Senior free labour provider dies whilst mowing a church lawn

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Gadianton
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Re: Senior free labour provider dies whilst mowing a church lawn

Post by Gadianton »

MG wrote:But there is purpose and meaning to what happens in the world.
In isolated instances that you approve of, apparently. You spent an entire thread claiming that the mudslide and many if not most other world events are meaningless, the random acts of "mother nature".
MG wrote:The opposition provides opportunities for growth and human kindness that would not flourish to the extent that it does without a cause/effect that triggers much of the good, and evil, that humans do and/or inflict on each other.
Are you now saying that God overturned the lawnmower and sent the mud into the chapel in order for humans to show kindness to each other? Because this is 180 degree opposite of your position thus far. Now, it's possible for humans to show kindness to each other if the mudslide was a random act of nature -- the problem for your position is that this is true specifically in the case of either a non-personal God or no God.
MG wrote:I don't see a contradiction at all between recognizing that we live in a world of nature and taking more or less a naturalistic view of things.
The contradiction is that such events are meaningless and have no purpose behind them. You are claiming there needs to be a personal God to give events purpose.
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Re: Senior free labour provider dies whilst mowing a church lawn

Post by huckelberry »

Gadianton wrote:
Sat Sep 06, 2025 2:14 pm
MG wrote:But there is purpose and meaning to what happens in the world.
In isolated instances that you approve of, apparently. You spent an entire thread claiming that the mudslide and many if not most other world events are meaningless, the random acts of "mother nature".
MG wrote:The opposition provides opportunities for growth and human kindness that would not flourish to the extent that it does without a cause/effect that triggers much of the good, and evil, that humans do and/or inflict on each other.
Are you now saying that God overturned the lawnmower and sent the mud into the chapel in order for humans to show kindness to each other? Because this is 180 degree opposite of your position thus far. Now, it's possible for humans to show kindness to each other if the mudslide was a random act of nature -- the problem for your position is that this is true specifically in the case of either a non-personal God or no God.
MG wrote:I don't see a contradiction at all between recognizing that we live in a world of nature and taking more or less a naturalistic view of things.
The contradiction is that such events are meaningless and have no purpose behind them. You are claiming there needs to be a personal God to give events purpose.
I think MG would agree it is common to think of God supplying purpose to life in terms of life's potential and goals. To try to see particular purpose in each time you stub your toe or it rains completely misses the point.

There may be people who search for a special meaning to every event. I think that is a mistaken a futile effort.
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Re: Senior free labour provider dies whilst mowing a church lawn

Post by MG 2.0 »

huckelberry wrote:
Sat Sep 06, 2025 4:30 pm
Gadianton wrote:
Sat Sep 06, 2025 2:14 pm


In isolated instances that you approve of, apparently. You spent an entire thread claiming that the mudslide and many if not most other world events are meaningless, the random acts of "mother nature".



Are you now saying that God overturned the lawnmower and sent the mud into the chapel in order for humans to show kindness to each other? Because this is 180 degree opposite of your position thus far. Now, it's possible for humans to show kindness to each other if the mudslide was a random act of nature -- the problem for your position is that this is true specifically in the case of either a non-personal God or no God.



The contradiction is that such events are meaningless and have no purpose behind them. You are claiming there needs to be a personal God to give events purpose.
I think MG would agree it is common to think of God supplying purpose to life in terms of life's potential and goals. To try to see particular purpose in each time you stub your toe or it rains completely misses the point.

There may be people who search for a special meaning to every event. I think that is a mistaken a futile effort.
Yep. That's what I'm sayin'.

Regards
MG
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Re: Senior free labour provider dies whilst mowing a church lawn

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Huck wrote:I think MG would agree it is common to think of God supplying purpose to life in terms of life's potential and goals. To try to see particular purpose in each time you stub your toe or it rains completely misses the point.

There may be people who search for a special meaning to every event. I think that is a mistaken a futile effort.
First of all, no, that is not what MG has been saying. Perhaps he's grateful for the helping hand in his attempt to explain himself. But no, this is not what he's saying. Now that you've answered for him, he thinks he's off the hook. He's not, and I will continue to question him and point out the problems with his beliefs. For one thing, a lawnmower turning over and killing someone and a mudslide destroying a chapel are NOT like stubbing a toe or raining. These are big events in people's lives, not minor things. But you're both still wrong, even in the case of little things.

Mormons thank God for the rain, Huck, every time it rains and even when it doesn't. The little things are meaningful. Stubbing a toe is a fantastic time for personal reflection and if you're doing it frequently, a great opportunity for even more reflection.

But, we're engaging in sleight of hand here, Huck, switching to the subjective realm, where atheists are in just as strong of a position to create meaning. MG's proposition of God requires objective meaning. God caused the mudslide for a reason. Our subjective meaning may or may not line up with God's intentions. We may not ever know God's intentions. But God intended something. MG is not saying that sometimes we just don't know what God intended, which is possible, but that God didn't do it. It's "mother nature". This is directly contradictory to his belief of a God who architected the natural world in the same way I architect a Python script.

MG's beliefs thus far have been found to be self-contradictory. Your attempts have not rescued him.
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Re: Senior free labour provider dies whilst mowing a church lawn

Post by Moksha »

Gadianton wrote:
Sat Sep 06, 2025 5:43 pm
This is directly contradictory to his belief of a God who architected the natural world in the same way I architect a Python script.

MG's beliefs thus far have been found to be self-contradictory. Your attempts have not rescued him.
What if MG had been suggesting that God presents meanings in something resembling a Monty Python script?
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Re: Senior free labour provider dies whilst mowing a church lawn

Post by huckelberry »

Gadianton wrote:
Sat Sep 06, 2025 5:43 pm
Huck wrote:I think MG would agree it is common to think of God supplying purpose to life in terms of life's potential and goals. To try to see particular purpose in each time you stub your toe or it rains completely misses the point.

There may be people who search for a special meaning to every event. I think that is a mistaken a futile effort.
First of all, no, that is not what MG has been saying. Perhaps he's grateful for the helping hand in his attempt to explain himself. But no, this is not what he's saying. Now that you've answered for him, he thinks he's off the hook. He's not, and I will continue to question him and point out the problems with his beliefs. For one thing, a lawnmower turning over and killing someone and a mudslide destroying a chapel are NOT like stubbing a toe or raining. These are big events in people's lives, not minor things. But you're both still wrong, even in the case of little things.

Mormons thank God for the rain, Huck, every time it rains and even when it doesn't. The little things are meaningful. Stubbing a toe is a fantastic time for personal reflection and if you're doing it frequently, a great opportunity for even more reflection.

But, we're engaging in sleight of hand here, Huck, switching to the subjective realm, where atheists are in just as strong of a position to create meaning. MG's proposition of God requires objective meaning. God caused the mudslide for a reason. Our subjective meaning may or may not line up with God's intentions. We may not ever know God's intentions. But God intended something. MG is not saying that sometimes we just don't know what God intended, which is possible, but that God didn't do it. It's "mother nature". This is directly contradictory to his belief of a God who architected the natural world in the same way I architect a Python script.

MG's beliefs thus far have been found to be self-contradictory. Your attempts have not rescued him.
Gadianton, speaking for myself I do not think God has orchestrated events for our needs purpose a clever story or a joke. The mud came down the hill due to fire eliminating soil stability, steep slope and lots of water. No miracle, no message, no punishment for a sin (except natural events pointing out planning errors)
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Re: Senior free labour provider dies whilst mowing a church lawn

Post by MG 2.0 »

huckelberry wrote:
Sat Sep 06, 2025 11:49 pm
Gadianton wrote:
Sat Sep 06, 2025 5:43 pm


First of all, no, that is not what MG has been saying. Perhaps he's grateful for the helping hand in his attempt to explain himself. But no, this is not what he's saying. Now that you've answered for him, he thinks he's off the hook. He's not, and I will continue to question him and point out the problems with his beliefs. For one thing, a lawnmower turning over and killing someone and a mudslide destroying a chapel are NOT like stubbing a toe or raining. These are big events in people's lives, not minor things. But you're both still wrong, even in the case of little things.

Mormons thank God for the rain, Huck, every time it rains and even when it doesn't. The little things are meaningful. Stubbing a toe is a fantastic time for personal reflection and if you're doing it frequently, a great opportunity for even more reflection.

But, we're engaging in sleight of hand here, Huck, switching to the subjective realm, where atheists are in just as strong of a position to create meaning. MG's proposition of God requires objective meaning. God caused the mudslide for a reason. Our subjective meaning may or may not line up with God's intentions. We may not ever know God's intentions. But God intended something. MG is not saying that sometimes we just don't know what God intended, which is possible, but that God didn't do it. It's "mother nature". This is directly contradictory to his belief of a God who architected the natural world in the same way I architect a Python script.

MG's beliefs thus far have been found to be self-contradictory. Your attempts have not rescued him.
Gadianton, speaking for myself I do not think God has orchestrated events for our needs purpose a clever story or a joke. The mud came down the hill due to fire eliminating soil stability, steep slope and lots of water. No miracle, no message, no punishment for a sin (except natural events pointing out planning errors)
Yep. Again.

Gadianton, you're trying to bring God directly into everything. Surely one can believe that God created the world and all that is in it without having to think that a mudslide was "God's will" or that anything and everything associated with it was. Except, perhaps, the willingness of many people coming together to scoop up mud and then charting a better course for the future with hopes this won't happen again.

Regards,
MG
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Re: Senior free labour provider dies whilst mowing a church lawn

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MG wrote: Gadianton, you're trying to bring God directly into everything.
God does everything for a reason. He put everything in motion the way he did for a reason. Including the mechanics of the earth that resulted in the mudslide. As a personal God, those reasons, the movement of every blade of grass and every speck of mud, must work toward something meaningful and comprehensible to people.
MG wrote:Surely one can believe that God created the world and all that is in it without having to think that a mudslide was "God's will" or that anything and everything associated with it was.
You can believe whatever you want. Your beliefs are inconsistent, however, and frivolous. You make up which events are meaningful and God ordained and which aren't on a whim. What would be convenient for you personally? And ultimately, your beliefs are more about a, perhaps, advanced alien being, rather than a God. An advanced alien navigating a chaotic universe himself, and he f's with with things here and there; throws a bunch of material together into a planet, but has no idea nor intention for how the planet governs itself from there. God in your view is barely more than a terraformer.
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Re: Senior free labour provider dies whilst mowing a church lawn

Post by Gadianton »

Huck wrote:Gadianton, speaking for myself I do not think God has orchestrated events for our needs purpose a clever story or a joke. The mud came down the hill due to fire eliminating soil stability, steep slope and lots of water. No miracle, no message, no punishment for a sin (except natural events pointing out planning errors)
Perhaps you don't believe in God then? You are a liberal believer if I recall. Let's review what it means to be God.

Suppose there exists a brilliant and benevolent engineer who loves his family and wishes to build them a home that meets all of their needs. So he builds a beautiful home that is perfectly climate regulated and with automation and robots that see to every need. When a child wakes in the morning and heads to the television, the cartoon the child wishes to see in that instance appears on the TV. But there have been a few problems. Some of the glasses that the robot removed from the dishwasher had spots. A bird flew into a spacious window of the home and fell to the ground in pain and the family watched it die. One of the children would have preferred their cartoon to begin immediately upon the television screen as the screen came into view rather than be subjected to previews. So our brilliant engineer though very good and brilliant, can't be God. Why?

Because the ontological argument informs us that if we can conceive of a greater and more benevolent engineer, then this engineer I've initially described can't be God. We can conceive of an engineer who foresaw all of these problems, even one who had calculated the local biosphere exactly, and put a soft cushioning right at that spot the bird flew into the window and gently sent it on its way. But is this far superior benevolent engineer God? Well, he only built a home for one family. And while he chopped the trees down with efficiency, he didn't "create" the tree. A greater and more powerful engineer would have created homes for many more families, and in fact, created the trees themselves. This thought exercise continues until it can't be imagined that there is a greater and more powerful "engineer"; then we can say we've found God.

Now, MG, in his child-like enthusiasm for everything that's good for himself personally, will quickly point out that I've created a God who created a world that is too perfect. His family needs challenges, not every whim attended to. He ultimately hasn't done his family any favors. I don't disagree, but, it's an easy way to introduce the point of 1) purpose and goal orientated design 2) flawless execution. Perhaps instead of home automation, there are lists of chores, or perhaps there is no list, and the children must learn to fend for themselves. Perhaps there is a balance between all three. It doesn't matter to me, what matters is that whatever the optimal scenario is, and whatever implies more greatness on the part of the creator of the scenario, then the creator is aligned with every last optimization if the creator is God.

Alvin Plantinga's solution to the Problem of Evil says that it's possible for evil to co-exist with a world created by God. He says the world as it is must therefore be maximally good. All things considered, a better world than what we have, considering all the big goals behind it with many we might not be able to comprehend, is not possible. This moves the Problem of Evil to a practical evaluation of what we see. Is it really believable that sparing one animal from dying in a forest fire couldn't make things just a little better? For the sake of my argument in this thread, I will take Plantinga at his word and agree that everything as it has happened, including the mudslide and the lawnmower accident, somehow works together to bring about a world that is maximally good, that cannot be improved upon.

However, if this is the case, then everything has happened for a reason down to the last movement of every pebble. Change one thing, no matter how small, and that change could result in a world slightly less good than it could otherwise have been. For instance, if that animal I mentioned dying in a fire was somehow a necessity to bring about the overall maximal good, then it can't be allowed to be saved. It must die. Perhaps that bird flying into the window in my original scenario was necessary for the maximal good also. The reasons for this could be varied. A fly landing in the eye of a warlord could change the history of the planet; as one kind of example. The family needing to learn about the pain animals feel could be another kind of example.

At this point, a sneaky believer might say that there are a great number of scenarios that hold the same level of maximal good such as to allow some flexibility for free agency or stylistic freedom for the creator. That doesn't change much, because every event must still be part of the explanation for world A or world B becoming co-equal maximally good worlds rather than falling into possibilities where things could have been better.

A final problem I will mention is true randomness. God and randomness are not compatible, sorry. Saying God created a purely random universe is like saying he created a rock so big he can't move it. If a person believes we need a random natural world in order to make for the ultimate gaming experience, well, in that case, the ultimate world is one without God (this person is what we call an existentialist). Perhaps simulated randomness for the sake of the test is necessary for the maximal good, I don't dispute this possibility, but ultimately God understands the details, and every detail in disguise is carefully crafted by God, and every detail matters.

MG appears to be an atheist of sorts. A person who believes in a thoroughgoing natural world but with a sky buddy who is there to make things better for himself personally as needed. A personal supernatural helper, but such a being is not God.
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Re: Senior free labour provider dies whilst mowing a church lawn

Post by Hound of Heaven »

Gadianton wrote:
Sun Sep 07, 2025 3:06 pm
A final problem I will mention is true randomness. God and randomness are not compatible, sorry.

I am not a Mormon and have not been for many years, but Mormon doctrine, more than any other so-called Christian religion, permits complete randomness in the journey of eternal progression. If a deity can evolve, then that deity must acquire knowledge, and if knowledge is to be gained, it is crucial to embrace mistakes, but allow mistakes during the learning journey; this applies to deities as well as to mortals.

If there is a god or gods, then they are engineers, scientists, biologists, and many other professionals. This earth, with everything on it, serves as a grand experiment, a testing ground of sorts, where the plants and animals created by the gods struggle for survival, allowing the gods to determine which ones are fit for life on other planets. I have never understood why Mormons strive so much to be recognized as Christians, given that contemporary Christianity often presents a very narrow perspective on life after death.

So you are mistaken; the gods of Mormonism do permit randomness, as it serves as a means for the progression of godliness, shaped through the experience of learning from what is effective and what is not.
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