by Numbers » Mon Oct 16, 2017 7:55 pm
> Now, now, this doesn't make any sense. When a parent has a child, he and she know that child is going to disobey sometimes and makes mistakes sometimes. Do we blame the parents for that? Of course not.
We do blame the parents in some cases, if not all.
If a kid doesn't stop screaming and running around in the supermarket, disobeying, the parents are not magically absolved of their responsibility. They are still responsible.
Also, parents aren't claimed to be all loving or all knowing.
Not only that, but it is easy for multiple parties to be responsible for something.
In the case of the disobedient kid in the supermarket, both the parent and the kid are to blame for the misbehavior.
You can't just pass off god's portion of the responsibility for it just because humans had a part. But in this case, it would be inaccurate to say that humanity had a part.
> It's impossible that humankind would be perfect and not sin.
And that doesn't absolve god's responsibility. If he created something that he knew would be result in evil then he is responsible for it.
Also, if it was impossible for us to not sin, then that means we have no free will and it is entirely god's fault.
You've shot yourself in the foot here.
> it is impossible for God to have created a being that didn't have the possibility of sin. Free will necessitates, well, free will.
If it is impossible for us to not sin, then we don't have free will.
And just as I've said before, even if we did have free will, which you've pretty much admitted that we don't, it wouldn't matter because god would still be responsible.
> God knew we would sin, and had instituted a plan before it happened to redeem the sin,
And the plan was worthless since he knew it would fail.