Karl R
Active Member
I'll freely admit that the existence of god is unprovable. The non-existence of god is also unprovable.Provide evidence to the existence of God, or a sound arguement as to why he exists. or admit to an illogical unproven god.
But using Kathryn's dog as an example, I'm not about to claim that god is illogical. In my opinion, Kathryn's dog has a better chance of understanding us than we do of understanding god. The dog's closer to being on our level than god is. Until I understand god, I'm in a poor position to say god's illogical.
Of course, logic is definitely a human construct, so it's entirely possible that god's not limited by it.
Lot's of believers (both christians and those who follow other religions) have experiences with the divine: answered prayers, miracles, prophecy, visions, other spiritual gifts, etc. For the individual in question, these provide strong evidence that there is a god.
To a non-believer, these don't count as evidence, and they certainly don't count as proof. If I tell you that I witnessed a miracle, you might believe that I'm lying, mistaken or delusional. Any of those options is more likely than a miracle.
If I witness a miracle, I don't get the same options. I can either believe that I'm delusional, or I can believe that there's a theistic god that treats scientific laws as if they're entirely optional. I'm not comfortable with either of those options. But once I've seen evidence, I can either accept it or try to deny it.
Just to be perfectly clear: If you base your belief off my personal experiences then I'm going to think you're seriously derranged.
I'm not sure it is. If that's the case, why did Abraham petition god to change his mind about the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah?However, isn't changlessness a characteristic of the Christian God?
And there are a lot of things in this world that appear to be unchanging (like the continents), but they're constantly changing ... just on a scale that's beyond human perception. Just because people perceive god to be unchanging, that doesn't mean that the perception is accurate.
Of course, even if something is always changing, it may be more useful for me to treat it like it's not. Even though a mountain is changing, I'm almost certain to find it in the exact same spot I last saw it.
In general, that's my take on things. It seems to be the most logical explanation.Sure, you could claim that it is the cultural lens through which God is perceived that has changed, and not God himself,
Can it be done without eliminating free will? Our free will seems to be important to god ... more important than misperceptions.Surely, God can control how he is perceived.
Let me give you an analogy: a six year old asks you where babies come from. You might want to give a completely accurate answer. You may even have the scientific knowledge to give a completely accurate answer. But the six year old isn't going to have the mental capacity to understand your explanation, no matter how hard you work at it. And in attempting to provide the answer, you may do a lot of harm (i.e. if you start demonstrating how sex works).Why would he want faulty perceptions of himself to be placed in his own holy book?
Given our mental capabilities, I would say our understanding of god is mostly incomplete. Of the knowledge we do have, some of it may also be difficult for us to accurately understand. I don't think the faulty perceptions are avoidable.
On a more personal level, there are a lot of misconceptions about me floating around. Most of the time I don't care enough to try to correct them. I'm not sure god cares about little things like that either.
I think religion and belief are also meant to be ever evolving and ever discovering.Science is not meant to be stagnant; it is meant to be ever evolving, ever discovering. I would think that is preferable to a belief system that is historically antagonistic to change.
But just as there are students who aren't interested in learning more, and there are science teachers who aren't willing to admit that their knowledge might be wrong, religion has the same problems. (And unlike science, religion doesn't have the convenient tools that science has to keep things moving along.)
The best belief system is one that's true. If I understand correctly, you believe in science and the non-existence of god. I believe in science and the existence of god. Since we have an area where we both agree, I'll use the common ground for my examples.
You and I both believe in the theory of evolution. It's not proven. It may not be provable. But either it's true or it's not true, regardless of whether of it's proven or provable. If it's true, it was true before there was evidence for it. It was true even when it wasn't correctly understood. It was true before anyone believed in it. It was even true before anyone conceived of it.
Either there is a god or there's not. Lack of proof, limited evidence and misconceptions don't change what is. They just affect what you and I are inclined to believe.