The Dude wrote:So God's agency is limited from helping trapped miners because our agency could potentially be infringed by viewing such a miracle?
Oh yeah, it's modeled after the "prime directive" of Star Trek: no advanced civilization may give technological aid to a pre-warp drive civilization, as this would interfere with their natural development (or destruction). This rule helps maintain dramatic tension and avoids short-circuiting the various plots with predictable deux ex machina. No wonder Stargazer's explanation sounds more like a literary device than a principle of divine ethics.
But finding car keys is okay -- it's the magical amount of intervention.
Riiiight.
I've made this point many times in conversations like this. It's a curious balance they propose. On the one hand, God intervening to stop suffering would damage will and destroy a justifying good. On the other hand, God intervenes a sufficient amount to allow for various miracles proposed by their faith and evidentiary knowledge of his existence that does not destroy the justifying good. There is a curious ad hoc balance that in of itself is a case against what they are proposing. What damages personal freedom and what leaves it intact is seems picked out of convienance rather than any understandable framework.
This is a great post,
"I think that the case against theism can be made even more compelling here. Believers always retreat to the claim that God is inherently "ineffable". We can't understand his motives, and we can't judge God by his own standards. So the existence of evil may not be explainable in human terms, but it certainly doesn't rule out the existence of benevolent God. Nonbelievers can only retort that evil is to be expected in a godless universe, but it remains a mystery in the theistic universe. So theism requires greater mental effort. So what?
On the other hand, theists also argue that we can understand God, and we know this because humans are allegedly made in "his own image". That explains the obvious anthropomorphism in our perceptions of the behavior of deities. (Non-theists see it the other way round--that God is made in our image.) When you juxtapose God's humanity (which entitles you to label him "benevolent") with his ineffability (which absolves him of "blame" that humans with power over evil would incur), you end up with a glaring inconsistency. God is partially ineffable and partially "effable". God is conveniently ineffable, in the same way that God conveniently "explains" all the gaps in our knowledge about the universe."
http://iidb.infidels.org/vbb/showthread ... 898&page=8
It can be modified slightly to the form of a variety of arguments theists make.