Well, Mephistopheles offering this choice and having the power to enforce it, presumably, does seem to say the Christianity is the true path. In that case, the only correct answer is “get the behind me, Satan”. Refusing to even deal with the question would be the most likely way to remove his influence, so that’s the way to go. If that doesn’t work, you’re probably stuck with a monkey’s paw and totally screwed no matter what.
Qin, your affectation for using British spellings has led you astray. I don’t think you mean the word daemon above. You mean demon. A daemon, in Greek myth, is a supernatural entity intermediate between men and gods, and not at all all malevolent. (At least, no more likely to be malevolent than any random god or human.) Mephistopheles is a demon – a fallen angel, an immortal spirit in rebellion against the capital-g God. He’s made of malice. Hell, he’s the Maker of Malice. While it’s true that demon descends from daemon, and daemon is an archaic spelling of the other term, calling Old Scratch a daemon is all kinds of wrong no matter which side of the Pond you live on.
Okay, that’s the grammar fascist part of me. The rest of me is just here to say this:
Seriously, dude, it’s Mephistopheles. If you’re a Christian, your only reasonable option when he offers you a deal is to say Get thee behind me, Adversary of God and Man, followed by a Help! Jesus, or at least Michael, if you could come save my ass, that’d be great!
Now ask yourselves when would you ever get an opportunity to save 10.000 dying souls? That may be enough to leave your name in history book. And we all know how fickle “love” is. Still no?
At the risk of earning additional Skald-wrath, to those who say no, would you feel comfortable telling your SO that you let 10,000 people die so they would still be with you?
Do any of you think your SO would have a problem with that? My wife’s a good enough person she’d surely never forgive me. Which is, I assume what Mephi had planned all-along.
That’s pretty much what I asked. So far, only CrazyCatLady answered and she said she’d be fine with whether he took it good or bad.
Personally, I’d probably take the save the 10,000 option. I would hate to lose her and vis versa but I’d rather she hate me because of some fake Satan mind warp, than hating me because I was actually so selfish as to value her company over that many lives.
No deal with the Devil. First of all for all you know, they are going to get perfectly healthy and then he will have stroll out of a hospital and walk over a cliff. They get no guarantee of a longer life, or a better life – they are just restored to health. Maybe they live longer.
Me and my love don’t get to live any longer, we just have the time we have and no more. So fuck that deal.
You may have guessed that I’m a glass half empty kind of guy.
This a moral dilemma hypothetical, IMHO. Saying the Devil will completely renege is kind of a cop out. But I guess that’s Skald’s choice by making this about a deal with the “actual” Devil, leaving all that trickery to speculation.
All the hatred from my love wouldn’t change my mind, I’d definitely save the cancer ridden people.
I don’t get how this is even a difficult choice for you people. I mean, I love my boyfriend as much as anyone possibly can, and of course I’d be so sad to lose him forever, and even sadder knowing that he hates me for betraying him. But come on, the lives of all of those people combined are worth way, WAY more than our love. He and I would move on with our lives and find new people, and those cancer ridden patients would get to live their lives healthfully.
Have you guys never loved and lost someone only to get over them eventually and find someone new??? Odds are the relationship you are in right now is probably going to end anyway.
Who else but the “actual” devil could make a deal like that in the first place.
And allow me to remind of all of the phrase, “the devil is in the details”. Especially in a case like this, is not copping out to say the devil would renege. More to the point, the deal is so… vague that the devil could do practically anything and claim not to be reneging. It’s a bad deal for that reason alone. If I could have a really good lawyer draw up an iron clad contract which guarantees these people a longer healthier life without an underhanded moves by the devil, I might go for that. But that’s not what the OP lays out.
Is that with the (mistaken, according to the OP) assumption that she died, or would you actually do that to get back her love if she stopped caring about you?