Re: Is there a God and why?
His point is that it doesn't erase the morality of the story or the importance of the lessons taught if the stories are not true.
But a large chunk of our population operates on the assumption that they are, and makes decisions about the future on that assumption. Climate change denial was driven significantly by conservative Christians who believed that, as God set the descendants of Adam to have dominion over the Earth, there was nothing we could do to screw it up because God wouldn't let it happen that way. These beliefs are not private little pearls that people kiss and put under their pillow at night. Whether or not they are true matters.
The real cop out here is that, after saying that the Bible is not comparable to Harry Potter because it claims to be true, you're turning around and saying it doesn't matter if it's true as long as the stories teach us something. Which puts them right back in the land of fantasy fiction. You can't have it both ways.
Also, I happen to think many of the lessons of the Bible, when taken as strictly morality tales, are either abhorrent, or traditional views are taking exactly the wrong lesson from them. As I've pointed out with regard to the Garden of Eden story, it's significant to me that God lies and the serpent tells the truth.
As for my own personal bias, yes I am biased. I have read many things, listened to many speakers, looked at different religions, philosophies, talked with agnostics, atheists, Mormons, Christian Scientists, and Jews. Quite simply, there is evidence for the Bible and there is evidence against the Bible, but there is evidence.
And the same can be said of the Quran and the Book of Mormon and all of that.
As the saying goes, when you understand why you dismiss those other religions and their scriptures, you will understand why I dismiss yours.
As for the theology, it does come down to faith. Without faith, belief really is impossible.
You're essentially saying you have to already believe something in order to believe it. It's completely circular and can apply to any ridiculous thing you'd care to. Give me evidence, and I'll give you faith.
There will never, ever, be proof of god or a deity that satisfies everyone.
That's because there's no deity to prove.
And proof and evidence are not the same and should not be used interchangeably.
I find all religions fascinating, much in the same way C.S. Lewis did. He liked myths but wondered at the source of them all.
He's actually the seed of my deconversion. I read a story somewhere -- I think in Joseph Campbell -- about him asking J.R.R. Tolkien what made Christianity more true than all the other myths out there, as objectively they all appeared to be the same. Tolkien's answer was basically "It just is," which apparently was good enough for Lewis but never was for me. I decided I wanted to find the answer so that when people doubting or wanting to know more about the faith asked me, I could give a satisfactory answer.
Two years later I was an atheist.
It may be unremarkable to you that 40 plus authors can write a book and have a cohesive theme but it is interesting to me, even from a literary point of view.
There are bookstores with entire sections devoted to Star Trek novels, you know. It really isn't that astonishing, especially when you figure they probably know about each other.