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      • Without God, there would be no life. There would be no hope – Paul told the Gentile Christians in Ephesus, “ Remember that you were at that time separate from Christ, excluded from the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers to the covenants of promise, having no hope and without God in the world ” (Ephesians 2:12).
      plainbibleteaching.com/2012/12/27/where-we-would-be-without-god/
  1. Dec 27, 2012 · There would be no hope – Paul told the Gentile Christians in Ephesus, “Remember that you were at that time separate from Christ, excluded from the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers to the covenants of promise, having no hope and without God in the world” (Ephesians 2:12).

    • Hope

      Plain Bible Teaching. Andy Sochor December 25, 2023. The...

    • Truth

      In the following quote, Cassius adapted the imagery of the...

  2. Nov 7, 2024 · Answer. In the Bible, the consequences of rejecting God are repeatedly emphasized. Scripture provides a sobering view of what happens when people turn away from their Creator. The Bible articulates both the present and eternal consequences of rejecting God, from spiritual emptiness to eternity in hell. A present consequence of rejecting God is ...

  3. Feb 22, 2023 · You see, if God does not exist, then human beings are just biological organisms, and like all biological organisms, are doomed to die both individually and collectively as a whole. And therefore every one of us has to come to grips with what theologian Paul Tillich called “the threat of non-being.”

    • One Wrong Answer
    • Another Wrong Answer
    • Picking and Choosing Our Moral Tragedies
    • What Should God do?
    • The Patience of God
    • Putting Your Knowledge Into Action
    • Quick Summary

    One answer is not going to work: the picture of a broken-hearted God, victimized, agonizing over events that are out of His control. This “finite God” view is Rabbi Harold Kushner’s answer in Why Do Bad Things Happen to Good People?Evil is bigger than God whose hands are tied by the laws of nature and the will of man. Limited in power, He weeps wit...

    But what alternative is there? How can anyone believe in God in the face of mind-numbing tragedy? The great 20thcentury British philosopher and atheist Bertrand Russell wondered how anyone could talk about God while kneeling at the bed of a dying child. It is a powerful image. Like the three-word sound byte, “Where was God?,” it strikes many Christ...

    Why does this question about God only come up with magnum tragedies—like a hurricane or a schoolyard massacre—or when we are personally stunned by deadly disease or financial ruin? What about the mass of evil that slips by us every day unnoticed and unlamented because we are the perpetrators of the evil, not its victims? On December 14, 2012—the sa...

    When people ask “Where was God?” I ask “What precisely do you expect God to do? If you were in His place, what would youdo?” If you would use your power to stop evil, would you punish it or prevent it? Either choice presents you with problems. One reason God doesn’t wipe out all evil immediately is that the alternative would be worse for us. This b...

    God is waiting. Patience, not lack of goodness or lack of ability, stays God’s hand from writing the last chapter of human history. “The Lord is not slow about His promise, as some count slowness,” Peter reminds us, “but is patient toward you, not wishing for any to perish, but for all to come to repentance” (2 Peter 3:9). God is patiently waiting ...

    First, be sympathetic to this problem. It hits all of us sooner or later, and sometimes with great force in very personal ways.
    Second, don’t let others leverage the problem of evil into an argument against God. It doesn’t work. Ask them how they would answer for evil if there were no God. Further, how would they answer the...
    Remember the Bertrand Russell challenge and William Lane Craig’s powerful response. It takes a liability and turns it into an asset.
    When someone asks “How does Christianity explain tragedy?” say “Christianity doesn’t explain it; Christianity predictsit. This is exactly what you’d expect to see if the Christian worldview is true.”
    When tragedy strikes it’s understandable to ask, “Where was God?” This question deserves an answer, but some responses are not helpful.
    An impotent God victimized as we are by evil is not the God of the Bible.
    Atheism fares no better. A world without God reduces wickedness and tragedy to tough luck. Real evil requires a real God, not a universe without Him.
    Most of us do not want God to deal with all evil because we are its perpetrators, not just its victims. Our prints are on the smoking gun.
  4. If there is no God, man is a biological animal one step removed from the beast. He is caught in the whirlpool of existence, cast about by blind chance. He knows not where he came from...

  5. Jul 16, 2013 · Many atheists will concede that if there is no God then the universe and human life have no objective meaning. But they’ll quickly add that we shouldn’t conclude that our lives lack any kind of meaning.

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  7. Dec 29, 2021 · If there were no God, then there would be more hatred, fear and destruction in this world. There’s already a lot of evil in the world because of us, not because of God. He gives us the choice to live our lives for Him or to live our lives independently of Him.

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