Re: Is there a God and why?

pastormacman wrote:
Dorkman wrote:

...You believe that Muslims are mythical? Well, I can't say I have a pre-loaded response for that one.

I'm going to assume that you are being funny here, but just in case you misunderstood, I didn't say Muslims are mythical, I'm saying the specific Muslim who has the same story as me is mythical until they join in our conversation and share their story. Until then that person is simply a figment of your imagination conjured up in order to attempt to nullify my story.

It is amazing that you are posting this in a thread about the existence of God without irony.

pastormacman wrote:
Dorkman wrote:

What I've stated here is a point of falsifiability -- or at least a path -- against my stance. If the above were true, I would have to seriously consider that my stance is wrong. Can you offer the same?

I suppose if your stance is only based upon what you have reasoned then it's logical to consider that a new argument could change it. However, my stance is not only based on what I've reasoned, but also what I've lived and experienced.

So you understand that you claiming I'VE made up my mind and you haven't is a complete cop-out and nonsense to boot, yes? I'm willing to change my mind based on new information. You're not. Don't project your intellectual rigidity onto me.

pastormacman wrote:

I'm talking about the rare times when I know what I heard and I act out on it and claim it publicly before there's any conclusion. Those times don't happen often, but when they'd do, I've never been let down. And I saw that life lived before my own eyes through my father. He knew my wife and I were pregnant before we told anyone, he told my mom. He knew our child was going to be a boy before he was born and told my father in law. Both of those things he heard from God were used as confirmations for something else that eventually came to pass.

And how many statements of that kind did he make to your mother or father-in-law or anyone else that did not come to pass? I don't expect you to know -- you'd only hear about them if they did come to pass because my goodness how remarkable. Any predictions that didn't come to pass would just be forgotten and never mentioned. This is what I'm referring to when I say counting the hits and forgetting the misses.

pastormacman wrote:

And in life, experience usually trumps reason. You can think, and reason, and calculate all you want, but in the end the real world is what you experience.

But your understanding of your experience is contingent on your reason. If I see a curtain moving in my house I could assume it was a ghost and say nobody can take it from me because I saw a curtain moving and I know ghosts move curtains therefore it was a ghost that moved the curtain. But maybe the window was open and I didn't notice. The experience would be the same, my interpretation of it is the question.

pastormacman wrote:

And I'm afraid that cannot be shaken.

So, again, YOU'RE the one who has made up his mind and is unwilling to investigate alternative ideas, not me. You have repeatedly accused me of having my mind absolutely made up without possibility of change but I do not. You do. I would like you to acknowledge that you have been stating a falsehood before we continue.

Last edited by Dorkman (2013-12-31 22:03:31)

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Five pages deep in a thread about religion, and no flame war. That's gotta be an internet record.

"The Doctor is Submarining through our brains." --Teague

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Doctor Submarine wrote:

Five pages deep in a thread about religion, and no flame war. That's gotta be an internet record.

Has there ever been a flame war here? I haven't really actively used the forum until 2012, so I don't know its entire history.

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Darth Praxus wrote:
Doctor Submarine wrote:

Five pages deep in a thread about religion, and no flame war. That's gotta be an internet record.

Has there ever been a flame war here? I haven't really actively used the forum until 2012, so I don't know its entire history.

Only one or two that I remember, and nothing that wasn't resolved.

"The Doctor is Submarining through our brains." --Teague

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Darth Praxus wrote:
Sam F wrote:
Dorkman wrote:

That's pretty crappy of God, IMO. At one point he went way out of his way to show himself to people to get them to believe and performed miracles right in their faces. Why was that good enough for them but I'm supposed to take a book's word for it? I think if he cares that much I deserve at LEAST as much evidence as he was willing to provide then -- and note that providing that evidence explicitly did not infringe on free will or faith.

I'm gonna defer to Romans 1:18-20 on that one. The evidence we've got is plenty. You may not accept the evidence, but that doesn't mean it's not there.

Regardless of whether it's "enough" or not, you can't deny that God gave (allegedly) far more evidence to a bunch of illiterate first-century Palestinians.

I don't understand what illiteracy has to do with it, and I also don't see how that makes Him a crappy God. We don't deserve any grace at all, so the fact that He's done anything for any of us shows his compassion. He's not going to save everyone, plain and simple; and it's not fair, only because none of us deserve it. The fair thing would be to let us all suffer.

You may disagree, but an opinion on what is good or bad based on a morality that has no ultimate grounding in anything but fallible human reasoning doesn't change what is truly good from biblical standards. If you don't accept those biblical standards of good and bad, you don't accept the biblical God and that opinion of Him is therefore pointless anyway.

Darth Praxus wrote:

Has there ever been a flame war here? I haven't really actively used the forum until 2012, so I don't know its entire history.

In my experience on this forum, the cat photo initiative has done a solid job in preventing such things.

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Re: Is there a God and why?

fireproof78 wrote:
Darth Praxus wrote:
fireproof78 wrote:

I'm curious as to your source that Jews were polytheistic and then turned monotheistic. ...

To start with, Dorkman posted this extremely useful video in the Raiders thread....

There's an incredibly fascinating and illuminating book called The Human Faces of God: What Scripture Reveals When It Gets God Wrong (And Why Inerrancy Tries to Hide It) that has a whole chapter devoted to polytheism. ...

Heavy on the Hebrew and linguistic side of things but this article discusses the verses in question at length:
http://digitalcommons.liberty.edu/cgi/v … s_fac_pubs

But that author is just arguing (rather unsuccessfully in my opinion) that Yahweh and El are one god in two specific passages. He completely concedes that they were separate gods at an earlier time.

Warning: I'm probably rewriting this post as you read it.

Zarban's House of Commentaries

Re: Is there a God and why?

Sam F wrote:

You may disagree, but an opinion on what is good or bad based on a morality that has no ultimate grounding in anything but fallible human reasoning doesn't change what is truly good from biblical standards. If you don't accept those biblical standards of good and bad, you don't accept the biblical God and that opinion of Him is therefore pointless anyway.

I'm glad that in the 21st century we DON'T take our morality from the Bible. What a barbarous world it would be. The Bible does't contain a single prohibition against slavery, but plenty of prescriptions of how to treat and punish your slave.

It's indicative that when Christianity was completely dominant throughout Europe (the Church was effectively a totalitarian regime) about 1000 years ago, we had very short harsh lives, no rights for women, gays, minorities, arbitrary cruel punishments, slavery, massive entrenched inequality, no democracy, etc. Dark Ages.

Only when the power of religion waned in the Enlightenment, did people start to experience an improvement in their well-being. Longer lives, more rights, a say in government, reduced violence, equality, etc. This was due to science, and yes, 'fallible' human reasoning. Yes, it's 3 steps forward, 2 back, but nevertheless, we worked it out for ourselves, rather than relying on a text written in the Middle Eastern iron age. The most progressive societies today are the least religious e.g. Sweden, Norway, Finland, etc - with the best statistics in literacy, health, education, equality, fair wealth distribution, low crime rates, etc.

not long to go now...

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Re: Is there a God and why?

pastormacman wrote:

I suppose if your stance is only based upon what you have reasoned then it's logical to consider that a new argument could change it. However, my stance is not only based on what I've reasoned, but also what I've lived and experienced. And in life, experience usually trumps reason. You can think, and reason, and calculate all you want, but in the end the real world is what you experience.

I'd suggest it goes a little deeper than that; assessment and evaluation of experience is an important part of learning. If reasoning doesn't match experience, it could be time to assess what led to the error reasoning, and reevaluate. I think that this is what Mike's discussing here - an argument can change an atheists position if it provides a more rational, evidence-based reason for an action or effect.

I'm open to the idea of a god, or multiple gods, but have yet to find a compelling argument in their favour. I don't accept that I'm simply not looking hard enough, or listening well enough, in fact I'd argue the opposite.

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Sam F wrote:
Darth Praxus wrote:
Sam F wrote:

I'm gonna defer to Romans 1:18-20 on that one. The evidence we've got is plenty. You may not accept the evidence, but that doesn't mean it's not there.

Regardless of whether it's "enough" or not, you can't deny that God gave (allegedly) far more evidence to a bunch of illiterate first-century Palestinians.

I don't understand what illiteracy has to do with it, and I also don't see how that makes Him a crappy God. We don't deserve any grace at all, so the fact that He's done anything for any of us shows his compassion. He's not going to save everyone, plain and simple; and it's not fair, only because none of us deserve it. The fair thing would be to let us all suffer.

Whenever people bring up how none of us deserves His compassion, we all deserve to burn, etc. etc., I really do wonder: why can't He just do what He commands us to do and just forgive? Why all this pointless rigamarole with the cross and salvation that ensures that some will burn, rather than just Him doing what we're ordered to do?

SamF wrote:

You may disagree, but an opinion on what is good or bad based on a morality that has no ultimate grounding in anything but fallible human reasoning doesn't change what is truly good from biblical standards. If you don't accept those biblical standards of good and bad, you don't accept the biblical God and that opinion of Him is therefore pointless anyway.

That's crap. To go along with avatar's argument, the Bible never condems slavery, rather openly endorsing it. Are you going to tell me humans were making a faulty moral statement when they decided slavery was wrong?

Last edited by Abbie (2014-01-04 17:40:32)

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Re: Is there a God and why?

All this talk of 'he's not going to save everyone' annoys me when there are little kids all over the world suffering or dying. Where is the sense in that? You can say we don't deserve his compassion but when shit like that happens, he just seems like a bit of a dick to me. hmm

Last edited by Jimmy B (2013-12-31 23:07:02)

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Jimmy B wrote:

All this talk of 'he's not going to save everyone' annoys me when there are little kids all over the world suffering or dying. Where is the sense in that? You can say we don't deserve his compassion but when shit like that happens, he just seems like a bit of a dick to me. hmm

I've never understood the idea of an infinitely powerful, benevolent, being that is like "Hmmm...you guys, yes, you guys...not so much. Oh! You guys haven't committed your lives to worshiping me? Well, I guess you can just just go die in a fire then."

Last edited by BigDamnArtist (2013-12-31 23:19:57)

ZangrethorDigital.ca

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Re: Is there a God and why?

pastormacman wrote:

And in life, experience usually trumps reason. You can think, and reason, and calculate all you want, but in the end the real world is what you experience.

And this is fascinating to me, because I believe the exact opposite.  As some folks (and I) like to say "The plural of "anecdote" is not "data".   And any prosecutor would trade ten eyewitness testimonies for one solid DNA result or clear fingerprint.

If I chose my beliefs based on experience, then - for example - I would believe Henry Cavill can fly.  Because I SAW HIM DO IT.   But reason tells me that he probably can't fly, because that contradicts every bit of relevant knowledge that we humans have accumulated thus far.    It's not "truth" unless it's true for everyone.   And the consensus is that Cavill doesn't actually fly, it was an illusion.  And there's actually a plausible real-world explanation for what I experienced - one that fits with the rest of the reality we all share.

Although I suppose I could then argue that all this talk about "visual effects" is merely an attempt by Satan to test my faith.   Spare me your "logic".  I saw the man fly, end of story!    And I am entitled to that belief in our society. 

But how much stock would you put in my decision-making abilities then?    Here, have a cookie.  ELVES MAKE THEM!

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Jimmy B wrote:

All this talk of 'he's not going to save everyone' annoys me when there are little kids all over the world suffering or dying. Where is the sense in that? You can say we don't deserve his compassion but when shit like that happens, he just seems like a bit of a dick to me. hmm

You also have to wonder why he lets children be born to parents of the "wrong" faith, as they're almost guaranteed to never convert and thus are doomed to hell from the start. Or why, pre-Jesus, he made no attempt to get non-Jews into heaven.

Actually, there was a strain of Christian thought at one time which said you were only doomed to hell if you had heard of Jesus and didn't convert. Thus, those with this view were against missionary work, as it would only send most of those heathen natives to hell, where as if you didn't introduce them to Christ God would send those who had lived good lives somewhere else.

I write stories! With words!
http://www.asstr.org/~Invid_Fan/

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Trey wrote:
pastormacman wrote:

And in life, experience usually trumps reason. You can think, and reason, and calculate all you want, but in the end the real world is what you experience.

And this is fascinating to me, because I believe the exact opposite.  As some folks (and I) like to say "The plural of "anecdote" is not "data".   And any prosecutor would trade ten eyewitness testimonies for one solid DNA result or clear fingerprint.

If I chose my beliefs based on experience, then - for example - I would believe Henry Cavill can fly.  Because I SAW HIM DO IT.   But reason tells me that he probably can't fly, because that contradicts every bit of relevant knowledge that we humans have accumulated thus far.    It's not "truth" unless it's true for everyone.   And the consensus is that Cavill doesn't actually fly, it was an illusion.  And there's actually a plausible real-world explanation for what I experienced - one that fits with the rest of the reality we all share.

Although I suppose I could then argue that all this talk about "visual effects" is merely an attempt by Satan to test my faith.   Spare me your "logic".  I saw the man fly, end of story!    And I am entitled to that belief in our society. 

But how much stock would you put in my decision-making abilities then?    Here, have a cookie.  ELVES MAKE THEM!

I'm mostly staying out of this thread, but I will say that this is what it ultimately comes down to for me. The Bible is proof of God like Harry Potter is proof of Dumbledore.

"But what about historical evidence of Jesus?" Yes, it's true that a man named Jesus most likely existed during that time period. There's historical evidence of Abraham Lincoln too, but I don't believe that he was a vampire hunter just because some book said so. And nothing else in the historical record indicates that vampires fought in the Civil War.

"The Doctor is Submarining through our brains." --Teague

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Re: Is there a God and why?

avatar wrote:

It's indicative that when Christianity was completely dominant throughout Europe (the Church was effectively a totalitarian regime) about 1000 years ago, we had very short harsh lives, no rights for women, gays, minorities, arbitrary cruel punishments, slavery, massive entrenched inequality, no democracy, etc. Dark Ages

Yes, a corrupt religious regime can have that affect. The Papacy of 1000 years ago was extremely corrupt. I don't really keep up on the current one, I don't subscribe to it at all. The idea of a papacy is an unbiblical concept in the first place.

Ungodly crimes have been committed the name of God, just as many more horrible crimes have been committed by atheist rulers like Stalin and Mao Zedong. But you can't judge a faith by its worst so-called adherents. Ananias and Sapphira (Acts 5:1-11) are a testament to that.

Darth Praxus wrote:

Whenever people bring up how none of us deserves His compassion, we all deserve to burn, etc. etc., I really do wonder: why can't He just do what He commands us to do and just forgive? Why all this pointless rigamarole with the cross and salvation that ensures that some will burn, rather than just Him doing what we're ordered to do

Because although He is a loving God, he is also a perfectly JUST God. He can't let evil go without punishment. It must be paid for. That's why Jesus came as a man - to pay our fine with the sacrifice of His perfect and sinless life.

Well, I'm off to a new year's party. Wish I had time to talk about slavery and such, maybe some other time.

Happy New Year everybody!

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Re: Is there a God and why?

SamF wrote:
Darth Praxus wrote:

Whenever people bring up how none of us deserves His compassion, we all deserve to burn, etc. etc., I really do wonder: why can't He just do what He commands us to do and just forgive? Why all this pointless rigamarole with the cross and salvation that ensures that some will burn, rather than just Him doing what we're ordered to do

Because although He is a loving God, he is also a perfectly JUST God. He can't let evil go without punishment. It must be paid for. That's why Jesus came as a man - to pay our fine with the sacrifice of His perfect and sinless life.

So, by that logic, God specifically ordered His followers to regularly perform an unjust deed? Seems we have a problem, doesn't it?

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Sam F wrote:

Because although He is a loving God, he is also a perfectly JUST God. He can't let evil go without punishment. It must be paid for. That's why Jesus came as a man - to pay our fine with the sacrifice of His perfect and sinless life.

Which is completely unjust and thus fails to make sense of this senseless premise. Punishing an innocent person for other people's crimes is as much a violation of "justice" as simply not punishing anyone and wiping the slate clean -- in fact, it's more unjust since in the latter case no one is suffering. Either way he's breaking the rules; to insist that it doesn't count unless there's murder is the sign of a lunatic, not a loving being.

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Sam F wrote:


Because although He is a loving God, he is also a perfectly JUST God. He can't let evil go without punishment. It must be paid for. That's why Jesus came as a man - to pay our fine with the sacrifice of His perfect and sinless life.

Again, though, this doesn't explain the number of children suffering and or dying every year. What evil are they getting punished for? That sort of thing really doesn't seem just to me.

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Sam F wrote:

Because although He is a loving God, he is also a perfectly JUST God. He can't let evil go without punishment. It must be paid for. That's why Jesus came as a man - to pay our fine with the sacrifice of His perfect and sinless life.

This being the same god who decided all of humanity (that he created) was evil because one chick ate an apple? And therefore no longer worthy of his love unless we redeemed ourselves by prostrating before him?

ZangrethorDigital.ca

Re: Is there a God and why?

Like I have said in the past, I don't care what people believe, it's up to you but going by what God does (or doesn't do) for humanity makes me realise that I am probably more compassionate towards the human race than he is.....

Last edited by Jimmy B (2013-12-31 23:45:40)

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Re: Is there a God and why?

BigDamnArtist wrote:
Sam F wrote:

Because although He is a loving God, he is also a perfectly JUST God. He can't let evil go without punishment. It must be paid for. That's why Jesus came as a man - to pay our fine with the sacrifice of His perfect and sinless life.

This being the same god who decided all of humanity (that he created) was evil because one chick ate an apple? And therefore no longer worthy of his love unless we redeemed ourselves by prostrating before him?

Of course, the fun part of that story is that Adam and Eve didn't know it was wrong to disobey God UNTIL they ate the apple, and learned about right and wrong.

I write stories! With words!
http://www.asstr.org/~Invid_Fan/

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Re: Is there a God and why?

See, THIS part of Christian belief I have no argument with at all.   

Let's assume there IS a God.  Let's even assume that it's the Christian God, who really did do all that stuff in the books.   So, we're talking about a being that is capable of creating universes.  How the hell can we know what that thing is thinking, and why?  It's just like Dr. Manhattan - it lives an existence that we can't comprehend.  Who the hell knows how it defines "morality"?

If we could poll ten housecats I bet we'd find they believe that humans are all-powerful, but immoral. Because humans can put food in the dish but they don't always put food in the dish and that is totally fucked up.

So if God is real, then I am completely on board with the argument "you can't comprehend what he wants or why he does the things he does".    But in the end, so what?  Because I don't think he is real.

Re: Is there a God and why?

Trey wrote:

Let's assume there IS a God.  Let's even assume that it's the Christian God, who really did do all that stuff in the books.   So, we're talking about a being that is capable of creating universes.  How the hell can we know what that thing is thinking, and why?  It's just like Dr. Manhattan - it lives an existence that we can't comprehend.  Who the hell knows how it defines "morality"?

Sure, but then what's the point of trying to please it or argue about it? If everything it does is of its own incomprehensible whims then it might just as well be a hurricane or other force of nature and is best ignored unless it is actively involving itself.

Which, indeed, explains cats.

Trey wrote:

So if God is real, then I am completely on board with the argument "you can't comprehend what he wants or why he does the things he does".

Which I would be fine with if that argument didn't always appear after the person making it has gone to great lengths to explain what he wants and why he does the things he does and how those things can absolutely be known, only jumping to the "incomprehensible" gambit when someone points out that they're talking gibberish.

EDIT: This does actually show up in the Bible, of course, in the story of Job. God completely ruins Job's life to win a bet with the devil, and when Job asks him why God pretty much says "Fuck you, you don't know me."

Which, I mean, fair enough, but then fuck you too buddy.

Last edited by Dorkman (2014-01-01 00:10:32)

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Re: Is there a God and why?

Dorkman wrote:

Sure, but then what's the point of trying to please it or argue about it?

That WAS my point.  That there's no point to arguing the morality of a thing like that.

But arguing whether there's evidence of its existence at all, that's where the ground is much more solid. smile

EDIT: As for pleasing it, I started by saying Let's assume it is the Christian God.  Which would make Sam and pastormacman right, that He made rules for us and wants us to follow them.  And I sure as hell would, and never mind whether they make sense to ME.    No more haircuts and where can I get some slaves, let's DO this!

Like Ricky Gervais said when asked "What would you do if someone gave you absolute proof there is a God?"  I'd worship him.

However, that actually has to happen.  Until then, I'm gonna go about my bidness. smile

Re: Is there a God and why?

100 billion visible galaxies, each with hundreds of billions of stars, each with many planets.

And the Creator of all that is supposed to care which hole you stick it in?

http://webodysseum.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/universe_hubble.jpg

not long to go now...

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