Re: Contact
I believe you are trying to insinuate that God is not faithful because He has not been faithful to you.
No, I'm rather explicitly pointing out that there is no reason to assume a god exists at all. Matters of faithfulness are secondary.
Lets look at it this way...
Could you say whether or not I am a faithful person?
Not at this point. But I have more reason to think you exist than I do for any god.
DorkmanScott wrote:Faith is actually defined as "belief in the absence of proof." What you mean is evidence.
No, read what I said again. Faith is the inevitable OUTCOME of proof. When something is proven to us, we have faith in it. I have proven myself to my boss and he has faith in me.
In the dictionary, faith is defined as "belief in the absence of proof." You can use an alternate definition if you choose, but that's the definition that seems most useful.
Your boss has only proof of what has occurred. He has no proof that you will do your job in the future. How can he? It's the future. What he has is evidence, in the form of your previous trustworthiness (or faithfulness, if you like) that you are more likely to do so than not.
You know this, because this is exactly what you're pointing out with the example you make later about the sun rising. So you're contradicting yourself again, but whatever.
DorkmanScott wrote:True, but it doesn't necessarily mean that it isn't. It also means that we would not be justified in having faith without having had similar experiences.
I would accept that as a true statement. I cannot expect you to have faith in something you have never experienced. However, has that ever kept you from experiencing something new before? Have you ever gone to a new restaurant, or went to go see a movie based on someone else's description of their experience there?
Yes, but all of those things clearly exist. That is a barrier that gods have not penetrated to my satisfaction.
You didn't read my words thoroughly. You instead read what you thought I meant. Read my words.
God doesn't ask us to have blind faith in HIM. He instead describes Himself as faithful and shows you His track record.
He asserts his track record. There's a substantial difference.
He tells us to remember His feats in the past. Where He does ask for us to have blind faith is in future events. Not who He is, but what He promises to do. (that is the difference in what I said earlier that you missed)
You say there's a difference. I don't see one here, and again, you're contradicting yourself:
Again, it all comes down to the person telling the story. Do you trust them?
What it all comes down to is having faith in the person, not what's been promised. When it's a person that I do not even have reason to believe exists in the first place, the question of trust is not a valid one.
You don't know me, you don't trust me. Fair enough. But what do you do when someone you do trust starts having these experiences over and over and over and over? At some point you either have to call them a liar or truly question your own stance.
These are not the only two options. Being a liar implies that they know what they are saying is untrue. A third option is that they sincerely believe what they are saying, and are simply wrong.
It's up to you. believe me or don't. It makes no difference to the fact that those things actually happened to me.
Case in point, I'm sure you believe that. And I'm willing to believe they did. What I'm not willing to do is simply accept your interpretations of why or how those things happened. Memory and interpretation are imperfect and powerfully affected by emotion and desire.
That is a very good point and a very good way of wording it. I suppose my only answer is that no one event has led me to believe in God.
I'm sorry, but this is necessarily a false statement. I don't think you realize it is, but it is.
You cannot attribute an experience to God unless you already accept that God exists. There must have been an initial event that led you to conclude God did exist, it was the God of the Bible, and that you were therefore justified in attributing future experiences to that God.
You failed to answer one question in my post, and it is possibly the most important question: what reason do you have to believe that the Bible is a reliable source of information?
It is an entire conglomeration of experiences. So I would have to say that no one event could get me to not believe in God. As long as my life's experiences continue to follow the promises God has given me in the Bible, I will continue to believe. There have been times when things didn't make sense to me. Where I really doubted some of the things I believed. In the end, the overwhelming majority of my experiences coincide with what God has promised me in His Word. Because of that, I am willing to accept the small things I don't understand on blind faith because I trust the Faithful One who has proven Himself to me over and over.
You've used a lot of words here to say "No, I am not sincerely willing to consider the possibility that I am wrong."
Your faith is not falsifiable. Anything you don't understand or doesn't fit your "theory," you will just wait until something else happens that allows you to explain it the way you want to, as part of God's will, rather than attempting an alternative explanation.
That's fine, but don't come around here lecturing others on having open minds, being dogmatic, or hearing only what they expect to.
We should probably open up a thread in off-topic to continue this, instead of dragging the Contact conversation completely off the rails. I'll do that now.
EDIT: it is done.