wit>trope
Deity
- Joined
- Dec 24, 2004
- Messages
- 2,871
I'd like to correct a factual error by TLC.
TLC said no Christian should support Pascal's wager since if it were true that would mean that the demons would be going to heaven. That's just not true, and this is from someone who is no big fan of Pascal's wager (nor a big critic).
First the demons issue was not one of faith. All the angels, including those who were to fall and be known as fallen angels or demons knew that God existed. They didn't need any element of faith because they knew this with a natural knowledge i.e. they were directly aware of God's existence -- I'm speaking of all this within the Christian framework of course since it was a consistency of the Christian framework that TLC criticized.
What made some angels fall is that they made a wrong decision, did something bad. Now if these angels were rational a la Pascal's wager, then they would have not done this bad thing TLC supposedly would reason since they would have known it would have been to their disadvantage due to punishment of hell. Here's the thing. THEY DIDN'T KNOW ABOUT THE PUNISHMENT OF HELL. It was a SURPRISE! At least that's the theory of St. Anselm of Canterbury which I won't relate in full here -- I'd only invite you to learn about it and study it. Since St. Anselm is the standard bearer of what made those angels fall, being that AFAIK there is no other Christian theologian who proposes an alternative of similar sophistication, TLC's argument just fails big time.
TLC said no Christian should support Pascal's wager since if it were true that would mean that the demons would be going to heaven. That's just not true, and this is from someone who is no big fan of Pascal's wager (nor a big critic).
First the demons issue was not one of faith. All the angels, including those who were to fall and be known as fallen angels or demons knew that God existed. They didn't need any element of faith because they knew this with a natural knowledge i.e. they were directly aware of God's existence -- I'm speaking of all this within the Christian framework of course since it was a consistency of the Christian framework that TLC criticized.
What made some angels fall is that they made a wrong decision, did something bad. Now if these angels were rational a la Pascal's wager, then they would have not done this bad thing TLC supposedly would reason since they would have known it would have been to their disadvantage due to punishment of hell. Here's the thing. THEY DIDN'T KNOW ABOUT THE PUNISHMENT OF HELL. It was a SURPRISE! At least that's the theory of St. Anselm of Canterbury which I won't relate in full here -- I'd only invite you to learn about it and study it. Since St. Anselm is the standard bearer of what made those angels fall, being that AFAIK there is no other Christian theologian who proposes an alternative of similar sophistication, TLC's argument just fails big time.