Nelly: �Hi Waldo, it's actually written in the New testament, that until we have "passed on" many secrets of life will remain unknown to us. Therefore, there will always be things about God we just don't get, I suppose it would kinda spoil the game, God Wants us to love him, you make it sound like a power trip, where really it's about being saved.�
Conversely, I�d argue you make it sound like being about being saved, when it�s really a power trip! If God had made the creation properly in the first place, then there would be *no need* to be saved. If God wants love, why doesn�t he just create beings to do that, and not bother with the whole living and possibility of sin malarkey? Jake-the-Peg mentioned earlier that this isn��t proof that God doesn�t exist, just proof that God�s nature may not be a pure and fluffy as some wish it to be. Well, he�s certainly right on the second point!
The old �Ahhh, there�s things you can�t understand until you die� argument is the ultimate cop out, I�m afraid. We both know it�s a moot point either way because you certainly can�t add those arguments into your discussion once you�re dead.
�When Brucie (in Die Hard) saves everyone, he saves them, they don't also blame him, for the death and destruction they could have experienced, you get me.�
Beyond both being fictional characters, why compare Bruce Willis in Die Hard to God? Bruce Willis�s character does not claim to be omnipotent and omniscient. He is reacting to events that have occurred around him. God, according to your religion, is omnipotent and omniscient and creator of everything, therefore must necessarily know that his creation is badly designed and that men will sin. Despite knowing this, God does not amend the creation to stop this from happening. He is therefore either not omniscient and omnipotent, or he is morally suspect in the extreme.
cont.