I did not mean that belief IS a choice. I meant that "if we choose to believe" God wants that to be OUR choice, not something that He chose for us.
I have to side with
@Left Coast on this one, namely, that belief is not a choice to certain kind of mind, which suggests to me that people who can choose what to believe have different kinds of minds from those who can't. You don't seem to acknowledge that this other kind of mind exists. But I assure you that it does.
This kind of thinking - critical thinking - may have been a choice to pursue, but once made, there are no further choices, just the valid analysis of evidence and tentative belief commensurate in strength with the quality and quantity of the relevant evidence. It is learned, generally in the setting of a formal education, but I doubt that anybody that has taken that path could ever return to faith-based thought without some cognitive or emotional crisis occurring first. I'm thinking of Anthony Flew now.
One could be convinced by the evidence and reject that evidence IF they did not want to believe.
I've only seen that once. “As I shared with my professors years ago when I was in college, if all the evidence in the universe turns against creationism, I would be the first to admit it, but I would still be a creationist because that is what the Word of God seems to indicate” – creationist Kurt Wise
I'd say that this is a pretty rare way to think. Reason and evidence-based thinkers simply go with the evidence, and faith-based thinkers seldom find it convincing. To find the evidence convincing but choose to ignore it anyway seems to be a rare trait in human minds.
Are you saying God should deliver His message to everybody? Why should He? Do any of Presidents, prime ministers, despots and tyrants speak directly to everyone? No, they use the media.
Do you think that that is a fair comparison? These human beings are making every effort to be heard and believed, because that is what reasonable people do that want to be understood and believed. You mentioned earlier that we are expected to use our intelligence. I don't know about expected, but I will rely on my wits whatever its origin, and my mind tells me that if there is a god in this orderly, mathematical, reasonable, comprehensible universe that it expects me to use the faculties I was gifted with, which means that if there is a god, those are things it admires, and so do I.
As I indicated, we should be suspicious of those who advise us to suppress reason and just believe by faith anyway.
Everything we do is a willful choice, even if we are not completely free to chose given constraints on free will.
You seem to use the words choose and choice differently than I do. For me, there has to be two or more options all available to the chooser to call it a choice. In fact, when we only have one option, some people call that having one choice, but I would call it having no choice.
Free will is an interesting topic. It appears to be essential to Christian doctrine, but there are good reasons to question whether any of our choices are indeterministic, and whether the felling of being free to choose isn't an illusion itself generated deterministically.
most people in the world believe in God because of a Messenger of God so that method has been very successful.
Except that no two got the same message. The reason I trust reason and evidence over faith is that the former is tied into physical reality, which is why there have been thousands of gods reported, but only one periodic table of the elements. If the scientists used faith rather than observation, they'd each have their own table, and none would be expected to be correct.
It is a choice whether one wants to seek truth about God even if what one ends up believing is not a choice.
I can agree with that. I did seek truth about gods and think I found it, although I doubt that you would find my conclusions useful to you. The world makes more sense without god beliefs. I no longer need to ignore evidence that contradicts my former god belief. I no longer need to wonder why little girls are allowed to die of leukemia. I no longer need to find endless excuses to justify the internal contradictions, unkept promises, moral and intellectual failings of a deity, failed prophecies, and errors in science and history. The world makes more sense.
we all have a choice whether we want to spend our time seeking truth about God or doing other things
You seem to assume that seeking a god mans finding one. I can assure you that that is not always the case. After a sincere and prolonged effort to sort out what's what, I arrived at tentative conclusions that have served me well and which I have no incentive to modify, or as others say, no incentive to continue seeking.
It's interesting how seeking forever is considered a virtue by many. My guess is that if one is still seeking, he has an unsatisfied need, and if he has been seeking for decades and decades, he's going about it wrong and will never find what he's looking for. like a man searching for his keys for decades. What is desirable is not to seek, but to find.
Now, let's look at your comment again, but substitute keys: We all have a choice whether we want to spend our time seeking our keys or doing other things. Eventually, we should choose to stop looking for them. There is no virtue in spending sixty or seventy years unsuccessfully looking for them. Likewise with gods.
We cannot blame God if we did not make any effort to believe.
Then we can blame God if we did make that effort, but still don't believe?
I suspect that you would say no, that we can never blame God for anything, but once again, I would disagree, even though I don't accept the existence of this god, which I must discuss in the hypothetical. With omniscience and omnipotence comes omniresponsiblity, which means that all praise and blame go to such an agent. If a person makes a sincere effort to find a god and fails, either no such god exists, or a god exists that is indifferent to us, incapable of communicating with us, or unaware of us.
There is no reason why belief should be easy to acquire or maintain.
Belief is very easy to the faith-based thinker. He simply chooses to believe, and voila, it is done.
For the reason and evidence-thinker, belief is easy if given the evidence. It is irrational to posit that a loving god that wants to be known, understood, loved in return, obeyed, and worshiped would withhold convincing evidence.
"
If there is a god, that god should know exactly what it would take to change my mind...and that god should be capable of doing whatever it would take. The fact that this hasn't happened can only mean one of two things: 1. No such god exists. 2. Whatever god exists doesn't care to convince me, at this time. In either case, it's not my problem and there's nothing I can do about it. Meanwhile, all of those believers who think that there is a god who does want me to know that he exists - are clearly, obviously, undeniably... wrong." - Matt Dillahunty"