0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 81809 times.
I agree with woodsyi, you cannot "reason" your way to god or belief in god. To my experience, people either already "have" faith or they do not. Reason plays no role in this basic question of faith or no faith. ...
Quote from: woodsyiScott, belief rooted in experience is a wise and safe thing, but to "commune" with god, one has to abandon reasonWhy? I don't have to abandon reason to talk to other rational being, even ones I can't touch or see (like you, for example). Why is this case different?
Scott, belief rooted in experience is a wise and safe thing, but to "commune" with god, one has to abandon reason
I keep thinking that some highly intellectual person "of faith" will begin to answer some questions with "plausible" answers.
A goldfish that demands that his human owner cannot exist, because there is air outside his tank and only creatures that breathe water can be alive, is going to have some intellectual difficulties getting any further.
I also hold (with Lewis) that there's stuff about God we have to infer from our own humanness and internal experience which is hard to put into words but is still useful to think about.
I only ask that god reveal himself to me, that hasn't happened, so I don't believe, simple as that.
Tyson,QuoteI only ask that god reveal himself to me, that hasn't happened, so I don't believe, simple as that.If you continue to seek with true sincerity - you will. GOD will see to it.Ephesians 2:8,9 - "For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast."
"why the wait, I'm losing time everyday, and what if god never reveals himself to me, I am simply left searching until I die. What then?"
My world-view and their world-view are so vastly different as to be incommensurate even at the most basic level. In the end you can only really state "this is what I think, and these are the reasons", and they can only state, "this is my belief, and this is what I base that on"...
Also, I don't want to come off as argumentative or closed off, I just know from experience how these types of discussions go. But maybe I'm wrong, and there is something I have not heard before or considered before. In that spirit, I'd like to continue along the lines of the "there are things we can infer" about god. Please continue on these lines, as I am genuinely interested in what you have to say.
Non-believers...you're not going to change any minds. Believers...you're not going to change any minds. Want to know what I think??? No? Fine. If I told you what I thought, and I made the most convincing argument imaginable, would it change anything? ...
Tyson,I like C.S. Lewis too but he is formost an apologist for Christianity and you may not think him impartial.
All organized religions have committed sins in the name of god, but that does not invalidate the efficacy their teachings. ...
And strangely enough, as I look at (and know) some of the participants I find it interesting that some who are staunch objectivists in audio are subjective in their religious bent, and vice versa. Not true across the board, but it is interesting that it is evident at all. I would have assumed that objectivity and subjectivity would be consistant in all aspects of a persons interests.