moderated to 100%; argued down by 40%
by wikipedia on 2005-03-26 05:32:10
The argument from nonbelief [en.wikipedia.org] contests the existence of an omnipotent god who wants humans to believe in him by arguing that such a god would do a better job of gathering believers.
moderated to 100%; argued down by 0%
by anonymous on 2005-09-28 00:54:59
This assumes such a god wants to gather believers by using omnipotent force. Traditional Judeo-Christian interpretation of God states only that God hopes that his 'children' (humans, perhaps other creatures I suppose) will walk with him in the light, so to speak. However, God's gift of free will supercedes any personal desire of His own to have believers, as it is generally understood that 'free-will' is what seperates us from animals (again, under traditional interpretation).
I believe you are confusing the church's desire for offering-plate participants with God's desire for believers.