Trailblazer said: If you have given the evidence a fair shake rather than a cursory look and it remains insufficient to you, then you have no choice but to choose deism or atheism.
leibowde84 said: That's how I feel, personally. I know that believing in a personal God would help me with everyday life. I do base that on evidence. Unfortunately, none of those anecdotal stories provide any evidence for God ... instead, they merely present evidence that belief in God is helpful to some. The advantages of holding a certain belief in no way evidences that belief as being based in fact.
I do not believe in God because it helps me with everyday life although I have discovered it helps me a lot.
Doubling back, I was not raised in any religion because my parents were fallen away Christians and I never saw the inside of a church or thought about God. Then in my first year of college I found out about the Baha’i Faith from my older brother and became a Baha’i.
I have been a Baha’i for 47 years but God was not really a part of my life until the last five years. That is a long sad story but suffice to say I knew God existed all that time because I never lost my belief in Baha’u’llah, which is why I believe God exists. Then I decided to try to make peace with God and learn more about my religion and other religions and now there is no turning back because it has become my whole life. I still have to take care of everyday business but I nothing that used to matter to me matters anymore...
I have studied, I grew up religious going to Catholic grade school, Jesuit high-school, hebrew school on the weekend and studying philosophy in college. Now I take it as a hobby to explore what evidence people base their belief in God on.
It has become my hobby posting to agnostics and atheists on forums for the last four years. About a year before that I started on forums posting to people of my religion and Christians. I only came here about a month ago and so far I am finding it a delightful place, compared to the forums I was posting on where believers were not well received and I was chided constantly for my beliefs.
But, even though I would most certainly like to believe, I cannot choose to believe in anything unless I am convinced it is actually true. For me, anything less would be dishonest.
I fully agree. My problem (if you can call it that) is that I tried to run away from God but I knew God existed so there was no place to run to, so I was stuck, and I ended up trying to make peace with God.
Anything else would be dishonest and it would also be foolish. What I have is complete certitude, what many people long for, and it is not right for me to throw that back in God’s face.
If God exists, he always has, and we certainly haven't found him yet. My biggest fear is settling on what could be an illusion when the truth might be attainable.
I believe the Truth is attainable because we all have the
capacity to recognize God. I know God has always existed but I also know God can never be located with a GPS tracking device.
I know that because of what my religion teaches. I have accumulated this knowledge mostly over the last five years and the more I learn the more mind-boggling it is. My religion makes sense of God and all the religions that have preceded mine. Moreover, it makes sense of the reason we exist and where we are headed for all of eternity.
Sure, I investigated my religion and chose to believe but I was also “guided” to the Truth. A greater gift God could never have bestowed upon me so I could never repay God. One way I do that is to talk to anybody and everybody who is interested in knowing what I believe and why. Concurrently, I am on my own spiritual journey, trying to know and love God. Knowing is a lot easier for me because I am more mental than emotional.