Because my beliefs don't supplant reality.
But they don't necessarily represent reality either.
No, it's really not about any of that. You only care about facts. Others of us care about what meaning can be made, that isn't necessarily of a "factual" nature, because it resides more in the intuitive and the creative aspects of human cognition.
Yes, there are certainly people out there who don't give a damn about reality. There are plenty of people who only care about emotional comfort and feeling happy. I don't respect those people one bit.
No. It doesn't. Some people within the religion may do those things, but not the theological constructions, themselves.
Then maybe you ought to describe what you mean by "theological construction" because I'm not seeing a difference.
The existence of Jesus is a factual/historical claim. The resurrection is a theological claim.
It is? Where's your objective evidence? There's a lot of disagreement on this one.
I'm not making any sort of factual claim, other than my belief from the presented evidence, that a man named "Jesus" existed, and that he was some sort of religious figure.
There are lots of people named Jesus. Heck, one of my gardners is named Jesus. I actually named a puppy Jesus way back when I was young and religiously incredulous. So what? The evidence for the existence of Jesus only comes from one book of mythology and there is no way to verify any of the content, we have no independent eyewitness accounts, even where we'd expect them, even where they ought to be. We certainly have no accounts of the miracles, making Jesus, at best, if he ever lived at all, a wholly human preacher with no magical powers and no direct connection to any gods. That means that any such belief is unsupported and thus irrational. It's like saying you believe in unicorns. I saw a
video on YouTube that purportedly shows a unicorn. It's probably a horse with something strapped to its head, but the camera is so shaky you can never get a really good look. But even if it was real, even if it was a horse with a horn, that doesn't prove that it's a unicorn or that it has any of the magical properties that unicorns are purported to have.
Because employing such myths/avatars provides a vehicle for making meaning.
But why have this "meaning" if it doesn't correspond to reality? Is it just for emotional comfort?
From the community in which I was nurtured.
Which doesn't make it true.
I test them mostly subjectively, because they are within the realm of the subjective. My objective testing is only to make sure they don't supplant reality. What works for me, I keep. What doesn't work, I discard.
But by definition, they all supplant reality if they are not demonstrable in reality.
They're not "factually true." They are subjectively true, in that they provide creative and intuitive vehicles for making meaning of reality.
"Truth" is not the same as fact and truth isn't necessarily true.
No, it's not "made up." Nor is it "delusional." The use of metaphor that makes sense to the community isn't "made up," although it is creative. The use of those metaphors isn't "delusional," if they help us to make meaning of the world.
Of course it's made up. You might not have made it up yourself, but someone, somewhere, most likely collectively over a period of time, came up with the idea. Are you suggesting that people actually had direct and demonstrable experiences with these things that they believed? Or did they just make up stories to explain things they didn't understand? All gods, so far as we can tell, are just invented. The same goes for leprechauns and unicorns and fairies and demons and all the rest. It's all made up out of whole cloth by ignorant people who had no clue how the world around them worked. That's not the case today. There has never been a single event that has ever been studied and the answer turned out to be "God". Not one.
They don't have to. Do dreams hold up to "objective examination?" Do philosophical stances hold up to "objective examination?" Do ethical struggles stand up to "objective examination?" No.
If someone is claiming their dreams are representative of objective reality, yes, they would have to. Dreams have been studied exhaustively and nobody has ever found a shred of evidence that they are more than movies that go on in our heads and have no further objective meaning. And yes, philosophical stances that seek to make claims about the real world do need to stand up to objective examination. There are lots of theists who, failing to present any empirical evidence for their claims, turn to philosophical arguments because they think they're no longer on the hook for making unjustified claims. But when you take a vague philosophical claim and pretend that gives you license to hop, skip and jump to an unsupported claim about your particular god, that's not acceptable. And ethical struggles? Maybe. Depends on the exact struggle and the exact claims being made.
Of course they are, because I'm not making an ontological argument for God. That's what you're confused about. You think I'm arguing that "God exists." I'm not arguing that. At all.
By believing it is true at all, you are inherently making that claim, unless you are saying that you know that your god isn't real, but you believe in it anyhow, you are still making an inherent claim. And nobody sane believes that way. Belief is not subject to the will, you can't just decide to believe something, you have to be convinced somehow and if you are convinced, you are stating that you believe the proposition is true.
I have the footprints of the sense I have of the world.
But the world doesn't prove the god. We have natural explanations for pretty much everything and at no point does it look like any supernatural entities were involved. What you're really pulling here is the argument from ignorance. You don't understand it, therefore God. It's a logical fallacy for a reason.
What do you mean by "belief?" Because I get the idea that what you mean by "belief" is that I believe "God exists." I don't.
You certainly want Jesus to be true, you've already said that. You haven't said enough about your beliefs, on purpose, I suspect, to be able to say much more.
I don't "want it to be true." But I find it to be true.
No, if you found it to be true, you could present the evidence that convinced you for outside evaluation. Scientists find things to be true, then it goes through the peer-review process to evaluate those claims. Religion doesn't do that.
I have explained it -- you simply haven't been listening. Religious beliefs, and the religious figures (such as Christ and God) are forms and avatars that provide language for personal and shared experiences for which there is no language. That's all. Providing language to talk about the experiences provides meaning for the experiences.
"God," for me, is simply an avatar, if you will, that provides meaning for existence, love, relationship, and community. "Christ," for me, is an avatar for the fullness of humanity. I'm not saying that God is a being in a white robe with a long beard. I'm not saying that there's a being "in heaven." But seeing existence and humanity and our interrelatedness in those terms helps me to make deeper meaning of those things.
So they're imaginary placeholders for ideas that you want to hold. You know that you are in the tiny minority of people when it comes to your position on religion, right? Most people really do believe that all of these things are actually real.