ether-ore
Active Member
I accept the correction. I should have said "one of the primary reasons". With regard to comparison to other deities, I can only offer my reasons for choosing mine. All we can know about any deity is what that deity chooses to reveal. We already know that deity cannot be discovered by science. Also, the thing is that all we can know about deity is that it is filtered through a prophet or prophets. Herein in the basis for my choice. Christian scriptures (particularly LDS) have multiple source prophets over millennia, all saying the same thing about God and corroborating one another. I have found other religious text to be single source material with no corroboration and I therefore consider them as not credible.Just to have said it.....the reason you list as "primary" for atheism is incorrect. Atheists reject your god for the same reason you reject everyone else's gods. They just don't feel the evidence comes anywhere close to substantiating the claims. The problem of evil is only brought up when you try to assert your particular god is "all loving or "love". It is only an argument that refutes your claim of "all loving".
Your very example about Jesus's sacrifice is a glaring example of the kind of illogical thinking that keeps atheists away from your belief system. Jesus was said to have died for our sins. Two problems......If he died, and he was god, then god died. If god died, who resurrected god? Then there is the issue with blood sacrifice, which is pretty awful in and of itself. Plus, I I think it it is a rather disgusting concept that has someone dying for someone else's transgressions. If my great-great-great-great-etc. grandfather committed a transgression, why should someone else pay for their mistake? If your father commits a murder, are you okay with being hanged for it yourself to satisfy the law???? It's absurd.
So you miss the point right out of the gate by making assumptions about what other people think.
One other reason I believe in God is that the story I related at the beginning of this thread makes more sense to me than any other explanation I have seen concerning where we come from, why we are here, what our relationship to God is and what will happen to us when we leave mortality. Much is made of 'reason' and let me say that it is reason that tells me that we are not alone in this universe. A great deal of money is spent by many scientists on the SETI program because they believe as I do that we are not the only intelligent life in the universe. The difference between myself and them is that while I believe that among the other intelligences out there, one of them is God, they absolutely deny any remote possibility that it could be God because most, if not all of them, are atheists. So, in my book, they defy reason.
With regard to the "problems" you outlined concerning Christ's atonement: first, I happen to believe something a bit different than most Christians. I believe in God the Father and in his son Jesus Christ and in the Holy Ghost. Three separate and distinct beings, but one in purpose. God the Father placed all power regarding this earth and the inhabitants of it in the hands of His Son, Jesus Christ. So, no one can return unto God the Father except through Jesus Christ. Christ created this temporary heaven and earth within the eternal universe and He did all of this before He was born in the flesh... while He was still a spirit. Because of this, He is called the Father of Heaven and Earth (Not the Father of our spirits... that is God the Father). Using the same power over matter that Christ used in the creation (preparing the pre-existing earth for our use) He effected His own demise and His own resurrection. Christ's death on the cross and subsequent resurrection enabled (in terms of justice) for us to be resurrected as well. The payment for our sins was accomplished in the Garden of Gethsemane which saves us from permanent separation from God on condition of repentance.
The reason an atonement was necessary is because we have broken God's laws during this mortality whether we repent or not, and God's law is that no unclean thing can dwell in His presence. We could never pay for our own sins and one person cannot pay for the sins of another. But God Himself can pay for our sins and God the Son... Jesus Christ did just that. God the Father's laws had been violated. Justice demands that a penalty be paid for that violation. God out of His love for us, paid that penalty for us. So, while we cannot be perfect and clean on our own (and therefore could never enter God's kingdom by any effort of our own), we can through repentance be made perfect in Christ Jesus.
As I said in the preamble to the op, I don't expect what I have said to be accepted by most. I just hope it will be beneficial to some... or one.