“God used beautiful mathematics in
creating the world.”
Paul Dirac
By Alex P. Vidal
WAS super-typhoon “Ruby” or “Hagupit” a “punishment” from God?
Or was it a pre-destined human suffering?
Or “revenge” of nature?
If we believe in the religious philosophy of deism, we will throw away
the doctrine of theism; and we will cast aside pantheism.
The deists would never believe that God had something to do with “Yolanda”
last year, “Ruby” this year, and other deadly catastrophes in the past and in
the future.
They believe that God exists, and that His glory is manifested in the
heavens and the earth, but that He does not participate in any way in the
events which happen in that universe.
The deist conception of God is that he is a great clock maker, who
created the cosmos and stands outside watching the events that unfold within
it.
The theists, on the other hand, hold that God is present to the world,
yet separate from it; thus if He is a murderous God, He could be blamed for the
“Yolanda” and “Ruby” mayhem “to teach us a lesson” for being sinners.
The pantheists believe that God is manifested in nature and, in fact,
identical to nature.
CRUEL
Since man has been cruel and irresponsible in dealing with his
environment and nature since time immemorial, did God bring the calamities as
an act of “revenge”?
From the point of view of Christian precepts, the above-stated arguments
seem illogical because God essentially sums up the meaning of love.
Since the theological concept of God is that of having the attributes of
omniscience (infinite knowledge), omnipotence (unlimited power), omnipresence
(present everywhere), omnibenevolence (perfect goodness), divine simplicity,
and eternal and necessary existence, God can never be cruel, murderous,
vengeful or destructive.
But Yahweh, the God in the Old Testament, was sadistic and cruel who
killed 2,821,364 people, mostly Philistines, using biblical numbers, according
to Dwindling In Belief.
YAHWEH
Yahweh reportedly killed an estimated 25 million people, added the
Dwindling In Belief, an unbeliever’s thoughts about the Bible, Quran, and Book
of Mormon.
“I kill ... I wound ... I will make my arrows drunk with blood, and mine
sword shall devour flesh.” (Deuteronomy 32:39-42)
In the Flood of Noah, an estimated 20,000,000 were killed (reference:
Genesis 7:23)
For more on the number of those killed by God, please read Steve Wells’
book Drunk With Blood, where he documented “God’s killings in the Bible.”
So why did “Yolanda”, “Ruby” and other calamities happen?
Either God wanted to stop them but He did not, or God wanted to stop them
but He could not.
This was the same view made by Voltaire, a rationalist, when he
criticized Jean-Jacque Rousseau, a romanticist, in the aftermath of the Lisbon
earthquake that killed thousands of people in 1755.
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