> A god who demands obedience, limits salvation, and stands by doing > nothing when his creatures are in pain and/or being oppressed is not a > loving god in my book.
Clare, I don't want to assume I understand your point, so let me ask for some clarification. Are you saying: God exists, but life is the way you have described, therefore God is not loving? Or Life is the way you have described above, therefore God does not exist? Or Life is not the way you described above, God exists, but is something different? Or ..... [Insert clarification here] In short, what I'm looking for is a theology that can cope with the seemingly contradictory claims of theology and science. - Greg ------------------------------------------------------ - You are subscribed to the mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] - To unsubscribe, email [EMAIL PROTECTED] and put in the message body 'unsubscribe insights-l' (ell, not one (1)) See: http://nsw.uca.org.au/insights-l-information.htm ------------------------------------------------------
