
YesIs it a sin to teach heresy?
Is it a sin to teach heresy?
Yes.Should I refrain from sinning, yes or no?
Should I refrain from sinning, yes or no?
Yes.
I'll put it into the form of a deductive syllogism, which then means you cannot reasonably disagree with the conclusion unless you prove that Premise 1 is factually incorrect, that Premise 2 is factually incorrect, or that the Conclusion fails to properly distribute the middle, since those are the only three ways to "refute" such a syllogism.
- Premise 1: God secretly willed for Hitler to sin.
- Premise 2: Hitler should not sin.
- Conclusion: Hitler should not do what God secretly willed.
[This] means you cannot reasonably disagree with the conclusion …
I don't think you can argue that the conclusion fails to properly distribute the middle, because "Hitler" and "should not" is found in both second premise and the conclusion, and God's secret will is represented in both first premise and the conclusion.
Of course. But something tells me, you know that.Is it a sin to teach heresy?
I agree that Hitler should not disobey God’s commands,
We see this sort of dynamic all over Scripture (e.g., Sennacherib). So, I fail to see what troubling inference this is supposed to produce.
I believe you violated [rule 4.4] …
In an effort to comply with the above-cited rule, I'll deal with your criticism one point at a time, … The "point" I deal with now is the way you fallaciously sap the conclusion of it's "troubling inference" by employment of the Strawman and Red Herring fallacies.
The conclusion doesn't say, "Hitler should not disobey God's commands."
If it doesn't raise any troubling inference, then if you could have been a Calvinist speaking to Hitler in 1942, the fact that you don't see what troubling inference the conclusion raises, means you'd also have no problem telling HItler anything which you say doesn't raise any troubling inference, for example, you'd be willing to tell him "Hitler should not do what God secretly willed."
If that conclusion raises no troubling inference for you, then suppose you had been a Calvinist speaking to Hitler in 1942. In that case, since you see nothing problematic in the conclusion, you would presumably have no hesitation in telling Hitler, “You should not do what God secretly willed.”
Are you still quite sure that you don't see what troubling inference such a moral statement raises?
Apparently I didn't have to go to the trouble of attempting to justify the conclusion because you apparently see nothing wrong with the conclusion.
You made a key concession that renders everything else you said irrelevant.
Weird, but okay. However, I didn’t allege that you committed even one fallacy, much less more than one, so I clearly did not violate that rule. And when I do allege a fallacy, I do so “in good faith, with evidence, careful attention to context, and a willingness to be corrected if mistaken.”
Well, your effort to comply didn’t last even that single post, for you alleged two fallacies. Please be more careful.
Yes, it does. Let’s unpack this for the reader, and you can identify which step, if any, departs from what you’re saying.
(1) Conclusion: “Hitler should not do what God secretly willed.”(a) What should Hitler not do? Sin. ← Premise 2.
(b) What is sin? Disobedience to what God commands. ← Relevant definition.
(c) What did God secretly will? That Hitler sin. ← Premise 1 (see step 1.b.).
(2) So the conclusion reads:(a) “Hitler should not do” → sin → “what God secretly willed” [him to do] → sin.
(b) Ergo: “Hitler should not sin.”
(c) Ergo: “Hitler should not disobey God’s commands.”
If this is genuinely a strawman caricature, you should be able to identify the exact step where the distortion occurs.
As best I can reconstruct your point, you seem to be saying this:
If that conclusion raises no troubling inference for you, then suppose you had been a Calvinist speaking to Hitler in 1942. In that case, since you see nothing problematic in the conclusion, you would presumably have no hesitation in telling Hitler, “You should not do what God secretly willed.”
If that is your point, then yes, that is correct. I would have no hesitation in telling Hitler that he should not do what God secretly willed him to do (i.e., he should not disobey God’s commands).
But notice the shift. The original question was whether the proposition is internally contradictory. (It is not.) You now seem to have shifted to a different question, namely, “Would you say this sentence to Hitler’s face?” But those are not the same issue. However, even on your revised question, the answer is still yes.
Yes, I am quite sure. There is no “troubling” inference.
Naturally, for there is simply nothing troubling there. It is true that God secretly willed Hitler to sin. It is also true that Hitler is morally obligated to not sin. Your attempted reductio has merely restated standard Calvinist theology, which is not troubling to a Calvinist. It becomes troubling only if one confuses God’s secret will (decree) with his revealed will (commands).
No, mate, everything else I said remains relevant. For example, since you described your argument as a categorical syllogism with a properly distributed middle, it remains entirely relevant to point out that your argument has no middle term to distribute, because it is not a categorical syllogism.
It also remains relevant that your conclusion is not really a new inference so much as a repackaging of Premise 2 in light of Premise 1. It simply substitutes “sin” with the description “what God secretly willed,” so the conclusion is basically just Premise 2 in different words. That is the sort of sleight of hand a casual reader might miss but should not, therefore drawing attention to it remains entirely relevant.
Should I refrain from sinning, yes or no?
Yes.
Just out of curiosity, WHY? Why should a "sinner" refrain from "sinning"?Yes.
Because both the temporal and eternal consequences of sin are adverse.Just out of curiosity, WHY? Why should a "sinner" refrain from "sinning"?
Those bullet points are only salient for the elect. The effects of sin, on the other hand, are universal.So what difference will it make?
Yep.To channel my inner Taylor Swift: "Sinner gonna sin, sin, sin, sin ..."![]()
Just out of curiosity: Why should a "sinner" refrain from "sinning"?