I'm not sure how to explain this any more plainly. For something to be discovered, it must exist. If it exists, then it has to be static. A lot of math has been "discovered" over the past centuries, but discovering it did not bring it into existence. It was always there, but just undiscovered. If we have "discovered" morality, then we have discovered what was always there in the mind of God. Either that, or we have made it up as we go along. In terms of the Bible, morality was not "discovered". It was revealed by God. It was something God did, and not what man did.Quote:
These are good examples of how morality changes over time. They are all found in your Bible.
I would question your knowledge of history. The vast majority of humans who have ever lived did so in poverty. Wars have been constant. Illness, for most of history, has run rampant. Perhaps as much as 60% of the population of Europe, for instance, died of bubonic plague in the Middle Ages. Life was very, very hard. Living in the West, a culture heavily influenced by Christianity, might convince us otherwise, but that would be incorrect.Quote:
Fascinating, revealing comment. Unlike you, I find the movement of mankind over the millennia always tending to the good. To see it as an ugly affair explains your religious beliefs tending to condemn the great majority of humans who have ever lived to "eternal punishment in hell".
My comment about your faith in mankind is based on this statement of yours. "By the collective wisdom of a society based on informed individual consciences and learned over the history of human evolution." Now that sounds an awful lot like a faith in mankind's collective wisdom. You did not mention God. Perhaps you meant to but forgot.
My joy comes from knowing and following Jesus. It is not attached to this world. Where does your joy come from?Quote:
Believing that, I don't know how you can find any joy in life.