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    It may be imprudent to waste a valuable gift, but it is n... — Carmelics
    Home/Afterlife & Death
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    Challenges→The gift analogy fails to justify the claim that God's giving of life prohibits suicide, because a genuinely given gift becomes the property of the recipient and the giver retains no claim over its use.

    It may be imprudent to waste a valuable gift, but it is not unjust to the giver to do so.

    Afterlife & Death
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    Afterlife & Death

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    A gift, genuinely given, becomes the property of its recipient.God is said to bestow life upon humans as a gift.Once given, the original giver has no remaining claim on what the recipient does...The gift analogy fails to justify the claim that God's giving of life prohibits ...

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    A gift that cannot be rejected is not truly a gift, undermining the gi...74%The gift analogy fails to justify the claim that God's giving of life ...73%The gift analogy implies life cannot be rejected or disposed of withou...73%Once given, the original giver has no remaining claim on what the reci...73%

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    Another common analogy asserts that God bestows life upon us as a gift, and it would be a mark of ingratitude or neglect to reject that gift by taking our lives. The obvious weakness with this “gift analogy” is that a gift, genuinely given, does not come with conditions such as that suggested by the analogy, i.e., once given, a gift becomes the property of its recipient and its giver no longer has any claim on what the recipient does with this gift. It may perhaps be imprudent to waste an especi

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