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Subject: 
Re: Mercy? (Was Re: My Prayer on this National Day of Prayer)
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.off-topic.debate
Date: 
Sat, 22 Sep 2001 22:13:34 GMT
Viewed: 
1046 times
  
In lugnet.off-topic.debate, Mark de Kock writes:
Okay, I'm going to jump onto this one just this once...

In lugnet.off-topic.debate, Ian Warfield writes:
In lugnet.off-topic.debate, Jeff Stembel writes:
In lugnet.off-topic.debate, Geordan Hankinson writes:

Coming together to help those affected by the attack is a good thing.  It
fosters a humble, generous spirit.

No God in there if you're not a religious person.

Granted.


In the first case, the vast majority of those people were not in need before
the attack, so why did God need to kill so many to create a need?  Why not
create a non-tragic event that would cause people to help those who were in
need *before* the attack?

The response would probably not have been as dramatic or as widespread.
Sometimes it takes a shattering tragedy to shock people out of complacency.

And all good religious people know this and STILL need this tragical event
to wake them up?

Yes, unfortunately.  Jesus warns against complacency and losing heart.
Being human, we fall short all the time.

It could be for the nonreligious people also.  A tragedy like this forces
many to reevaluate their priorities in life and not take things for granted.
The search for meaning often leads them to God.

In the second case, how can killing people without a trial be good?  How can
god want this?  isn't there a Commandment that says "Thou Shalt Not Kill"?

In war, things are slightly different.  The commandment actually says "Thou
shalt not murder" and I have to assume that in war, killing is not the same
as murdering.  God in fact commanded many wars in the Old Testament.  He
would not have commanded the Israelites to violate His law.

Whe quoting the bible, everyone can get his or her right. Check out the Old
Testament; it's full of contradictions within itself. (Sorry, I'm still in
the middle of a lot of boxes, so I can't find a bible).

Interpretation can either clarify the issue or muddle it further.  In either
case, I think the original Hebrew supports "murder" rather than "kill".

In any case, if we do nothing in response, the terrorism will increase.  By
demonstrating force, we discourage future attacks, and by rendering justice,
we stop (or at least slow down or set back) the evil.  What would have
happened if we had never gone after Hitler?

And with every step we take against terrorism, we should ask ourselves
several questions. Questions like 'isn't this exactly what the terrorists
want us to do?' and 'what will be the consequences for THE WORLD? (not just
the USoA; the whole world is involved here!)'.

True.  We need to consider our response carefully.

Right now I can name a number of good things that God has brought us due to
this already:

It has brought the nation together,
It has brought most of the world together
People have opened up their houses to the people in need and therefore made
a few new friends, people have learned to appreciate others and be more
thankful.

All of which SHOULDN'T take the deaths of thousands to perform.  Besides,
why are we only helping the victims, and not people who were suffering
*before* the attack?  Wouldn't it have been better to just leave it as it
was?

You're right, it shouldn't have taken this tragedy to produce this good.
But none of this was happening before the attack.  The attack shocked us
into action.

Again, this is due to the acts of God, if you are a religious person. To
others it's just men, behaving like men. Nature at its best: survival of
(part of) the species.

Again, granted.

Even *one* person is merciful.  However, you forget that 50,000 people
worked at the World Trade Center daily.  For whatever reason - they weren't
at work yet, they were able to evacute, or they were rescued, 45,000 people
were spared.

Tell that to the family and friends of the 5000+ dead.

I know.  I don't mean to belittle this tragedy, because it certainly was
horrible.

-What about the mercy for those who were stuck in a airport and someone
opened up their house so they would have someplace to stay?

The Kindness Of Man.  Please, give credit where credit is due, and don't
shortchange the good people.

All goodness derives from God, but this is a technicality in this
instance :).

Again, only if you're a religious person. This Goodness in God made him
decide to kick us out of Paradise? To get palestines kicked out of the
'Promised Land'? (Old Testament; not the current events) This goodness of
God got Goliath killed, because he was a big guy that liked playing with
little guys?
Strange acts of kindness.

This was due to God's judgement.  God must render justice as well as love.

-What about the mercy for those who thought they had lost a family member,
but later found out they were alive?

What about the tens of thousands more who will never see their loved
ones/friends ever again?  Mercy to a few is vindictive.

Again, 45,000 people were saved vs. the 5,000 who died.  See above.

Again, try to explain that to the families and friends of the 5000+ dead.

Again, a valid reminder of the tragedy.  I was pointing out God's mercy to
the 45,000, not belittling the tragedy of the 5,000.

-What about the mercy for those who were late coming to work that day and
missed the explosion?

Blind dumb luck.  Happens to me all the time.

What if God engineered it?

What if he didn't? These kind of questions makes me stop discussing anything
where someone drags in the religious factor. As soon as religion is
concerned, reason seems to have gone through the back-door and caught the
first train out of here.

Reason should accompany faith.  "Come, let us reason together, says the
LORD," Isaiah 1:18; and "Test all things, hold fast that which is good," 1
Thess. 5:21.  God both created the universe and inspired the Bible, so it
follows that they should be logically consistent.

What about the mercy for those working in the white house, but the plane
was crash landed before it got there?

The mercy of good city planning, perhaps.  I'm currently not entirely
convinced the White House was really a target.

What good city planning?  Washington, D.C. was designed over 100 years
before the invention of the airplane.  A Congressman saw one of the planes
circling the Capitol before it went off to hit the Pentagon.  There had to
have been some reason why the pilot didn't crash then.

Plenty of hypotheses: The terrorists and the pilots where fighting? Heroic
passengers tried to intervene? Who knows? Only the dead did know.

True.  This is still speculation.

-What about the mercy for the families who have had money donated etc.?

They wouldn't need it if the attack hadn't happened, and what about those
who have needed help longer?

If the attack hadn't happened, nobody would be getting money anyway.
Sometimes it takes a dramatic event to jump-start people into doing
something.

Sounds like a design-fault in men. Where is God, so I can get a bugg-fix?

Too true!  You just pegged the Gospel.  The fault in men is that they
rebelled against God and plunged the world into sin.  The fix is God -
accepting the free offer of salvation and thus gaining entrance to His
perfect paradise.

This has to be God at work, whether you like it or not, God has shown
himself clearly in the face of tragedy.

I'm sorry, I don't see God there anywhere.  I see the kindness of people
being unfairly credited to a non-existant being.  Why is all the evil in
this world credited to man, but none of the good?  God sure doesn't have
anything to do with my good deeds.

The more I look at this attack, the more I see that it could have become
much worse in many ways, and yet it didn't.  I see God's restraint
throughout the whole thing.

Ahhh, so as long as people can say 'it could have been worse', you can
explain that as the restraining of God, or the kindness?

True.  The Christian position is that, since man is utterly sinful, it is
only through God's restraint that the unrepentant world doesn't go to Hell
right now.

I'm glad life is as simple as that for you. That would also mean (warning:
reason coming back) that Armageddon, when 'things can't get any worse' is
when God finally snaps?

Exactly.  God's patience reaches its limit and He removes His restraint.

Evil is credited to man because it can't be credited to God -- God cannot
commit evil.  I agree that each person is responsible for his or her own
deeds, but I believe it is God who prompts us to do good.

God = good and men = bad/evil? Again, I wish my life was as simple as that.
But please understand me: I have nothing against religious people. Just as
long as they don't try to enforce it on me.

God is good.  Man was originally good, but through rebellion became sinful.

Notice that I do not say 'Christians', to me all religions are the same.
They all are a way out of the harsh reality of the every day struggle for
survival. It is also a handy tool to explain things that men can't explain
in any other way (yet).
Example: a long time ago, men thought that a thunderstorm was (a) God, being
angry at men. Nowadays, men knows that it is just  natural phenomena.
But my favorite example is the Rainbow, because I like boats.


Jeff

--Ian

and Mark - who did enjoy a religious back-ground but outgrew it -de Kock

and Ian again



Message is in Reply To:
  Re: Mercy? (Was Re: My Prayer on this National Day of Prayer)
 
Okay, I'm going to jump onto this one just this once... (...) No God in there if you're not a religious person. (...) And all good religious people know this and STILL need this tragical event to wake them up? (...) Whe quoting the bible, everyone (...) (23 years ago, 19-Sep-01, to lugnet.off-topic.debate)

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