 Originally Posted by skysaw
Dewitback,
If mother represents God or religion in this picture, it misses the mark because mother will let the child go when he is no longer young. This is not at all like religion or God, dictating when cola and chocolate cake should be consumed for the rest of his life.
Who is to say which parents have the best intentions? Our world is full of criminally negligent mothers and fathers. Not to mention that problem children are very often a sign of problem parenting. If the parents really do have the best of intentions, it's of course good for the child. But again, the idea is to teach them to fend for themselves, then to set them free from the nest. Not to continue to impose arbitrary rules and ritual upon them for the rest of their lives.
You state the same thing in the last two paragraphs. That God dictates everything you do your whole life, while a mother only does it for a while and then lets you go. Well, I purposely mentioned, "...while you are still young" (when the mother is talking to the child). When you listen to God while you are "young" in religion, you don't know too much and you are like child. But, as you grow, God's rules and regulations become your own rules and regulations. Like a child who listens to their mother or father, they begin to develop the same morality no? Your parents teach you not to steal when you are young, so in the future, are you not to going steal because your parents said so? or because you found out that, "hey, stealing isn't the way." or going back to the story i made up. In the future, when you know that coke keeps you up, will you think, "i'm not going to drink coke because my parents told me so!" or are you going to make the decision because its best for you, and you actually have to be up early in the morning?
The longer you listen to God, the more his rule make sense, and the more you make his morality your own morality.
No, not all parents are the best, and some are abusive. but i was talking about an ideal mother, like and ideal God.
 Originally Posted by skysaw
Are you suggesting that an Atheist can't do fine by themselves? Are you aware that US prisons are filled with fewer Athiests per capita than the population at large? Perhaps you should define your usage of the word "fine."
Sorry, I'll clarify what i meant by "fine". I meant it in a way that compares Mom-God. If you don't listen to your mother when you are kid, you are going to go down a path of hardships and trouble, which your mother doesn't want. You could even end up dying young, get involved with gangs etc. And if you don't listen to God, then you could end up on a path that doesn't lead to heaven, which God doesn't want.
 Originally Posted by skysaw
I wholeheartedly agree with the sentiment here, though perhaps not for the reasons you intended. This is precisely the church's message, and for precisely the reason a mother might promise a reward: to get the "child" to do something they wouldn't otherwise do. Telling your child "clean your room and you'll get cake" does little to teach him the importance of being tidy. It only serves to teach that he shouldn't have to clean if no cake is promised. When he's off on his own and no one is baking for him, why would he bother ever cleaning up? The only reward he's ever known is cake.
This goes the same for the first paragraph i wrote. Once a child realizes the importance of cleaning his room, then he won't need cake to realize its importance. And he would thank his mother for teaching him this important lesson. God wants more than Heaven to be our only goal. He wants a relationship with us, like a mother wants a relationship with the child. The child loves the mother for being there and teaching him, and also loving him no matter what. It ends up not being about the cake does it? i mean, do you love your mother for the rewards she gave you? or because of the love she promised. ( again I am talking about the ideal mother). Then, after both of you know that you love each other, the cake becomes something you can both enjoy mutually, a gift of love, because of love.
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