. The first thesis of time he…
focuses on how to reconcile the existence of a God with divine attributes - omniscience, omnipotence, and omnibenevolence - with the presence of evil in the world. Leibniz’s stance on the problem of evil relies heavily upon the principle of sufficient reason, which states that it would be irrational for anything to be without causation. In creating the world, God was bound by this principle; the reason for choosing this world can be found in the fact that God created the perfect…
Surin from The Harvard Review (1983) states “Theodicy, in its classic form requires the adherent of a theistic faith to reconcile of an omnipotent, omniscient and morally perfect God with the existence of evil” (p.225). In other words, in a religion where God is all powerful, all knowing, and purely good, how can evil exist at all. E. Dowling & W. Scarlett of Encyclopedia of Religious and Spiritual Development (2006) define evil as the bad or painful things which mankind is subject to with…
Road” by Cormac McCarthy stirs up a lot of dilemma within a reader's mind. The author focuses on a consistent theme of hope, faith, and the meaning of life in a world of darkness. Metaphorically the entire novel questions the existence of the one true God who created the whole entire Universe. The two protagonists are places into a hellish setting with not many survivors who turn into cannibals or act like animals. However, the father and son act with morality in the midst of the chaos they are…
because Trinity is a subject for all interested parties, not only for advanced student but for every believer, young and old. B. Fundamental, because this study starts from God and everything is in the Trinity (Mat. 28:18-20)…
What is your belief about ultimate reality? My belief about ultimate reality is that God exists and he created humankind. I believe there is one God that we all pray to him regardless of religion. I do not believe that you have to follow religions to worship God. I have a relationship with God even though my religion is unclear because of my beliefs. What is your belief about the nature of the universe? My belief about the nature of the universe is that the universe was created by the…
David Hume’s “Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion” challenges and questions the structure of religion by examining God and the truth around it. The dialogue consists of four characters; Pamphilus, Cleanthes, Demea, and Philo. They unwrap and challenge each other’s thoughts of religion and God during the enlightenment era. The first character Pamphilus is a student of philosophy who is observing the conversation between Demea, Cleanthes, and Philo. His education and how it should be composed…