by jimwalton » Mon Oct 16, 2017 8:46 pm
You seem to miss the whole point.
No one is innocent (whatever "innocent" really means in this context). I don't care what Sarah McLaughlin sings! I don't agree with B.F. Skinner that we are born with a clean slate. Any parent knows that children at a very young age are disobedient, self-centered, angry, and many other things besides adorably cute. But cuteness isn't the issue here, it's that we are born separated from God. It's not the we're evil or that we've done anything bad, but that we're separated from God.
Suppose a dog is loved and cared for by his master, but one day chooses to run away into the woods, so far as to never be found. That's not the master's fault, but the dog's choice. Let's suppose then that dog has puppies, and they are, necessarily, raised as wild dogs. They don't know the home and love of the master, the warm fire or the food freely put into their bowls. They are wild. it's all they know. They are not "born innocent," to try to bring the analogy into our context, but born wild, separated from the master, knowing nothing of His love.
Let's suppose also there is a raging fire, like in California right now. Some of the pups get killed. Is this the master's fault? No. Actually, every day he has gone out into the woods looking for his beloved dog. Every once in a while he comes upon some of the pups. They're afraid of him. They don't know about his love. Any pups who will return to his home will be welcomed as family, and given food and shelter. It's their choice whether to return or to continue as wild.
These dogs may be "good" dogs, but they're wild. They're not "innocent," so to speak, even from birth.
> how do people think that just because someone goes to heaven, everything is fine.
It's not that everything is fine, but it's not the loss and the cruelty you make it out to be. The children are caught in the wave of the judgment, but they are also brought into the home of the master. It's the right ending to a tragic story.
You seem to miss the whole point.
No one is innocent (whatever "innocent" really means in this context). I don't care what Sarah McLaughlin sings! I don't agree with B.F. Skinner that we are born with a clean slate. Any parent knows that children at a very young age are disobedient, self-centered, angry, and many other things besides adorably cute. But cuteness isn't the issue here, it's that we are born separated from God. It's not the we're evil or that we've done anything bad, but that we're separated from God.
Suppose a dog is loved and cared for by his master, but one day chooses to run away into the woods, so far as to never be found. That's not the master's fault, but the dog's choice. Let's suppose then that dog has puppies, and they are, necessarily, raised as wild dogs. They don't know the home and love of the master, the warm fire or the food freely put into their bowls. They are wild. it's all they know. They are not "born innocent," to try to bring the analogy into our context, but born wild, separated from the master, knowing nothing of His love.
Let's suppose also there is a raging fire, like in California right now. Some of the pups get killed. Is this the master's fault? No. Actually, every day he has gone out into the woods looking for his beloved dog. Every once in a while he comes upon some of the pups. They're afraid of him. They don't know about his love. Any pups who will return to his home will be welcomed as family, and given food and shelter. It's their choice whether to return or to continue as wild.
These dogs may be "good" dogs, but they're wild. They're not "innocent," so to speak, even from birth.
> how do people think that just because someone goes to heaven, everything is fine.
It's not that everything is fine, but it's not the loss and the cruelty you make it out to be. The children are caught in the wave of the judgment, but they are also brought into the home of the master. It's the right ending to a tragic story.