This is a strawman. No skeptic expects you to have any evidence at all.
Then why do they keep
asking me for evidence, over and over and over and over and over again? Hundreds of times atheists have asked me for evidence. The only other reason I can think of for them asking for evidence is as a game to show me that I have no evidence. If that is the reason they ask I consider that childish, and I don't have time for games.
To say that they do and to call them ridiculous for it is a classic strawman.
I did not CALL anyone ridiculous. I said I think that the
expectation (to have objective evidence of God) is ridiculous, given that God is not objective.
I never ask for evidence from believers, because after years of reading their words, I know that they have none. Why would I ask for more bad arguments?
Why indeed would you keep asking for evidence as other atheists do, when you already know what theists have and know it is insufficient? As the old saying goes, insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.
Don't forget that to an empiricist, that which is undetectable and that which don't exist are indistinguishable and can be treated as the same thing. Why? Because nothing causally disconnected from our reality has any reality here. That's what undetectable means - incapable of modifying physical reality in any way. It doesn't mean invisible, because many invisible things are detectable. To be undetectable means to have no connection with reality.
Maybe that is logical to you as an empiricist, but as a believer I do not consider that logical. Just because God is not detectable that does not mean God is causally disconnected from the physical reality.
To the skeptic, inability to produce evidence generally means somebody believes something untrue, not that they're correct but just can't show it. That's pretty much how we distinguish correct ideas from useless ones - evidence.
It all boils down to what you consider evidence. What I consider evidence is not what atheists consider evidence and I accept that.
Correct ideas can be empirically demonstrated to be correct, whereas incorrect ones cannot. Evolution is correct, and biblical creationism is incorrect, based on one aligning with compelling evidence and the having none.
That's right. What contradicts proven scientific facts cannot be correct. However, everything is not within the purview of science as science does not address matters of God and religion.
Probably until you adopt coherent definitions for those words. I still don't know what they mean to you if you don't consider an expressed belief a claim. People aren't merely disagreeing with your beliefs. They don't understand what they are when you use language the way you do. It's seems incoherent that you say that you believe something, but make no claim. You seem to equate claiming anything with claiming to have proof.
A belief is not a claim unless I am claiming it is true. Believing it is true is not claiming it is true. A person can believe something yet not claim it is true. I am not
claiming that my beliefs are true because
I cannot prove that they are true to anyone except myself. I might be able to convince somebody they are true but that is not the same thing as proving they are true as a fact. Beliefs are not factual.
Claim: state or assert that something is the case, typically without providing evidence or proof.
https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=claim+means
Claim: to say that something is
true or is a
fact,
although you cannot
prove it and other
people might not
believe it:
claim
Belief:
1. an acceptance that a statement is true or that something exists.
"his
belief in the value of hard work"
2. trust, faith, or confidence in someone or something.
"a belief in democratic politics"
https://www.google.com/search
Belief:
the
feeling of being
certain that something
exists or is
true:
His belief in
God gave him
hope during
difficult times.
Recent
scandals have
shaken many people's belief in (=
caused people to have
doubts about)
politicians.
belief
In logic, the distinction is made between an adequately evidenced and soundly argued claim, which is called a sound conclusion, and what appears to be a conclusion not supported by evidence or argument, which is called a bare claim.
Religious beliefs are not subject to logical proofs. I realized that a long time ago and I have told people that I am not going to make a logical argument for my beliefs since they cannot be proven true or false. That does not mean that my beliefs are not logical in the sense that my religious beliefs make logical sense, it only means that they can never be proven to be true.
The Writings of Baha'u'llah are 'part' of the evidence but
the claims of Baha'u'llah are not the evidence.
Baha’u’llah’s Two Bold Claims
All of which leads us back to Baha’u’llah, who made two very bold claims. First, he declared he was God’s messenger for the next one thousand years, having the same divine authority, the same Holy Spirit, the same divine power, as Moses, Christ, Muhammad, and the other founders of the major world religions:
Baha’u’llah made a second and even more challenging claim. He declared he was the promised world messiah foretold in all the prophecies, in all the holy books, of all the religions of the world – the one promised to come on the Day of Judgment, the Day of God, the Time of the End, the End of the World, to establish the kingdom of God on Earth.
https://bahaiteachings.org/what-did-bahaullah-teach?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Below is a list of the primary categories of
evidence that support the claims above.
1. His character (His qualities).
That can be determined by reading about Him in books such as the following:
The Revelation of Bahá'u'lláh, Volumes 1-4
2. His Revelation is what He accomplished (His Mission on earth, i,e., the history of the Baha'i Faith).
That can be determined by reading about His mission in books such as the following:
God Passes By (1844-1944)
The Revelation of Bahá'u'lláh, Volumes 1-4, which cover the 40 years of His Mission, from 1853-1892.
3. His Writings which can be found in books that are posted online:
The Works of Bahá'u'lláh
4. Baha'u'llah fulfilled all the Bible prophecies that refer to the return of Christ and the promised Messiah. That proves to me He was the Messiah and the return of Christ. Those prophecies and how they were fulfilled are delineated in the following book:
William Sears, Thief in the Night
5. Baha'u'llah predicted many events that later came to pass. Some of these predictions and how they came to pass are listed and delineated in this book:
The Challenge of Baha'u'llah
That's a claim to everybody but you. It's a statement of what you believe to be true, and that is sufficient to make it a claim, an unsupported one in this case. It doesn't matter that you can't prove your belief to the question of whether it is a claim. It's merely enough that you assert that it is true to you.
No, my belief is not a claim (see definitions above) because I am not
asserting that it is true just because I believe that it is true. Atheists want to make my belief into a claim so they can say I have a burden of proof but I have no burden of proof because I am making no claims, nor am I trying to prove anything.
Why do you even bother telling people what you believe if you aren't promoting the belief or answering in response to a question about what you believe? You routinely make these posts, then spend the rest of the thread running from them when others question them.
Have you been following this thread? I run from nobody. I answer all the questions about what I believe.
With all due respect, how is that of value to others? How is it of value to you? Has this thread accomplished anything for you apart from getting you into discussions you don't want to have?
I am not trying to accomplish anything, I just respond to posts. I do not want to have repetitive discussions that lead nowhere, or the constant I am right and you are wrong, but I want to have respectful discussions that benefit both parties.