That there were two gods- one good and one evil was an early heresy
dismissed by some council of Christian Fathers.//We were taught that
god desired choices made by free wills rather than forced determinism.

On Mar 8, 11:48 pm, fiddler <[email protected]> wrote:
> I'm going to address a few issues when I can, life has taken most of
> my attention recently. I will post on the idiots idea of Pascal's
> wager and all of the silly ideas that it invokes, I simply don't have
> the time at the moment.
> Until then, I'd like you to chew on this quote. Devout theists
> proclaim this to be a defeated concept, without ever explaining when,
> where, or how it was defeated. Christians especially call foul, yet
> seem incapable of explaining the foul. An extreme case of irony
> happens more often than many of you might imagine; wherein a bible
> believer declares this to be an out of date writing by an ancient
> author, one that has no bearing on modern life!!!! hahahaha too funny
> and so sad...
>
> Is God willing to prevent Evil, but not able? Then he is not
> omnipotent.
> Is He able, but not willing? Then He is malevolent.
> Is He both able and willing? Then whence cometh Evil?
> Is He neither able nor willing? Then why call Him God?
>                                                 - Epicurus-

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