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Mac;2279363; said:Umm no. Because like I said there are signs that are given to us in the Bible that shares what the last days on Earth will be like.
BKB answered better than I could have and I agree with everything he posted.Mac;2279314; said:Let me ask you this...the events that take place in Revelations about the end of the world. The ones that talk about many wars, many disasters, the west power falling to its knees, those who wish to seek harm against Israel, but cannot. Do you believe that is just a coincidence about what is told in the book of Revelations or do you think there is some kind of connection? Those things are happening now. Just curious on your thoughts.
But assuming that God interacts with the natural universe in unnatural ways (such as performing miracles), wouldn't he also leave "footprints"?JBaney45;2279319; said:You would just look in your back yard for footprints? How big is your back yard?
Your analogy just doesn't work, in that scenario there would be evidence clearly pointing one way or the other. In God's case or the case of the actual origin of the universe that evidence just isn't there.
But I think my standard of "knowing" is really no different than anyone else's for most of what we all encounter in everyday life, except when it comes to religious matters. I'm just trying to stay consistent in my method to determine what's likely true and what is not, and I think most religious people have two separate methodologies. If you were suffering from an incurable disease and your doctors told you that you only had months to live, but also read on the internet that some stranger was selling a pill in exchange for all of your money and possessions that he was certain would cure you because of "the medical experience that resonates deeply within him personally", would you just accept his claim at face value and buy the pill or require some additional evidence? I don't deny that he strongly believes that he has the cure, but I would question whether or not what he believes is really true.BayBuck;2279323; said:These are good questions, but I'm not sure I can answer in a way that will meet your standard for "knowing". The mystery of faith is a part of the religious experience that resonates deeply with me personally.
I don't need definitive proof and don't think we can know anything with 100% certainty, but if God is only an impersonal creator that doesn't interact with the natural world, only exists behind the scenes and never leaves a trace of his existence - why bother believing such a thing even exists? There are an infinite number of things that can exist with the same characteristics so why not believe in all of them? But if God is personal, listens and answers prayers, cures the sick and performs miracles, I don't think it's unreasonable to ask for some kind of evidence for these claims. Hell, if he would cure just one amputee or paraplegic that would go a long way with making me reconsider my position.Buckeyeskickbuttocks;2279326; said:I will just say, as we discussed on a different thread, I still have no idea what constitutes proof for you Brew. If I could show you something that was stamped "Made By God" I think you'd say "OK, you win" but, I'm not likely to find such a thing. :p On the other hand, if I point to something that appears to be unnatural, you can easily retort, "Just because we don't understand what we're looking at as modern men does not mean it's unnatural" And on another, the idea that the Universe would exist as it does, and we'd find some sort of God fingerprints somewhere is patently absurd. (ie, I don't believe an all powerful/all knowing entity would create a thing, say a universe, where he'd have to ever do ANYTHING that would appear to defy the very rules he made up in the first place).
You're asking for the impossible and you know it. That's what, in my IMO, makes your question here disingenuous.
Are you seriously countering my posts with this?Mac;2279360; said:Yes, I know what Revelation 18 is. Thank you for copy and pasting it. I would check out the first 17 chapters before the 18th. They go in order.
You'll know something's up when the rapture occurs
probably, but then we're usually rather impatient and assume/hope things will happen sooner than they do.BusNative;2279361; said:Yeah, maybe. You think John would be surprised to know that it hasn't happened yet, 2,000 years later?
jwinslow;2279367; said:probably, but then we're usually rather impatient and assume/hope things will happen sooner than they do.
Well, here we are talking about different gods. I would not ever pretend to be able to prove the god Mac is talking about, for example. And in case that sounds like a shot a Mac, I know virtually nothing of Bgrads version either. In my view, those ideas of God don't measure up. But.. that's just my IMO.Brewtus;2279365; said:I don't need definitive proof and don't think we can know anything with 100% certainty, but if God is only an impersonal creator that doesn't interact with the natural world, only exists behind the scenes and never leaves a trace of his existence - why bother believing such a thing even exists? There are an infinite number of things that can exist with the same characteristics so why not believe in all of them? But if God is personal, listens and answers prayers, cures the sick and performs miracles, I don't think it's unreasonable to ask for some kind of evidence for these claims. Hell, if he would cure just one amputee or paraplegic that would go a long way with making me reconsider my position.
Mac;2279368; said:For example, Doctors regularly say, they have no idea how x was healed/cured/etc. Is that a coincidence that something all of the sudden changes so frantically that medicine has no explanation for why it happens?
BusNative;2279372; said:Often, yes. Or maybe they just don't know the answer.
Is it coincidence that doctors learn to diagnose things only after they've seen it happen, typically more than once in order to establish a pattern of symptoms?
Buckeyeskickbuttocks;2279370; said:Well, here we are talking about different gods. I would not ever pretend to be able to prove the god Mac is talking about, for example. And in case that sounds like a shot a Mac, I know virtually nothing of Bgrads version either. In my view, those ideas of God don't measure up. But.. that's just my IMO.
So, when I speak about God, the Creator God, I actually DO believe in the infinite number of things which exist as you mentioned... Multiple universes.. which, I guess are becoming something of a mathematical certainty these days among those folks who think about that sort of stuff.
For me, it really just gets back down to the answer to a question... how did we come to be here. As I've said before, I try and find corollaries in the world. I have NEVER come across a thing which was not created. Ever. And so I have a real hard time wrapping my head around the idea that the universe is here at all, if it wasn't created somehow.
Now, you can say, "Sure, but what about God ... shouldn't he have been created?" and my answer to that is, No, it's part of his very definition.
That said, I have some pause in not just saying "Well, maybe the universe (or the infinite number of them) are omnipresent by definition" I can't really prove otherwise... after all.
Still... I tend to see things as iterations of itself. Much like the old Animal House pot smoking scene... we may well be the dust under the finger nail of some larger being. And, frankly, that's sorta how I view reality... we are God.. Much the same way as some random blood cell is me... It's just not ALL of me.
First, it is my belief that nothing that happens shouldn't have occurred.Mac;2279368; said:Bkb an Brewtus, how do you guys explain things that happen, that shouldn't happen, do occur.
For example, Doctors regularly say, they have no idea how x was healed/cured/etc. Is that a coincidence that something all of the sudden changes so frantically that medicine has no explanation for why it happens?
What's your take in something like that?
I believe in planes of existence. I believe in ghosts. I believe in life. There is no such thing as death (of a soul).Mac;2279375; said:So is our human life the end all be all then? No after life?
Because things which appear alike...Mac;2279374; said:Then why does person 1 with same symptoms/treatment as person 2 survive. But person 1 dies?
Brewtus;2279365; said:But assuming that God interacts with the natural universe in unnatural ways (such as performing miracles), wouldn't he also leave "footprints"?
Brewtus;2279365; said:I don't need definitive proof and don't think we can know anything with 100% certainty, but if God is only an impersonal creator that doesn't interact with the natural world, only exists behind the scenes and never leaves a trace of his existence - why bother believing such a thing even exists? There are an infinite number of things that can exist with the same characteristics so why not believe in all of them? But if God is personal, listens and answers prayers, cures the sick and performs miracles, I don't think it's unreasonable to ask for some kind of evidence for these claims. Hell, if he would cure just one amputee or paraplegic that would go a long way with making me reconsider my position.