Quote:Questions for Bob and Scotty:
1. If some heinous sins can be prearranged before birth, as you say, then does that mean the person is committing the sin against their own will? For example, if I go out tomorrow and murder a random person on the street and I don't know why I did it, would that mean it was all just predetermined and my own choice has nothing to do with it?
2. In such cases of predestined crimes, does the criminal have to suffer in the afterlife for his sin, or is the sin just forgiven/forgotten because it was not his own choice?
3. How do we know whether a particular example of sin or crime is prearranged in the spirit world, or whether it is freely chosen? Does this mean that some people can literally get away with murder and have no punishment for it when they die, just because it was pre-planned, while other murderers end up in a hellish state when they die? Seems kind of unjust to me.
4. Some people argue that it is our own fear and guilt that causes us to enter a hellish state after death. Does this mean that a murderer with no conscience, who feels no fear of God and no guilt for his heinous crime, will have a better afterlife experience than a person who committed the same sinful crime but does have a conscience and felt pangs of regret, remorse, guilt and fear of divine judgment? If so, would it be accurate to say that the afterlife is basically an extremely unfair place, which punishes people with a better soul/conscience more than people with a thoroughly corrupt spiritual nature?
It seems to me that your theory leaves much to be desired and gives rise to confusion and absurdities. It might be comforting to think we could all just sin like the devil if we wanted to, go around raping and killing people, and that's all fine and dandy because maybe it was all pre-planned before we were born. But is that really a sensible view of the universe? Not to my mind. JMHO.
Freebird
I've been kind of following this post and I kind of liked your question and therefore, have a question for you.
If a man commits a sin, but doesn't know it's a sin should he be punished?
For example, from what I know about serial killers, they usually see absolutely nothing wrong with what they're doing.
Going back to Adam and Eve and I know you've heard this story a million times, I really think there's alot more to the story than what people perceive.
Regardless, from the story we can still conclude that, in essence, one has to know sin in order to commit sin right? I think this is basically the moral of the story of Adam and Eve even though it seems like since Eve ate the apple that we all should have knowledge of good and evil--I really think there's a whole lot more to the story than that. I mean if this was really the case, then why the heck would they have the need to write the ten commandments?
Anyway, before she ate the fruit they could do almost anything they wanted to couldn't they?-- and not commit a sin? Even murder someone?
So what if some people's lives were pre-determined by the stars or something and they just weren't meant to know that what they were doing was wrong? They say that you can predict serial killers based on their astrological birth charts.
Now this is totally different from someone actually committing a murder and knowing that it is wrong. Usually that person would have some sort of motive. Thats when it comes down to free will.
I guess what I'm saying is that some people have a purpose to come down here and commit murder without conciously knowing that it's wrong and the ones who do have a purpose to overcome it.
Anyway, I know how you feel. I read a story about a little boy once, about 2 years old, who was tortured and brutally murdered. This bothered me for a very very long time because all I could think of was my 2 year old nephew. I still haven't found peace.