Can't wait to bring this to my next family function It's my experience too that people will realize that a discussion is harder than they anticipated and will immediately back out or shut down. They'll stop harassing you once they realize you take the argument more seriously than they do and have thought all the way through it. I believe in you fellow viewer! :)
I remember this from summer school well XD Also the "don't doubt it, even if it looks like there are discrepancies in the bible, it all works out." sigh... I just wanted friends...
@mineben256 He's omnibenevolent. He DOESN'T want to segregate people by understanding because HE made them able or not able to understand them. If he WANTS to be understood (omniBenevolent), is ABLE to be understood (omniPotent), and KNOWS how to be understood (omniscient), then if he exists he IS understood. You MUST sacrifice one of the omnis. That's the only way to square God's existence with reality. Otherwise, this construction is a solid argument that God doesn't exist as described. So does he not exist, or is he not as described?
@mineben256 Does God want to segregate and punish people by understanding? If God doesn't want to punish people for things they had no choice in, he MUST want to be understood.
It really is so freeing to no longer believe in an omniscient, omnipotent, omnibenevolent god. My mother died of an asthma attack when I was 1 year old. I was told my whole life that it was “part of gods plan” and that “god works everything for good”. So he not only *knew* it would happen, but *caused* it to happen and because he is omnibenevolent, it was a *good* thing that I grew up without a mother. It was hard to take growing up.
I'm sorry and I also understand, on New years day 1981 my mother lost her struggle against bone cancer. I was 9 and was presented the same argument,I became very angry up well into my twenties with a God that where anything good that happens it's explained as a miracle but whenever there's a struggle or strife that it is God's will. I'm 49 now and still struggle between rage and being cordial, politely ending a conversation that ends up being an assault about "our Lord and savior".
So many sad stories... I was becoming rather skeptic while growing up, but the true clinch for me was when my best friend died, before he became 15, in his bed, for a cardiac disease no one ever noticed, and I was told that god needed him as an angel...there are no ways this can justify a death. If there is a place where "angels" (as in "people who stand at your side and support you") are sorely needed, is here... A huge hug to everyone who had to endure the loss and the christian lies...
Dying *is* part of God’s plan. Why are you so afraid of death? “b-but God lets b-bad things happen!” We are here for God, not the other way around. So arrogant and entitled. As if you’re the only one who’s Mom ever died. smh
@@bloodbased more importantly death is also a part of living. I wasn't still blubbering about it. I am not afraid of dying, I was merely stating that I wasted my time being angry. If you have nothing better to do than "throw stones" just to make yourself feel superior, feel free to keep chuckin. This is where I stop because you are of no consequence to me. At least not to justify myself. F. O.
I had a similar path. I was a Christian until I was in my teens. I realized how cultish the church felt and as I delved into history I grew a disdain for ecclesiastic institutions (i.e. Church organization) and settled on Agnosticism. However, I found faith in the Norse gods as they spoke to me and connected through me through my ancestry. I saw and felt their presence around me. It has solidified my belief.
Im srry that you’ve began to think like this, and considering there is a lot of times the church organizations had used the bible to justify atrocities, war, and prosecutions they did you’re not wrong to grow a disdain for it. Seriously, you’re not wrong and you’re right for feeling this way. But, I’d really like to point out that, that Christians are just people believing in one true God. Which means it isn’t or shouldn’t be surprising that us Christians too use the bible, take texts out of context or without thinking, and make it a way to justify this with their own personal hate. What I want to say, and this may give you some clarity if your ever hateful to Christianity or thinking about it, don’t ever put your faith in Christians but put in Jesus Christ, put in on God. Again, Christianity was used to justify wars, atrocities, and prosecutions. And from what God did, helping the chosen people out of Egypt from slavery, his Son stopping those who were gonna stone a woman for adultery, and more. The very God that we worship clearly would have not condone or done these things. There was no reason to think that God would rejoice and praise the Christians who used his word to justify hate. I know that you may have found your belief already, and I don’t wanna force you into believing in God again if that’s not what you want, but you were a brother before gang, and if you are confusing what the Christians before us did and comparing it to God, then we could work this out together and I’ll try my best to help.
As a ex christian from Georgia, the yelling and the "don't ask questions" thing, and the "offering basket" (which I always thought was just a way the church would pay for it's bills) another thing I was told not to say out loud. I'm glad I found your channel and glad I follow the old Gods as a norse pegan. Skål 🍺 Keep that great content coming.
@@eddielopez2373 You say "pretend gods" yet this video is by a guy who believes in the old Gods which you clicked to watch. Something's not adding up friend, Gods be with you Skål 🍺👍
@@RedC-px2rb nope, I clicked on a UA-cam recommended video called “the interpretation argument,” with a thumbnail that said “this destroys Christianity.” I clicked on it to hear a critique of Christianity and subsequently discovered his beliefs in mythology.
You call it “passionate”; I call it “hectoring”. I guess they are not mutually exclusive. Whatever the label, one needs paracetamol and a good lie down afterwards.
A friend who is a Christian pastor actually once asked me why I cannot or will not accept Jesus as the sole God and I simply told him there is not a single pill or medicine for all ailments so how can there be only one God for all the world's problems to which he simply replied touche
@Nobody Important imma tell you once child I am no kid and we are not here to discuss your God damned opinion my state and its relevance were perfectly timed as a response to ocean's statement you don't like insa
@Seamus YT1396 I loved how You shutdown that persons Bollocks straight away👏🏾, well done n' said. P.s. My favorite part was the end, "Insa"...🤣 I don't know many people that use that term or understand it. Bloody brilliant. May the God's Love n' Keep n' May You Always be in the God's Favor...
These people are crazy. If they truly want to get to the bottom of their texts shouldn't they be looking at the original ones instead of arguing over translations?
The first problem is that many of those arguing over the texts believe that their texts are original (English, Spanish, etc) and that it was translated is usually a revelation in itself (some may accept translation from Latin but that is rare in my experience). The second problem is that there are no originals, at least for the New Testament, where the first known biblical documents are dated at least 40 years after the time of Jesus. Given that there are specific fields in biblical studies just for examining the scribe errors for the various bibles and manuscripts that exist today, the errors due to the verbal “telephone game” of Christian preaching for the first forty years are a complete mystery.
@@darrenhemingway7121 try doing history using that standard. The manuscript evidence is overwhelmingly in support that what we have today in the protestant new and old testament is correct from the original greek and hebrew. Besides that, what you are saying is based upon logic. Why should anyone be logical? Are there universal unchanging laws of logic? If so, where do they come from if not God? If you say they are merely conventions of the human mind, then why are your conventions any better or worse than mine? We dont share the same brain. Also, how can you know that you are even standing here? If logical laws are merely conventions then how do you kniw that your brain isnt telling you something false? And if you cant detect whether or not you are insane, why do you believe anything? therefore logical laws of thought demonstrate that God has ordered the universe in a uniform way. And that true and false are real concepts, although abstract.
@@jesse-s4q2k Translations with bias playing in happen in every, and that adds up over the big numberof translation. Try argue in anime communities sub vs dup, and even subtitles have to choose what meanings they adapt, and thats one translation. Historically the evidence is, that translations have to choose and ofren with bias, what to adapt. The bible is no different. And any historian worth their money will admitvto be sceptic of personal bias of records, and that we cant never know for 100% like science, we cqn br certain but always room for error.
@@marocat4749 so you dont believe the new testament manuscripts teach and are translated consistently? Can you read greek? Im not sure if your aware of this but the fundamentals of christianity are translated consistently through the kjv, nkjv, niv, esv, nasb versions of the bible. Greek is a very specific language. And most translations are so similar that they do not change any major doctrine of the christian faith. Do the homework man, check out and examine different translations from accepted christian scholars and textual critics like bruce metzger and bill mounce. The overwhelming amount of greek manuscripts testify that what we have today is what apostles wrote. And if you reject that, your standard of determing authenticity of ancient works is too high and you would not be able to do history at all. Let alone decipher the authors of ancient texts. But you dont treat those works like that because of your bias against the text of the bible.
@@jesse-s4q2k But i can point that simple translations now, where we can ask authors for input can being prette devisive, th whole sub vs dub debtes in circles, what meaning is lost, how translate a word from languige,in meaning or literally?. That goes with booka and even more other media, prominently anime where i kno sub v dub, in an ever ongoing debate. What i mean is translation is really hard, and never does have the ect same meaning traslated, because languages can e vastly diferent in proverb and quotes and sayings. Like see anime translations. I dont habe to able to read old greek to know that a book thats translated by various people with bias certain wrds will be interpreted not a intended by the author, and that adds up when you edit it within councon that decides on meanigs, which different interpretations led to a huge diversity of interpretations, and thats why ther are so many different christian churches. Retranlated, translated different, and small changes can change entre context of sentences, like the one quoted against homoseuality, it was against male incest. The bile and probably no old work is a perfect translation. Because that sources are lost and cant be checked. The bible is no different, we cat ask tha authors what they meant , which is the best souce to get te original meaning.
It's true the word of teaches that God is a God whose greatness we cannot fathom or comprehend. But it's also true that He gives us a spirit of understanding.
Either Yahweh revealed himself/communicated his message to humanity, or he didn't. If he didn't, then we're done here. If he did, then if his omniscient, he would know how to communicate his message in order to be understood. If he is omnipotent, he would have the power to do so successfully. It would be logically impossible for him to fail. So who are _you_ (person who's using this "duck-out argument") to say that god failed?
@@jaxthewolf4572 If we can't question Yahweh, then we can't come up with positive answers either. IOW, we can't claim that Yahweh is perfectly good/just/merciful/etc., because that presupposes that we're in a position to evaluate him. If not, then the most we can say is that he's an inexplicable force that acts according to alien logic we mere humans cannot comprehend. A positive evaluation of Yahweh ("Praise him!") is every bit as much a human judgment as a negative evaluation ("If the actions and attitudes attributed to Yahweh in the Bible were attributed to any other character in any other work, that character would be immediately recognized as a classic supervillain or Dark Lord").
I would totally use these arguments but unfortunately for me the people trying to "save" me from being a heathen treat me like a confused child and ignore what I say, obviously I've never tried to understand the bible because if I did I would believe is what it boils down to.
That is incredibly frustrating. Unfortunately in those situations, its time to set personal boundaries and get people to back off. Doesnt always work though unfortunately. But it can work with time.
As a Catholic, I am really, really sorry man. I realize you may hate us for our misled brother’s actions and there’s nothing I can say to change that, I at least pray you will stop being mistreated and receive a fair view of how good the Catholic Church can be. Do well, friend. Maybe at least I can be someone who will give you guys hope that I think you all have great intelligence even though you may not be part of my church.
As an ex christian For the he past few years, I've had one instance with christians trying to witness to Me. Within 5 minutes, I pulled out the Bible to contradict everything they told me, and they said they didn't want to argue with me.( Meaning argue against quotes in the Bible), and left as quickly as they came on me. No christian came to witness to me again
Yes, indeed, the chosen Bibles VERY HUMANLY and purposefully contains any answer you might need... And on which ever major side of an issue you may need them on.
Same as you, I understand your side, actually more like I just left Christianity for months, yet I'm going through what you went through years ago too as of the present
One time Jehovah's Witnesses came knocking and I pulled out the big honkin Catholic bible I inherited from my grandma and went "hey lets debate and compare qoutes!" THey backed off. Thanks Grandma for the cult sheild!
I had an interesting missionary situation when I was in high school. I live in Utah, and was practicing paganism for 5 years prior to my step-brothers attempt to "save me". Since I had changed my residence to live with my father for a year I didn't want to be disrespectful, so I let the missionaries talk with me. I usually just spaced out and communicated with my guides while this was happening, but one teaching rubbed me wrong. They were teaching about building the path to God, and using red soho cups to demonstrate building the path. I stopped them at one point and asked, "What if I want to use blue soho cups instead of your red soho cups?" They stopped, puzzled at my response. So I took it a step further. "What if I think all soho cups are extremely flimsy building materials, and I decide to use building blocks? In the end doesn't it still give me a path to God?" In the end they couldn't rebuke what I said and left.
@@kevincrady2831 Even better! The whole lesson was just absurd. It was a scare tactic to try and scare people into what they were teaching. The verbiage used was what you would hear from an abuser. I can't say word for word now since it's been 20 years.
when i was in the church’s youth group, one of their teachings was the “umbrella” of the “protection” of jesus. the youth pastor said when you’re under the umbrella you are safe from the storm. whoever isn’t under it has to option to be, they just are deciding not to. when you’re out in the storm there’s all the wind and leaves and flying debris. i said well when you get under the umbrella, you’re still soaked, you’re still wet it’s not helping anything. he said that the metaphor wasn’t the best and we should just get the gist of it. idk it felt kinda sketch to me.
When I left Christianity it felt like I left an abusive relationship. Anyway, its nice to hear that an evangelical has a problem with Steven Anderson, but too bad its not because of his dangerous views.
That pastor holds a lot of the same dangerous views, which is part of why it's so wild. It's strange that he's this impassioned about something so comparatively small.
It was like that for me too. The religion was actually making me mentally unstable because every decision I made; I felt that I was being judged for it. It constantly felt like no matter how good of a person I was or tried to be, that I was never going to be good enough. Thankfully though, I ended up leaving Christianity and it feels like I've gotten a new lease on life. I'm so glad I worked up the courage to do it.
@@KyL6067 umm… it’s actually a really common feeling for people who leave. I know you’re a bit miffed, but as an atheist ex Christian who was actually really attached to the faith, to that idea that I had the holy spirit with me day to day, I felt the same way. Actually, to point out a parallel I haven’t heard brought up before, if you’ve ever been or known anyone who was thoroughly under the influence of a manipulative person, they tend to have this idea that the person who manipulates them has almost never been wrong, and they’ll bend over backwards to mentally justify them. Like it’s impossible to consider. In a religion where you suffer hell for not believing, and only for not believing, on the basis of the idea that you’re fundamentally unworthy of anything good, don’t you think you can end up with the same result? And note that I’m not saying this proves you wrong, I’m just trying to get you to see the other person’s point of view
@Daren Fliflet I don’t think the Calvinism is relevant. I’m gonna try to explain what people mean when they compare the Christian god to an abusive boyfriend, and I’m going to call it as I see it. I’m not asking you to agree, I’m asking you, for the sake of the people you interact with, to understand why they feel and think how they do, by giving a relatively common example. Edit: some of this will read as a tad repetitive, but I consider it worth keeping upon review The perception, from the outside, in my experience and from my point of view, isn’t that “God arbitrarily choosing who he saves and who he doesn’t is tyrannical,” it’s the premise of the salvation. Salvation from being a damn human. Christianity teaches, at its premise, that I, regardless of how much I strive to be honorable, am evil. That as I instinctively and emotionally commiserate with those in pain or need, I am fundamentally fucked up. That as I do the things that the Bible says a righteous man does, I am fundamentally deserving of eternal torture. After I left, I had self destructive habits start to go away. I recall feeling totally worthy for the first time. That’s similar to my experiences rejecting abusive personal relationships. The church teaches people that life is worthless without someone else, that has a record of wiping civilizations off the map, saying so. Like, to further the metaphor, a husband that beats his wife and says he loves her is a liar. He’s motivated to have her like him, sure, but he’s not motivated to look after her, otherwise he’ll work on the problem or end the relationship. A god who loves the world also has a kill count, in the Bible, higher than the First World War. He loves me, he says, as he threatens me. That’s how it feels and quite frankly I can draw no other conclusion now that I’ve seen it. And it’s not even why I left. You’ll draw your own conclusions about how you feel about what I said, but I hope that it read as blunt and not malicious. Feel free to provide your own perspective. I’m a fan of siphoning the lessons from other people’s experiences.
This is so incredibly well made holy shit, you considered everything and made a genuine argument that can not be shut down by “it’s god’s will” or “it’s in god’s plan”. This is amazing. Thank you Ocean Keltoi
@@josephwilson-doan4163 I've been considering doing a reaction video and laying out my counter-argument so if I go through with that, I'll let you know. I have to write the script first.
@@josephwilson-doan4163 Somewhere in this youtube comment section is my initial counter-argument typed out if that interests you to read. It's somewhere here.
I've run around and around this bush a few times and here's where I land: Do I exist? - I think, therefore I am Was I created? - Intelligence begets intelligence, so yes Who IS this creator? (oh boy, here we go) This part would take A LOT of typing, so I'll nut shell it :-) FOR ME, there is one thing I believe, one thing that feels innately known/perceived, that I've never needed a book, a pastor, a priest, or otherwise to confirm.....And that is that "whoever" our creator is, that creator IS Love. I also believe that the one thing every single person who has ever existed desires, is Love. Now, we may not know how to give or receive it very well, but in our heart of hearts, we desire it. I believe that even the most morally wayward person among us desires love. Everyone wants to love and to be loved. Again, most of us probably completely muck up the pursuit, obtaining, retaining, and reciprocation of love, but it is what we most deeply desire and love is what makes the world go around. So, God is love, and there is plenty of mystery there......and we all possess the common denominator of desiring love.... so ultimately, I believe we all desire God, who is love. Now, for a number of reasons that I won't take the bandwidth to express here in pixel, I do believe that the heart and mind of God were presented in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus. There are many reasons why I believe Jesus existed. There are many reasons why I believe He was crucified by the Romans....AND there are a number of reasons why I believe that a resurrected Jesus was witnessed by a large number of people. From this position forward I have many issues with "Christianity" as it has been developed and in my opinion manipulated. I take issue with how the Bible has been weaponized, often by well meaning people, but never the less, inappropriately so.....as I see it. In my opinion anyone who tries to take a "straight" reading of Scripture and form their beliefs based on that reading...well, they will more than likely arrive at some at odds with reality beliefs, in my opinion. At the end of the day I believe: ALL of life is a mystery. We should embrace the mystery, while endeavoring to live in the flow of Love. There is more truth out there than we'll ever know or could possibly know. I don't believe any one religion has cornered the market on truth. And ultimately I believe that all shall be well and all shall be well and all manner of things shall be well.
Recently had to deal with a friend of my gmas giving me the fire and brimstone talk and that I HAD to follow god to get into Heaven. I told him if being a good person wasn’t enough, I don’t want to go anyway. I am not scared of hell. And he tried over and over to make me fear it. All the usual stuff. Told me my children would burn too because I didn’t have them in church. Basically tried to guilt me for not being a Christian. He was very flustered that it didn’t work and that I was ok with burning in hell. I told him “if I was a good person here on earth and loved my friends and family and treated them well then I will happily burn for all eternity” when it came to my children I told them they are welcome to go to church if they want to, I’ll even drive them. But I will never force my beliefs or anyone else’s on them. So pretty much dismantled what he may have believed about pagans. That was my best defense. But saving this in my pocket cause I have a feeling he is gonna keep preaching at me
i was at a christian college for my freshman year. i had to get out of there. it was way too toxic for a non christian. i always was looked down upon and no one really wanted to talk to me. they lied to me and said that i didn't have to take any bible classes, but once i was already in, they forced me to minor in theology and had to pay for a few bible classes. i left as soon as i could and i feel so much better
The title of your video brings to mind a story my comparative religion teach told us in college. Back when he was in college and first heard about the ontological argument, it just made so much sense to him. He took it as a revelation, an indisputable piece of logic he felt he could take out into the world to convince people. Completely beyond reproach. The first person he decided to go too was his father, he stated the argument clearly and full of enthusiasm. His dad listened and reflected on this revelation and after a short time he looked his son in the eyes and said, "Nah, I don't buy it."
@Logan Post I think you may slightly misunderstand the ontological argument. This video gives an example like your saying about using the same logic to say the ultimate perfect pizza might exist using the ontological argument, therefore it must exist. The video explains why that actually wouldn't work given the logic of the ontological argument. Would be interested to see if this changes your mind on the whole deathstar thing. I know I thought the exact same kind of thing when I first heard about the ontological argument, but I watched this video and it seemed to make a good explanation for why something like that wouldn't fit into the ontological argument.
You forgot the most important premise of the ontological argument for the existence of God... Which is "this argument can only be applied to what it is trying to prove as long as you accept that perfection is one of it's qualities, which of course would those require you to sneak in it's assumed existence as a subtly implied premise." The ontological argument for the perfect pizza is a whole 'nother argument all together. Pay no heed to the man behind the curtain.
@@r3aperrising984 The ontological argument is just an attempt to define God into existence. The key issue is this: none of its premises are supported. "God is maximally great"? Says who? It's not supported. It's a claim. It also presumes that it's possible for it to be possible that God exists. This is a claim on the meta-physics (the physics that determine what possible states exist for *our* physics) of the multiverse. We do not know that it *is* possible for a God to be a God. To be real. The ontological argument is just presuppositionalist apologetics pretending not to be.
Pretty sure they’ll fall back on the two standard answers to any “God doesn’t exist” argument: “we aren’t meant to know His will” and the classic “Mysterious Ways”. Anyone on this Earth more than a few months can figure out easily there is no God.
And you wouldn't be wrong. TL;DR: Loki told me so in a UPG of mine. Long story: I had a UPG that got me out of Atheism, but I misinterpreted my UPG and thought it was the Judeo-Christian God calling me, so I followed him for 10 years. Every time I tried to officially convert something terrible would happen that would kick me out of that church, so I hopped onto the next one looking for "the truth". This happened 6 times, and by the time I was baptized but left churchless, I arrived at similar conclusions as The Interpretation Argument espoused here, which made me leave Christianity for good. I started noticing that the Norse Gods were calling me to Heathenism, so I started following Them. It wasn't before long that I had this UPG where Loki told me that They (the Norse Gods) were the ones calling me to Heathenism 10 years ago, but as I had misinterpreted Them for the Christian God, Loki played along until I came around. We had a good laugh. To me, that explains perfectly why none of my prayers to the Christian God were ever answered, and in contrast, why I can feel the presence, support, and guidance of the Norse Gods as the realest experience I've ever had.
If I, as a father, maintained a fear-based relationship with my children I would be viewed as toxic at best or abusive at worst. "As above, so below" also means "As below, so above." That's one reason I left that path. Took a while to drop the baggage, I'll admit - but I've been happier for it in the long run. I don't often debate with Christians though. I've had to shut down their well-intended but terribly rude attempts to "save" me, and it's kept them off my case. But I also consider that all faiths, however obscure, essentially lead to the same goal. It's the interpretive twists and turns of us humans that make them onerous. That said, I have had some fun when Christians make the statement "God gave us free will to test our faith" or something to that effect. I point out that if the metaphor of Eden is to be believed, it was the Serpent who did that (hence the name "Light Bringer), and the loving God was so angry he holds it against Adam, Eve, and their progeny to this very day. Makes one wonder what his original intent was.
@Aphorism V no, when I wrote about the metaphor I was rambling. I had already made the point I was aiming in the first paragraph, unrelated to the metaphor itself. Reading comprehension can be challenging sometimes.
I love videos like this that help me understand rhetoric and logic better. My earliest exposure to argument was my dad talking and talking until I gave up, so I appreciate a genuine education on the topic.
"If your God is all powerful and all knowing, then the Bible would convince me because he would know how to write it in such a way that it would convince me. But it doesn't so he's not. Thanks, though."
@@bloodbased that's honestly a good point. Just because he KNOWs how to convince you to be christian and has the CAPABILITY to convince you to be christian, that doesn't mean he wants you to convert. If he wanted to communicate the message perfectly, he could have, but maybe he didn't want to. The argument doesn't assume omni-benevolence, and even if it did, that still doesn't mean that he would want you to convert. Unfortunately that just means that there's NO true path for a believer to follow. Maybe God doesn't care if people worship him on the planet. Because if the bible was the word of god, and God intended to use it to communicate that he is our god, then it would have happened. But it doesn't, so it wasn't his plan to use the bible to convert everyone to christianity... Mind trippy...
I had one who said there were chariots in the Dead Sea therefore Moses saved them from Egypt, when I told them there wasn’t evidence for chariots in the Dead Sea, they cited the Bible as a source for that claim to be true
I am an atheist but i tend to get along with pagans more than followers of Abrahamic religions. Pagans tend to be more open minded and accepting. I actually enjoy going to pagan bookstores, the artwork and music i find there is often quite beautiful.
Do you get along with christians? If not, why? On what basis do you think pagan's are easier to get along with than christians? Do you think that you yourself have an open or a closed mind? If you had to judge. And why are you an atheist, and how do you think your worldview explains reality?
@@jesse-s4q2k hello, I am not the OP but atheists hold a wide variety of positions as all they have in common is not being convinced of a god or gods existence. I just wanted to tackle why I personally am an atheist. To me, atheism is the null hypothesis. If someone says something is a certain way, we should ask them why and then see if they have a convincing argument. Arguments for a deity seem to fall short in my opinion and without any good evidence, I just cannot honestly believe in any deity. In terms of explaining the world around us, we have not had the supernatural proven to exist and no natural explanation has been switched out for a supernatural one. To me, it adds to the likelihood of everything else having a natural explanation but obviously not proof.
@@sebaquesadilla hi. Thanks for getting involved in the conversation. So i believe the christian worldview explains reality better than atheism because it accounts for laws of nature, absolute morality, and universal laws of logic. In your worldview, why would you expect the universe to operate consistently and why would being logical be necessary to determine truth? Also, how do you account for morality? I know some atheists claim that there is no absolute morality, just nature.
I guess to simplify, why do i need to be logical to prove my point if there are no laws of logic? If there are laws of logic where do they come from? If they were merely conventions, i could make up my own and those would be just as valid as yours and debate would be impossible.
@@jesse-s4q2k i can get along with Christians but in my experience when the topic of religion comes up and they find out i do not hold their views, they tend to be very judgemental and try to convert me. Pagans usually are far more accepting of my views. I was once told about something called the Wiccan Rede. "An it harm none, do ad ye will." I love that sentiment. I try to have an open mind but i recognize every human has his or her own biases. Atheism is simply a lack of belief in a diety, not a worldview itself. As far as my own worldview, i try to simply observe, trust my senses as much as i can. And i trust the scientific method.
Man, I've just met your channel and it's already been a lot of fun to hear someone different arguing from another perspective, you know how to debate, I really like your channel. looks like you've got another subscriber :D
I had a similar argument, but not distilled down as well as this one. It basically said that god should be able to communicate perfectly with his creation. To not be able to means that either he is limited because he can't make another being smart enough to understand him, and/or he is limited because he is unable to communicate with his own creation. Ultimately removing his omnipotence. The only counter is that he doesn't want to communicate effectively with his creation, and that opens up all sorts of problems which ultimately end in removing his omnibenevolence.
There's a problem with this though. You left out an option that God doesn't communicate with His creation because of His omnibenevolence. And if you're going to try to show why Christianity is false you require a burden of proof as to show why God needs to communicate with His creation and it's necessary.
@@huskydragon2000 P1) god is omnibenevilent. P2) god is onmipotent. P3) anyone who does not follow god correctly will go to hell, or go through some analagous punishment. From P1, god does not want anyone to go to hell. From P2, he has the ability to effectively communicate with his creation in such a way that nobody would go to hell. Therefore God must communicate clearly with his creation. It is evident that God does not communicate clearly with his creation, therefore one of the 3 premises must be false. Either hell, or anything analagous to it, does not exist and therefore there is no longer a carrot and stick to convert people, or you give up one of god's omni-traits.
Why do they have to yell? It’s like a midnight infomercial where they think the louder they yell the more likely they are to get their message across. My anxiety skyrocketed just listening to him. Great argument though, keep up the good work Ocean 😎👍🏼
Even when I was a Christian televangelists and “fire and brimstone” preachers freaked me out. It probably has a lot to do with how I was raised as a Christian, but they’ve never “seemed Christian” to me.
@Ocean I had this exact argument for years about Islam. In Islam there is Quran and Hadith (reports about what the prophet did or said). Hadith are either strong or weak and some people don t follow Hadith at all and only Quran. My argument has always been that God would have seen that some people would follow with or without Hadith and since God would see the future he would put Hadith in Quran. Since he did not then God did not write Quran.
pretty much explaining that the Hadith is false. And the Quran is all we need, the Hadith just helps mankind understand more details regarding our salvation. Please just don’t listen to BS pick up a Quran and read it before you die, surely you have the time for it.
I literally feel gross, like my skin crawls when videos of pastors like that are played. I just have this bone-deep feeling that if it were legal, he'd kill me for my beliefs and for being a strong minded woman.
Old comment but yeah, that's EXACTLY how monotheism spread in the first place. To quote someone else's comment on another ocean keltoi video "monotheism always loses without violence".
@remingron The Bipolarity of Neo-pagan argument: 1) Christianity is either docile or violent 2) Christianity surely didn't spread from the mountains of Armenia to the rolling hills of Ethiopia while is constant persecution
He probably would. They used to & there is a sudden push for the stripping of womens freedoms in the last 5 years here and pagans, druids, witches have been being targetted & harmed at least in non physical ways in the last few years. Those of us who tried to be open about our beliefs anyways. I had my business attacked, my car egged & my life threatened. So deffinitely connect with a pagan community for support & stay safe. They are nuts.
I'm actually scared of pastors like this. Because of our current situation in our country, I'm afraid we may end up with "A handmaidens' Tail" scenario. We need to pray to our gods for salvation from the Christians.
As an ex-Christian, that is the religion I am most afraid of. Thank you all for showing me how I can be sure that one isn't real, while allowing that the Gods you all believe in might be.
@@mako9579 it’s one of those things that’s probably best explained over a voice call or in person but it centers around LFW second order desires and decrees for God. So if a Christian can have a coherent view that negates LFW and affirms second order desires then the criticism fails. Ocean kind of mentioned this in the video.
The all knowing thing is an interesting idea. In Irish paganism, the goddess The Morrígan has the gift of prophecy and regularly delivers poems predicting the future. And yet there is also an element of fate within the stories, or at least a level of inevitability. On top of this, we often see The Morrígan orchestrating events, pushing people to act a certain way, or moving pieces on the chest board seemingly so it'll go the way she most desires. So is it fate that she is likewise bound to and must assist to see through to it's end? Or does she see many possible futures and picks the one she deems most worthy and sets that future in motion? It's hard to say, but there is room for interpretation here and its very engaging to speculate on.
The morrigan or morrigu is actually 3 goddesses a tripple goddess & daughters of the Tuatha De Dannan who later accept at least 2 others to their number: Macha, Badb, Nemain, Morgana le Fey, Morgaise. Rhiannon & Raven are also sometimes among their number. They are weavers and washer women at the fjord, but they are not the same as the Fata or Fates who are Clotho, Lachesis & Atropos. The Norns, Arachne, Hecate, Rosanitsy, Moira, Akka & many other weavers exist. They are never said to be omnipotent. They are powerful & can effect the strands of fate. They can not alter destiny however. Unchangeable fate in celtic mythology was called a Guise. Free choice effects fate that is not destined. Some gods and goddesses can change mortals fate, but destiny is even hard to impossible for even a Weaver to alter.
No, The Morrigan is ONE figure. It is deeply erroneous to say she is a triple goddess because that is not reflected in the source material. Now, you can say your UPG identifies them as a triple goddess, that's fine. But you cannot say that is what The Morrigan is, because again, that is not reflected in the mythic material. The Morrigan and her sisters only occasionally appear in threes in the source material, sometimes its four goddess, sometimes two. And sometimes its three, but not the same three. Now you can say there are many great queens, but there is already a term for that in the material, Na Morrigna. But insofar as The Morrigan herself, she is a solo figure, she is not three people. Badb and Macha are their own individuals, who are stated to be sisters, with their own agendas who work alone or with other figures. For example, during the Tain, Badb appears with two other figures who are not The Morrigan or Macha, but rather with Fea and Nemain, or sometimes Nemain and Be Nuit. If you would like to argue with me, please provided a credible source. Also, NO, there is no such thing as "Celtic myth," the gods in Ireland were not the same as the gods in Gaul or Britain. Also, I think you misspelled that word, "GUISE" is like a disguise. Unless there is something in either Welsh or Gaulish myth about a guise as such, I assume we're talking about Irish myth and you meant the word GEIS. But a geis is literally changed fate within the source material. A geis is a taboo which a person takes on themselves, and the wording when they do so is extremely specific. "I destiny a destiny." It is chosen density, under the condition they keep their oath when they make it, and if they do they receive great boons. Irish myth a least has no direct equivalent to the Norns or the Fates of Greek myth, the closest are the goddess of prophecy, who are the Na Morrigna. AND likewise I did not say The Morrigan changes fate, I said she has an agenda, sees several future outcomes through prophecy, and pushes events forward to facilitate the future she wants. Which she regularly does, successfully. The Tain literally only happens because The Morrigan facilitates it to happen.
@@wolfgirl535 You are wrong, but I don't have the time or inclination to argue with you. When you come on social media with that attitude putting others down for autocorrect and asking for "sources" for a belief path that existed prior to written language you show how much of an ignorant child you are. Read more. In between the lines. The little known folk tales that have survived christian corruption and mass rewrites paired with the adjusted mabinogion book of conquests and tale of the dun cow all explicitely say that the Morrigan is both a title and a name. They are daughters of the original. Idiot. Expand your mind or don't, its up to you. Its not my job to do your research for you. I offered legitimate information and if you don't want to accept it then that is your perview to remain ignorant, but don't attack others online because you feel embarassed when someone knows more than you.
The independent Baptist church that I grew up in would easily bypass all this as they’d assume Assemblies of God, Methodists, or anyone not them were going to hell. I grew up thinking my little tiny church had all the answers to life and death.
The condescension & pomposity of that. There are billions in the world, but they had all the answers. This kind of attitude always astounds me with the prideful ignorance of it.
Seems like when we contest the existence of God; we become stuck criticizing the flaws of humanity. IE: “God can’t exist if he allows Us to exist like this”.
Hi there. I just wanted to pop by and say I am so incredibly thankful to have found your channel. I'm a former Christian, turned witch and I personally worship Hermes, and some of the things you said really resonated with me. Thank you, and I hope that life finds you well.
Wonder why someone needs to worship at all ? Is it fear of something ? Or maybe not wanting to believe we're not spcial just apes with delusions of importance,and are only here to breed the next generation ,nothing more ?
Its good you dropped christianiy,but why do you feel the need to worship anyone/thing,its just the same addiction with a different flavour ? To me anyway,im not trying to be nasty i genuinely
@@andreworr9128well the gods and goddesses offer knowledge, inspiration and wisdom . Fate and luck are also something people believe in that ,plus the gods and goddesses are pretty logical to explain ,atleast the polytheistic pantheons are
yup same. it was a nice introduction I guess but Ocean is so much more scholarly and intelligent in his videos. woo barely uses sources which was what led me originally to feel off about him.
I was raised Catholic, and still technically am, but over the past year or so I've been questioning what I believe. Besides the contradictions in the Bible, the different translations can completely change the meaning of a passage. I've never really been one for structured religion, and seeing people get so aggressive over it hasn't really made me want to stay Christian. Ocean, your channel has clarified which aspects of Christianity I question, and also strengthen my interest in the Norse gods. Thanks! 👍🏻
good for you man no matter what you end up finding its always good to question, as I've seen it skepticism is never a bad thing. you either come away with a new path and more knowledge or strengthened faith. if your looking for a place to stand this channels a great one no matter the religion. good luck in your search.
Hey m8. Personally I preferred the Douay-Rheims bible. It's a closer word for wprd translation of the original Latin. But I do have to look into more modern versions for some passages because the grammar and words can be funky. I do enjoy looking into it though and parsing all the stuff together even if I don't understand it all atm (and maybe never will).
Well, if we follow Aristotle... 1. All things that exist must possess an identity. 2. All identities are definite, and in being defined they are thereby delineated apart from other things. 3. The opposite of definite is infinite, therefore nothing can be infinite. 4a. God, having an identity, can be defined. 4b. One such definition of God is that God has certain properties unto infinity (omniscience, omnipotence, infinite good, etc.) 5. If God is infinite, God does not posses an identity. Conclusion: Therefore, such a God does not exist.
For any event God wants to bring about, he knows how to bring it about. For any event God wants to bring about, he is capable of bringing it about. Conclusion. If God chooses to bring about a particular event, it must occur. For any message God wants to communicate, he knows how to communicate it such that it will be interpreted correctly. For any message God wants to communicate, his is capable of communicating it such that it will be interpreted correctly. Conclusion. If God chooses to communicate a message, it must be interpreted correctly. These seem quite compelling on first read. The first proposition in both sets deal with his knowledge (omniscience), and the second in both sets deal with is capability (omnipotence). I agree with the first two propositions in both sets, but there's a glaring proposition that he's overlooking that renders his conclusions inadequate. In order for God to do something, he must also be willing. I'm not claiming to know God's will, but he has told us his will in parts in the Bible. One part of his will is that humanity has free will to decide to be with or without God. Therefore, it is against God's will to do anything that would violate our free will as humans. That where his omnibenevolence comes into play, God lets us choose and won't violate that decision. How, here is my set of revised propositions and conclusions that take into account the full tri-omni nature of God. Proposition 1: For any event God wills to happen, he knows how to bring it about and is capable of bringing it about. Proposition 2: For any message God wills to communicate, he knows and is capable of communicating it such that it will be interpreted correctly. Before I continue, I must highlight something. Due to our corrupted nature, perfectly consistent interpretations of God's messages to us is impossible. Therefore, in order for God to insure his messages are interpreted correctly, he must violate our free will by controlling our mind such that we will all interpret his message correctly. Proposition 3: Due to sin, interpretation of the Biblical texts will be varied among Christians. Proposition 4: God won't perform an action that violates his will or the free will to which he granted us. Conclusion: God communicating a message such that it will be interpreted correctly by all who believe in his messages would violate the free will to which he granted us and, therefore, violate his own will.
I originally heard this argument in my Symbolic Logic class, which was taught by a devout Catholic professor at a Catholic university. People got so mad they left the room. The Protestants and Catholics formed two distinct teams, spittle was flying in some cases, and I was left out of the argument because at that point I was out to the class along with a few assorted atheists and agnostics. The way Doc put it was, "You think God's a dirtbag, right?" "Well, your god is. Some of mine are pretty cool." I also find it kind of hilarious that the ad that played after this video IS!!! for a colon cleanse... more than one way to remove some crap from your life I guess...
@MexTaco710 Yes, there is plenty of evidence that (some) events described in the Bible are factual, and I would never deny this, and I do in fact believe that man who is called Jesus did exist. My seperation from the Bible isn't from the historical narrative, but the mystical and moral one, and this doesn't come from 'not wanting to believe', or 'wanting to not believe', rather from personal reason, I would be quite happy to know of a God empirically, and there is an extent to which I believe in a god, just not so nearly to how the bible describes it. and I quite respect your ability to argue for the historical accuracy of the Bible, that's just not where my argument lies.
You have this God, who already knows everything and controls everything, who creates billions and billions of souls on this planet and then neatly divides them into good and bad (and has a 'maybe' purgatory pile) when they die (already knowing who is going where before they are born). That concept of existence and the reason for human life seems so incredibly simplistic that my brain just cannot accept it.
I did have an English teacher like that. He was extremely annoyed that non native Brits were doing better than native Brits. To be fair to him, he wanted Brits to make an effort as they were over confident. After 12 years, he still asks to read my stories.
As an atheist this will be interesting, I can not deny the concept of god nearly as well as I could have due to this channel and my pagan friends. The things I have that make me deny Christianity in the affirmative and say Christianity is false can not apply to most pagan faiths. Your God can go to Hell video is a good argument as to how this applies.
People keep talking about the "problem of evil", but if you really look at the Bible, it seems we have more of a "problem of good". How could such an evil being allow good to exist?
@@Nerobyrne Easy, apathy. This is the world of an apathetic singular god if It is to be the work of a single god. If the god is nearly apathetic it would allow all good and all evil. An omnipotent omniscience will have its will fulfilled with more ease than you expend every day you eat lunch. Its will would just happen but it clearly doesn't less the god be an apathetic god of chaos. That stated if there is more than one god exists and they all have their own will and none is omnipotent this world makes perfect sense, this does look like a world where a clash of ideas exist simply because it is plainly obvious that it does. You do none the less make a good point if the default is Hell and worship and devotion and the basic manner of salvation is how the vast majority of Christians say it is then absolutely I do not see how that is a god that demands kindness, the God described in the Bible is evil simply by allowing the majority of us to be tormented in Hell.
As another athiest, I find that the concept of a god or gods is too vague. We have written gods in books, talked about them in stories, and used them as explanations for the state of the world. Some gods are all powerful, and are one, other gods have greater and lesser roles. Even in fiction, gods generally are hidden or beyond our world. Reaching them might be considered a challenge few could conquer, while others remain locked away by mortals. Hell, some gods even reproduce and grow old. I don't find it convincing that someone believes, but I do find it interesting. Too often people use common sense to navigate life, and generally find a role to play. I am quite happy that I, despite working a job that is quite frustrating due to a lack of effective communication, have an interest in philosophy. I find theology more of a challenge because a story can be told many ways, like a metaphor, losing the details to make way for a message. I like the exploration of myths and legends, especially when they come in the form of webcomics and video games. I personally play D&D but have not found a group ready to explore the lore during game time. Christians are hard to argue with as they at times will consider you a troll or be unwilling to think of a world without their god as they fear doing so would have them _fall out of grace, into the clutches of the devil below, to burn for eternity._ I still ask them questions as you never know what kind of conversation you might get.
Would you mind mentioning a source or explaining some of the arguments you talked about? I can't find much online on "arguments for polytheism that work against monotheism." Most of them start and end at "less fighting, any argument for a God works better for multiple Gods, and they are more fun to be around and be with." So I would appreciate a starting area to go through.
@@haruhirogrimgar6047 here's an easy one: The problem of evil. If there is only one god, why doesn't it do something about all the evil? If there are many competing gods, then it's easy to explain. They are in competition with each other and nobody ever truly wins.
As a former Christian who was raised in the faith - trying to use any of this to speak/argue/debate/defend to Christians won't go far, as most of it is too far over their heads for them to understand (not all of course, but every christian I've known or met, for certain.) Maybe breaking it down several levels will.
You set me up. Played your video and thinks to myself “I can’t really hear. Let me raise the volume”. *Enters crazy-loud spewing Christian* Jump scare happens and eardrums may or may not have been damaged. 🙂
I'm currently an undergrad Bible major, studying to be a minister. You've given me a lot to think about so, thank you. Here is my immediate thoughts on this, would love to hear what you think of this response: God created free willed creatures, and being such we have the ability to defy God not because He can't make us obey but because He allows us to be able to disobey. As Christians I believe that God has given us the Holy Spirit which guides us towards Truth, and while some may still disagree, in my experience Christians tend to agree where it matters, and those who disagree on more minor issues are usually pretty stubborn which makes me wonder if they are allowing the Spirit to guide them towards that particular Truth or allowing themselves to make interpretations. Hope that makes sense. Sorry for the run-on sentence!
In this argument the concept of free will is not an issue. God only makes you understand his communication. You still have a free will to follow it or not. Satan knows god exist, he knows God's communication and yet he chooses to disobey. No matter how stubborn someone is, omnipotent and omniscient god should be able to create a communication that is understandable.
@@MrQbee87 I'm not a Christian but I do think free will is integral to this argument. If god's will was explicitly known (ie. you must do X, Y, and Z or you will go to hell for eternity), then why would you choose to disobey him? Wouldn't that create a constant fear and incentivize doing the right thing only to avoid punishment? On the other hand, if Christians believe that God used the Bible only as a guide, then they still have to decide for themselves on a code of ethics. They have to choose to be a good person (and what constitutes that) based on their own principles (which may be inspired by the teachings of scripture) rather than based on the knowledge of the absolute right or wrong thing to do in every situation.
I don't necessarily agree or disagree. I think as human beings WE are infallible and we are going to get things wrong, or misinterpret things. Yes, I believe the Bible is God's word, but I also know that I don't understand parts of it as well. So maybe different religions read and interpret it in different ways. I also believe that every religion has Fanatics that pick and choose the parts of the Bible that suit them and go crazy with those beliefs. Those are the ones I worry about more than the whether the person writing God's word got the wording correct. If you're looking for inconsistencies only, you're going to find them in every situation if you look hard enough
"What the Bible plainly says" = "My interpretation of the Bible, which I am either too dishonest or too arrogant (likely both) to even consider could be inaccurate or up to debate"
Well, that is a good point im many cases, but thouse that take a littral interpretation should almost always be given the benifit of the doubt. This meassage im writing could be a wird code for something hidden, but it’s more resonable to asume im just makeing a counter point to you, becurse that is the litteral interpretation of my comment.
@@oliverfoldager291 I wonder what the "Biblical literalist" pastor featured in this video would say if I pointed him to the verse where Jesus said it was unnecessary to wash your hands because "it's what comes out of the mouth that defiles it." "Germs are a lie; a conspiracy invented by the Liberal media to control us!" Well, not likely. He's more likely to say that Jesus was speaking metaphorically. How do we know that? Because what Jesus said was wrong, and God can't be wrong! Therefor the inaccurate statement was actually not saying the thing that it's saying!
@@TheZeroNeonix I dont know what he would say, and I dont really care, as an athiest I have no problem saying, that the bible has a lot of deeply imoral and factually wrong statements in it. And although the pastor might dissagree, that is still his headach. Takeing a littaral interpretation as the first is still a good way to interorate any kind of text, holy or not.
This all seems misguided if they are not reading the text in the original Greek and have a solid knowledge of the language in that historical context. Interesting video BTW!
When I left the Catholic Church in my late teens, my pastor had a long talk with me (as I had been very involved in the parish), asking me why why why. Eventually, I just blurted out that I'd come to the conclusion that going to church anymore was kinda like attending a horror show inside of a fun house. He just smiled and asked if I would still work at bingo. Cheers All!
interesting. i just left the Catholic church and I'm scheduled for a long talk with my pastor in a couple weeks. i distinctly remember attending easter vigil mass, seeing the new converts get water poured on their head from a dollar store jug filled with 'holy water' and thinking "shit. im in a cult, aren't i?". i hope i find a way to tell this to him in a more agreeable way.
Many Christians spend their whole lives basically gossiping about how this or that person or group isn't really a Christian. I overheard 3 of my uncles who were clergymen all confide to my mum at different times how the others weren't actually christians and probably werent really saved at all. This is how christians cope with the dilemma described in the video. And that's why there are 35k different denominations, each believing that only THEY have the truth and the others have been deceived by Satan.
I've run around and around this bush a few times and here's where I land: Do I exist? - I think, therefore I am Was I created? - Intelligence begets intelligence, so yes Who IS this creator? (oh boy, here we go) This part would take A LOT of typing, so I'll nut shell it :-) FOR ME, there is one thing I believe, one thing that feels innately known/perceived, that I've never needed a book, a pastor, a priest, or otherwise to confirm.....And that is that "whoever" our creator is, that creator IS Love. I also believe that the one thing every single person who has ever existed desires, is Love. Now, we may not know how to give or receive it very well, but in our heart of hearts, we desire it. I believe that even the most morally wayward person among us desires love. Everyone wants to love and to be loved. Again, most of us probably completely muck up the pursuit, obtaining, retaining, and reciprocation of love, but it is what we most deeply desire and love is what makes the world go around. So, God is love, and there is plenty of mystery there......and we all possess the common denominator of desiring love.... so ultimately, I believe we all desire God, who is love. Now, for a number of reasons that I won't take the bandwidth to express here in pixel, I do believe that the heart and mind of God were presented in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus. There are many reasons why I believe Jesus existed. There are many reasons why I believe He was crucified by the Romans....AND there are a number of reasons why I believe that a resurrected Jesus was witnessed by a large number of people. From this position forward I have many issues with "Christianity" as it has been developed and in my opinion manipulated. I take issue with how the Bible has been weaponized, often by well meaning people, but never the less, inappropriately so.....as I see it. In my opinion anyone who tries to take a "straight" reading of Scripture and form their beliefs based on that reading...well, they will more than likely arrive at some at odds with reality beliefs, in my opinion. At the end of the day I believe: ALL of life is a mystery. We should embrace the mystery, while endeavoring to live in the flow of Love. There is more truth out there than we'll ever know or could possibly know. I don't believe any one religion has cornered the market on truth. And ultimately I believe that all shall be well and all shall be well and all manner of things shall be well.
@@TheKrispyfort Did God not know it would need to be translated? Why provide a 'perfect message' that you know will be delivered to the innumerably vast majority of people via mistranslations?
@@huskydragon2000 The main issue I see is that 'perfection' is very subjective. Assuming one's intention is to create a message that will be easy to comprehend and share so that everyone (or as near to everyone as is possible) understands, the fact that we're presented with a confusing message that is interpreted in many ways would be considered an abject failure by any objective standard. If one's intention was not to share a clear and universally-understood message then... Job done!
@@ChrisFineganTunes The argument isn't valid is what I was getting at. I believe perfection is objective in a metaphysical sense. What doesn't make sense about this argument is people are just buying it without realizing the heavy burden of proof they have to bear to hold to this. First, a free will defense can be made against this. In the Bible, we are warned that there are false prophets, false doctrines, and deceivers of all sorts. These people can certainly change the meaning of Scripture and preach these false teachings to innocent bystanders without contradiction. This is because God cannot freely make people do something. No Christian believes that God's main purpose is to have people correctly interpret the Bible. And a majority of Christians hold that the main purpose of the Scriptures is to have people come to a saving relationship with God. Now, let's consider the "knockdown" final argument that's suppose to move the Christian (I really think this is just preaching to the choir with a horrible argument) 1. It is logically impossible for God’s communications to be misinterpreted 2. If God is all-knowing, a communication of a false proposition must be a lie 3. If there are contradicting interpretations, at least one must be false 4. There are multiple instances of contradicting interpretation of God’s communications 5. Therefore, God is a pathological liar The conclusion comes out of left field! In no way does the conclusion follow from these premises and so it's logically invalid. To see this, here's a translation. 1. It's logically impossible for P to be Q 2. If God is R, then P must be a lie 3. If there are S, then at least one P is false 4. There are S & P 5. Therefore, God is T Notice, (5) has a new symbol. This is because the proposition (T) is nowhere in (1, 2, 3, 4) I believe proposition (T) is pure rhetoric and not logically valid. Also, notice (2) has a proposition (R) that isn't really relevant to the rest of the argument and doesn't help conclude anything. Again, this is pure rhetoric just added to confuse the people who are illogical. Notice also that premises (3) and (4) are circular. In order for an argument to be valid, it can’t be circular. I contend if we find a way to make this valid (which I do in a reply to someone else) that the Christian simply doesn't have to accept premise (1) and if we stray away from premise (1) as being logical but probable, then I believe that those who hold premise (1) and hold to premise (4) proposition (P) in either sense, then they have a burden of proof of showing that God Himself has given direct revelations to those interpreting the Bible and intentionally lied to them. In my research, it seems to me that most interpretations of the Bible are done out of the knowledge of men, not God. In conclusion, this is choir preaching. This is no "knock down" argument unless you lack a sense of logic. This whole video would only move those who fall for rhetoric rather than truth.
I kind of figured out these arguments in my head years ago before I became a Pagan. I never knew how to put them into words which made arguing with other Christians super difficult, though. Thank you!
Why would a god give us rational thinking brains to solve logical problems, and by then by all logic prove his own inexistence. I Do not accept faith as an answer, Faith is the ultimate tool of gaslighting the problem at hand. Faith tells you that you should ignore all truth, reason, and logic because it's more noble to hold on to a glistening lie without doubt than to accept a hard truth and in the end you will be rewarded for being tricked, or be punished harshly for calling the ultimate liar out on his bluff. If by some deceit there is a Christian God, he is an abusive father.
Good vid, but I think I have a few counter arguments (as an ecumenical Christian) 1: A communication that is always interpreted as the truth is logically impossible, as interpretation is the responsibility of the listener and not the communicator. The only way God could ensure that all of humanity would interpret his communications the same way would be to override their free will. 2. This speaks to a larger question within Christianity, but it is that God often prefers to work through people rather than manifest in the world. God obviously could have just placed a library with all the eternal truths contained within them on Earth, but instead chose to communicate with unreliable middle men who corrupted the communication (presuming Biblical errancy). As to the larger question as to why God doesn't interact in our world more often, I'd probably liken it to a parent helping their kid with a school project. You don't want to do the project or else the kid doesn't learn anything. But that deserves its own essay/book on why God does this. 3. This is my weakest argument, but I'd perhaps argue that there are multiple 'true' or at the very least valuable interpretations of the same text, and so God risks 'false' or problematic interpretations so that humanity can have the former. This is very postmodernist and very heretical so take it with a grain of salt.
(As a non-demonination Christian) 1. The issue with God not interfering in free will is that we have examples of him doing exactly that, such as when Jonah refused to go to Ninevah because he feared what they would do to him, as well as striking down Onan for refusing to get his sister in law pregnant, though the counter argument for those two situations is that they disobeyed direct orders given to them by God. 2. This argument is based purely in the idea of God as the Father, a parental figure who wants us to learn not only more about Him, but also more about ourselves and the world around us. It would obviously be too easy to give us every answer, but then where would that put us? On the same level because then we would know all the things that God knows. This is where the concept of free will comes into play. We are free to gain the knowledge he has placed in front of us, but in order to do so we need to take action since while He could just give it to us, there is no value in gaining that knowledge. 3. Because I do believe that God doesn't interfere in free will, I do think that many interpretations of passages from the Bible are false in that they do not have the whole truth from the passage. I think, though this is only personal opinion, that this is a result of cherry picking verses that has become very prevalent in the last century or so. We miss important parts of interpreting a verse if we leave out verses that occur before and after a verse (some times many verses before and after). Sorry for the ramble Im pretty sure none of that makes sense
1. as the other xtian pointed out, your god overrules free will and human agency in the Bible. 2. if your god was omniscient it would have chosen middle men who wouldn't corrupt its word, unless your god gets pleasure out of leading people astray and, consequently, to damnation within its rules. So either your god lacks knowledge to choose an appropriate messenger to pass along the message, in which case they aren't omniscient; or they are deliberately leading people into an eternity of torture, in which case not only is its omnibenevolence obviously compromised but so is xtianity itself since Jesus could have just been another one of its "pranks" to lead people astray. 3. again, if your god was omnipotent and omniscient it would be able to formulate the text in such a way that, even after translation, every possible "true" message would be conveyed without any false or misleading messages.
1.) If God is omnipotent, he is capable of all things, is he not? If he's limited by "logically possible" he isn't omnipotent and is thus not God. In any case as other point out, God overrides free will constantly in the Bible. He did it dozens of times during the Israelite onvasion of Canaan to allow His Chosen People to slaughter, rape and genocide their enemies with impunity, and did it prior to the king of Egypt himself so they wouldn't be released early so he could perform his "Wonders" and show off. That's actually explicit in the text. 2.) Well the issue here is that if you child fails their science project, it's not that big a deal. If you fail to follow the right religion you are tortured forever and ever and ever until the last stars burn out trillions of years hence and are STILL being horrifically tortured. Because you know... Hell. 3.) This opens the door to Islam, Judaism, Baha'i and other monotheist faiths *also* being perfectly legitimate in addition to the thousands of Christian denominations, including the ones with such an alien theology to the mainline church they're practically different religions entirely, like Jehovah's Witnesses or Mormons. Doesn't that kind of... break Christianity entirely?
When I was a Christian I would see this as a pretty weak argument. I can think of several reasons from the Christian perspective that would explain the interpretation problem: 1. Free will. God doesn't want to use his omnipotence to make us understand him because it would violate free will. 2. Relationship. God wants us to get closer to him and those with a better relationship understand him better. 3. Faith. If you have more faith then god will give you more understanding in interpretation. 4. Satan. God is letting Satan blind people as part of his master plan. 5. Mystery. Who can know the mind of god? He probably has a great reason for not making his intentions obvious to everyone but if you could figure it out then you would be god. Anyway, I just don't see this as strong as so many other arguments. I do like the interpretation issue as an argument against the moral argument. (I.e. if morality is objective then why can't Christians agree on what god thinks is moral)
Like you let your child walk into traffic because you don't want to impinge on their free will? And how it's our job to seek him out when it would be much easier for him to come to us, for a relationship to which we cannot meaningfully consent, given that it's under threat of eternal torture? Maybe the Christian can get out of Ocean's argument, but there is no getting around the fact that the character is evil.
@@carmensavu5122 sure, I was just arguing the premise that god wants everyone to know his intentions/commands/desires etc. I think Christians can come up with lots of reasons for that not to be the case, thus division over interpretation doesn't violate gods supposed omniscience or omnipotence.
Nate W, I do appreciate the perspective you’ve provided. My expectation would have been along the same lines in terms of response. The only issue I see is that if god did these things intentionally, it would violate the whole “God is not a God of confusion” thing.
@@jamesbroderick689 That "God is not a god of confusion" thing is hilarious. If there's anything we can be sure of when looking at Christianity and the Bible, is that it's confusing. The thousands of different interpretations show that beyond all doubts.
@@carmensavu5122 More like you teach your child about the dangerous things in the world (including traffic) and guide them while they're young, but eventually once they are adults you let them make their own decisions, even if they make bad ones.
30 years ago I married a southern baptist woman; she was a believer but not obnoxiously so, her family especially her mother a woman who never ventured more than 100 miles from her birthplace was a whole different story. I've had discussions with church pastors, traveling ministers, revival scam artists, etc.. along with the core members of several churches. These devout people have no logical argument for their beliefs, I would begin our discussion with " I don't believe that the bible is the written word of god so using what is written in there will not convince me. All of their arguments lead back to the bible which I would argue was as factual to me as a Marvel's comic book, give me a logical example or actual action. I was eventually labeled a Heathen, which I embraced, and left alone. Lol I divorced and got away from all that nonsense 20 years ago and never looked back. Religion should bring people together not separate them into hostile opponents.
Closest exsperience i had was at my work place when it came out when i was Pagan. Now people wasnt like "Oh you wanna go to hell" but actually more questions of understanding like "What does it entail and what gods do you have".
I love your videos they make so much sense I just had to subscribe. Funny thing is I actually have better conversations with atheists than I do with christians for this very reason. Thank you for this information, I seek knowledge as Odin would want us to do and you provided some. Skol! 🍻
When I tell my overly cristian grandmother that I am a heathen. I'm going to come armed with this information for the instance that she inevitably fires back at me
I would never argue about the bible with my grandparents. Better to let them believe at this point. They get peace from the prospect of heaven, putting doubts into their head this late in life seems cruel.
Sadly, growing up in Norway we got spoon fed Christianity in my upbringing (it has since been removed, kids no longer get forced in to the religion). SO I was a "true believer" in my childhood. When I was in my tweens I found two facts that bothered me... If you do bad, even coldblooded murder, but then ask forgiveness your sins will be forgiven and you go to heaven. If you live your life doing good and always sacrificing yourself to help others, but don't do it in HIS name, you still go to hell. Worshiping HIM maters more than your actions. So, the bad people are in Heaven, and good people in Hell? got it! Hell it is! ;) I've seen so many devoted Christians I would NOT get along with, and so many fun "damned" people who I'd much rather hang with. Heck, I think Lucifer isn't as bad as God anyway! God permitted Lucifer to kill the wife and kids of his most devoted follower just to test him... I thought he was supposed to be your protector?! I'd much rather have a God I can trust, like Loki! Heck yeah, I trust him way more! ;) (not even joking, Lokean!
Daniel and the Lions den, he saved Daniel because he had faith, then women and children were thrown into the lion's pit... INNOCENT WOMEN AND CHILDREN, and they were eaten, because who cares about them right?
We once believed we lived in the garden of our ancestors, together with all our siblings, the animals, the birds etc. We were given this gift of living - and we honored our ancestors, had respect for our siblings and cared for mother Earth. Cities gave the rise to new religions - religions of men and power. Religions which care less for life and more for death (afterlife with god), religions without the spirit of animals, mountains, birds and mother earth.
Hopefully they'll be like my parents and just accept it ("as long as you have a reason" lol)! Though I had the advantage of them being atheist... Best of luck.
This is a very well thought out & presented argument. It mimics many conversations I have had with my christian friends & family. Thanks & keep up the good work.
I think the best way to wiggle out of this argument is to say that god chooses to communicate in a way that can be misinterpreted. It seems to me that this T.I.A. argument has a third, unspoken proposition: that god would always choose to be correctly interpreted in all circumstances. If we discard this assumption, we could say that god is able and knows how to communicate with absolute clarity, but chooses not to for his own reasons. This is similar to the Calvinist argument (leaving out the reprobate part), and I think it diminishes god's omnibenevolence. Anyway, these are my half-baked thoughts, I'm obviously no philosopher. Great video Ocean!
That is along the lines of the "god works in mysterious ways"-stuff. It may be an escape hatch for this argument, if we want to accept it. But it leads into a rabbit hole in which the Theodicy is the smallest problem.
I'm a Neoplatonist & it doesn't seem to affect my view. The ONE has no attribute that you can pin down because it's infinite & thus paradoxical. You cannot say it is this or that because it is both & neither. The ONE does not generally interfere in anykind of direct way. The Gods on the other hand have vast power but are far from infalliable.
I think Gnostic Christianity side steps this to some extent by pushing the "true" God beyond concern for the physical world. It also explains away the God in the bible as the demiurge. Although in many ways Gnostic thought is more in line with the polytheistic beliefs. I am also not knowledgeable enough to say if the Gnostic God is omnipotent or omniscient.
The Interpretation Argument falls apart for one major reason; it does not account for intent. Look up “The Interpretation Argument debunked in 5 minutes”
Jelly Bean of course intent matters. What if He wants to tell a riddle or a cypher? What if He wants to lie? What if wants you to dig into His words to find the truth for yourself? I could go on ad infinitum. An omnipotent & omniscient being could have any number of reasons for not communicating a message clearly.
I like this argument. It utterly obliterates Protestantism. There are Roman Catholic theologians, such as Joseph Cardinal Franzelin, who make the same argument. So I'll be responding to this tonight on my channel from a Catholic perspective.
Does Catholicism come out any better? Has every Pope had exactly the same theological beliefs? Has there never been a papal bull that changed a previous one?
@@fluffysheap That is why I am Orthodox. God revealed his scripture through the unity of the church in councils and through the writings of the Church Fathers. No one man can interpret scripture, neither pope or laymen. It is the work of the spirit through the Bishops.
I think that Orthodoxy and early Church history prior to the papacy have the best theological and philosophical arguments for Christianity compared to Protestantism or Catholicism
Plus, if yahweh is omniscient, he knew before he created the universe if you would choose to belive in him or not, leaving you no alternative choice, which means he lied about free will. It also means he specificity created some of us to go straight to hell and suffer without a choice. And i'm pretty sure NOBODY would say that's god.... Thus, I'm a pagan
Exactly! If God wanted us all in heaven, than we all are going to heaven, because he intended it to be that way since he knew where all of us with end up before we were even born.
I agree with you on this argument but I got to ask. Do you think that Loki may be the one that brought the Christian faith about so that he could have his army come ragnarok?
When I was a child, I believed there wasn't enough room in heaven, and that I would be one of those going to hell, because I believed there were others more deserving than me, and to my 5 year old mind, that was ok I didn't even grow up in a christian household, I don't know how that kind of thinking got in my head
From a biblical standpoint, all have sinned and fall short of "going to heaven", so God provided a way thru grace by giving his only begotten son as substitute to die the death that we deserve so that we could believe in him and be saved. No one is good enough but God is good enough to save you
@@davidhaimoto6339 And that is one of the worst parts of christianity. Every other religion that has ever existed with a salvation narrative has affirmed that paradise is earned by doing good and improving the lives of others, not by just believing the right thing and doing nothing else. Believing that good works don’t matter and only “accepting” a messiah gives one passage to heaven, and that nothing else is required, is why fundamentalist christianity is so full of hateful, selfish, hypocritical, bigoted monsters. No matter how much evil these people bring into the world, no matter how much they hurt others, no matter how much they make the world a worse place, they still get to go to heaven because jesus. It’s ridiculous and detestable.
@@GothWolfRants justification is separate from sanctification. I agree with you 100%. There is no amount of works that can you can do that will get you to heaven. Keeping of the law is not required. Understanding the law is important in understanding what Christ did on Earth because His work is what saves. The law doesnt save but condemns, no one could keep it or even does but Christ did. So when He died, it was on account of our sin, not His. Because He kept the law perfectly. So to define the law and understand it, is important. Salvation is not keeping the law but a fruit that gives you assurance of your salvation that came through Christ. Many outside observers and fundamentalists do think that works means you have faith, therefore you must exhibit works. Then those type of preachers will tell you how to work. You'll get quick tips on how to not sin. But every writer of the epistles paints a different type of preaching that says you will be made a new creature in Christ. Your desires will change, your eyes will see, your ears will hear. If you believe He died and rose again. In romans 5 or 6 paul describes the law saying, that "when the law was given, sin increased. But where sin increased, grace abounded more. So then shall we sin so that grace may abound? May it never be..." Because the Law points out your need for Christ and belief in His works. So that you will turn from your dead works in sin and live. So to say that just believing in Christ is separate from changing your actions is equally unbiblical. Thats is what repentance is about. Seeing your dead actions and turning from them to Christ. This is the nature of sactification that happens gradually over time. Is this required? Technically no. All are judged on account of their works but those in Christ are not condemned by theirs.
So I'm not Christian. I'm pagan and was raised atheist and didn't have much intimate experience with Christianity growing up. I read the Bible once in an academic setting for the purpose of understanding biblical reference in English literature better. But for the sake of discussion: I wonder if there is an answer to this argument in the form of the Christian God's supposed desire for us to have free will, in addition to how he supposedly allows evil/The Devil's influence in the world under the idea that true believers will absolve themselves by finding the True Path or whatever they want to call it. Basically, the existence of conflicting interpretations of God's word is due to the Devil influencing people's ability to interpret the word of God correctly, and possibly people who misinterpret the Bible are in some way agents of Satan set on Earth to lead people astray. In the conception of an omnipotent and omniscient God, the existence of Satan and his influences can only come to be if God wants Satan's influence to exist. And if God wants to allow Satan to exist, it follows that God would allow Satan to do things that lead people astray, including misinterpreting the Bible or having agents on Earth who teach people the wrong lessons about the Bible. There is also the issue of the Bible being a translated text so of course different interpretations of its text are a natural thing to arise since we aren't reading the original language. And according to the Old Testament, different languages exist BECAUSE God created them after the Tower of Babel was constructed. God disliked that the collaboration of a people who all spoke 1 universal language led them to the hubris of trying to build a tower that would reach God and thus erased the universal language and replaced it with many different languages, and in that act arguably created the possibility of the Bible being misinterpreted. At any rate, very cool video, as always. I enjoyed it very much and it gave me a lot to think about.
I'm not Christian, I'm Atheist but I do see a solution here: God is curious as to what humans will do with messages that are not 100% clear, there are some stories where god sort of Experiments on humans and how they'll react to certain things. This however only applies if you see God as just omnicient and omnipotent, if you also say he is all good the whole Argument comes appart
I actually got into an argument similar to this with someone the earlier today. The one thing that really dismantles this particular argument is the fact that God isn't fallible but mankind is very fallible. Gods word is perfect but man isn't perfect, and sadly we often misinterpret a lot of things.
Now I'm still technically a Christian, so I shouldn't probably be arguing against this, but wouldnt a good rebuttal to that be that if God is all-capable/all-powerful such that he is able to communicate the message of salvation in a way which all people will understand, and all-knowing in that he knows exactly how to do so, and all-benevolent meaning that he wants all people to know him and come to him for salvation, then he would communicate his message in a way which even fallible men could agree upon? He communicates gravity in a way which all men, no matter how fallible, agree on. No man disbelieves gravity, or at least the effects of gravity, because it has been given to us as a universal law which is immediately applicable to everyone. Nobody disbelieves the existence of the mind because all men have minds and understand them intuitively. If the reality of the gospel is more important and more foundational to the reality of human life than anything else, as scripture says, wouldn't God likewise communicate the truth of the gospel in a way which all men would intuitively understand? I suppose you can venture into double predestination and say that God wants most people to go to Hell for his own glory, but at that point the debate moves into a purely moral area.
@@dugood70 the big flaw with that argument is again taking human accountability out of the equation. We as humans are flawed God isn't, his word is perfect but we ourselves are not. God is pretty clear with his word and he's allowed it to be translated into multiple languages just so all of the world can read and hear it. But again we ourselves are not perfect so we can never fully agree on just about anything. God isn't accountable for our failures and short comings in life. The whole point of this existence is that we learn to depend on him and his word and use the tools he's set out to help us further along with our journey. And no, the spiritual is not the only and all important part of things. Living here and now is also a very important part of our journey. He created us in his image so we could inevitably experience paradise. We screwed up the first time and now we have to learn from our mistakes and choose to be with him again in the second one he has coming.
@@rojack79er you're still taking away god's all-powerful nature in this argument - you're essentially making a 'can god make a rock that is too heavy for god to lift' argument - can god make humanity be so corrupt that god cannot give a perfect message to them? (or allow humanity to be made so corrupt, whether it was directly him who corrupted humanity or if he allowed another of his creations to do the corrupting is immaterial, he is still the ultimate cause). If god is truly omnipotent, it does not matter how corrupting humanity is, he should still be theoretically able to beam perfect understanding into every human's mind at once, or else he is not all-powerful. The only conclusion you can come to is that he is choosing to not communicate a perfect message for whatever reason - most people choose to believe either that having a perfect message would conflict with free will, or that god doesn't want the true path to be easy to find for some other reason. I think that's a valid way to get out of this bind - there is no perfect message of god's will because he doesn't want there to be, but you have let go of the idea that the bible is the perfect word of god along the way, you have to accept that the bible can be misinterpreted and that you don't know if your interpretation is correct in any quantifiable way. I think it still breaks down the concept of christianity because it does get rid of the idea that god is not a 'god of confusion' - the way to god is purposefully unclear, which makes the belief that the only way to god is through correct belief, and that failure to find this belief results in endless torture, an abusive setup by any standard of human morality. Sure, a christian can wave it away by saying god has a different morality and who are we to judge it, but i think that's dumb on the face, if you believe in a triomni god then he's the one who gave us this sense of morality, and him having his own rules that seem immoral to us is just another coil of the abusive setup of forcing people to submit to his unintuitive, seemingly immoral will on blind faith backed by nothing. if god made it impossible for me to understand his morality how can he expect me not to judge him on the only morality he gave me and find him lacking
@@amberbydreamsart5467 No I'm not making an argument for can God make a rock bigger than he is. I said what I said and meant it. Mankind is flawed, God isn't. We can misinterpret his word all we want that doesn't mean the Bible itself is flawed, only our interpretation of it is.
“God is a pathological liar.” This is the correct answer right here. Even if I was to grant that the Bible god existed and that the Bible was the word of God, this would be the only reasonable conclusion just by reading the damn thing.
God is. And the word of God, is Truth and light and life. You only talk as you do, because you don't believe. the bible teaches that to those who are of the world, the word of God is noise, because they don't have spirit of understanding. And it also teaches that no one can say Jesus is Lord unless they have the Holy Spirit of God dwelling in their hearts. Make no mistake, God is, and His son Jesus is, the way, the truth and the life, and none may come to the father except through Him, this is further made self evident by the fact that His teachings on the word of God, through His disciples. Is what moved us from the dark ages and meadevil times, of paganism and devil worship and demonic sacrifices, to modern times, with our modern understanding of right and wrong, good and evil. Even our modern day family values, which are drawn from the word of God. All this because, God who is Truth, communicated, and what he, said, what He taught, has not only been taught, through out the world, but this same teachings, changed the world, for the better. How can you say, God isn't real, and the word of God isn't truth?
@@brayo.4793 There is evidence? So does that mean that you’re going to provide said evidence or are you just going to assert that there is and walk away? My bet is that you’re just going to quote carefully selected quotes from the Bible at me not knowing that it either gets contradicted elsewhere in the Bible or it doesn’t mean what you think that it means when even if I was to grant you that it says that I still don’t trust the Bible thus it was a waste of time even bringing it up in the first place. But please do feel free to prove me wrong.
8:15 in the most respectful way I find it hysterical how Christians will call pagans aggressive. I've never seen someone so angry over the word "is" before.
Having a war about religion is like having a fight over who's got the best imaginary friend - Yassar Arafat, chairman of the Palestine liberation organization (1929 - 2004)
Millions upon millions and millions more will die for the causes of the 3 Desert Religions. Claiming the SAME God to worship and claiming their omnipotent God is on their side.
Are religious wars really about religion? Take a look at the Thirty Years War. It clearly started as a religious war, or at least that's what they said. But half-way through the war a treaty made all the religious reasons for fighting moot, so they picked sides again and got back to fighting, but this time for their Nations. Religion is just another form of tribalism.
Religion (gold, land, & oil) is used as a reason/means to fuel war. War is used to eliminate competition. If you're told your cause is more just in comparison to another, you're then excused from judgment no matter what atrocities you inact.
@@LesHaskell - False, institutional, religion is used as a means of political control. Monopolise a religion and you have a monopoly of power. You go to war on the pretext of religion because another religion threatens your monopoly. True religion is Peace.
The whole god gave his only son and sacrificed him also makes no sense whatsoever. Why could an infinity powerful god only be able to have a single son. But not only that it's not even a sacrifice. He died on the cross sure but he was revived! You can't give something away and just take it back. He got to ascend to heaven after his revival. So no that's not a sacrifice it makes no sense under the general belief of the story.
Great points there, I know this was something I had questioned myself. Because to me, it seems troublesome and inefficient. This is where one of my teacher's points rings out loud and clear. If you are reading something. Rule number one; Context. Rule number two; context. Rule number three; context. I will try to keep it short and sweet but in essence, a perfect God that keeps every promise without failure has to follow through with the set punishments. Death is the punishment for eating the fruit. after this atonement for sins came into place after the world "fell" the one true atonement is the death of the sinner. This is where the lineage comes into place. David being the son of Adam and Jesus being the Son of David. Thus linking him to the promise of adam that his offspring would crush the head of the serpent and that the man to do it would be from a royal bloodline. So with that in place, Jesus fit that description and had to be outside of impurity thus conceived in a virgin so a pure woman (there is an ideology that it is the man that failed and thus passes the seed of sin on and not the woman). The last part is to overcome death or the penalty for the first sin and that is what Jesus took on the cross. Now, why a cross? I don't know yet. but that in short sums up the atonement side of things that a perfectly just God that keeps his promises has to follow through with things. Hopefully, this helps with some understanding, I know this is brief but if you have anything else like this you are wondering about just ask I'll answer as best as I can.
Biggest argument breaker for Christianity is as such, How could one man have all that power? They will break because you are bringing logic into the conversation.
@Daren Fliflet because omnipotence falls upon it's own logical contradictions. If your god is not logical, then it's less likely to exist. THIS is why we don't say our Gods are omnipotent, because they ARE logical, not illogical
@Daren Fliflet Because divinity is immanent, it exists within our reality, and by such, it also follows the rules of our reality, not because the Gods are limited by it, but because they move according to it in order for us to reach them.
@Daren Fliflet someone orthodox saying "men becoming gods" is specially funny... even you know that is wrong and christianity doesn't teach that. If the christian god was truly immanent you wouldn't be claiming omnipotence like if he was a comic book character. Another proof of how easy is to debunk you. The orthodox apotheosis is in origin pagan from the hellenic religion, there it makes sense because heroes can be deified, but NOT in christianity. And no, saints are not Gods or demigods, heroes maybe, don't try that one.
@Daren Fliflet So your whole argument is a psalm... poetry composed by a polytheistic king like Solomon... SPECIALLY Solomon who was into the occult stuff. You're just showing your pagan hellenic influence here. Again, many gods is not monotheism. BTW what is the first commandment?
I was expecting the preacher to finish his sermon with, “...it’s like you’re unraveling a giant cable knit sweater that someone keeps knitting and knitting and knitting and....”
Can't wait to bring this to my next family function
It's my experience too that people will realize that a discussion is harder than they anticipated and will immediately back out or shut down. They'll stop harassing you once they realize you take the argument more seriously than they do and have thought all the way through it. I believe in you fellow viewer! :)
Every time I add a source to an arguement people stop arguing, it's kinda magical.
>brown person
😎🤘👍
@@bloodbased who you? or are you claiming to be a racist?
Why dont you like Christianity or people arguing for it?
"IM YELLING SO THAT MAKES ME MORE CORRECT IN MY SERMON!"
Love how so many pastors use this tactic.
yep. fraudulent passion = strong faith...or so he is trying to sell.
You will find this formula Is used in politics as well.
I remember this from summer school well XD Also the "don't doubt it, even if it looks like there are discrepancies in the bible, it all works out." sigh... I just wanted friends...
@@ravnjokr “I JUST WANTED FRIENDS” JUST PUNCHED ME IN THE CHEST
Good one, this made ME laugh.
I listen to a lot of heavy metal etc . . . never had to turn down my youtube volume until that preacher . . . dude's got *volume*.
right? listening to Norwegian black/progressive metal right now and feel no need to turn the volume down. that preacher however...
Lol thanks for the heads up - girl who loves Ocean for his chill demeanor
That's what these dudes are trained to do: project, shock n awe.
Bro I’m dead 😂😂
Dude acts like he's possessed by some dark dark things 😂
I refer back to George Carlin:”if god can do anything, can he make a ball that’s so heavy that he can’t lift it?”
And thus the universe imploded lol. Guess that christian deity doesn't exist, because the ball you speak of is the lovely goddess Serene, Prematerra.
He can make a lever to lift it
Yes God/Gods ours can and do that all the time.
Pastor: “Is! Is! Is!”
Me: *laughs in biblical archaeology*
“Have you ever studied text in Ancient Greek?” 😂😂😂
Allah: allow me to introduce myself, infidel
Oh? Is there no present tense “to be” in Greek? Guess god can’t preserve his text at all
@mineben256 He's omnibenevolent. He DOESN'T want to segregate people by understanding because HE made them able or not able to understand them.
If he WANTS to be understood (omniBenevolent), is ABLE to be understood (omniPotent), and KNOWS how to be understood (omniscient), then if he exists he IS understood.
You MUST sacrifice one of the omnis. That's the only way to square God's existence with reality.
Otherwise, this construction is a solid argument that God doesn't exist as described. So does he not exist, or is he not as described?
What does it say in Greek?
@mineben256 Does God want to segregate and punish people by understanding?
If God doesn't want to punish people for things they had no choice in, he MUST want to be understood.
It really is so freeing to no longer believe in an omniscient, omnipotent, omnibenevolent god. My mother died of an asthma attack when I was 1 year old. I was told my whole life that it was “part of gods plan” and that “god works everything for good”. So he not only *knew* it would happen, but *caused* it to happen and because he is omnibenevolent, it was a *good* thing that I grew up without a mother. It was hard to take growing up.
I'm so sorry this happened. This is part of how Christianity can cause serious harm simply with the entailments that come from its doctrines.
I'm sorry and I also understand, on New years day 1981 my mother lost her struggle against bone cancer. I was 9 and was presented the same argument,I became very angry up well into my twenties with a God that where anything good that happens it's explained as a miracle but whenever there's a struggle or strife that it is God's will.
I'm 49 now and still struggle between rage and being cordial, politely ending a conversation that ends up being an assault about "our Lord and savior".
So many sad stories... I was becoming rather skeptic while growing up, but the true clinch for me was when my best friend died, before he became 15, in his bed, for a cardiac disease no one ever noticed, and I was told that god needed him as an angel...there are no ways this can justify a death. If there is a place where "angels" (as in "people who stand at your side and support you") are sorely needed, is here... A huge hug to everyone who had to endure the loss and the christian lies...
Dying *is* part of God’s plan. Why are you so afraid of death?
“b-but God lets b-bad things happen!”
We are here for God, not the other way around. So arrogant and entitled. As if you’re the only one who’s Mom ever died. smh
@@bloodbased more importantly death is also a part of living. I wasn't still blubbering about it. I am not afraid of dying, I was merely stating that I wasted my time being angry. If you have nothing better to do than "throw stones" just to make yourself feel superior, feel free to keep chuckin. This is where I stop because you are of no consequence to me. At least not to justify myself. F. O.
I had a similar path. I was a Christian until I was in my teens. I realized how cultish the church felt and as I delved into history I grew a disdain for ecclesiastic institutions (i.e. Church organization) and settled on Agnosticism. However, I found faith in the Norse gods as they spoke to me and connected through me through my ancestry. I saw and felt their presence around me. It has solidified my belief.
Im srry that you’ve began to think like this, and considering there is a lot of times the church organizations had used the bible to justify atrocities, war, and prosecutions they did you’re not wrong to grow a disdain for it. Seriously, you’re not wrong and you’re right for feeling this way.
But, I’d really like to point out that, that Christians are just people believing in one true God. Which means it isn’t or shouldn’t be surprising that us Christians too use the bible, take texts out of context or without thinking, and make it a way to justify this with their own personal hate.
What I want to say, and this may give you some clarity if your ever hateful to Christianity or thinking about it, don’t ever put your faith in Christians but put in Jesus Christ, put in on God. Again, Christianity was used to justify wars, atrocities, and prosecutions.
And from what God did, helping the chosen people out of Egypt from slavery, his Son stopping those who were gonna stone a woman for adultery, and more. The very God that we worship clearly would have not condone or done these things. There was no reason to think that God would rejoice and praise the Christians who used his word to justify hate.
I know that you may have found your belief already, and I don’t wanna force you into believing in God again if that’s not what you want, but you were a brother before gang, and if you are confusing what the Christians before us did and comparing it to God, then we could work this out together and I’ll try my best to help.
Norse gods? 😂😂😂😂 only Jesus is god put some respect on his name
As a ex christian from Georgia, the yelling and the "don't ask questions" thing, and the "offering basket" (which I always thought was just a way the church would pay for it's bills) another thing I was told not to say out loud. I'm glad I found your channel and glad I follow the old Gods as a norse pegan. Skål 🍺 Keep that great content coming.
Its that , forbills for sonething or a charity.
Following multiple pretend gods is better than following one pretend god?
@@eddielopez2373 You say "pretend gods" yet this video is by a guy who believes in the old Gods which you clicked to watch. Something's not adding up friend, Gods be with you Skål 🍺👍
@@RedC-px2rb nope, I clicked on a UA-cam recommended video called “the interpretation argument,” with a thumbnail that said “this destroys Christianity.” I clicked on it to hear a critique of Christianity and subsequently discovered his beliefs in mythology.
@@eddielopez2373 So basically the first time you ever watched him. Peace and and Gods go with you friend
Holy shit I forgot how passionate preachers can get for Jesus hahahah
When the volume is high, so is their devotion to Jesus.
and they honestly think jesus would approve
You call it “passionate”; I call it “hectoring”. I guess they are not mutually exclusive. Whatever the label, one needs paracetamol and a good lie down afterwards.
@@rodywithers3536 Hectoring?
@@missZoey5387 Dictionary definition: “Talking in a bullying and brusque manner”.
A friend who is a Christian pastor actually once asked me why I cannot or will not accept Jesus as the sole God and I simply told him there is not a single pill or medicine for all ailments so how can there be only one God for all the world's problems to which he simply replied touche
@Nobody Important and sounds like you would benefit from a english class focusing on context
@Nobody Important I got more logic than you ever will now go find someone else to troll if all you came to do is talk shit
@Nobody Important imma tell you once child I am no kid and we are not here to discuss your God damned opinion my state and its relevance were perfectly timed as a response to ocean's statement you don't like insa
@@Seamusyt1396 what did he say?
@Seamus YT1396 I loved how You shutdown that persons Bollocks straight away👏🏾, well done n' said. P.s. My favorite part was the end, "Insa"...🤣 I don't know many people that use that term or understand it. Bloody brilliant. May the God's Love n' Keep n' May You Always be in the God's Favor...
These people are crazy. If they truly want to get to the bottom of their texts shouldn't they be looking at the original ones instead of arguing over translations?
The first problem is that many of those arguing over the texts believe that their texts are original (English, Spanish, etc) and that it was translated is usually a revelation in itself (some may accept translation from Latin but that is rare in my experience).
The second problem is that there are no originals, at least for the New Testament, where the first known biblical documents are dated at least 40 years after the time of Jesus. Given that there are specific fields in biblical studies just for examining the scribe errors for the various bibles and manuscripts that exist today, the errors due to the verbal “telephone game” of Christian preaching for the first forty years are a complete mystery.
@@darrenhemingway7121 try doing history using that standard. The manuscript evidence is overwhelmingly in support that what we have today in the protestant new and old testament is correct from the original greek and hebrew. Besides that, what you are saying is based upon logic. Why should anyone be logical? Are there universal unchanging laws of logic? If so, where do they come from if not God? If you say they are merely conventions of the human mind, then why are your conventions any better or worse than mine? We dont share the same brain. Also, how can you know that you are even standing here? If logical laws are merely conventions then how do you kniw that your brain isnt telling you something false? And if you cant detect whether or not you are insane, why do you believe anything? therefore logical laws of thought demonstrate that God has ordered the universe in a uniform way. And that true and false are real concepts, although abstract.
@@jesse-s4q2k Translations with bias playing in happen in every, and that adds up over the big numberof translation. Try argue in anime communities sub vs dup, and even subtitles have to choose what meanings they adapt, and thats one translation.
Historically the evidence is, that translations have to choose and ofren with bias, what to adapt. The bible is no different.
And any historian worth their money will admitvto be sceptic of personal bias of records, and that we cant never know for 100% like science, we cqn br certain but always room for error.
@@marocat4749 so you dont believe the new testament manuscripts teach and are translated consistently? Can you read greek? Im not sure if your aware of this but the fundamentals of christianity are translated consistently through the kjv, nkjv, niv, esv, nasb versions of the bible. Greek is a very specific language. And most translations are so similar that they do not change any major doctrine of the christian faith. Do the homework man, check out and examine different translations from accepted christian scholars and textual critics like bruce metzger and bill mounce. The overwhelming amount of greek manuscripts testify that what we have today is what apostles wrote. And if you reject that, your standard of determing authenticity of ancient works is too high and you would not be able to do history at all. Let alone decipher the authors of ancient texts. But you dont treat those works like that because of your bias against the text of the bible.
@@jesse-s4q2k But i can point that simple translations now, where we can ask authors for input can being prette devisive, th whole sub vs dub debtes in circles, what meaning is lost, how translate a word from languige,in meaning or literally?. That goes with booka and even more other media, prominently anime where i kno sub v dub, in an ever ongoing debate.
What i mean is translation is really hard, and never does have the ect same meaning traslated, because languages can e vastly diferent in proverb and quotes and sayings. Like see anime translations.
I dont habe to able to read old greek to know that a book thats translated by various people with bias certain wrds will be interpreted not a intended by the author, and that adds up when you edit it within councon that decides on meanigs, which different interpretations led to a huge diversity of interpretations, and thats why ther are so many different christian churches.
Retranlated, translated different, and small changes can change entre context of sentences, like the one quoted against homoseuality, it was against male incest.
The bile and probably no old work is a perfect translation. Because that sources are lost and cant be checked. The bible is no different, we cat ask tha authors what they meant , which is the best souce to get te original meaning.
My least favorite "ducking out of this argument" phrase is: "who are we to understand an all knowing god" 🙄
It's true the word of teaches that God is a God whose greatness we cannot fathom or comprehend. But it's also true that He gives us a spirit of understanding.
Either Yahweh revealed himself/communicated his message to humanity, or he didn't. If he didn't, then we're done here. If he did, then if his omniscient, he would know how to communicate his message in order to be understood. If he is omnipotent, he would have the power to do so successfully. It would be logically impossible for him to fail. So who are _you_ (person who's using this "duck-out argument") to say that god failed?
Yep. "God can do whatever he wants. Who am I or you to question God!" It's as effective as the old, "I know what you are, but what am I?" argument.
Or "Who are we to question or challenge God?!"
@@jaxthewolf4572 If we can't question Yahweh, then we can't come up with positive answers either. IOW, we can't claim that Yahweh is perfectly good/just/merciful/etc., because that presupposes that we're in a position to evaluate him.
If not, then the most we can say is that he's an inexplicable force that acts according to alien logic we mere humans cannot comprehend. A positive evaluation of Yahweh ("Praise him!") is every bit as much a human judgment as a negative evaluation ("If the actions and attitudes attributed to Yahweh in the Bible were attributed to any other character in any other work, that character would be immediately recognized as a classic supervillain or Dark Lord").
I would totally use these arguments but unfortunately for me the people trying to "save" me from being a heathen treat me like a confused child and ignore what I say, obviously I've never tried to understand the bible because if I did I would believe is what it boils down to.
That is incredibly frustrating. Unfortunately in those situations, its time to set personal boundaries and get people to back off. Doesnt always work though unfortunately. But it can work with time.
Yeah, people always assume I've never read the Bible just because I'm an atheist.
Yeah, they just dismiss what you say because it is in opposition.
As a Catholic, I am really, really sorry man. I realize you may hate us for our misled brother’s actions and there’s nothing I can say to change that, I at least pray you will stop being mistreated and receive a fair view of how good the Catholic Church can be. Do well, friend. Maybe at least I can be someone who will give you guys hope that I think you all have great intelligence even though you may not be part of my church.
@chase thetford. I'm so sorry you have to put up with that. I was raised LDS, so I understand completely.
As an ex christian For the he past few years, I've had one instance with christians trying to witness to Me. Within 5 minutes, I pulled out the Bible to contradict everything they told me, and they said they didn't want to argue with me.( Meaning argue against quotes in the Bible), and left as quickly as they came on me.
No christian came to witness to me again
Yes, indeed, the chosen Bibles VERY HUMANLY and purposefully contains any answer you might need... And on which ever major side of an issue you may need them on.
Same as you, I understand your side, actually more like I just left Christianity for months, yet I'm going through what you went through years ago too as of the present
@@mako9579 which one?
If it happens to me, I'm just pulling up this channel lol
One time Jehovah's Witnesses came knocking and I pulled out the big honkin Catholic bible I inherited from my grandma and went "hey lets debate and compare qoutes!" THey backed off. Thanks Grandma for the cult sheild!
I had an interesting missionary situation when I was in high school. I live in Utah, and was practicing paganism for 5 years prior to my step-brothers attempt to "save me". Since I had changed my residence to live with my father for a year I didn't want to be disrespectful, so I let the missionaries talk with me. I usually just spaced out and communicated with my guides while this was happening, but one teaching rubbed me wrong. They were teaching about building the path to God, and using red soho cups to demonstrate building the path. I stopped them at one point and asked, "What if I want to use blue soho cups instead of your red soho cups?" They stopped, puzzled at my response. So I took it a step further. "What if I think all soho cups are extremely flimsy building materials, and I decide to use building blocks? In the end doesn't it still give me a path to God?" In the end they couldn't rebuke what I said and left.
Nimrod: "What if I want to use mud-bricks?" 🤣
@@kevincrady2831 Even better! The whole lesson was just absurd. It was a scare tactic to try and scare people into what they were teaching. The verbiage used was what you would hear from an abuser. I can't say word for word now since it's been 20 years.
when i was in the church’s youth group, one of their teachings was the “umbrella” of the “protection” of jesus. the youth pastor said when you’re under the umbrella you are safe from the storm. whoever isn’t under it has to option to be, they just are deciding not to. when you’re out in the storm there’s all the wind and leaves and flying debris. i said well when you get under the umbrella, you’re still soaked, you’re still wet it’s not helping anything. he said that the metaphor wasn’t the best and we should just get the gist of it. idk it felt kinda sketch to me.
@@thechosengamer6212 "That's a nice little soul you got there. It'd be a shame if something happened to it."
Explaining God to you like you're 3 year old
When I left Christianity it felt like I left an abusive relationship.
Anyway, its nice to hear that an evangelical has a problem with Steven Anderson, but too bad its not because of his dangerous views.
That pastor holds a lot of the same dangerous views, which is part of why it's so wild. It's strange that he's this impassioned about something so comparatively small.
It was like that for me too. The religion was actually making me mentally unstable because every decision I made; I felt that I was being judged for it. It constantly felt like no matter how good of a person I was or tried to be, that I was never going to be good enough. Thankfully though, I ended up leaving Christianity and it feels like I've gotten a new lease on life. I'm so glad I worked up the courage to do it.
@@OceanKeltoi Anderson was a big part of my livin Yahweh behind.
@@KyL6067 umm… it’s actually a really common feeling for people who leave. I know you’re a bit miffed, but as an atheist ex Christian who was actually really attached to the faith, to that idea that I had the holy spirit with me day to day, I felt the same way. Actually, to point out a parallel I haven’t heard brought up before, if you’ve ever been or known anyone who was thoroughly under the influence of a manipulative person, they tend to have this idea that the person who manipulates them has almost never been wrong, and they’ll bend over backwards to mentally justify them. Like it’s impossible to consider. In a religion where you suffer hell for not believing, and only for not believing, on the basis of the idea that you’re fundamentally unworthy of anything good, don’t you think you can end up with the same result? And note that I’m not saying this proves you wrong, I’m just trying to get you to see the other person’s point of view
@Daren Fliflet I don’t think the Calvinism is relevant. I’m gonna try to explain what people mean when they compare the Christian god to an abusive boyfriend, and I’m going to call it as I see it. I’m not asking you to agree, I’m asking you, for the sake of the people you interact with, to understand why they feel and think how they do, by giving a relatively common example. Edit: some of this will read as a tad repetitive, but I consider it worth keeping upon review
The perception, from the outside, in my experience and from my point of view, isn’t that “God arbitrarily choosing who he saves and who he doesn’t is tyrannical,” it’s the premise of the salvation. Salvation from being a damn human. Christianity teaches, at its premise, that I, regardless of how much I strive to be honorable, am evil. That as I instinctively and emotionally commiserate with those in pain or need, I am fundamentally fucked up. That as I do the things that the Bible says a righteous man does, I am fundamentally deserving of eternal torture. After I left, I had self destructive habits start to go away. I recall feeling totally worthy for the first time. That’s similar to my experiences rejecting abusive personal relationships.
The church teaches people that life is worthless without someone else, that has a record of wiping civilizations off the map, saying so. Like, to further the metaphor, a husband that beats his wife and says he loves her is a liar. He’s motivated to have her like him, sure, but he’s not motivated to look after her, otherwise he’ll work on the problem or end the relationship. A god who loves the world also has a kill count, in the Bible, higher than the First World War. He loves me, he says, as he threatens me. That’s how it feels and quite frankly I can draw no other conclusion now that I’ve seen it. And it’s not even why I left.
You’ll draw your own conclusions about how you feel about what I said, but I hope that it read as blunt and not malicious. Feel free to provide your own perspective. I’m a fan of siphoning the lessons from other people’s experiences.
This is so incredibly well made holy shit, you considered everything and made a genuine argument that can not be shut down by “it’s god’s will” or “it’s in god’s plan”. This is amazing. Thank you Ocean Keltoi
It's very poorly thought-out logic unfortunately. Listen carefully to the line of reasoning and you'll see the conclusions do not follow.
@@brandonw.peebles4225 Then argue against it.
@@josephwilson-doan4163 I've been considering doing a reaction video and laying out my counter-argument so if I go through with that, I'll let you know. I have to write the script first.
@@josephwilson-doan4163 Somewhere in this youtube comment section is my initial counter-argument typed out if that interests you to read. It's somewhere here.
I've run around and around this bush a few times and here's where I land:
Do I exist?
- I think, therefore I am
Was I created?
- Intelligence begets intelligence, so yes
Who IS this creator? (oh boy, here we go)
This part would take A LOT of typing, so I'll nut shell it :-)
FOR ME, there is one thing I believe, one thing that feels innately known/perceived, that I've never needed a book, a pastor, a priest, or otherwise to confirm.....And that is that "whoever" our creator is, that creator IS Love.
I also believe that the one thing every single person who has ever existed desires, is Love. Now, we may not know how to give or receive it very well, but in our heart of hearts, we desire it. I believe that even the most morally wayward person among us desires love. Everyone wants to love and to be loved. Again, most of us probably completely muck up the pursuit, obtaining, retaining, and reciprocation of love, but it is what we most deeply desire and love is what makes the world go around.
So, God is love, and there is plenty of mystery there......and we all possess the common denominator of desiring love.... so ultimately, I believe we all desire God, who is love.
Now, for a number of reasons that I won't take the bandwidth to express here in pixel, I do believe that the heart and mind of God were presented in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus.
There are many reasons why I believe Jesus existed. There are many reasons why I believe He was crucified by the Romans....AND there are a number of reasons why I believe that a resurrected Jesus was witnessed by a large number of people.
From this position forward I have many issues with "Christianity" as it has been developed and in my opinion manipulated. I take issue with how the Bible has been weaponized, often by well meaning people, but never the less, inappropriately so.....as I see it.
In my opinion anyone who tries to take a "straight" reading of Scripture and form their beliefs based on that reading...well, they will more than likely arrive at some at odds with reality beliefs, in my opinion.
At the end of the day I believe:
ALL of life is a mystery. We should embrace the mystery, while endeavoring to live in the flow of Love. There is more truth out there than we'll ever know or could possibly know. I don't believe any one religion has cornered the market on truth.
And ultimately I believe that all shall be well and all shall be well and all manner of things shall be well.
Recently had to deal with a friend of my gmas giving me the fire and brimstone talk and that I HAD to follow god to get into Heaven. I told him if being a good person wasn’t enough, I don’t want to go anyway. I am not scared of hell. And he tried over and over to make me fear it. All the usual stuff. Told me my children would burn too because I didn’t have them in church. Basically tried to guilt me for not being a Christian. He was very flustered that it didn’t work and that I was ok with burning in hell. I told him “if I was a good person here on earth and loved my friends and family and treated them well then I will happily burn for all eternity” when it came to my children I told them they are welcome to go to church if they want to, I’ll even drive them. But I will never force my beliefs or anyone else’s on them.
So pretty much dismantled what he may have believed about pagans. That was my best defense. But saving this in my pocket cause I have a feeling he is gonna keep preaching at me
And what kind of genuinely good deity burns a good person simply because they won't conform and do as commanded?
i was at a christian college for my freshman year. i had to get out of there. it was way too toxic for a non christian. i always was looked down upon and no one really wanted to talk to me. they lied to me and said that i didn't have to take any bible classes, but once i was already in, they forced me to minor in theology and had to pay for a few bible classes. i left as soon as i could and i feel so much better
The title of your video brings to mind a story my comparative religion teach told us in college. Back when he was in college and first heard about the ontological argument, it just made so much sense to him. He took it as a revelation, an indisputable piece of logic he felt he could take out into the world to convince people. Completely beyond reproach.
The first person he decided to go too was his father, he stated the argument clearly and full of enthusiasm. His dad listened and reflected on this revelation and after a short time he looked his son in the eyes and said, "Nah, I don't buy it."
@Logan Post I think you may slightly misunderstand the ontological argument. This video gives an example like your saying about using the same logic to say the ultimate perfect pizza might exist using the ontological argument, therefore it must exist. The video explains why that actually wouldn't work given the logic of the ontological argument. Would be interested to see if this changes your mind on the whole deathstar thing. I know I thought the exact same kind of thing when I first heard about the ontological argument, but I watched this video and it seemed to make a good explanation for why something like that wouldn't fit into the ontological argument.
You forgot the most important premise of the ontological argument for the existence of God... Which is "this argument can only be applied to what it is trying to prove as long as you accept that perfection is one of it's qualities, which of course would those require you to sneak in it's assumed existence as a subtly implied premise." The ontological argument for the perfect pizza is a whole 'nother argument all together. Pay no heed to the man behind the curtain.
Let alone the Onto-AFTEO the FSM or IPU.
@@r3aperrising984 The ontological argument is just an attempt to define God into existence.
The key issue is this: none of its premises are supported.
"God is maximally great"?
Says who? It's not supported. It's a claim.
It also presumes that it's possible for it to be possible that God exists. This is a claim on the meta-physics (the physics that determine what possible states exist for *our* physics) of the multiverse. We do not know that it *is* possible for a God to be a God. To be real.
The ontological argument is just presuppositionalist apologetics pretending not to be.
Pretty sure they’ll fall back on the two standard answers to any “God doesn’t exist” argument: “we aren’t meant to know His will” and the classic “Mysterious Ways”. Anyone on this Earth more than a few months can figure out easily there is no God.
I'm not sure if I dig the argument or facial expressions more?
I had some coffee, I cannot be held responsible
@@OceanKeltoi likely story...
@@OceanKeltoi coffee is an essential substance
This was such a great vid Ocean 🤘🏻
Thanks a ton!
my interpretation is that all Monotheistic Gods are just Loki pulling a prank.
This is my interpretation now too
Loki? I wouldn't be at all surprised! I never thought of it that way, but it makes sense to me. I'll remember that.
Lol that would make sense
@@VSLS06 φίλε μου οι θεοί μαζί σου
And you wouldn't be wrong. TL;DR: Loki told me so in a UPG of mine. Long story: I had a UPG that got me out of Atheism, but I misinterpreted my UPG and thought it was the Judeo-Christian God calling me, so I followed him for 10 years. Every time I tried to officially convert something terrible would happen that would kick me out of that church, so I hopped onto the next one looking for "the truth". This happened 6 times, and by the time I was baptized but left churchless, I arrived at similar conclusions as The Interpretation Argument espoused here, which made me leave Christianity for good. I started noticing that the Norse Gods were calling me to Heathenism, so I started following Them. It wasn't before long that I had this UPG where Loki told me that They (the Norse Gods) were the ones calling me to Heathenism 10 years ago, but as I had misinterpreted Them for the Christian God, Loki played along until I came around. We had a good laugh. To me, that explains perfectly why none of my prayers to the Christian God were ever answered, and in contrast, why I can feel the presence, support, and guidance of the Norse Gods as the realest experience I've ever had.
If I, as a father, maintained a fear-based relationship with my children I would be viewed as toxic at best or abusive at worst. "As above, so below" also means "As below, so above." That's one reason I left that path. Took a while to drop the baggage, I'll admit - but I've been happier for it in the long run.
I don't often debate with Christians though. I've had to shut down their well-intended but terribly rude attempts to "save" me, and it's kept them off my case. But I also consider that all faiths, however obscure, essentially lead to the same goal. It's the interpretive twists and turns of us humans that make them onerous.
That said, I have had some fun when Christians make the statement "God gave us free will to test our faith" or something to that effect. I point out that if the metaphor of Eden is to be believed, it was the Serpent who did that (hence the name "Light Bringer), and the loving God was so angry he holds it against Adam, Eve, and their progeny to this very day. Makes one wonder what his original intent was.
But God maintains love based relationship.
@@martinsoukup562 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@weirdmath119 what's so funny?
@Aphorism V who said it was literal? I called it "the metaphor of Eden" - so what argument went out the window?
@Aphorism V no, when I wrote about the metaphor I was rambling. I had already made the point I was aiming in the first paragraph, unrelated to the metaphor itself. Reading comprehension can be challenging sometimes.
I love videos like this that help me understand rhetoric and logic better. My earliest exposure to argument was my dad talking and talking until I gave up, so I appreciate a genuine education on the topic.
I've encountered pieces of this argument before but it's good to have it all laid out so clearly in one place.
Thanks! 👍
I only wish that the Christians who try to convert me were intelligent enough to hold to such argument, they usually keep circling to bible verses.
"If your God is all powerful and all knowing, then the Bible would convince me because he would know how to write it in such a way that it would convince me. But it doesn't so he's not. Thanks, though."
@@OceanKeltoi Maybe God doesn’t know you
He doesn’t owe you an explanation 😂
@@bloodbased that's honestly a good point. Just because he KNOWs how to convince you to be christian and has the CAPABILITY to convince you to be christian, that doesn't mean he wants you to convert. If he wanted to communicate the message perfectly, he could have, but maybe he didn't want to. The argument doesn't assume omni-benevolence, and even if it did, that still doesn't mean that he would want you to convert.
Unfortunately that just means that there's NO true path for a believer to follow. Maybe God doesn't care if people worship him on the planet. Because if the bible was the word of god, and God intended to use it to communicate that he is our god, then it would have happened. But it doesn't, so it wasn't his plan to use the bible to convert everyone to christianity...
Mind trippy...
I had one who said there were chariots in the Dead Sea therefore Moses saved them from Egypt, when I told them there wasn’t evidence for chariots in the Dead Sea, they cited the Bible as a source for that claim to be true
I am an atheist but i tend to get along with pagans more than followers of Abrahamic religions. Pagans tend to be more open minded and accepting. I actually enjoy going to pagan bookstores, the artwork and music i find there is often quite beautiful.
Do you get along with christians? If not, why? On what basis do you think pagan's are easier to get along with than christians? Do you think that you yourself have an open or a closed mind? If you had to judge. And why are you an atheist, and how do you think your worldview explains reality?
@@jesse-s4q2k hello, I am not the OP but atheists hold a wide variety of positions as all they have in common is not being convinced of a god or gods existence.
I just wanted to tackle why I personally am an atheist. To me, atheism is the null hypothesis. If someone says something is a certain way, we should ask them why and then see if they have a convincing argument. Arguments for a deity seem to fall short in my opinion and without any good evidence, I just cannot honestly believe in any deity.
In terms of explaining the world around us, we have not had the supernatural proven to exist and no natural explanation has been switched out for a supernatural one. To me, it adds to the likelihood of everything else having a natural explanation but obviously not proof.
@@sebaquesadilla hi. Thanks for getting involved in the conversation. So i believe the christian worldview explains reality better than atheism because it accounts for laws of nature, absolute morality, and universal laws of logic. In your worldview, why would you expect the universe to operate consistently and why would being logical be necessary to determine truth? Also, how do you account for morality? I know some atheists claim that there is no absolute morality, just nature.
I guess to simplify, why do i need to be logical to prove my point if there are no laws of logic? If there are laws of logic where do they come from? If they were merely conventions, i could make up my own and those would be just as valid as yours and debate would be impossible.
@@jesse-s4q2k i can get along with Christians but in my experience when the topic of religion comes up and they find out i do not hold their views, they tend to be very judgemental and try to convert me. Pagans usually are far more accepting of my views. I was once told about something called the Wiccan Rede. "An it harm none, do ad ye will." I love that sentiment.
I try to have an open mind but i recognize every human has his or her own biases.
Atheism is simply a lack of belief in a diety, not a worldview itself. As far as my own worldview, i try to simply observe, trust my senses as much as i can. And i trust the scientific method.
Man, I've just met your channel and it's already been a lot of fun to hear someone different arguing from another perspective, you know how to debate, I really like your channel. looks like you've got another subscriber :D
I had a similar argument, but not distilled down as well as this one.
It basically said that god should be able to communicate perfectly with his creation.
To not be able to means that either he is limited because he can't make another being smart enough to understand him, and/or he is limited because he is unable to communicate with his own creation. Ultimately removing his omnipotence. The only counter is that he doesn't want to communicate effectively with his creation, and that opens up all sorts of problems which ultimately end in removing his omnibenevolence.
There's a problem with this though. You left out an option that God doesn't communicate with His creation because of His omnibenevolence. And if you're going to try to show why Christianity is false you require a burden of proof as to show why God needs to communicate with His creation and it's necessary.
@@huskydragon2000
P1) god is omnibenevilent.
P2) god is onmipotent.
P3) anyone who does not follow god correctly will go to hell, or go through some analagous punishment.
From P1, god does not want anyone to go to hell.
From P2, he has the ability to effectively communicate with his creation in such a way that nobody would go to hell.
Therefore God must communicate clearly with his creation.
It is evident that God does not communicate clearly with his creation, therefore one of the 3 premises must be false.
Either hell, or anything analagous to it, does not exist and therefore there is no longer a carrot and stick to convert people, or you give up one of god's omni-traits.
Christians trying to “save me” just made me want to leave even more.
Why do they have to yell? It’s like a midnight infomercial where they think the louder they yell the more likely they are to get their message across. My anxiety skyrocketed just listening to him. Great argument though, keep up the good work Ocean 😎👍🏼
I am a Christian but I got to say that pastor scares me.
Even when I was a Christian televangelists and “fire and brimstone” preachers freaked me out. It probably has a lot to do with how I was raised as a Christian, but they’ve never “seemed Christian” to me.
@Ocean I had this exact argument for years about Islam. In Islam there is Quran and Hadith (reports about what the prophet did or said). Hadith are either strong or weak and some people don t follow Hadith at all and only Quran. My argument has always been that God would have seen that some people would follow with or without Hadith and since God would see the future he would put Hadith in Quran. Since he did not then God did not write Quran.
pretty much explaining that the Hadith is false. And the Quran is all we need, the Hadith just helps mankind understand more details regarding our salvation. Please just don’t listen to BS pick up a Quran and read it before you die, surely you have the time for it.
@@bugginoutw2243 Do you believe the Bible is the word of god?
I literally feel gross, like my skin crawls when videos of pastors like that are played. I just have this bone-deep feeling that if it were legal, he'd kill me for my beliefs and for being a strong minded woman.
I know the feeling. Trust me, he'd kill anyone who isn't waving a bible in somebody else's face.
Old comment but yeah, that's EXACTLY how monotheism spread in the first place.
To quote someone else's comment on another ocean keltoi video "monotheism always loses without violence".
@remingron
The Bipolarity of Neo-pagan argument:
1) Christianity is either docile or violent
2) Christianity surely didn't spread from the mountains of Armenia to the rolling hills of Ethiopia while is constant persecution
He probably would. They used to & there is a sudden push for the stripping of womens freedoms in the last 5 years here and pagans, druids, witches have been being targetted & harmed at least in non physical ways in the last few years. Those of us who tried to be open about our beliefs anyways. I had my business attacked, my car egged & my life threatened. So deffinitely connect with a pagan community for support & stay safe. They are nuts.
I'm actually scared of pastors like this. Because of our current situation in our country, I'm afraid we may end up with "A handmaidens' Tail" scenario. We need to pray to our gods for salvation from the Christians.
As an ex-Christian, that is the religion I am most afraid of. Thank you all for showing me how I can be sure that one isn't real, while allowing that the Gods you all believe in might be.
And you would be very welcome among us my friend!
You know that there are responses to the Interpretation Argument right?
Sikhism
@@mako9579 it’s one of those things that’s probably best explained over a voice call or in person but it centers around LFW second order desires and decrees for God. So if a Christian can have a coherent view that negates LFW and affirms second order desires then the criticism fails. Ocean kind of mentioned this in the video.
Christianity is only scary after death but Islam is scary while alive !! Trying to reach heaven through killing people!!
This is a new and exciting argument that I haven't actually caught on to before. Great job!
The all knowing thing is an interesting idea. In Irish paganism, the goddess The Morrígan has the gift of prophecy and regularly delivers poems predicting the future. And yet there is also an element of fate within the stories, or at least a level of inevitability. On top of this, we often see The Morrígan orchestrating events, pushing people to act a certain way, or moving pieces on the chest board seemingly so it'll go the way she most desires. So is it fate that she is likewise bound to and must assist to see through to it's end? Or does she see many possible futures and picks the one she deems most worthy and sets that future in motion? It's hard to say, but there is room for interpretation here and its very engaging to speculate on.
My fellow ancient way polytheist, I have Celtic in my family, and you are great to explain this
The morrigan or morrigu is actually 3 goddesses a tripple goddess & daughters of the Tuatha De Dannan who later accept at least 2 others to their number: Macha, Badb, Nemain, Morgana le Fey, Morgaise. Rhiannon & Raven are also sometimes among their number. They are weavers and washer women at the fjord, but they are not the same as the Fata or Fates who are Clotho, Lachesis & Atropos. The Norns, Arachne, Hecate, Rosanitsy, Moira, Akka & many other weavers exist. They are never said to be omnipotent. They are powerful & can effect the strands of fate. They can not alter destiny however. Unchangeable fate in celtic mythology was called a Guise. Free choice effects fate that is not destined. Some gods and goddesses can change mortals fate, but destiny is even hard to impossible for even a Weaver to alter.
No, The Morrigan is ONE figure. It is deeply erroneous to say she is a triple goddess because that is not reflected in the source material. Now, you can say your UPG identifies them as a triple goddess, that's fine. But you cannot say that is what The Morrigan is, because again, that is not reflected in the mythic material. The Morrigan and her sisters only occasionally appear in threes in the source material, sometimes its four goddess, sometimes two. And sometimes its three, but not the same three.
Now you can say there are many great queens, but there is already a term for that in the material, Na Morrigna. But insofar as The Morrigan herself, she is a solo figure, she is not three people. Badb and Macha are their own individuals, who are stated to be sisters, with their own agendas who work alone or with other figures. For example, during the Tain, Badb appears with two other figures who are not The Morrigan or Macha, but rather with Fea and Nemain, or sometimes Nemain and Be Nuit. If you would like to argue with me, please provided a credible source.
Also, NO, there is no such thing as "Celtic myth," the gods in Ireland were not the same as the gods in Gaul or Britain.
Also, I think you misspelled that word, "GUISE" is like a disguise. Unless there is something in either Welsh or Gaulish myth about a guise as such, I assume we're talking about Irish myth and you meant the word GEIS. But a geis is literally changed fate within the source material. A geis is a taboo which a person takes on themselves, and the wording when they do so is extremely specific. "I destiny a destiny." It is chosen density, under the condition they keep their oath when they make it, and if they do they receive great boons.
Irish myth a least has no direct equivalent to the Norns or the Fates of Greek myth, the closest are the goddess of prophecy, who are the Na Morrigna. AND likewise I did not say The Morrigan changes fate, I said she has an agenda, sees several future outcomes through prophecy, and pushes events forward to facilitate the future she wants. Which she regularly does, successfully. The Tain literally only happens because The Morrigan facilitates it to happen.
@@wolfgirl535 You are wrong, but I don't have the time or inclination to argue with you. When you come on social media with that attitude putting others down for autocorrect and asking for "sources" for a belief path that existed prior to written language you show how much of an ignorant child you are. Read more. In between the lines. The little known folk tales that have survived christian corruption and mass rewrites paired with the adjusted mabinogion book of conquests and tale of the dun cow all explicitely say that the Morrigan is both a title and a name. They are daughters of the original. Idiot. Expand your mind or don't, its up to you. Its not my job to do your research for you. I offered legitimate information and if you don't want to accept it then that is your perview to remain ignorant, but don't attack others online because you feel embarassed when someone knows more than you.
Here from genetically modified skeptic.
Yea, me too :)
Welcome!
So am I.
Me too!
same brooo
The independent Baptist church that I grew up in would easily bypass all this as they’d assume Assemblies of God, Methodists, or anyone not them were going to hell. I grew up thinking my little tiny church had all the answers to life and death.
1980's Florida, same thing, but the church I went to for a couple of years had a couple .. hundred .. members.
I was thinking the same thing. The phrase "they aren't real Christians" was the common term I heard for anyone who disagreed.
@@otterheart3844 "No True Scotsman..."
Me too.
The condescension & pomposity of that. There are billions in the world, but they had all the answers. This kind of attitude always astounds me with the prideful ignorance of it.
I recently saw a church called the "Church of I am"
I looked at my coworker and said "The church of who is? You are?"
I am is the English translation of the Hebrew name for God - Yahweh : Thus the Church is named "Church of Yahweh" or "Church of God".
How about the church of Popeye the Sailor? He would say, "I yam what I yam..."
Seems like when we contest the existence of God; we become stuck criticizing the flaws of humanity.
IE: “God can’t exist if he allows Us to exist like this”.
"No man ascended into heaven, except the Son of Man who is in heaven."
*LAUGHS IN ELIJAH*
Possibly Enoch too.
@@sixsmith7653 came here to add Enoch. You beat me too it!
A solid example of mis-quotation and lack of contexual evidence. Also a misunderstanding of the doctrine of heaven or the usage of the word ascended.
@@witchdoctorgames5011 Christians always want to claim their book is " tooken out of context" when they do it them damn selves
And Enoch
Hi there. I just wanted to pop by and say I am so incredibly thankful to have found your channel. I'm a former Christian, turned witch and I personally worship Hermes, and some of the things you said really resonated with me. Thank you, and I hope that life finds you well.
Wonder why someone needs to worship at all ? Is it fear of something ? Or maybe not wanting to believe we're not spcial just apes with delusions of importance,and are only here to breed the next generation ,nothing more ?
Its good you dropped christianiy,but why do you feel the need to worship anyone/thing,its just the same addiction with a different flavour ? To me anyway,im not trying to be nasty i genuinely
@@andreworr9128 truly
@@andreworr9128well the gods and goddesses offer knowledge, inspiration and wisdom .
Fate and luck are also something people believe in that ,plus the gods and goddesses are pretty logical to explain ,atleast the polytheistic pantheons are
Hail Hermes of the swift feet, messenger of the gods. Sweet mercury of swift thought & stollen moments ☺️
Im glad im not watching woo anymore, thanks when you did that video
Same here! I was watching him for a few months, but had no idea what else was going on until I saw his videos.
ill second that i had just watched alot of woo stuff then found ocean
yup same. it was a nice introduction I guess but Ocean is so much more scholarly and intelligent in his videos. woo barely uses sources which was what led me originally to feel off about him.
I was raised Catholic, and still technically am, but over the past year or so I've been questioning what I believe. Besides the contradictions in the Bible, the different translations can completely change the meaning of a passage. I've never really been one for structured religion, and seeing people get so aggressive over it hasn't really made me want to stay Christian.
Ocean, your channel has clarified which aspects of Christianity I question, and also strengthen my interest in the Norse gods. Thanks! 👍🏻
good for you man no matter what you end up finding its always good to question, as I've seen it skepticism is never a bad thing. you either come away with a new path and more knowledge or strengthened faith. if your looking for a place to stand this channels a great one no matter the religion. good luck in your search.
Hey m8. Personally I preferred the Douay-Rheims bible. It's a closer word for wprd translation of the original Latin. But I do have to look into more modern versions for some passages because the grammar and words can be funky. I do enjoy looking into it though and parsing all the stuff together even if I don't understand it all atm (and maybe never will).
Well, if we follow Aristotle...
1. All things that exist must possess an identity.
2. All identities are definite, and in being defined they are thereby delineated apart from other things.
3. The opposite of definite is infinite, therefore nothing can be infinite.
4a. God, having an identity, can be defined.
4b. One such definition of God is that God has certain properties unto infinity (omniscience, omnipotence, infinite good, etc.)
5. If God is infinite, God does not posses an identity.
Conclusion: Therefore, such a God does not exist.
I honestly just kinda figured this kinda argument out myself and am interested to learn more about it, glad it shot up on my recommendation tab
Ah, the joys of logic! I fondly remember a similar coversation with a priest on my way out the door. You made me smile 💜
TBH this argument doesn't really hold much water if you think about it.
Joys of logic? This argument is logically invalid
For any event God wants to bring about, he knows how to bring it about.
For any event God wants to bring about, he is capable of bringing it about.
Conclusion. If God chooses to bring about a particular event, it must occur.
For any message God wants to communicate, he knows how to communicate it such that it will be interpreted correctly.
For any message God wants to communicate, his is capable of communicating it such that it will be interpreted correctly.
Conclusion. If God chooses to communicate a message, it must be interpreted correctly.
These seem quite compelling on first read. The first proposition in both sets deal with his knowledge (omniscience), and the second in both sets deal with is capability (omnipotence). I agree with the first two propositions in both sets, but there's a glaring proposition that he's overlooking that renders his conclusions inadequate. In order for God to do something, he must also be willing.
I'm not claiming to know God's will, but he has told us his will in parts in the Bible. One part of his will is that humanity has free will to decide to be with or without God. Therefore, it is against God's will to do anything that would violate our free will as humans. That where his omnibenevolence comes into play, God lets us choose and won't violate that decision.
How, here is my set of revised propositions and conclusions that take into account the full tri-omni nature of God.
Proposition 1: For any event God wills to happen, he knows how to bring it about and is capable of bringing it about.
Proposition 2: For any message God wills to communicate, he knows and is capable of communicating it such that it will be interpreted correctly.
Before I continue, I must highlight something. Due to our corrupted nature, perfectly consistent interpretations of God's messages to us is impossible. Therefore, in order for God to insure his messages are interpreted correctly, he must violate our free will by controlling our mind such that we will all interpret his message correctly.
Proposition 3: Due to sin, interpretation of the Biblical texts will be varied among Christians.
Proposition 4: God won't perform an action that violates his will or the free will to which he granted us.
Conclusion: God communicating a message such that it will be interpreted correctly by all who believe in his messages would violate the free will to which he granted us and, therefore, violate his own will.
I originally heard this argument in my Symbolic Logic class, which was taught by a devout Catholic professor at a Catholic university. People got so mad they left the room. The Protestants and Catholics formed two distinct teams, spittle was flying in some cases, and I was left out of the argument because at that point I was out to the class along with a few assorted atheists and agnostics. The way Doc put it was, "You think God's a dirtbag, right?" "Well, your god is. Some of mine are pretty cool."
I also find it kind of hilarious that the ad that played after this video IS!!! for a colon cleanse... more than one way to remove some crap from your life I guess...
"Hell is scary"
**Shows an image of a very attractive woman**
@MexTaco710
I appreciate the gesture but verses hold no argumental weight to me.
Hell is scary, but Hel is kind of hot, if you are into necrophilia and godesses.
@MexTaco710
This is one of those most well-articulated defenses of the Bible's validity I've seen, I'm impressed, though I still disagree :)
@@oliverfoldager291 they are the same entity in origin :)
@MexTaco710
Yes, there is plenty of evidence that (some) events described in the Bible are factual, and I would never deny this, and I do in fact believe that man who is called Jesus did exist.
My seperation from the Bible isn't from the historical narrative, but the mystical and moral one, and this doesn't come from 'not wanting to believe', or 'wanting to not believe', rather from personal reason, I would be quite happy to know of a God empirically, and there is an extent to which I believe in a god, just not so nearly to how the bible describes it.
and I quite respect your ability to argue for the historical accuracy of the Bible, that's just not where my argument lies.
You have this God, who already knows everything and controls everything, who creates billions and billions of souls on this planet and then neatly divides them into good and bad (and has a 'maybe' purgatory pile) when they die (already knowing who is going where before they are born). That concept of existence and the reason for human life seems so incredibly simplistic that my brain just cannot accept it.
That pastor reminds me of the English teacher I never had, but kinda wish I did. Would have made English a lot more interesting.
By interesting you mean scary?
Lol🤣🤣
Yes he looked scary to me
I did have an English teacher like that. He was extremely annoyed that non native Brits were doing better than native Brits. To be fair to him, he wanted Brits to make an effort as they were over confident. After 12 years, he still asks to read my stories.
@@otherssingpuree1779 cool that he still asks to read your storys 👍😊
As an atheist this will be interesting, I can not deny the concept of god nearly as well as I could have due to this channel and my pagan friends. The things I have that make me deny Christianity in the affirmative and say Christianity is false can not apply to most pagan faiths. Your God can go to Hell video is a good argument as to how this applies.
People keep talking about the "problem of evil", but if you really look at the Bible, it seems we have more of a "problem of good".
How could such an evil being allow good to exist?
@@Nerobyrne Easy, apathy. This is the world of an apathetic singular god if It is to be the work of a single god. If the god is nearly apathetic it would allow all good and all evil. An omnipotent omniscience will have its will fulfilled with more ease than you expend every day you eat lunch. Its will would just happen but it clearly doesn't less the god be an apathetic god of chaos.
That stated if there is more than one god exists and they all have their own will and none is omnipotent this world makes perfect sense, this does look like a world where a clash of ideas exist simply because it is plainly obvious that it does.
You do none the less make a good point if the default is Hell and worship and devotion and the basic manner of salvation is how the vast majority of Christians say it is then absolutely I do not see how that is a god that demands kindness, the God described in the Bible is evil simply by allowing the majority of us to be tormented in Hell.
As another athiest, I find that the concept of a god or gods is too vague. We have written gods in books, talked about them in stories, and used them as explanations for the state of the world. Some gods are all powerful, and are one, other gods have greater and lesser roles. Even in fiction, gods generally are hidden or beyond our world. Reaching them might be considered a challenge few could conquer, while others remain locked away by mortals. Hell, some gods even reproduce and grow old. I don't find it convincing that someone believes, but I do find it interesting. Too often people use common sense to navigate life, and generally find a role to play. I am quite happy that I, despite working a job that is quite frustrating due to a lack of effective communication, have an interest in philosophy.
I find theology more of a challenge because a story can be told many ways, like a metaphor, losing the details to make way for a message.
I like the exploration of myths and legends, especially when they come in the form of webcomics and video games. I personally play D&D but have not found a group ready to explore the lore during game time.
Christians are hard to argue with as they at times will consider you a troll or be unwilling to think of a world without their god as they fear doing so would have them _fall out of grace, into the clutches of the devil below, to burn for eternity._
I still ask them questions as you never know what kind of conversation you might get.
Would you mind mentioning a source or explaining some of the arguments you talked about? I can't find much online on "arguments for polytheism that work against monotheism." Most of them start and end at "less fighting, any argument for a God works better for multiple Gods, and they are more fun to be around and be with." So I would appreciate a starting area to go through.
@@haruhirogrimgar6047 here's an easy one:
The problem of evil.
If there is only one god, why doesn't it do something about all the evil?
If there are many competing gods, then it's easy to explain. They are in competition with each other and nobody ever truly wins.
As a former Christian who was raised in the faith - trying to use any of this to speak/argue/debate/defend to Christians won't go far, as most of it is too far over their heads for them to understand (not all of course, but every christian I've known or met, for certain.) Maybe breaking it down several levels will.
True. The church thrives off the power of ignorant followers. And encourages them to not think for themselves.
Also: "Find a way.. or make one" is Such a cool thing to say. I'm gonna start using it now XDD
You set me up. Played your video and thinks to myself “I can’t really hear. Let me raise the volume”.
*Enters crazy-loud spewing Christian*
Jump scare happens and eardrums may or may not have been damaged. 🙂
THE SON OF MAN
IS
IN
HEAVEN
PRESENT TENSE
I'm currently an undergrad Bible major, studying to be a minister. You've given me a lot to think about so, thank you.
Here is my immediate thoughts on this, would love to hear what you think of this response:
God created free willed creatures, and being such we have the ability to defy God not because He can't make us obey but because He allows us to be able to disobey. As Christians I believe that God has given us the Holy Spirit which guides us towards Truth, and while some may still disagree, in my experience Christians tend to agree where it matters, and those who disagree on more minor issues are usually pretty stubborn which makes me wonder if they are allowing the Spirit to guide them towards that particular Truth or allowing themselves to make interpretations.
Hope that makes sense. Sorry for the run-on sentence!
In this argument the concept of free will is not an issue. God only makes you understand his communication. You still have a free will to follow it or not. Satan knows god exist, he knows God's communication and yet he chooses to disobey. No matter how stubborn someone is, omnipotent and omniscient god should be able to create a communication that is understandable.
@@MrQbee87 I'm not a Christian but I do think free will is integral to this argument. If god's will was explicitly known (ie. you must do X, Y, and Z or you will go to hell for eternity), then why would you choose to disobey him? Wouldn't that create a constant fear and incentivize doing the right thing only to avoid punishment?
On the other hand, if Christians believe that God used the Bible only as a guide, then they still have to decide for themselves on a code of ethics. They have to choose to be a good person (and what constitutes that) based on their own principles (which may be inspired by the teachings of scripture) rather than based on the knowledge of the absolute right or wrong thing to do in every situation.
@@Bmlscipio why would you choose to disobey him? Because his moral code is barbaric and I don't agree with it.
I don't necessarily agree or disagree. I think as human beings WE are infallible and we are going to get things wrong, or misinterpret things. Yes, I believe the Bible is God's word, but I also know that I don't understand parts of it as well. So maybe different religions read and interpret it in different ways. I also believe that every religion has Fanatics that pick and choose the parts of the Bible that suit them and go crazy with those beliefs. Those are the ones I worry about more than the whether the person writing God's word got the wording correct. If you're looking for inconsistencies only, you're going to find them in every situation if you look hard enough
@@jenmen76 If we get things wrong, how can we be infallible?
"What the Bible plainly says" = "My interpretation of the Bible, which I am either too dishonest or too arrogant (likely both) to even consider could be inaccurate or up to debate"
Well, that is a good point im many cases, but thouse that take a littral interpretation should almost always be given the benifit of the doubt. This meassage im writing could be a wird code for something hidden, but it’s more resonable to asume im just makeing a counter point to you, becurse that is the litteral interpretation of my comment.
@@oliverfoldager291 I wonder what the "Biblical literalist" pastor featured in this video would say if I pointed him to the verse where Jesus said it was unnecessary to wash your hands because "it's what comes out of the mouth that defiles it."
"Germs are a lie; a conspiracy invented by the Liberal media to control us!"
Well, not likely. He's more likely to say that Jesus was speaking metaphorically. How do we know that? Because what Jesus said was wrong, and God can't be wrong! Therefor the inaccurate statement was actually not saying the thing that it's saying!
@@TheZeroNeonix I dont know what he would say, and I dont really care, as an athiest I have no problem saying, that the bible has a lot of deeply imoral and factually wrong statements in it. And although the pastor might dissagree, that is still his headach. Takeing a littaral interpretation as the first is still a good way to interorate any kind of text, holy or not.
This all seems misguided if they are not reading the text in the original Greek and have a solid knowledge of the language in that historical context.
Interesting video BTW!
When I left the Catholic Church in my late teens, my pastor had a long talk with me (as I had been very involved in the parish), asking me why why why. Eventually, I just blurted out that I'd come to the conclusion that going to church anymore was kinda like attending a horror show inside of a fun house. He just smiled and asked if I would still work at bingo. Cheers All!
This reminds of The Clergyman’s Daughter by George Orwell.
interesting. i just left the Catholic church and I'm scheduled for a long talk with my pastor in a couple weeks. i distinctly remember attending easter vigil mass, seeing the new converts get water poured on their head from a dollar store jug filled with 'holy water' and thinking "shit. im in a cult, aren't i?". i hope i find a way to tell this to him in a more agreeable way.
@@MrAdamo Easter Vigil used to be my favorite as well...until at 14 my body told me not to be around hyacinths...
@@mako9579 lol allergies
Many Christians spend their whole lives basically gossiping about how this or that person or group isn't really a Christian. I overheard 3 of my uncles who were clergymen all confide to my mum at different times how the others weren't actually christians and probably werent really saved at all. This is how christians cope with the dilemma described in the video. And that's why there are 35k different denominations, each believing that only THEY have the truth and the others have been deceived by Satan.
I've run around and around this bush a few times and here's where I land:
Do I exist?
- I think, therefore I am
Was I created?
- Intelligence begets intelligence, so yes
Who IS this creator? (oh boy, here we go)
This part would take A LOT of typing, so I'll nut shell it :-)
FOR ME, there is one thing I believe, one thing that feels innately known/perceived, that I've never needed a book, a pastor, a priest, or otherwise to confirm.....And that is that "whoever" our creator is, that creator IS Love.
I also believe that the one thing every single person who has ever existed desires, is Love. Now, we may not know how to give or receive it very well, but in our heart of hearts, we desire it. I believe that even the most morally wayward person among us desires love. Everyone wants to love and to be loved. Again, most of us probably completely muck up the pursuit, obtaining, retaining, and reciprocation of love, but it is what we most deeply desire and love is what makes the world go around.
So, God is love, and there is plenty of mystery there......and we all possess the common denominator of desiring love.... so ultimately, I believe we all desire God, who is love.
Now, for a number of reasons that I won't take the bandwidth to express here in pixel, I do believe that the heart and mind of God were presented in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus.
There are many reasons why I believe Jesus existed. There are many reasons why I believe He was crucified by the Romans....AND there are a number of reasons why I believe that a resurrected Jesus was witnessed by a large number of people.
From this position forward I have many issues with "Christianity" as it has been developed and in my opinion manipulated. I take issue with how the Bible has been weaponized, often by well meaning people, but never the less, inappropriately so.....as I see it.
In my opinion anyone who tries to take a "straight" reading of Scripture and form their beliefs based on that reading...well, they will more than likely arrive at some at odds with reality beliefs, in my opinion.
At the end of the day I believe:
ALL of life is a mystery. We should embrace the mystery, while endeavoring to live in the flow of Love. There is more truth out there than we'll ever know or could possibly know. I don't believe any one religion has cornered the market on truth.
And ultimately I believe that all shall be well and all shall be well and all manner of things shall be well.
Makes perfect sense.
In order for a message to be perfect it must be perfectly clear and not open to misinterpretation.
Still subject to mistranslation. Deliberate and otherwise
@@TheKrispyfort
Did God not know it would need to be translated? Why provide a 'perfect message' that you know will be delivered to the innumerably vast majority of people via mistranslations?
Makes perfect sense? That's weird, this is actually a pretty bad argument if you know how logic works
@@huskydragon2000
The main issue I see is that 'perfection' is very subjective.
Assuming one's intention is to create a message that will be easy to comprehend and share so that everyone (or as near to everyone as is possible) understands, the fact that we're presented with a confusing message that is interpreted in many ways would be considered an abject failure by any objective standard.
If one's intention was not to share a clear and universally-understood message then... Job done!
@@ChrisFineganTunes The argument isn't valid is what I was getting at. I believe perfection is objective in a metaphysical sense.
What doesn't make sense about this argument is people are just buying it without realizing the heavy burden of proof they have to bear to hold to this. First, a free will defense can be made against this. In the Bible, we are warned that there are false prophets, false doctrines, and deceivers of all sorts. These people can certainly change the meaning of Scripture and preach these false teachings to innocent bystanders without contradiction. This is because God cannot freely make people do something.
No Christian believes that God's main purpose is to have people correctly interpret the Bible. And a majority of Christians hold that the main purpose of the Scriptures is to have people come to a saving relationship with God.
Now, let's consider the "knockdown" final argument that's suppose to move the Christian (I really think this is just preaching to the choir with a horrible argument)
1. It is logically impossible for God’s communications to be misinterpreted
2. If God is all-knowing, a communication of a false proposition must be a lie
3. If there are contradicting interpretations, at least one must be false
4. There are multiple instances of contradicting interpretation of God’s communications
5. Therefore, God is a pathological liar
The conclusion comes out of left field! In no way does the conclusion follow from these premises and so it's logically invalid. To see this, here's a translation.
1. It's logically impossible for P to be Q
2. If God is R, then P must be a lie
3. If there are S, then at least one P is false
4. There are S & P
5. Therefore, God is T
Notice, (5) has a new symbol. This is because the proposition (T) is nowhere in (1, 2, 3, 4) I believe proposition (T) is pure rhetoric and not logically valid. Also, notice (2) has a proposition (R) that isn't really relevant to the rest of the argument and doesn't help conclude anything. Again, this is pure rhetoric just added to confuse the people who are illogical.
Notice also that premises (3) and (4) are circular. In order for an argument to be valid, it can’t be circular.
I contend if we find a way to make this valid (which I do in a reply to someone else) that the Christian simply doesn't have to accept premise (1) and if we stray away from premise (1) as being logical but probable, then I believe that those who hold premise (1) and hold to premise (4) proposition (P) in either sense, then they have a burden of proof of showing that God Himself has given direct revelations to those interpreting the Bible and intentionally lied to them. In my research, it seems to me that most interpretations of the Bible are done out of the knowledge of men, not God.
In conclusion, this is choir preaching. This is no "knock down" argument unless you lack a sense of logic. This whole video would only move those who fall for rhetoric rather than truth.
I kind of figured out these arguments in my head years ago before I became a Pagan. I never knew how to put them into words which made arguing with other Christians super difficult, though. Thank you!
Why would a god give us rational thinking brains to solve logical problems, and by then by all logic prove his own inexistence. I Do not accept faith as an answer, Faith is the ultimate tool of gaslighting the problem at hand. Faith tells you that you should ignore all truth, reason, and logic because it's more noble to hold on to a glistening lie without doubt than to accept a hard truth and in the end you will be rewarded for being tricked, or be punished harshly for calling the ultimate liar out on his bluff.
If by some deceit there is a Christian God, he is an abusive father.
Good vid, but I think I have a few counter arguments (as an ecumenical Christian)
1: A communication that is always interpreted as the truth is logically impossible, as interpretation is the responsibility of the listener and not the communicator. The only way God could ensure that all of humanity would interpret his communications the same way would be to override their free will.
2. This speaks to a larger question within Christianity, but it is that God often prefers to work through people rather than manifest in the world. God obviously could have just placed a library with all the eternal truths contained within them on Earth, but instead chose to communicate with unreliable middle men who corrupted the communication (presuming Biblical errancy). As to the larger question as to why God doesn't interact in our world more often, I'd probably liken it to a parent helping their kid with a school project. You don't want to do the project or else the kid doesn't learn anything. But that deserves its own essay/book on why God does this.
3. This is my weakest argument, but I'd perhaps argue that there are multiple 'true' or at the very least valuable interpretations of the same text, and so God risks 'false' or problematic interpretations so that humanity can have the former. This is very postmodernist and very heretical so take it with a grain of salt.
(As a non-demonination Christian)
1. The issue with God not interfering in free will is that we have examples of him doing exactly that, such as when Jonah refused to go to Ninevah because he feared what they would do to him, as well as striking down Onan for refusing to get his sister in law pregnant, though the counter argument for those two situations is that they disobeyed direct orders given to them by God.
2. This argument is based purely in the idea of God as the Father, a parental figure who wants us to learn not only more about Him, but also more about ourselves and the world around us. It would obviously be too easy to give us every answer, but then where would that put us? On the same level because then we would know all the things that God knows. This is where the concept of free will comes into play. We are free to gain the knowledge he has placed in front of us, but in order to do so we need to take action since while He could just give it to us, there is no value in gaining that knowledge.
3. Because I do believe that God doesn't interfere in free will, I do think that many interpretations of passages from the Bible are false in that they do not have the whole truth from the passage. I think, though this is only personal opinion, that this is a result of cherry picking verses that has become very prevalent in the last century or so. We miss important parts of interpreting a verse if we leave out verses that occur before and after a verse (some times many verses before and after).
Sorry for the ramble Im pretty sure none of that makes sense
1. as the other xtian pointed out, your god overrules free will and human agency in the Bible.
2. if your god was omniscient it would have chosen middle men who wouldn't corrupt its word, unless your god gets pleasure out of leading people astray and, consequently, to damnation within its rules. So either your god lacks knowledge to choose an appropriate messenger to pass along the message, in which case they aren't omniscient; or they are deliberately leading people into an eternity of torture, in which case not only is its omnibenevolence obviously compromised but so is xtianity itself since Jesus could have just been another one of its "pranks" to lead people astray.
3. again, if your god was omnipotent and omniscient it would be able to formulate the text in such a way that, even after translation, every possible "true" message would be conveyed without any false or misleading messages.
1.) If God is omnipotent, he is capable of all things, is he not? If he's limited by "logically possible" he isn't omnipotent and is thus not God. In any case as other point out, God overrides free will constantly in the Bible. He did it dozens of times during the Israelite onvasion of Canaan to allow His Chosen People to slaughter, rape and genocide their enemies with impunity, and did it prior to the king of Egypt himself so they wouldn't be released early so he could perform his "Wonders" and show off. That's actually explicit in the text.
2.) Well the issue here is that if you child fails their science project, it's not that big a deal. If you fail to follow the right religion you are tortured forever and ever and ever until the last stars burn out trillions of years hence and are STILL being horrifically tortured. Because you know... Hell.
3.) This opens the door to Islam, Judaism, Baha'i and other monotheist faiths *also* being perfectly legitimate in addition to the thousands of Christian denominations, including the ones with such an alien theology to the mainline church they're practically different religions entirely, like Jehovah's Witnesses or Mormons. Doesn't that kind of... break Christianity entirely?
When I was a Christian I would see this as a pretty weak argument.
I can think of several reasons from the Christian perspective that would explain the interpretation problem:
1. Free will. God doesn't want to use his omnipotence to make us understand him because it would violate free will.
2. Relationship. God wants us to get closer to him and those with a better relationship understand him better.
3. Faith. If you have more faith then god will give you more understanding in interpretation.
4. Satan. God is letting Satan blind people as part of his master plan.
5. Mystery. Who can know the mind of god? He probably has a great reason for not making his intentions obvious to everyone but if you could figure it out then you would be god.
Anyway, I just don't see this as strong as so many other arguments. I do like the interpretation issue as an argument against the moral argument. (I.e. if morality is objective then why can't Christians agree on what god thinks is moral)
Like you let your child walk into traffic because you don't want to impinge on their free will? And how it's our job to seek him out when it would be much easier for him to come to us, for a relationship to which we cannot meaningfully consent, given that it's under threat of eternal torture? Maybe the Christian can get out of Ocean's argument, but there is no getting around the fact that the character is evil.
@@carmensavu5122 sure, I was just arguing the premise that god wants everyone to know his intentions/commands/desires etc. I think Christians can come up with lots of reasons for that not to be the case, thus division over interpretation doesn't violate gods supposed omniscience or omnipotence.
Nate W, I do appreciate the perspective you’ve provided. My expectation would have been along the same lines in terms of response. The only issue I see is that if god did these things intentionally, it would violate the whole “God is not a God of confusion” thing.
@@jamesbroderick689 That "God is not a god of confusion" thing is hilarious. If there's anything we can be sure of when looking at Christianity and the Bible, is that it's confusing. The thousands of different interpretations show that beyond all doubts.
@@carmensavu5122 More like you teach your child about the dangerous things in the world (including traffic) and guide them while they're young, but eventually once they are adults you let them make their own decisions, even if they make bad ones.
30 years ago I married a southern baptist woman; she was a believer but not obnoxiously so, her family especially her mother a woman who never ventured more than 100 miles from her birthplace was a whole different story. I've had discussions with church pastors, traveling ministers, revival scam artists, etc.. along with the core members of several churches. These devout people have no logical argument for their beliefs, I would begin our discussion with " I don't believe that the bible is the written word of god so using what is written in there will not convince me. All of their arguments lead back to the bible which I would argue was as factual to me as a Marvel's comic book, give me a logical example or actual action. I was eventually labeled a Heathen, which I embraced, and left alone. Lol
I divorced and got away from all that nonsense 20 years ago and never looked back.
Religion should bring people together not separate them into hostile opponents.
Closest exsperience i had was at my work place when it came out when i was Pagan. Now people wasnt like "Oh you wanna go to hell" but actually more questions of understanding like "What does it entail and what gods do you have".
I love your videos they make so much sense I just had to subscribe. Funny thing is I actually have better conversations with atheists than I do with christians for this very reason. Thank you for this information, I seek knowledge as Odin would want us to do and you provided some. Skol! 🍻
Excellent video. Thanks for posting this.
When I tell my overly cristian grandmother that I am a heathen. I'm going to come armed with this information for the instance that she inevitably fires back at me
Let us know how that goes and good luck. Also bring her sone bacon, that might smooth things over.
As if she’ll understand it
Don't be surprised if that's like pouring gasoline all over the car hoping that some gets into the tank.
I would never argue about the bible with my grandparents. Better to let them believe at this point. They get peace from the prospect of heaven, putting doubts into their head this late in life seems cruel.
You are right, why ruin someone’s dream?
Sadly, growing up in Norway we got spoon fed Christianity in my upbringing (it has since been removed, kids no longer get forced in to the religion). SO I was a "true believer" in my childhood. When I was in my tweens I found two facts that bothered me... If you do bad, even coldblooded murder, but then ask forgiveness your sins will be forgiven and you go to heaven. If you live your life doing good and always sacrificing yourself to help others, but don't do it in HIS name, you still go to hell. Worshiping HIM maters more than your actions. So, the bad people are in Heaven, and good people in Hell? got it! Hell it is! ;)
I've seen so many devoted Christians I would NOT get along with, and so many fun "damned" people who I'd much rather hang with. Heck, I think Lucifer isn't as bad as God anyway! God permitted Lucifer to kill the wife and kids of his most devoted follower just to test him... I thought he was supposed to be your protector?!
I'd much rather have a God I can trust, like Loki! Heck yeah, I trust him way more! ;) (not even joking, Lokean!
Daniel and the Lions den, he saved Daniel because he had faith, then women and children were thrown into the lion's pit... INNOCENT WOMEN AND CHILDREN, and they were eaten, because who cares about them right?
@@wulver810 Ah yes, such fairness, and a loving just god worthy of worship 🙃
We once believed we lived in the garden of our ancestors, together with all our siblings, the animals, the birds etc. We were given this gift of living - and we honored our ancestors, had respect for our siblings and cared for mother Earth. Cities gave the rise to new religions - religions of men and power. Religions which care less for life and more for death (afterlife with god), religions without the spirit of animals, mountains, birds and mother earth.
7:20 the random "wow" and *coughs* is what got me laughing 😂
Hopfully this will workout for me. I'm coming out of the broom closet this weekend and I'm hoping I can get my parents to understand this is who I am.
Fingers crossed.
Good luck! 🍀
Hopefully they'll be like my parents and just accept it ("as long as you have a reason" lol)! Though I had the advantage of them being atheist... Best of luck.
Good news. It went well :) 😀 they were very respectful and it feel a huge burden off my shoulders
@@Drakelich-1 that's great to hear!
This is a very well thought out & presented argument. It mimics many conversations I have had with my christian friends & family. Thanks & keep up the good work.
I think the best way to wiggle out of this argument is to say that god chooses to communicate in a way that can be misinterpreted. It seems to me that this T.I.A. argument has a third, unspoken proposition: that god would always choose to be correctly interpreted in all circumstances. If we discard this assumption, we could say that god is able and knows how to communicate with absolute clarity, but chooses not to for his own reasons. This is similar to the Calvinist argument (leaving out the reprobate part), and I think it diminishes god's omnibenevolence.
Anyway, these are my half-baked thoughts, I'm obviously no philosopher. Great video Ocean!
That is along the lines of the "god works in mysterious ways"-stuff. It may be an escape hatch for this argument, if we want to accept it. But it leads into a rabbit hole in which the Theodicy is the smallest problem.
I'm a Neoplatonist & it doesn't seem to affect my view. The ONE has no attribute that you can pin down because it's infinite & thus paradoxical. You cannot say it is this or that because it is both & neither.
The ONE does not generally interfere in anykind of direct way.
The Gods on the other hand have vast power but are far from infalliable.
I think Gnostic Christianity side steps this to some extent by pushing the "true" God beyond concern for the physical world. It also explains away the God in the bible as the demiurge.
Although in many ways Gnostic thought is more in line with the polytheistic beliefs. I am also not knowledgeable enough to say if the Gnostic God is omnipotent or omniscient.
The Interpretation Argument falls apart for one major reason; it does not account for intent. Look up “The Interpretation Argument debunked in 5 minutes”
Intent doesn't matter. We're talking about an all good, all knowing, all powerful being. His intent should be to get a good message across.
Jelly Bean of course intent matters. What if He wants to tell a riddle or a cypher? What if He wants to lie? What if wants you to dig into His words to find the truth for yourself? I could go on ad infinitum. An omnipotent & omniscient being could have any number of reasons for not communicating a message clearly.
@@TheCynicogue But that means he is not all good, especially when the punishment for getting it wrong is eternal punishment.
Jelly Bean TIA doesn’t require Him to be all-good. That’s exactly the point. TIA does not account for the intent of the deity.
@@TheCynicogue But it's talking about the Christian God. That's what Christians believe.
I like this argument. It utterly obliterates Protestantism. There are Roman Catholic theologians, such as Joseph Cardinal Franzelin, who make the same argument.
So I'll be responding to this tonight on my channel from a Catholic perspective.
Does Catholicism come out any better? Has every Pope had exactly the same theological beliefs? Has there never been a papal bull that changed a previous one?
It doesn't seem like you did that. Probably because catholicism doesn't fare much better.
@@fluffysheap That is why I am Orthodox. God revealed his scripture through the unity of the church in councils and through the writings of the Church Fathers.
No one man can interpret scripture, neither pope or laymen. It is the work of the spirit through the Bishops.
I think that Orthodoxy and early Church history prior to the papacy have the best theological and philosophical arguments for Christianity compared to Protestantism or Catholicism
I'm just thinking of That '70s Show where Fez is like, "Wait a minute, COCKROACH BEATS *EVERYTHING!"*
Have you ever noticed Christianity is a very loud and angry religion?
Plus, if yahweh is omniscient, he knew before he created the universe if you would choose to belive in him or not, leaving you no alternative choice, which means he lied about free will. It also means he specificity created some of us to go straight to hell and suffer without a choice. And i'm pretty sure NOBODY would say that's god.... Thus, I'm a pagan
Exactly! If God wanted us all in heaven, than we all are going to heaven, because he intended it to be that way since he knew where all of us with end up before we were even born.
The bible actually doesn't speak on free will, it just says man has "will"
I agree with you on this argument but I got to ask. Do you think that Loki may be the one that brought the Christian faith about so that he could have his army come ragnarok?
When I was a child, I believed there wasn't enough room in heaven, and that I would be one of those going to hell, because I believed there were others more deserving than me, and to my 5 year old mind, that was ok
I didn't even grow up in a christian household, I don't know how that kind of thinking got in my head
From a biblical standpoint, that makes no sense either
From a biblical standpoint, all have sinned and fall short of "going to heaven", so God provided a way thru grace by giving his only begotten son as substitute to die the death that we deserve so that we could believe in him and be saved. No one is good enough but God is good enough to save you
@@davidhaimoto6339 Makes no sense at all.
@@davidhaimoto6339 And that is one of the worst parts of christianity. Every other religion that has ever existed with a salvation narrative has affirmed that paradise is earned by doing good and improving the lives of others, not by just believing the right thing and doing nothing else. Believing that good works don’t matter and only “accepting” a messiah gives one passage to heaven, and that nothing else is required, is why fundamentalist christianity is so full of hateful, selfish, hypocritical, bigoted monsters. No matter how much evil these people bring into the world, no matter how much they hurt others, no matter how much they make the world a worse place, they still get to go to heaven because jesus. It’s ridiculous and detestable.
@@GothWolfRants justification is separate from sanctification. I agree with you 100%. There is no amount of works that can you can do that will get you to heaven. Keeping of the law is not required. Understanding the law is important in understanding what Christ did on Earth because His work is what saves. The law doesnt save but condemns, no one could keep it or even does but Christ did. So when He died, it was on account of our sin, not His. Because He kept the law perfectly. So to define the law and understand it, is important. Salvation is not keeping the law but a fruit that gives you assurance of your salvation that came through Christ.
Many outside observers and fundamentalists do think that works means you have faith, therefore you must exhibit works. Then those type of preachers will tell you how to work. You'll get quick tips on how to not sin. But every writer of the epistles paints a different type of preaching that says you will be made a new creature in Christ. Your desires will change, your eyes will see, your ears will hear. If you believe He died and rose again. In romans 5 or 6 paul describes the law saying, that
"when the law was given, sin increased. But where sin increased, grace abounded more. So then shall we sin so that grace may abound? May it never be..."
Because the Law points out your need for Christ and belief in His works. So that you will turn from your dead works in sin and live. So to say that just believing in Christ is separate from changing your actions is equally unbiblical. Thats is what repentance is about. Seeing your dead actions and turning from them to Christ. This is the nature of sactification that happens gradually over time. Is this required? Technically no. All are judged on account of their works but those in Christ are not condemned by theirs.
Great now I have a new argument for a Christian colleague who continually tries to convert me...
oh and "Aut viam inveniam aut faciam."
This preacher's screaming sounds like narcissistic rage.
F*ck. This sounds a lot like my journery around college and religion into Polytheism. Glad to know I wasn't alone in it.
No, you got entire college campuses thinking the exact same as you
So I'm not Christian. I'm pagan and was raised atheist and didn't have much intimate experience with Christianity growing up. I read the Bible once in an academic setting for the purpose of understanding biblical reference in English literature better. But for the sake of discussion:
I wonder if there is an answer to this argument in the form of the Christian God's supposed desire for us to have free will, in addition to how he supposedly allows evil/The Devil's influence in the world under the idea that true believers will absolve themselves by finding the True Path or whatever they want to call it. Basically, the existence of conflicting interpretations of God's word is due to the Devil influencing people's ability to interpret the word of God correctly, and possibly people who misinterpret the Bible are in some way agents of Satan set on Earth to lead people astray.
In the conception of an omnipotent and omniscient God, the existence of Satan and his influences can only come to be if God wants Satan's influence to exist. And if God wants to allow Satan to exist, it follows that God would allow Satan to do things that lead people astray, including misinterpreting the Bible or having agents on Earth who teach people the wrong lessons about the Bible.
There is also the issue of the Bible being a translated text so of course different interpretations of its text are a natural thing to arise since we aren't reading the original language. And according to the Old Testament, different languages exist BECAUSE God created them after the Tower of Babel was constructed. God disliked that the collaboration of a people who all spoke 1 universal language led them to the hubris of trying to build a tower that would reach God and thus erased the universal language and replaced it with many different languages, and in that act arguably created the possibility of the Bible being misinterpreted.
At any rate, very cool video, as always. I enjoyed it very much and it gave me a lot to think about.
I'm not Christian, I'm Atheist but I do see a solution here: God is curious as to what humans will do with messages that are not 100% clear, there are some stories where god sort of Experiments on humans and how they'll react to certain things. This however only applies if you see God as just omnicient and omnipotent, if you also say he is all good the whole Argument comes appart
I actually got into an argument similar to this with someone the earlier today. The one thing that really dismantles this particular argument is the fact that God isn't fallible but mankind is very fallible. Gods word is perfect but man isn't perfect, and sadly we often misinterpret a lot of things.
Now I'm still technically a Christian, so I shouldn't probably be arguing against this, but wouldnt a good rebuttal to that be that if God is all-capable/all-powerful such that he is able to communicate the message of salvation in a way which all people will understand, and all-knowing in that he knows exactly how to do so, and all-benevolent meaning that he wants all people to know him and come to him for salvation, then he would communicate his message in a way which even fallible men could agree upon? He communicates gravity in a way which all men, no matter how fallible, agree on. No man disbelieves gravity, or at least the effects of gravity, because it has been given to us as a universal law which is immediately applicable to everyone. Nobody disbelieves the existence of the mind because all men have minds and understand them intuitively. If the reality of the gospel is more important and more foundational to the reality of human life than anything else, as scripture says, wouldn't God likewise communicate the truth of the gospel in a way which all men would intuitively understand? I suppose you can venture into double predestination and say that God wants most people to go to Hell for his own glory, but at that point the debate moves into a purely moral area.
@@dugood70 the big flaw with that argument is again taking human accountability out of the equation. We as humans are flawed God isn't, his word is perfect but we ourselves are not. God is pretty clear with his word and he's allowed it to be translated into multiple languages just so all of the world can read and hear it. But again we ourselves are not perfect so we can never fully agree on just about anything. God isn't accountable for our failures and short comings in life. The whole point of this existence is that we learn to depend on him and his word and use the tools he's set out to help us further along with our journey. And no, the spiritual is not the only and all important part of things. Living here and now is also a very important part of our journey. He created us in his image so we could inevitably experience paradise. We screwed up the first time and now we have to learn from our mistakes and choose to be with him again in the second one he has coming.
@@rojack79er you're still taking away god's all-powerful nature in this argument - you're essentially making a 'can god make a rock that is too heavy for god to lift' argument - can god make humanity be so corrupt that god cannot give a perfect message to them? (or allow humanity to be made so corrupt, whether it was directly him who corrupted humanity or if he allowed another of his creations to do the corrupting is immaterial, he is still the ultimate cause). If god is truly omnipotent, it does not matter how corrupting humanity is, he should still be theoretically able to beam perfect understanding into every human's mind at once, or else he is not all-powerful. The only conclusion you can come to is that he is choosing to not communicate a perfect message for whatever reason - most people choose to believe either that having a perfect message would conflict with free will, or that god doesn't want the true path to be easy to find for some other reason.
I think that's a valid way to get out of this bind - there is no perfect message of god's will because he doesn't want there to be, but you have let go of the idea that the bible is the perfect word of god along the way, you have to accept that the bible can be misinterpreted and that you don't know if your interpretation is correct in any quantifiable way. I think it still breaks down the concept of christianity because it does get rid of the idea that god is not a 'god of confusion' - the way to god is purposefully unclear, which makes the belief that the only way to god is through correct belief, and that failure to find this belief results in endless torture, an abusive setup by any standard of human morality. Sure, a christian can wave it away by saying god has a different morality and who are we to judge it, but i think that's dumb on the face, if you believe in a triomni god then he's the one who gave us this sense of morality, and him having his own rules that seem immoral to us is just another coil of the abusive setup of forcing people to submit to his unintuitive, seemingly immoral will on blind faith backed by nothing. if god made it impossible for me to understand his morality how can he expect me not to judge him on the only morality he gave me and find him lacking
@@amberbydreamsart5467 No I'm not making an argument for can God make a rock bigger than he is. I said what I said and meant it. Mankind is flawed, God isn't. We can misinterpret his word all we want that doesn't mean the Bible itself is flawed, only our interpretation of it is.
“God is a pathological liar.”
This is the correct answer right here. Even if I was to grant that the Bible god existed and that the Bible was the word of God, this would be the only reasonable conclusion just by reading the damn thing.
God is. And the word of God, is Truth and light and life. You only talk as you do, because you don't believe. the bible teaches that to those who are of the world, the word of God is noise, because they don't have spirit of understanding. And it also teaches that no one can say Jesus is Lord unless they have the Holy Spirit of God dwelling in their hearts.
Make no mistake, God is, and His son Jesus is, the way, the truth and the life, and none may come to the father except through Him, this is further made self evident by the fact that His teachings on the word of God, through His disciples. Is what moved us from the dark ages and meadevil times, of paganism and devil worship and demonic sacrifices, to modern times, with our modern understanding of right and wrong, good and evil. Even our modern day family values, which are drawn from the word of God.
All this because, God who is Truth, communicated, and what he, said, what He taught, has not only been taught, through out the world, but this same teachings, changed the world, for the better. How can you say, God isn't real, and the word of God isn't truth?
@@brayo.4793 Do you have evidence that god exists and that the Bible is his word? I highly doubt it.
@@mikelapine1 "THERE'S EVIDENCE!"
@@brayo.4793 There is evidence? So does that mean that you’re going to provide said evidence or are you just going to assert that there is and walk away?
My bet is that you’re just going to quote carefully selected quotes from the Bible at me not knowing that it either gets contradicted elsewhere in the Bible or it doesn’t mean what you think that it means when even if I was to grant you that it says that I still don’t trust the Bible thus it was a waste of time even bringing it up in the first place.
But please do feel free to prove me wrong.
@@mikelapine1 what if I told you that it's possible to prove that God exists?
8:15 in the most respectful way I find it hysterical how Christians will call pagans aggressive. I've never seen someone so angry over the word "is" before.
Having a war about religion is like having a fight over who's got the best imaginary friend - Yassar Arafat, chairman of the Palestine liberation organization (1929 - 2004)
Millions upon millions and millions more will die for the causes of the 3 Desert Religions. Claiming the SAME God to worship and claiming their omnipotent God is on their side.
And what better purpose is there than to murder & die for the glory of your imaginary friend?
How did we ever become so bored & lonely? 🤣😭
Are religious wars really about religion? Take a look at the Thirty Years War. It clearly started as a religious war, or at least that's what they said. But half-way through the war a treaty made all the religious reasons for fighting moot, so they picked sides again and got back to fighting, but this time for their Nations. Religion is just another form of tribalism.
Religion (gold, land, & oil) is used as a reason/means to fuel war. War is used to eliminate competition. If you're told your cause is more just in comparison to another, you're then excused from judgment no matter what atrocities you inact.
@@LesHaskell - False, institutional, religion is used as a means of political control. Monopolise a religion and you have a monopoly of power. You go to war on the pretext of religion because another religion threatens your monopoly. True religion is Peace.
The whole god gave his only son and sacrificed him also makes no sense whatsoever. Why could an infinity powerful god only be able to have a single son. But not only that it's not even a sacrifice. He died on the cross sure but he was revived! You can't give something away and just take it back. He got to ascend to heaven after his revival. So no that's not a sacrifice it makes no sense under the general belief of the story.
Great points there, I know this was something I had questioned myself. Because to me, it seems troublesome and inefficient. This is where one of my teacher's points rings out loud and clear. If you are reading something. Rule number one; Context. Rule number two; context. Rule number three; context. I will try to keep it short and sweet but in essence, a perfect God that keeps every promise without failure has to follow through with the set punishments. Death is the punishment for eating the fruit. after this atonement for sins came into place after the world "fell" the one true atonement is the death of the sinner. This is where the lineage comes into place. David being the son of Adam and Jesus being the Son of David. Thus linking him to the promise of adam that his offspring would crush the head of the serpent and that the man to do it would be from a royal bloodline. So with that in place, Jesus fit that description and had to be outside of impurity thus conceived in a virgin so a pure woman (there is an ideology that it is the man that failed and thus passes the seed of sin on and not the woman). The last part is to overcome death or the penalty for the first sin and that is what Jesus took on the cross. Now, why a cross? I don't know yet. but that in short sums up the atonement side of things that a perfectly just God that keeps his promises has to follow through with things. Hopefully, this helps with some understanding, I know this is brief but if you have anything else like this you are wondering about just ask I'll answer as best as I can.
Biggest argument breaker for Christianity is as such, How could one man have all that power? They will break because you are bringing logic into the conversation.
@Daren Fliflet Christ was a man of no power. God was the only one with power. God is one man.
@Daren Fliflet because omnipotence falls upon it's own logical contradictions. If your god is not logical, then it's less likely to exist. THIS is why we don't say our Gods are omnipotent, because they ARE logical, not illogical
@Daren Fliflet Because divinity is immanent, it exists within our reality, and by such, it also follows the rules of our reality, not because the Gods are limited by it, but because they move according to it in order for us to reach them.
@Daren Fliflet someone orthodox saying "men becoming gods" is specially funny... even you know that is wrong and christianity doesn't teach that. If the christian god was truly immanent you wouldn't be claiming omnipotence like if he was a comic book character. Another proof of how easy is to debunk you. The orthodox apotheosis is in origin pagan from the hellenic religion, there it makes sense because heroes can be deified, but NOT in christianity. And no, saints are not Gods or demigods, heroes maybe, don't try that one.
@Daren Fliflet So your whole argument is a psalm... poetry composed by a polytheistic king like Solomon... SPECIALLY Solomon who was into the occult stuff. You're just showing your pagan hellenic influence here. Again, many gods is not monotheism. BTW what is the first commandment?
I was expecting the preacher to finish his sermon with, “...it’s like you’re unraveling a giant cable knit sweater that someone keeps knitting and knitting and knitting and....”