Thursday, February 12, 2009

The Pluralistic God Theory Breaks down

Well it's my first one . . . . . . ever so don't feel like you have to go easy or anything. And don't be afraid that I will cry because I cut your head off. these things make me nervous, you know the whole exposing my innards and the realization of the illusion of control and all that. /Puke. Whatever, I feel better now. People who feel they must write disclaimers are just insecure bastards. Shut up already, /violently turns head, jeez.

So we were talking about God and Allah as a theoretical basis for a pluralistic God theory. basically that there is one God who revealed Himself to different peoples differently. For example He revealed Himself to the Christian through Jesus(In this blog and every other blog I will ever write Christian or Christianity is defined by the life of The Lord Jesus Christ not by its abusers ie The crusades . . .Etc.), and revealed Himself to the Muslims through the prophet Muhammad and the Koran, and the Jews by way of Moses and Torah . . . and so on. Here is my question and where I see it breaking down. He says to the Christian and the Muslim alike that He does Not Lie. But He say to the Christian I Am a Triune being (like a peach has DNA that Defines the rest of the entity{The Father}, has Flesh nuf said{The Lord Jesus Christ}, and has Flavor{The Holy Spirit}, but is A{very much Singular} peach), but says to the Muslim I am Not a Triune being I am One? Both statements cannot be true. So There is one God, The God as revealed to the Christians or the God as revealed to the Muslims...Etc., or this God is a liar and cannot be trusted. This raises another problem.

We all know and concede that there is right and wrong, Good and Evil. If not you are calling your heart a liar and you can't be trusted. If there is right and wrong then there must be a way to differentiate between right and wrong, A Moral Law. If there is a moral law then there must be a moral law giver. but this moral law giver must be transcendent above humanity, because some humans give each other gifts and others prefer give others as gifts to each other to snack on. This moral law is a Just thing, so the moral law giver must be a just being and would not be able to lie or he breaks His own moral law. So that leaves us with only one option, that the God of Islam and the God of Christianity . . .Etc. cannot be the same person.