Did you believe in Santa Claus as a kid? My dad and the step mothers I had were all for lying to me and telling me some magical jolly fat man gives me presents once a year. It seems to be tradition amongst many, telling kids to believe in Santa Claus.
Wasn’t it nice? Ignorance is bliss. But, eventually, you grew out of the Santa Claus belief.
Imagine now that you were to try to believe in Santa Claus once again. You miss the gifts. You also miss the idea of an omniscient being judging your morality and rewarding it.
How would you go about believing in Santa Claus once again? You can’t! There is no way, once the truth has been realized.
So why does one ask an atheist to believe in God? Is it not the same as asking an adult to believe in Santa?
Discuss?
I know I’m comparing a belief in God to a belief in Santa, but I don’t intend to belittle belief in God. Nor do I necessarily believe that atheists have a monopoly on truth.
Hi Xavier Graham. Good afternoon. Have you ever read Romans 1:
"19 because that which is known of Yahweh is manifest in them; for Yahweh manifested it unto them. 20 For the invisible things of him since the creation of the world are clearly seen, being perceived through the things that are made,
even his everlasting power and divinity; that they may be without excuse: 21 because that, knowing Yahweh, they glorified him not as Elohim, neither gave thanks; but became vain in their reasonings, and their senseless heart was darkened."
Yahweh's power is seen through the things He has made. Through the many beautiful things we see in nature. To the many lifeforms He created. One must truly be blind to see all these things around them and claim that it is not part of Intelligent Design. Santa Claus is a myth. A myth that is easily refuted. But an Almighty Being creating the things around us is not only logical, it's the only sensible conclusion one can draw from the evidence. Further, the Santa Claus myth doesn't involve a sacred text which reveals the history of the Jewish people, our Messiah and Savior and sin-bearer, the things we need to do to enter the Kingdom of Yahweh and to live a spiritually fulfilling life. Do you really think that a big bang, 13.8 billion years ago, brought the universe into existence and initially produced hydrogen, the simplest chemical element; hydrogen then evolved into other chemical elements—and eventually people. It's laughable. It is to me anyway.
Further, you are missing three key points:
1. Macroevolution cannot occur.
“The basic flaw of all evolutionary views is the origin of the information in living beings. It has never been shown that a coding system and semantic information could originate by itself in a material medium, and the information theorems predict that this will never be possible. A purely material origin of life is thus precluded.” Gitt, p. 124.
2. Outside intelligence was involved in the creation of the universe and all forms of life.
Information theory tells us that the only known way to decrease the entropy of an isolated system is by having intelligence in that system. [See, for example, Charles H. Bennett, “Demons, Engines and the Second Law,” Scientific American, Vol. 257, November 1987, pp. 108–116.] Because the universe is far from its maximum entropy level, a vast intelligence is the only known means by which the universe could have been brought into being. [See also
“Second Law of Thermodynamics” on
page 35.]
3. Life could not result from a “big bang.”
If the “big bang” occurred, all the matter in the universe was once a hot gas. A gas is one of the most random systems known to science. Random, chaotic movements of gas molecules contain no useful information. Because an isolated system, such as the universe, cannot generate non-trivial information, the “big bang” could not produce the complex, living universe we have today, which contains astronomical amounts of useful information.
In the Beginning: Compelling Evidence for Creation and the Flood - 15. Codes, Programs, and Information (creationscience.com)