{"id":34772,"date":"2014-05-16T04:00:10","date_gmt":"2014-05-16T12:00:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/redeeminggod.com\/?p=34772"},"modified":"2014-05-10T09:32:01","modified_gmt":"2014-05-10T17:32:01","slug":"52-god-memes","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/redeeminggod.com\/52-god-memes\/","title":{"rendered":"52 God Memes that will either make you laugh or angry (depending on your theology)"},"content":{"rendered":"
As I write about the violence of God in the Bible and have conversations about this with various people I interact with during the week, I often tell people that one of the reasons this is such an important topic is because Christians need a better answer to provide the world than the ones we have always given. Usually, the stock Christian answer to the violence of God in Scripture is “God is God and can do what He wants.”<\/p>\n
I am not fond of that answer.<\/p>\n
In fact, let me go so far as to say that if what God wants to do is slaughter people because they don’t do what He wants, then I don’t mind it so much if people decide not to worship a God like that.<\/strong><\/p>\n Anyway, one of the objections I occasionally get (but not too often, thankfully) to this whole series on the violence of God is that we don’t really need a better answer to give the world, because the world isn’t too concerned about the violent portrayals of God in the Bible.<\/p>\n I think I understand what people mean when they say this. I think they mean that most people in the world aren’t thinking too much about whether or not God is violent. That’s probably true. Maybe.<\/p>\n Yet in my conversations with people who do not believe in God or who want nothing to do with Him, it seems that more often than not, the issue of His violence in the Bible is often mentioned in the first few minutes of the conversation about why they cannot believe in the God of the Bible.<\/strong> Maybe it’s just who I talk with…<\/p>\n