Unveiled Artist
Veteran Member
I know many people define atheist differently. Most on RF don't claim "knowledge that god doesn't exist" just lack of belief on a sliding scale.
I am an hardstone, cold, point blank atheist. Always was, always will be. (Maybe gnostic is better? I have knowledge that god doesn't exist... that aside)
1. God of abraham is said to be a being or spirit. How can he be a spirit when he has no body with whom that spirit comes from? (To Muslims, Jews, Christians, and others that don't believe in jesus or that jesus is god)
2. In mainstream christianity (since I don't know about Islam and Judaism) jesus is god. Now I've seen spirits. Every spirit I've seen and experienced was once a human. So, this makes more sense that jesus is a spirit. Since god has no physical attributes, he can't be nor represent god. I heard all the arguments before. It just leaves me thinking: If jesus is god, the father, then who is his father? If jesus and god are separate (one human and one being) and they are both god, then what defines god since he is would either be a spirit with no physical representation of him or a human in and of itself?
3. God is said to be consciousness. Do you guys mean the mind? Is god part of your mind and "he's" creating your thoughts and emotions? Neurons moving through parts of your brain does that. Thoughts are collective thoughts picked up by your brain like 0011s to a computer and translated into thoughts that are only restated in the brain. Nothing new from inside out. We just can't label it. So, if god is consciousness, wouldn't everyone acknowledge consciousness and given they have a mind and thoughts, wouldn't everyone already interpret their thoughts as greater then themselves? Is this type of god selective or is this type of god an emotion or something you can't define?
4. God is said to be everywhere and everything. Pantheism. Energy is everywhere and in everything. Energy (heat and all of that) creates and sustains life. So, taking spiritual terminology out, is god energy? I can't think of another term to use if it isn't energy because no other term to me captures the fact of how life begins, lives, and dies. I know it sounds like a cold way to describe god, but is god in pantheism an elegant way of saying god is energy?
5. God is said to be object(s) and people(s) for that matter of worship. What's the real purpose of worship? Of course even us atheist are grateful to others, our environment, and ourselves. It has nothing to do with our religions since everyone can experience the same thing regardless their religion or lack thereof. What is the reason of holding things "sacred"? I mean, you can still live life in gratitude et cetera without singling out an aspect of reality rather than considering all reality and everything and everyone sacred.
6. Last, god is said to be a mystical experience. Something greater (or undefined). Maybe defined my mythology, who knows. For another thread, perhaps. However, mystical experiences cannot happen without our involvement in our environment and people. How we put together pieces of our lives and patterns are not universal. If god is an experience, and everyone has experiences, wouldn't this mystical experience be universal? A fact. Something that is a part of life that all can share in? Why "mystical" though? Of course, some feelings are hard to explain. Why are they special?
Basically, what is a god? (I asked this before but kind of asking it in questions in hopes someone would actually read the thread and think about what I'm asking before replying).
If you can't describe it, then how is it more of a god than my not able to explain an physical and mental experience to my psychologist which may or may not be related to depression or anxiety?
Yes, I've had "mystical" experiences but I don't all them that since I don't like the sacred-concept and putting things and people above or below myself. Last question, once you put something or someone above or below yourself in sacredness, you make whatever it is you worship a god. Do you really need to do this to understand the mystery of life?
Can't experiences be experiences? and why do you guys need a purpose or origin when our purpose and origin are unfolding daily? It's not a big bang. It's not from a creator. It just is.
You can quote scripture but I would love to ask the same things to Moses and Jesus but they aren't alive right now, so basically you're telling me words of Moses and the apostles not jesus and most definitely not god.
Okay. I let this gather dust but if you reply please be polite. I put some people on ignore unfortunately because with all my threads they post something rude and completely irrelevant.
I am an hardstone, cold, point blank atheist. Always was, always will be. (Maybe gnostic is better? I have knowledge that god doesn't exist... that aside)
1. God of abraham is said to be a being or spirit. How can he be a spirit when he has no body with whom that spirit comes from? (To Muslims, Jews, Christians, and others that don't believe in jesus or that jesus is god)
2. In mainstream christianity (since I don't know about Islam and Judaism) jesus is god. Now I've seen spirits. Every spirit I've seen and experienced was once a human. So, this makes more sense that jesus is a spirit. Since god has no physical attributes, he can't be nor represent god. I heard all the arguments before. It just leaves me thinking: If jesus is god, the father, then who is his father? If jesus and god are separate (one human and one being) and they are both god, then what defines god since he is would either be a spirit with no physical representation of him or a human in and of itself?
3. God is said to be consciousness. Do you guys mean the mind? Is god part of your mind and "he's" creating your thoughts and emotions? Neurons moving through parts of your brain does that. Thoughts are collective thoughts picked up by your brain like 0011s to a computer and translated into thoughts that are only restated in the brain. Nothing new from inside out. We just can't label it. So, if god is consciousness, wouldn't everyone acknowledge consciousness and given they have a mind and thoughts, wouldn't everyone already interpret their thoughts as greater then themselves? Is this type of god selective or is this type of god an emotion or something you can't define?
4. God is said to be everywhere and everything. Pantheism. Energy is everywhere and in everything. Energy (heat and all of that) creates and sustains life. So, taking spiritual terminology out, is god energy? I can't think of another term to use if it isn't energy because no other term to me captures the fact of how life begins, lives, and dies. I know it sounds like a cold way to describe god, but is god in pantheism an elegant way of saying god is energy?
5. God is said to be object(s) and people(s) for that matter of worship. What's the real purpose of worship? Of course even us atheist are grateful to others, our environment, and ourselves. It has nothing to do with our religions since everyone can experience the same thing regardless their religion or lack thereof. What is the reason of holding things "sacred"? I mean, you can still live life in gratitude et cetera without singling out an aspect of reality rather than considering all reality and everything and everyone sacred.
6. Last, god is said to be a mystical experience. Something greater (or undefined). Maybe defined my mythology, who knows. For another thread, perhaps. However, mystical experiences cannot happen without our involvement in our environment and people. How we put together pieces of our lives and patterns are not universal. If god is an experience, and everyone has experiences, wouldn't this mystical experience be universal? A fact. Something that is a part of life that all can share in? Why "mystical" though? Of course, some feelings are hard to explain. Why are they special?
Basically, what is a god? (I asked this before but kind of asking it in questions in hopes someone would actually read the thread and think about what I'm asking before replying).
If you can't describe it, then how is it more of a god than my not able to explain an physical and mental experience to my psychologist which may or may not be related to depression or anxiety?
Yes, I've had "mystical" experiences but I don't all them that since I don't like the sacred-concept and putting things and people above or below myself. Last question, once you put something or someone above or below yourself in sacredness, you make whatever it is you worship a god. Do you really need to do this to understand the mystery of life?
Can't experiences be experiences? and why do you guys need a purpose or origin when our purpose and origin are unfolding daily? It's not a big bang. It's not from a creator. It just is.
You can quote scripture but I would love to ask the same things to Moses and Jesus but they aren't alive right now, so basically you're telling me words of Moses and the apostles not jesus and most definitely not god.
Okay. I let this gather dust but if you reply please be polite. I put some people on ignore unfortunately because with all my threads they post something rude and completely irrelevant.