This video presents a critical analysis of Christian theology, arguing that the concept of an omniscient God who created Satan (an angel who rebelled) and created humans knowing some would reject Him and face eternal torment contains logical contradictions. The analysis highlights that if God is omniscient, He cannot have hope that humans will choose Him, yet Christian teaching uses hope as an analogy for divine love. Additionally, the video questions why Jesus did not come earlier in history (after Adam and Eve, during Noah's flood, Exodus, etc.) and challenges the historical development of Satan's identity as a fallen angel, noting that this concept only emerged in the first century. The video concludes that Christians cannot coherently explain why an all-knowing, all-good God would create beings knowing they would suffer eternally.
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Christian word salad concerning SatanAdded:
is never going to answer the question.
She's going to give a whole bunch of word salad, but I'm going to break it down. So, just be patient and listen to the word salad, and then we'll break it all down.
It's not that God created the devil because he wanted evil, but what's unfortunate is that the devil used to be an angel, had free will as well.
But, God knew that was going to happen, right? Yes, he knew. God knew that Satan was going to rebel, and that him rebelling was going to put the world in a fallen state. But, that's why he also had Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ didn't come just 2,000 years ago, but Jesus Christ has been here since the beginning. It says, "In the beginning was the word, and the word was with God, and the word was God." So, that means that God Jesus Christ is a living manifestation of the word, and he was there with us, and he gave us to choose him or not to choose him. But, yes, God did know that was going to happen, but he gave us redemption through Christ Jesus. That whoever shall believe in him shall not perish, but have everlasting life. So, our redemption ticket is there, but it's just up to you to take it. And he gave us a choice, just like he gave us a choice in the garden. So, we have a choice to either choose to live a life with God, or to live separated from God.
But, yes, there is evil in this world, but through Christ we have redemption and life and life more abundantly.
But, God knew some people wouldn't choose him, right?
Yeah. If I force you to love me, would I be a would that be love?
He created them not to accept Jesus Christ.
Right?
No, he created us because he loved [snorts] us. We're We're made in God's likeness and God's image. So, God created us, and he loves us. And if I love somebody, you want them to love you back out of their own free will. Love is not coercion.
So, God gave us the choice. He didn't choose He didn't choose to create us knowing that we weren't going to choose.
He hoped that he we we would choose him.
Just like when you have a lover, you hope that your lover would love you.
Typical Christian word salad rhetoric.
So, let's break down some of the things that she did say just to see how if possibly she's wrong.
Or it doesn't make sense.
So, the lady is just saying God created the devil.
God also created man. God created the devil which is therefore evil is in the world. God also created man knowing that there will be those who will not accept him. And that he will have to send and that he will choose to send them to hell.
Send them to this torment in this lake of fire.
And I know that lady, the other young lady gave all the normal Christian rhetoric that you have choice, God made you thinking that you know, you have the free will to choose him and he loved you so much that he sent his only son to die for the situation that he created in the beginning and all of that good stuff. But, let's first start out with the premise that according to what Christians believe, God is omniscient.
Meaning that God knows everything. He knows everything in the past, the present, and the future. All things are known by God. Nothing is unknown to this God.
So, then if nothing is unknown to this God, then there can be no hope for this God. She said that you know, when you have a lover, you hope that your lover does love you back.
How can an omniscient God have hope that someone is going to love him back when he already knows the person is not ever going to love him back?
If God has hope that a person will love him, then that God cannot be all knowing.
Because he would not know what the outcome is going to be, but yet Christians say that God knows what the outcome is going to be. He already knows everything. He's omniscient.
And if you are the creator God of this universe, then yes, you should be omniscient.
So, therefore, unless you're going to agree unless there's Christians just put it in just put it in the comments if you agree that God is not omniscient, that's a whole another conversation.
But it reminds me of a conversation I just had last night actually. Um but well, at least part of that conversation.
But the fact remains that if this God is all-knowing, he cannot have hope.
So, therefore, like the lady said, God made people knowing that they were not going to choose them, knowing that he was going to send them into this lake of fire, knowing that they will burn in torture and pain for all eternity.
That's sadistic.
Why would you purposely create a being that you absolutely know is not going to choose you, and then is going to you're going to put in this lake of fire to be tormented?
That's very sadistic.
And here's the other part. She was, you know, she was talking about God made us because he loved us so much, and he wanted us to choose him.
When you create something, so I e. like a child, do you put knives in child's reach? Do you put a loaded gun within a child's reach? Do you put poison in the food of the child and tell them there's poison in this cupcake, but not in that cupcake, but I'm going to leave both of them out and you see which one you choose.
Do you do that? No, that's sadistic.
Very, very, very sadistic. That's the nature of this God if this is the choice that he's given.
And if you are this God and you're calling yourself a good God, a all good God, which we know developed from their the Jews being under the Greek and Zoroastrian religion for a few centuries, that this idea of a all good God, Ahura Mazda, and all bad God, Ahriman, then that is something that was a later development in the 2nd century, but if this God is all good, then why would he create a world where evil can persist?
If evil is has its availability to his universe, you would think he would place the evil outside of that universe.
Put it somewhere in, maybe in some antimatter universe or somewhere where it cannot touch the good universe that he's trying to build, if he was truly trying to build a place for these creatures that he loved that are made in the image of him.
He wouldn't do that. You wouldn't do that. You as a human wouldn't do that.
You know you wouldn't.
But you believe your God did and of course God's ways are not man's ways.
God cannot be understood words have it.
Words have it all that is.
So the girl the young lady never answered the question. She goes into all this rhetoric about Jesus Jesus Jesus. Why did Jesus have to wait until the time frame that he came to come?
If if uh since Adam and Eve had their fall, why didn't Jesus come then?
When it was time for Noah, instead of flooding everybody, why didn't you send Jesus then?
Tower of Babel, why didn't you send Jesus?
Exodus, why didn't you send Jesus?
During the time frame of judges and kings, instead of judges and kings, why didn't you send Jesus? Instead of letting them be conquered by the Assyrians, the the Babylonians, the Persians, the Greeks, the Romans, the Ottomans, the Christians, why didn't you send Jesus?
Well, I mean time frame of the Christians you got Jesus but and Ottomans. But why didn't you send Jesus during [clears throat] all of those other times of hardship that were being inflicted? I mean, based on the Bible story, it was more of a hardship during the time frame of the Exodus than it was during the time frame of being under Roman control.
So why didn't you send Jesus then? You didn't You chose not to.
Maybe because the story was made up at that time frame because they had started these prophecies about a Messiah coming. You see, during the time frame of the the writing of Genesis and the writing of Well, the Pentateuch, the first five books of the Bible, there was no prophecy of a Jesus, no prophecy of a Messiah. This is something that later developed under the not even under the Assyrian rule so much but this is something that developed during the Babylonian rule and then the Persian rule and Greeks and Romans.
Before that, there was no Messianic Messiah in the Bible in the old Torah in the in the Torah. So, we don't have that.
Which shows that it's a made-up thing because people were desperate during those time frames and they believe that their God was going to save them like he did with Moses.
But it never happened.
And then they claim that, you know, Satan was an angel who was cast out.
No, you see the Satan in the Old Testament was an angel who was in the employment of this guy.
The Satan job was to come was to go be an adversary. So, he was like, "Hey Job, you know this Job?" The Satan wasn't paying attention. Job didn't have no or or no issues with Job. Wasn't going to bother Job until God brought it up.
God told Balaam, "Hey man, go with these people and do and say the words that I tell you to say."
But then immediately after it says, "I need someone who will be an adversary, Satan, to Balaam." And then so he sends one of his angels, a different angel than the one in Job.
So, this idea that he was an angel in heaven really only comes out because by the first century you have a clear distinction between a good guy and a bad guy.
So, by the time we get into the first century and Jesus is walking around, he not learn first century Judaism, which is interesting because if Jesus was there in the beginning and he knows all things, why did he need to learn it? And why does his messages are based on first century Judaism where he then says, "I saw Lucifer fall from the sky like fall from the heaven like a sky like a star." Or saw Satan fall from the heaven like a sky like a star.
Why does Jesus speak in first century terms if he's supposed to be all-knowing God?
Hm.
Kind of a little fishy.
Like Jonah and the whale, it's fishy in in the whale. It's fishy.
Very fishy.
But no, she did not answer the question because Christians don't have an answer for that question. They can't have an answer for that question. Either admit that your God is not omniscient or your God is omniscient and he's just even more sadistic than we can imagine.
But what do you guys think? Let me see what you guys say in the comments. Like, share, and and support the channel.
Subscribe. And always remember you have to free yourself to be yourself cuz your greatness is non-negotiable.
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