The Logical Form
Argument 1: Rational Requirement for Belief in a God
  1. P1: Any true God would want belief in Him to be rational.
  2. P2: Rational belief requires evaluating all evidence relevant to an alleged deity.
  3. P3: A true God would want humanity to examine all evidence for any alleged deity.
  4. P4: Some versions of Christianity promote a God who discourages this examination.
  5. Conclusion: Therefore, some versions of Christianity promote a God who is unlikely to be actual.
Argument 2: The Duty of Scrutiny in Divine Claims
  1. P1: Honest seekers must critically assess every claim, especially those about divinity.
  2. P2: If a proposed God’s actions or attributes contradict expected divine qualities, we may reasonably doubt that God’s existence.
  3. P3: Some religious teachings discourage such scrutiny.
  4. Conclusion: Therefore, some religious teachings may support belief in a deity whose existence is unreasonable.
Argument 3: Coherency and the Nature of God
  1. P1: A truly just God would not condemn someone for honest questioning.
  2. P2: Some believers assert that doubting God’s character leads to damnation.
  3. Conclusion: Therefore, a God who condemns honest seekers for doubt contradicts the nature of a just God.
Argument 4: The Incoherence of “Divine Mysteries”
  1. P1: If “divine mysteries” allow love to appear as hate and justice as injustice, then these terms lack objective meaning.
  2. P2: Without objective meaning, we cannot distinguish a true God from a deceitful demon.
  3. Conclusion: Therefore, accepting “divine mysteries” that obscure objective meaning prevents us from distinguishing a true God from a deceitful demon.


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A Dialogue
Questioning Divine Justice

CLARUS: Chris, if your God is truly just and loving, shouldn’t we be free to question his actions without fear of punishment?

CHRIS: Clarus, that sounds like pride talking. Who are we to question God’s ways? His wisdom far exceeds our own, and we can’t expect to understand everything he does.

CLARUS: But if God’s wisdom is so great, shouldn’t his actions make more sense to us, not less? It seems odd that we’re asked to believe in a being whose actions often contradict the very qualities of justice and love we’re supposed to admire.

CHRIS: You’re thinking too humanly. God’s love might not always look like our version of love. Sometimes, what appears as suffering to us is part of a greater divine plan that we can’t comprehend.

CLARUS: So, you’re saying love could look like suffering and justice could look like injustice, all depending on some “mystery” we aren’t meant to understand?

CHRIS: Exactly! We have to trust that God knows what he’s doing, even if we can’t see it.

CLARUS: But if that’s the case, how can we tell the difference between a truly just God and a demon who just claims to be one? If “love” and “justice” can look like anything, then they mean nothing. We’d have no way to determine if we’re actually following a good being or a deceitful one.

CHRIS: Well, the Bible gives us God’s standards. We aren’t following some random deity; we’re following the God of Scripture.

CLARUS: But that’s circular, isn’t it? You’re judging other gods as false based on the standards of your own God, without any objective measure. Isn’t that like me declaring that only my friend’s definition of “honesty” is valid, so anyone else must be dishonest?

CHRIS: But Clarus, if you use your own understanding, you’ll inevitably misunderstand divine things. That’s why you have to submit to God’s standards before you can truly understand his nature.

CLARUS: But that’s backwards. I’d need to see that this God’s actions match basic standards of justice and love before I believe. You wouldn’t marry someone without verifying their character, would you?

CHRIS: I see your point, but belief requires faith, and faith is trusting in what we can’t fully see or understand.

CLARUS: I get that, but blind faith seems risky. If an ideology discourages questioning, it’s usually hiding something. If God is just and good, wouldn’t he welcome honest inquiry rather than condemn it?

CHRIS: Perhaps, but at some point, faith requires humility to accept things beyond our understanding.

CLARUS: Humility, yes, but not at the cost of reason. A God who would condemn honest questioning seems more insecure than loving. If he truly values justice, he’d want us to pursue truth—even if that includes questioning him. Right?


The Companion #01 Video

The Companion #01 Podcast


Helpful Analogies

Imagine a judge who is instructed to assess cases of justice but is told that justice could look like injustice or cruelty. If any action could theoretically be justified as “just,” then justice loses its objective meaning, and no measure of justice remains through which the judge’s decisions can be assessed. Similarly, if divine mysteries allow love to resemble hate or justice to appear as injustice, then distinguishing a true God from a deceptive force becomes impossible.


Suppose a politician assures people of their integrity but insists that honesty may sometimes look like deception under certain “higher purposes.” Without a stable, objective meaning for honesty, it becomes impossible to hold this leader accountable. Likewise, if divine mysteries allow terms like love and justice to have no fixed meaning, distinguishing a benevolent God from a malicious being becomes untenable.


Imagine receiving currency that a bank claims may look like counterfeit but is still “genuine” under certain hidden conditions. If “genuine” currency can resemble fake money, then the concept of authenticity loses its value, and you can no longer trust the currency. In the same way, if divine mysteries allow justice to resemble injustice, the very concept of a just God loses meaning, preventing us from discerning true divine goodness from deception.


Addressing Theological Responses
1. Divine Transcendence Beyond Human Understanding

Theologians might argue that God’s nature is transcendent and therefore surpasses human understanding. What may appear as injustice or hate to human minds might actually be expressions of a higher divine love or justice that we simply cannot fully comprehend. In this view, our conventional terms are limited and cannot encompass the fullness of divine reality.


2. Mystery as a Test of Faith

Another theological response might emphasize that divine mysteries serve as a test of faith for believers. By trusting that God is good even when his actions seem to contradict human moral standards, believers demonstrate faith in his ultimate wisdom and benevolence. This perspective holds that faith itself is strengthened by accepting that God’s ways are beyond our moral frameworks.


3. Redefinition, Not Rejection, of Moral Terms

Theologians may contend that divine mysteries do not reject objective meaning but rather redefine it within a divine context. From this standpoint, terms like love and justice retain their objective meanings, but these meanings are enhanced or broadened by God’s infinite nature. Thus, human understanding of love and justice is considered a partial reflection of God’s perfect qualities, rather than a complete framework for evaluating divine actions.


4. Historical Context of Divine Revelation

Some theologians argue that God’s actions must be viewed within the historical context in which they were revealed. They might assert that certain actions attributed to God in religious texts, which seem harsh or unjust by modern standards, were appropriate for the culture and moral understanding of that time. This perspective suggests that divine actions reflect an adaptive approach to guiding humanity, rather than a fixed adherence to modern ethical standards.


5. Moral Growth Through Divine Mystery

Another response might hold that divine mysteries prompt believers to engage in moral reflection and growth. By grappling with actions or attributes that seem contradictory to human ethics, believers are encouraged to deepen their understanding of moral complexities. This view interprets divine mystery not as moral relativism but as a challenge to grow spiritually and develop a more nuanced comprehension of love and justice.


  • See “Clarifications” for an explanation of the reference to morality.
1. Limits of Divine Transcendence as a Rational Justification

While divine transcendence is often cited as a reason why God’s actions are beyond human understanding, this response can undermine a behavioral assessment and objective meaning. If love and justice lose their fixed definitions due to divine transcendence, then these concepts are rendered ambiguous and can justify any action. For a term like justice to be meaningful, it must align with certain objective principles; otherwise, it risks becoming a vacuous label that supports any arbitrary claim about God’s nature.


2. Faith Testing and the Need for Coherent Moral Standards

Claiming that divine mysteries are a test of faith implicitly assumes that faith is more valuable when it disregards moral coherence. However, rational belief requires a degree of consistency between claims of goodness and observable actions. If God is depicted as both just and benevolent, then actions that appear as injustice or cruelty call for justification that aligns with these terms. Otherwise, the test of faith becomes a test of credulity, requiring believers to abandon their moral intuitions without any rational basis for moral trust.


3. Redefining Terms Erodes Objective Meaning

While theologians argue that divine mysteries merely broaden the meanings of terms like love and justice, this redefinition dilutes their objectivity. If love or justice can mean one thing to humans and another to God, then these terms lose their stability and fail to guide us in recognizing moral qualities. For objective moral standards to hold, they must be universally intelligible; without this, distinguishing a benevolent God from a malevolent being becomes impossible, as any behavior could be labeled just or loving under an undefined divine perspective.


4. Historical Context Doesn’t Excuse Moral Contradictions

Appealing to historical context suggests that God’s nature adapts to cultural morals rather than transcends them, which contradicts the idea of eternal moral standards. If God’s actions are interpreted as just for one era and unjust by today’s standards, then moral relativism is unavoidable, even in divine contexts. A truly just and loving God would act in ways that reflect consistent moral principles across all times and cultures, rather than adapting to the limitations of each historical period.


5. Divine Mystery Should Not Compromise Moral Clarity

While divine mysteries are often invoked to compromise moral clarity. If believers are expected to grow through moral ambiguities attributed to God’s actions, this growth becomes subjective and unpredictable without an objective moral foundation. Mysteries that erode clear standards for love and justice lead to moral confusion rather than enlightenment, as they provide no stable moral framework for believers to genuinely distinguish good from evil.

Clarifications

The inclusion of the term “morality” in the article above is merely a reductio ad absurdum tool to explore the internal coherence of Christianity and does not imply actual morality exists.

From a moral non-realist perspective, the term “morality” is not taken as an indicator of any objective moral truths or inherent moral realm. Instead, it is used as a reductio ad absurdum device to assess the internal logic of Christian doctrines that claim moral authority and ethical absolutes. In this view, the invocation of “morality” serves purely as a conceptual tool, adopted to highlight potential inconsistencies within a framework that professes absolute moral standards but may fail to uphold them in practice or theology.

For a moral non-realist, moral terms like “good,” “evil,” “justice,” and “love” are understood as expressions of human emotions, cultural conventions, or social agreements without intrinsic truth-value. By temporarily engaging with the language of morality as defined by Christian doctrine, the moral non-realist can question the coherence of these doctrines by examining whether Christianity’s moral claims remain logically consistent within its own terms. However, this does not imply an endorsement of objective morality; rather, it acknowledges that Christianity operates within a moral framework it purports as real and binding.

Thus, when analyzing Christianity’s ethics, a moral non-realist employs moral language only to reveal internal contradictions or logical gaps. The aim is not to affirm any moral truths but to demonstrate that Christianity must, at minimum, adhere to the standards it prescribes if it is to be self-consistent. The use of morality here is, therefore, instrumental and hypothetical—it is a lens through which internal coherence can be evaluated without conceding the existence of moral facts.

That said, the author does encourage those who feel they can articulate a moral system that does not reduce to mere emotions or blind obedience to present coherent grounding for that moral system.


The tactic of feigned horror and the exclamation, “How dare you judge God!” serves as a form of social and intellectual intimidation designed to halt inquiry by appealing to authority and devotion rather than reason.

When someone challenges God’s actions or character, this response implicitly assumes that questioning divine authority is arrogant or blasphemous, attempting to shift the focus from the substance of the critique to the presumed attitude of the questioner. By suggesting that humility equates to unquestioning acceptance, this tactic discourages believers from engaging with potential contradictions or logical gaps within their faith’s moral framework.

For a moral non-realist or a rational inquirer, the notion that one must “humble oneself” before God by suspending all questioning undermines the pursuit of truth and internal coherence. If God’s nature is truly just and benevolent, then genuine inquiry and rational reflection should not be seen as defiant but as sincere efforts to establish the logical coherence of the alleged deity and accompanying morality. Feigned horror implies that faith requires submission without scrutiny, thus sidelining critical examination and potentially allowing for moral contradictions to remain unaddressed. Ultimately, this tactic diverts from a reasoned discussion and introduces an atmosphere where devotion replaces clarity as the measure of faithfulness, which can render belief more about loyalty than logical integrity.


◉ Formalization:

Christian Apologists Group Responses

◉ These quotes are some of the most salient, representative quotes in response to this issue from a Facebook group called “Christian Apologetics.” This group consist of quite civil and well-educated apologies, many of them, pastors, or ministers.

Not all of the responses were problematic. The list below contains only the clearly flawed responses, posted here for educational purposes. The last check revealed that there were a total of 340 comments in the thread.


  1. “God’s ways are higher than ours.”

Why it fails: Appeal to mystery. Evades the question about textual clarity and humanitarian knowledge.

  1. “Other gods are fallen angels or Satan himself.”

Why it fails: Assumes the truth of Christianity without argument. Does not address the content critique.

  1. “You are not a serious seeker.”

Why it fails: Ad hominem. Dismisses the arguer instead of the argument.

  1. “You’re in an Apologetics group.”

Why it fails: Irrelevant procedural point. No engagement with the theological critique.

  1. “It’s illogical to claim we can judge God.”

Why it fails: Begs the question. The original post is questioning whether such a God is worthy of belief.

  1. “Apologetics is defending, not questioning.”

Why it fails: Focuses on method, not content. Dodges the criticism.

  1. “We don’t have to question our beliefs to defend them.”

Why it fails: Evades the issue of whether unexamined belief deserves defense.

  1. “You’re dictating how God should act.”

Why it fails: Mischaracterizes the post. It questioned the internal coherence of God’s supposed traits.

  1. “God tells us who he is in the Bible.”

Why it fails: Circular reasoning. Uses the text under critique to justify the critique.

  1. “God is worthy not by any standard, but because He is God.”

Why it fails: Divine command theory. Assumes authority without epistemic justification.

  1. “Science happened for me because of God.”

Why it fails: Post hoc fallacy. Personal narrative doesn’t engage with the general critique.

  1. “A true seeker will find the truth.”

Why it fails: No True Scotsman. Reframes criticism as insincerity.

  1. “You judge God by human standards.”

Why it fails: Avoids internal coherence checks. Shifts burden away from explanatory adequacy.

  1. “You assume God’s unworthiness means he doesn’t exist.”

Why it fails: Straw man. The argument critiques divine authorship, not mere existence.

  1. “You must show worthiness and existence are logically distinct.”

Why it fails: The original post does not argue they are equivalent, but critiques the coherence of worship-worthiness.

  1. “You only want to win a debate.”

Why it fails: Ad hominem. Assumes motive instead of answering the challenge.

  1. “You have been told enough.”

Why it fails: Evasion. Dismisses continued engagement without addressing content.

  1. “I came to faith through research.”

Why it fails: Personal testimony. Doesn’t engage with the systemic critique.

  1. “Faith isn’t blind.”

Why it fails: Doesn’t explain why faith remains credible without basic empirical grounding.

  1. “You have a Western intellectual mind.”

Why it fails: Red herring. Impugns methodology rather than arguments.

  1. “God doesn’t owe us anything.”

Why it fails: Avoids the original question of whether a compassionate deity would act.

  1. “The Bible’s clarity is proven through faith.”

Why it fails: Circular. Uses faith to validate what is under scrutiny.

  1. “You can’t limit God to human logic.”

Why it fails: Special pleading. Exempts God from the standards applied to all other truth claims.

  1. “You just don’t want God to be real.”

Why it fails: Psychological projection. Does not refute the argument.

  1. “You sound angry at God.”

Why it fails: Ad hominem. Emotional speculation about the arguer.

  1. “I trust God’s plan even if I don’t understand it.”

Why it fails: Appeal to ignorance. Defers to mystery rather than engaging evidence-based criticism.

  1. “We can’t expect to understand everything with our limited minds.”

Why it fails: Special pleading. Dismisses rational evaluation.

  1. “Atheists always twist the Bible.”

Why it fails: Ad hominem and sweeping generalization.

  1. “You wouldn’t believe even if God appeared to you.”

Why it fails: Mind-reading fallacy. Avoids the substantive argument.

  1. “The Bible isn’t a science textbook.”

Why it fails: Straw man. The critique is not that it should be, but that it omits crucial life-saving knowledge.

  1. “Your logic is flawed because it lacks faith.”

Why it fails: Category error. Faith and logic are different epistemic tools.

  1. “God works in mysterious ways.”

Why it fails: Appeal to mystery. Non-response.

  1. “You need the Holy Spirit to truly understand.”

Why it fails: Unfalsifiable and excludes nonbelievers from rational inquiry.

  1. “God’s justice is perfect even if we can’t see it.”

Why it fails: Circular and unverifiable.

  1. “You’re using man’s reasoning, not God’s.”

Why it fails: Special pleading. Evades shared reasoning standards.

  1. “Why should God care about disease? It’s part of the fall.”

Why it fails: Theodicy deflection. Avoids the question of divine authorship.

  1. “All truth is God’s truth.”

Why it fails: Tautological. Doesn’t address omissions in Scripture.

  1. “Your question shows you don’t fear God.”

Why it fails: Tone policing. Doesn’t respond to substance.

  1. “You’re reading with a hardened heart.”

Why it fails: Psychological attack. Avoids the argument.

  1. “God has revealed all we need.”

Why it fails: Assertion without justification. Ignores the critique’s examples.

  1. “Truth isn’t determined by logic but by revelation.”

Why it fails: Rejects critical scrutiny in favor of dogma.

  1. “God gave us brains, but not to question Him.”

Why it fails: Contradictory reasoning. Undermines human inquiry.

  1. “You’re arrogant to think you could judge the Creator.”

Why it fails: Fallacy of hubris. Shifts focus from the argument to tone.

  1. “Spiritual things are spiritually discerned.”

Why it fails: Exclusionary epistemology. Dismisses reasoned critique.

  1. “Faith begins where reason ends.”

Why it fails: Abandons logic. Doesn’t respond to the argument.

  1. “Many have come to Christ through that same Bible.”

Why it fails: Popularity fallacy. Doesn’t address content.

  1. “Your questions are dangerous.”

Why it fails: Anti-intellectualism. Refuses engagement.

  1. “Doubt is the devil whispering.”

Why it fails: Demonizes skepticism. Avoids rational debate.

  1. “Only God knows what’s best.”

Why it fails: Appeal to authority without justification.

  1. “His silence is part of the test.”

Why it fails: Theodicy by obfuscation. Doesn’t respond to the central concern.



10 responses to “#01 ✓ Consider: Do we dare assess the character and actions of a proposed God before accepting the existence of that God?”

  1. Sushanth Avatar
    Sushanth

    existence ? So you don’t know god. If you know about god. You dont ask for existence or proof.

    1. Phil Stilwell Avatar
      Phil Stilwell

      Claiming someone does not know a particular God is to assume that particular God exists. That assumption needs substantiation. This entire site is an invitation for evidence. It is not, however, a place for empty assertions.

    2. Phil Stilwell Avatar
      Phil Stilwell

      If I understand your argument correctly, you’re suggesting that knowledge of God makes questions about existence or proof unnecessary. However, let’s examine this claim logically.

      — P1: Knowledge of a being requires that the being exists.
      Explanation: For example, I know a person if that person exists in reality. If the person does not exist, any knowledge I claim to have is either mistaken or imaginary.
      — P2: To verify the existence of a being, especially one not directly observable, we typically rely on evidence.
      Explanation: We apply this principle universally to all claims—whether about scientific phenomena, historical events, or abstract concepts.
      — P3: Claims about God’s existence, like all existential claims, are subject to the same reasoning process.
      Explanation: Just as one would ask for proof of a distant star’s existence before accepting it, it’s reasonable to ask for proof of God’s existence if someone asserts it as a fact.
      — Conclusion: Asking for evidence or proof of God’s existence is not an indication of ignorance but rather a commitment to rational inquiry.
      Merely claiming to “know God” without evidence does not demonstrate God’s existence any more than someone claiming to know a mythical creature would demonstrate its reality. Belief without evidence may satisfy some on a personal level, but it fails the test of logical scrutiny.

      Would you agree that if evidence is crucial in other areas of knowledge, it should also apply to questions of God’s existence?

  2. Ryan Stohldrier Avatar

    Prompt Under Discussion

    Do we dare assess the character and actions of a proposed God before accepting the existence of that God?

    What I Read (and Why)

    I read the article, but I did not read the accompanying technical paper for two reasons:

    1. The article itself contains more than enough material to engage in meaningful dialogue.
    2. I agree with what I take to be your main point: people should not accept God on blind faith or dismiss difficult questions as “mysteries.”

    Related note: the Greek term musterion does not denote an unobtainable truth; it points to a profound matter of inquiry that people should actually investigate. Point 1: Isaiah 55:8–9 and Authorial Intent

    You referenced Isaiah 55:8–9, but I believe that misses the author’s intent.

    God was not saying:

    • humans cannot understand His ways, and
    • humans therefore should not seek understanding.

    Rather, the surrounding context suggests the opposite. Consider Isaiah 55:6–7:

    “Seek the LORD while He may be found;
    Call upon Him while He is near.
    Let the wicked forsake his way
    And the unrighteous man his thoughts;
    And let him return to the LORD,
    And He will have compassion on him,
    And to our God,
    For He will abundantly pardon.”

    In this light, Isaiah 55:8–9 is not a call to abandon inquiry. It is more like an invitation to a higher and better road of inquiry—turning away from the worldly and profane gods of surrounding nations and seeking the God who offers “higher thoughts.”

    To borrow the language you used: it’s closer to a “come up higher” moment than a “stop asking questions” moment.

    So, I’m happy to discuss further, but I think the Isaiah reference was taken out of context (as many Christians do, unfortunately). Point 2: Suffering and the Claim of Benevolence

    You then move into the Problem of Evil in a somewhat vague way, and I’m open to dialogue here.

    You wrote:

    “If a God claims to be loving yet permits suffering among those he professes to love, such behavior suggests a lack of coherence with the concept of a benevolent deity.”

    Thought Experiment 1: Discipline and Love

    Suppose a child steals something from a store. The parent makes the child return the item and accept whatever consequences the manager imposes.

    Would we conclude that the parent does not love the child because the child experiences discomfort or shame? That seems presumptuous. My parents did something like that, and they loved me. Thought Experiment 2: Bullying and Development

    Suppose a child is bullied at school.

    A parent could storm in and physically punish the bullies. But a parent might instead teach the child strategies for handling conflict—diplomacy, resilience, situational awareness, confidence.

    Which is more loving?
    I would argue the latter: equipping the child to cope with difficulty. Scriptural Framing

    This is consistent with passages like James 1:2–4:

    “Consider it all joy, my brethren, when you encounter various trials, knowing that the testing of your faith produces endurance. And let endurance have its perfect result, so that you may be perfect and complete, lacking in nothing.”

    (“Perfect and complete” here is pointing toward maturity.)

    Likewise:

    • Job 2:10 — “Shall we indeed accept good from God and not accept adversity?”
    • 2 Corinthians 4:17 — “For momentary, light affliction is producing for us an eternal weight of glory far beyond all comparison.”

    A lot of life comes down to perspective. “Woe is me” makes “count it all joy” sound absurd. But a gratitude-oriented frame can change how adversity is interpreted. Practical Analogy: Martial Arts Training

    In martial arts training, my instructor had us condition our fists by punching progressively harder surfaces. That involves discomfort, but it prepares the body to endure difficulty and avoid greater harm later.

    In other words: suffering can be instrumental and beneficial. Summary: My Two Main Points

    1. God does not require blind faith or forbid inquiry.
      The Isaiah 55 context supports a “seek higher” interpretation rather than an anti-inquiry one.
    2. Suffering does not necessarily imply a lack of love or benevolence.
      Suffering can function as discipline, development, conditioning, or maturation—so its existence alone does not justify the conclusion that God is non-benevolent or non-existent.
    1. Phil Stilwell Avatar
      Phil Stilwell

      Thanks for the substantive engagement, Ryan. Few others actually addressing the thesis.

      1) On Isaiah 55:8–9 and “mystery”
      I agree with you on the narrow point: Isaiah 55:6–9 is not a blanket command to stop thinking. The passage contains an invitation to “seek,” and I’m not claiming the authorial intent is “don’t inquire.”

      But here’s the problem my post targets: how Isaiah 55:8–9 is functionally used in apologetics discourse. In the wild, it routinely functions as a conversation-stopper when a believer is cornered by incoherence: “God’s ways are higher,” therefore your critique is illegitimate. Even if that’s not Isaiah’s intent, it becomes the text’s practical role.

      And that practical role creates an epistemic dilemma:

      ✓ If “higher” means “beyond human grasp” in the very places where coherence is questioned, then the claim becomes immunized from evaluation.
      ✓ If “higher” simply means “better,” then it doesn’t rescue contradictions; it just asserts that God’s plan is superior while leaving the alleged incoherence untouched.

      So yes: Isaiah 55 can be read as a call to seek. But the apologetic deployment I’m criticizing is still real, and it still undercuts rational evaluation.

      On μυστήριον: I’m fine granting your semantic point. The issue isn’t lexicography. The issue is that “mystery” is used as a method to bypass scrutiny rather than an invitation to deeper inquiry.

      2) On suffering, love, and the relevance gap
      You’re right that some suffering can coexist with love. Discipline, training, and resilience-building are real. Nothing in my post requires the absurd premise “any suffering disproves love.”

      But your analogies are doing far less work than you think, because they don’t scale to the world we’re actually in.

      Your cases involve:

      bounded suffering (temporary, limited)
      purpose-linked suffering (clearly connected to growth)
      a non-omnipotent parent (limited options, limited foresight)
      a parent not responsible for the whole system (they didn’t design disease, physics, predators, earthquakes)

      The theistic claim under discussion is not “a loving being sometimes allows discomfort.” It’s closer to: a maximally powerful, maximally informed, loving creator intentionally actualized a reality in which vast quantities of extreme suffering occur, much of it unrelated to growth, and much of it experienced by beings incapable of learning from it.

      That’s where the analogies break.

      Examples you didn’t address:

      ✓ infants dying painfully before any “maturity” is possible
      ✓ animal suffering across evolutionary history (predation, starvation, parasitism)
      ✓ natural disasters that crush indiscriminately
      ✓ prolonged torture/abuse where “character formation” is a grotesque fit
      ✓ diseases whose primary “lesson” is simply that biology is brutal

      And once you appeal to “eternal weight of glory,” you’re relying on the afterlife framework to justify the present. But that’s inside the system. For someone assessing the system, that move is: “This looks awful now, but trust me, it cashes out later.” That’s not evidence; that’s a promissory note.

      So the core point remains:

      Suffering doesn’t logically contradict love in every conceivable case.
      ✓ But the pattern, scale, and distribution of suffering we actually observe makes a “maximally loving and maximally capable” creator less probable than alternatives (indifferent nature, non-personal causes, or a deity not matching the advertised traits).

      3) The post’s thesis you didn’t really touch
      My post isn’t “God forbids inquiry.” It’s: it’s rationally required to evaluate a candidate God’s coherence and trustworthiness before pledging allegiance, especially when the stakes are high. And if a framework blocks that evaluation by insisting (explicitly or in practice) that scrutiny is arrogant or illegitimate, then that framework deserves suspicion.

      So I’ll accept your two “main points” with modifications:

      ✓ 1) Christianity may say inquiry is allowed — but in practice it often draws a bright red line precisely where coherence and trustworthiness are challenged, then waves “mystery” to protect the claim.
      ✓ 2) Suffering alone doesn’t disprove benevolence — but the actual empirical profile of suffering is exactly what forces the coherence and likelihood questions back onto the table.

      If you want to push this forward cleanly, provide a coherent answer to this:

      ✓ What observable difference should we expect between a world with an indwelling, transforming Holy Spirit and a world shaped by ordinary psychology, culture, and selection effects?
      If the difference is not specifiable in a way that could, in principle, be checked, then “seek and you’ll find” remains a devotional slogan, not an epistemic method.

      And, one last point that’s central to why I wrote the post in the first place.

      Too often, “God is beyond our understanding” is not used as a modest reminder of cognitive limits; it’s wielded as a rhetorical club to force the surrender of the very responsibility that rational agents have: to aggressively assess every proposed God-claim without exception.

      Here’s the problem in plain terms:

      ✓ The moment “beyond our understanding” is invoked to block scrutiny, it becomes a license for any claim to pass.
      ✓ If “love” can look like cruelty, and “justice” can look like injustice, and the explanation is always “higher ways,” then the words stop doing any real work.
      ✓ And once terms lose stable meaning, you’ve lost the ability to distinguish a benevolent deity from a malevolent deceiver, a demon, or a purely human projection.

      So when someone says, “You can’t judge God,” the correct reply is:

      We’re not “judging God” from a position of superiority. We’re doing the only thing honest seekers can do: evaluating a candidate description before we hand over our trust, allegiance, and life-or-death commitments. If you demand that I suspend that evaluation, you are not defending God—you are defending a protected bubble in which claims are exempt from the standards applied to every other high-stakes belief.

      And that’s the core epistemic point:

      No proposed God gets a pass.
      No claim gets immunity.
      No “mystery” gets to function as a veto on scrutiny.

      If a God is real and worthy of trust, open evaluation won’t threaten that God. It will confirm it. If a God-concept can survive only by forcing people to stop asking the sharp questions—especially the questions about coherence, reliability, and the real-world consequences of belief—then that concept has already indicted itself.

      1. Ryan Stohldrier Avatar

        1. Clarifying the Claim About Christianity and Inquiry

        [“Christianity may say inquiry is allowed — but in practice it often draws a bright red line precisely where coherence and trustworthiness are challenged, then waves ‘mystery’ to protect the claim.”]

        This objection cannot be applied wholesale to Christianity as such. Christianity is not a monolithic entity. I am a Christian, and I do not, in practice, do what you describe.

        Some ignorant or poorly informed Christians do rely on appeals to “mystery” to shield weak or underdeveloped claims, and that is indeed a problem. It is one I am regularly working to address by helping to educate others. As such, the epistemic dilemma you pose applies to uninformed sects or practitioners of Christianity—not to Christianity properly understood or responsibly practiced. 2. Steel-Manning the Problem of Suffering

        [“It’s closer to: a maximally powerful, maximally informed, loving creator intentionally actualized a reality in which vast quantities of extreme suffering occur, much of it unrelated to growth, and much of it experienced by beings incapable of learning from it.”]

        Allow me to offer a steel-man version of your claim:

        An all-powerful, all-loving, all-benevolent, all-knowing God intentionally actualized a reality in which vast quantities of extreme suffering occur—much of it unrelated to growth, and much of it experienced by beings incapable of learning from it.

        This formulation is more robust, and I will now attempt to address it directly. 3. Love, Free Will, and the Necessity of Suffering

        God, being maximally great, would necessarily create the best possible candidate for maximally exemplifying love. The critical question is:

        Which is more valuable for the purpose of love?

        A being pre-programmed to love and only to love, or

        A being with the genuine choice to love?

        I would argue the latter. Genuine love requires free will. A being capable of freely choosing love must also be capable of choosing evil. When beings freely choose to do evil, suffering follows. Therefore, if God aims at the greatest possible exemplification of love, the possibility of suffering is unavoidable. 4. Why God Does Not Simply Prevent All Suffering

        One might respond: “But God could stop suffering from happening.”

        My reply is that if God were to prevent all suffering, human choices would no longer be genuinely free. The moral significance of free will would collapse if its consequences were continually overridden. 5. The Fall, Cosmic Corruption, and Natural Evil

        God created the best possible world: a world in which there was only one potentially bad choice—to be satisfied with God or to choose dissatisfaction with God.

        The choice of dissatisfaction unleashed corruption into the world. Humanity was meant to steward the kingdom of the world, but when mankind relinquished that kingdom to Satan (the serpent), disorder followed. This accounts for:

        Infant suffering and death

        Animal suffering

        Natural disasters

        Disease

        6. Divine Mercy and Human Participation in Restoration

        Despite this corruption, God, in His mercy, provided means of relief—namely, through the love and action of mankind. God desired that humanity follow in His footsteps and participate in remedying the broken world that mankind itself handed over to corruption. 7. Love’s Highest Expressions: Sacrifice and Forgiveness

        Two of the greatest exemplifications of love are:

        Self-sacrifice for others

        Forgiveness of others

        The misdeeds and failures of mankind made these highest forms of love possible in ways that would not otherwise exist. 8. Agreement on Rational Evaluation of God

        [“My post isn’t ‘God forbids inquiry.’ It’s: it’s rationally required to evaluate a candidate God’s coherence and trustworthiness before pledging allegiance, especially when the stakes are high.”]

        I did not directly address this earlier because I largely agree with it. I believe that fully rational answers can be given for virtually all alleged incoherences, and I look forward to attempting to demonstrate that claim.

        1. Phil Stilwell Avatar
          Phil Stilwell

          Ryan, you wrote a thoughtful, structured reply, but it still doesn’t meet the central burden of the article you’re responding to.

          The post is not mainly “some Christians misuse Isaiah” or “a theodicy exists.” The post is a method claim:

          ✓ Before you pledge allegiance to a candidate God (especially under high-stakes threats/promises), you must first evaluate that candidate’s coherence, trustworthiness, and evidential posture using standards that are not smuggled in from the very system under evaluation.

          Right now, your response repeatedly re-enters the system (Fall, Satan, “best possible world,” love requires libertarian freedom, etc.) without doing the prior work the article demands: why should any outsider treat those as anything more than internal storytelling?

          Here’s what you need to answer to actually address the post.

          1) “Christianity isn’t monolithic” doesn’t touch the thesis
          Saying “I’m a Christian and I don’t do that” is autobiographical, not an answer.

          The question is:
          Does your version of Christianity allow independent evaluation all the way down—especially at the points where coherence and trustworthiness are challenged—without invoking ‘mystery’ as a veto or ‘God’s standards’ as the court of appeal?

          Also, “Christianity properly understood” risks becoming:
          ✓ a “No True Scotsman” shield (“the bad replies don’t count; only my sect counts”), which is exactly the kind of insulation-from-scrutiny the post is warning about.

          2) Your “steel-man” is fine — but your reply immediately assumes what’s under evaluation
          You say you’ll address: an all-powerful, all-knowing, all-loving God actualizing a world with massive suffering.

          But then your defense relies on additional big premises that you didn’t justify from outside the system:

          ✓ “God must create the best possible world.”
          ✓ “Libertarian free will is required for genuine love.”
          ✓ “Preventing many harms would collapse freedom.”
          ✓ “The Fall unleashed cosmic corruption.”
          ✓ “Humans handed the world to Satan.”
          ✓ “This explains infant death, disease, disasters, and animal suffering.”

          Those aren’t explanations unless you can argue they’re more credible than rival explanations without citing the very book/tradition whose trustworthiness is in question.

          3) Free will doesn’t do the heavy lifting you’re assigning it
          Even granting freedom, your claim “God can’t prevent suffering without undermining freedom” is far too strong.

          ✓ A world can preserve meaningful choice while still preventing many extreme harms (e.g., less disease, fewer natural catastrophes, less predation, less stochastic horror) without turning people into puppets.
          ✓ “Some consequences” isn’t the same as this magnitude and distribution of consequences.

          So the article’s pressure returns:
          ✓ Why this world, rather than one with far less involuntary suffering, if the creator is both able and committed to human flourishing?

          4) “The Fall + Satan” is a promissory internal patch unless you answer the evidential questions
          You say the Fall explains infant suffering, animal suffering, disasters, disease.

          But the post’s method demand is:
          What public, checkable reason is there to think “Fall/Satan/cosmic corruption” is more than a retrofitted narrative added to protect the claim?

          So, concretely, you need to answer things like:

          ✓ What independent evidence do we have that “Satan” is a real causal actor in geology, virology, and meteorology?
          ✓ What observable signature would distinguish “cosmic corruption” from indifferent natural processes?
          ✓ What would count as disconfirming evidence for the Fall/Satan hypothesis?

          If the answer is “nothing could disconfirm it,” then it’s not functioning as an explanation; it’s functioning as an immunizing clause.

          5) You didn’t answer the post’s key discriminator question
          This is the question that decides whether your framework is epistemically serious or devotional:

          What observable difference should we expect between (A) a world with an indwelling, transforming Holy Spirit actively guiding humanity and (B) a world explained by ordinary psychology, culture, incentives, and selection effects?

          Not “people feel transformed.” Not “there are saints.” Those happen under every major religion and many nonreligious ideologies.

          I mean:
          ✓ What specific, non-handwavy, in-principle-checkable difference should show up?

          If you can’t specify that, then “seek and you’ll find” remains a slogan, not a method.

          6) The article’s core dilemma still stands
          If your view allows “love” and “justice” to be redescribed so flexibly that any outcome can be labeled compatible with them, then:

          ✓ those terms stop doing real discriminating work, and
          ✓ you lose the ability to distinguish a worthy deity from a deceiver or a projection.

          So here’s the tight way forward.

          Answer these three items directly (no Bible verses as the foundation—those can come later):
          ✓ A) What are your independent criteria for concluding a candidate God is coherent and trustworthy before allegiance?
          ✓ B) What specific observations would you expect in our world if your God exists that would be unlikely on naturalistic alternatives?
          ✓ C) What would falsify (or at least seriously reduce your confidence in) the Fall/Satan/cosmic-corruption explanation?

          Until those are answered, your reply is largely a well-written internal theodicy—but the post is asking for an external evaluation standard before commitment.

  3. J Avatar
    J

    Claiming that the “epistemic dilemma you pose applies to uninformed sects or practitioners of Christianity—not to Christianity properly understood or responsibly practiced” and “God created the best possible world: a world in which there was only one potentially bad choice—to be satisfied with God or to choose dissatisfaction with God” seem to be examples of begging the question:

    1.) What is Christianity “properly understood” or “responsibly practiced”? Isn’t this the equivalent of saying “my chosen form of Christianity is the correct one”? Do Christians really agree on what is essential doctrine or teaching, i.e. necessary to be consider saved? For example, can someone reject the Trinity and still be saved if they have some trust in Jesus as the agent of salvation? People claiming to be Christian or followers of Jesus have espoused Unitarianism, Arianism, Gnosticism, etc. throughout history. Protestants have often claimed Catholics are in danger of eternal damnation and vice versa.

    2.) How can you verify that God “created the best possible world” without knowing or verifying all the possibilities? I can conceive of a world where we were created entirely as spiritual beings (angels) who could choose to join Satan in rejecting God or choose to remain loyal. This would allow for your free choice demand and remove many physical forms of suffering: Without physical bodies, we could suffer tissue damage or experience physical pain. Also, without the need to reproduce, there could be no hormones to cause the forms of sexual desire that are condemned as sinful in the Bible. The creation of spiritual beings who could reject God as the devil did are

    When you beg the question, you are using a different form of the same fallacy behind appeals to mystery. Appeals to mystery are “just-so” explanations that must be accepted just like the two examples of appeals to assumed premises given above.

    Also, in response to some of your later points, the decision of God to create animals and human beings who must pass through a childhood stage without sentience or the capacity for meaningful moral decision-making would either undermine his supposed goal of ensuring free-will or be tangential/unnecessary to his creation of spiritual beings who obviously had a choice if one of them willfully rebelled against his creator. To argue that infants had to be born who could be contaminated by the sins of two ancient predecessors is to beg the question yet again. Spiritual beings presumably don’t have familial relations or genealogical ancestry. There is also no reason God would have been prohibited from creating each person individually to allow each one to choose whether to obey him without the problem of inherited original sin. (The bizarre account of Genesis 6 with the half-human, half-spiritual hybrids seems to only create a theological mess and is probably derived from Mesopotamian mythology.)

    Further, how many free agents need to come into existence to satisfy God’s wish for beings to freely choose him? If God/Jesus will return and ultimately end the propagation of the human species, isn’t any population number arbitrary?

    Finally, will there be self-sacrifice or forgiveness of sins (we have committed?) in heaven? Can human infants engage in conscious self-sacrifice? If not, then it seems this isn’t a priority of God or something good for its own sake? In fact, you could argue that choosing to suffer in hell alongside or for someone you cared about for all eternity would be the highest possible form of self-sacrifice. A deity permanently renouncing their divinity would also count. (To illustrate, I believe in the universe fictional Legend of Zelda games, the princess Zelda is actually the reincarnation of a goddess who chose to “shed” her divinity in pity for the hero Link’s ancestor who gave himself up. It’s hard to argue that isn’t a high form of sacrifice.)

    But’s that not what Jesus did or the type of love that Christians teach, is it?

    1. Ryan Stohldrier Avatar
      1. What I was attempting to show was that much of what “Christianity” [a vague term] teaches lacks critical thinking in the realm of apologetics. What I mean by that is: many well-meaning people take large swaths of scripture and boil them down to inaccurate pithy sayings and base a theology off of that. Instead, what should be done is to develop a theology from the text itself. So, to be more direct “properly understood,” essential means “taken within context using critical thinking.” This doesn’t mean that two people won’t walk away with two different ideas about a scripture; however, it does lead to a more informed position as opposed to the cheap hermeneutics employed by many. “Responsibly practiced” refers to actually doing what the Bible says in light of what the Bible says. For example, Jesus taught that adultery was an acceptable reason for divorce (I say this tongue-in-cheek because there are nuances there); however, He also taught that we must forgive one another. So, one could divorce because of adultery; however, in light of the principle of forgiveness, forgiveness should be the primary principle in operation. That is just one of many examples that could be made. Your point #1 asks a lot of questions that, to answer fully, would comprise a full discipleship program. So, I will leave it at what I have already said.
      2. The world you described that you conceive is precisely what I am saying happened. Adam and Eve were created as spirit-beings clothed in flesh (which is why they did not consider themselves as naked). When they disobeyed God and transferred their rights over to Satan, the world was transformed, as were the man and his wife. All of what you describe can be traced back to this transformation that I referenced.

      Please clarify how I was begging the question. I think perhaps you think I was begging the question because of some ambiguity rather than actually begging the question.

      You are free to disagree with me on the idea that God created the greatest possible world. I will admit that perhaps there is a possible world beyond my cognition that could have been greater; however, I don’t think the point is altogether crucial to my case. But, regarding reproduction: would it not be greater for the perfect creation to be such that it reproduces, assuming a continual choice to obey God?

      The questions you ask are all good questions, but the answer to each one could easily comprise a full philosophical discussion of their own. I suggest narrowing down your scope to 1-2 questions at a time that can be substantively responded to. Furthermore, the answers to some of your questions can serve as a means to eliminate other questions you ask. So for that reason also, I suggest that you limit yourself to 1-2 questions at a time. For this purpose, you may want to open up a private dialogue with me (may be a better format than this). If so, let me know and I can give you my email address.

      1. J Avatar
        J

          Thanks for the response. I apologize if my posts weren’t well-outlined or well-formatted: it would probably have been better to split off each set of the many questions on different topics into separate posts or to include an outline of some sort.

        Also, I appreciate what you are saying about “1-2 questions” at a time but have concerns about its being used as a tactic by apologists to diminish the weight of skeptical objections. My suspicion (after having seen this approach used on William Lane Craig’s Reasonable Faith site) is that it helps portray the rejection of Christianity as being based on a few objections rather than on a rigorous inquiry into Christian claims resulting in a larger list of questions that appear more formidable as a result. (Also, I generally prefer to include anticipatory questions for possible replies.)

           In regards to e-mail discussion, I’ll definitely consider it, but there would probably need to be agreement on certain points to ensure that something productive came out of any future discussion.

        In light of that, would you agree with the following “starting points”? (I respectfully ask because many Christians reject them. In parentheses are my reasons for appealing to them while trying to determine the possibility for future dialogue on these subjects.):

              1.) Evolution through natural selection (both Macro- and Micro) is confirmed by the body of current scientific evidence. (Important for questions regarding suffering and biblical interpretation.)

        2.) The formation of scripture (i.e. determination of books as canonical vs. non-canonical) was compiled through a gradual process involving some combination of communal use, citation by certain authorities, opinions issued at church councils, and (especially in the case of the New Testament) response to perceived “heresy.” (Important for questions involving appeals to the Bible.)

        3.) The works that were canonized as part of the Old and New Testaments were written in the same fallible manner as applies to any human creation. As a result, biblical passages can be erroneous or otherwise limited by the very human understanding of their respective authors. (Important for questions involving appeals to the Bible or evaluating Christian doctrine.)

        4.) Different biblical writers can present contradictory or mutually exclusive perspectives on topics such as suffering, the afterlife, the existence of other gods, proper ritual practice, or even celibacy. (That is to say, biblical texts are best thought of as an anthology of different authors.) (Important for philosophical questions or evaluating Christian doctrine.)

        5.) The use of the historical-critical method supplemented by other scholarly approaches is the best way to understand the “original intent” of a biblical passage. This approach entails that the passage might be mistaken, at odds with other biblical authors, or standing in contradiction to opinions widely held in the church today. (Important for questions involving appeals to the Bible.)

         If you disagree with one or more of these principles, then I would suggest that discussions proceed while adhering to either of the following methods:

                 6a.) One or more Biblical passages or theological statements may be cited in discussion but are subject to being evaluated philosophically on the basis of prior understanding, observation, and/or logical consistency.

                  6b.) Biblical passages or theological statements may be cited but are subject to evaluation in light of other passages or doctrines to determine consistency or identify problematic implications as a result of harmonization attempts. (For example, trying to fit Satan into the narratives of Genesis 1-3 might potentially lead to contradictions or problems when viewed in light of Christian doctrine.)

                (In the interest of keeping my posts better organized, I decided to offer some clarifications and/or responses to your points above in separate posts below.)

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