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02-13-2002, 09:58 AM | #21 |
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Okay. Forgive me, I'm not very good at clipping portions of quotes to create "conversations."
Wyrdsmyth, we appear to share some common ground, which is nice to be able to do. Let me clarify a point I made, though, which you took as being more Deistic than Christian. I said "I personally do not rely on unexplained natural phenomena as evidence of the existence of God." To which you replied: "Interesting. You don't sound like a Christian, but more like a Deist. Most of Christianity seems to be based on the miracles allegedly performed by Christ -- unexplained natural phenomena which establish Jesus as a god. Particularly the Resurrection." To clarify: The statement I made above was more to say that I don't fall back on "Goddidit" as evidence of his existence. As a Christian, I believe that Christ rose from the dead. I do not use the Resurrection as the evidence I need to believe in God; rather, I believe that the Resurrection is possible BECAUSE I believe in God. You later wrote: "In some Hume-an way, God could be "behind" the entire natural universe, and leave not a supernatural trace... But I have a real "so what" reaction to this sort of thing. It sounds like deism to me. God fired up the engine, and let it run on it's own... he may have walked away eons ago. How is that more comforting or even significantly different from not assuming the God in the first place?" This is a departure from my beliefs. While I of course cannot prove it, I believe God desires a relationship with us, his creation, and is more than a watchmaker who subsequently walked away to let the watch run on its own. I take the life of Jesus one example for this belief. Another example is the way I've seen people's lives change as a result of entering a relationship with God (this is what I meant by "experiential"). The beliefs in the above paragraph, I acknowledge, are just beliefs. Based on my faith. It's possible the Gospels are less reliable than I give them credit for (that is another entire issue). It's possible that the life changes I've observed are just a result of the change in social conditions - the new people they're around, the new actions they choose to take in their lives, and that none of it has to do with a God. Before we get into all of that, though, I want to close with my original point from a couple messages ago, which you agree with -- God's existence is possible, and not disprovable by science. How anyone chooses to respond to this possibility cannot be 100% verified nor 100% disproved. I am quickly trying to churn this out during a lunch break. I hope it didn't get too cluttered or off-topic. |
02-14-2002, 09:28 AM | #22 | |||
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I know, many theists think we atheists are putting so much "faith" in this scientific picture of the world, while theists are merely putting faith in their own picture... And it has often been argued that, since we each "presuppose" these pictures, and have them as our foundations, we automatically rule out anything that is antithetical to them, or doesn't fit. But I don't think we "presuppose" these pictures of reality at all. I think we have to learn them. I had to learn science, and learn religion. And, as I grew up, I saw they weren't just two epistemically equal but competing worldviews, but that they were two entirely different kinds of processes. At this point, when I open a physics textbook, it is complicated but it makes sense to me. But anymore, when I open the Bible or any other old world holy book, I feel like I'm just reading ancient, primitive myths... which can be very entertaining, but it just looks so obvious to me that they're fabricated myths. Talking serpents, garden of paradise, fiery rain destroying cities for their immorality, the sea splitting in half so a tribe of slaves could escape from Egypt... Why isn't it obvious to everyone that this stuff is made up? [ February 14, 2002: Message edited by: Wyrdsmyth ]</p> |
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02-14-2002, 10:47 AM | #23 |
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As a Christian, I believe that Christ rose from the dead. I do not use the Resurrection as the evidence I need to believe in God; rather, I believe that the Resurrection is possible BECAUSE I believe in God.
Hmm, interesting. This seems contrary to some of the writings in the NT (for example, Jesus's speaking of the "sign of Jonah"), IMO, where the ressurection is typically held as the proof of christ's deity. Before we get into all of that, though, I want to close with my original point from a couple messages ago, which you agree with -- God's existence is possible, and not disprovable by science. How anyone chooses to respond to this possibility cannot be 100% verified nor 100% disproved. IMO, it may be possible to disprove certain conceptions of god. For example, there are serious logical incosistencies in the typical xian definition of an omnipotent/omnipresent/omniscient god. |
02-14-2002, 02:13 PM | #24 |
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Most people believed in God (or gods in many cases) long before the Resurrection. Was this because they all experienced first-hand encounters with God, or knew people who did? Of course not. Is it just that everyone in the world believed a handful of these lying prophets? I doubt it. Why, then? Adults grow up and realize that Santa Claus and the Tooth Fairy don't exist. Why doesn't this natural maturation process include a realization that God is in the same category (except to you enlightened folks, that is)?
Like I said, I do not hold up the resurrection as evidence of God's existence. However, once the existence of a God (or at least that possibility) is accepted, the Resurrection could more accurately be used as evidence that Jesus was God incarnate. But again, that's a different issue. I believe that God reveals himself to people in a myriad of ways. I'm not arrogant enough to assert that the only reason you don't see it is that you are so closed to the idea that you ignore the signs you're given. I'm certain he reveals himself more clearly to some than others; I wish everyday he would reveal himself more clearly to me. What of the miraculous tales of the old testament? Fire from the heavens, the sea splitting, etc.? I'd say it's a combination of allegory and mythical exaggeration (there are possible natural explanations for many of those "Acts of God.") I am not a Creationist; I don't take the Genesis creation story literally. The same goes for a lot of the stories in the Old Testament. I know that opens up a can of worms regarding which to treat as literal history, which not to, and what does all of this do to the reliability of the Bible as a whole. To that question, I would answer "I don't know." I'm not a Bible scholar. Just like the man in your example wasn't a meteorologist. I am not afraid to admit that I don't understand everything in the Bible. Nor do I claim to have worked out my theological beliefs into a nicely wrapped package without any loose ends. Theology is not as neatly wrap-able as science tends to be (chaos theory notwithstanding). Let me go even further. I have doubts. Lots of them. I read around here 100 times more than I write, and I understand and often agree with many points about the difficulties of believing in God. So, then, am I just holding on to beliefs that were ingrained in my head to the point I can't let go? Many of you would say yes. But I don't think so. I believe God exists. I wish he would provide me a sign from the heavens, or that random 30-digit number to match the one from a computer. But as of today at 6:00, he hasn't. If I die and am wrong, oh, well (that is not an appeal to Occam's Razor, by the way). I would not feel that I'd been cheated out of a fun, shackle-less, God-free life. Of course, I wouldn't feel ANYTHING, but you get my point. [ February 14, 2002: Message edited by: MotownMJ ]</p> |
02-19-2002, 03:59 PM | #25 | ||||||||
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1. Everything in this book is true. 2. God dictated it all to me. Does that make it true? If I take some events of the past, and mix them up with stories of deities and angels and prophets... does that make the fantastic elements any more plausible? Quote:
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