Ziggy Stardust
Absolutely Sane
Atheistic Hypothetical Theism.
I've been remarking about this in other threads, but I think it's about time I start a dedicated thread about it to see whether I took a wrong turn in reasoning somewhere and not to trespass on those threads.
The reason for this train of thought was that people have a certain outlook on God and religion based on their personal experiences and background. Based on that and for the sake of the subject of this thread I am going to make two disclaimers. God's existence and it's characteristics cannot objectively be proven. If you have a problem with this, no worries, there are a host of other threads to vent any issues you might have with this. Second disclaimer is that I'm not arguing here: God is this or that. My conviction is still God's existence and characteristics are unknown. My argument is going to be: based on my personal experiences and those of others, it's not unreasonable to conclude that God could be like this.
One problem I faced was the many different ideas about God that exist. This is caused precisely because the interaction is a very personal one. If it's characteristics are determined by personal experiences, but there is only one God then it stands to reason that God presents itself in different ways to different people but is still the same god.
Next problem is a personal one. I'm an atheist. But I do allow for the possibility that God exists, however remote I might feel that possibility is. This is why I felt I needed to give this possibility a little more attention and see whether I could conjure up an image of God based on my own personal experiences, since this is the same way theist arrive at the way they see God. The one problem that becomes immediately apparent is, I have none of these personal experiences. So I'll need to incorporate that in my hypothetical theism. The same God who has manifested himself to others and sparked their religious believes has not manifested itself to me. When God has manifested himself to people, he has done so in many different ways and people have had varying spiritual experiences as a result of that.
So, based on that, I find it reasonable to conclude that if God exists, he wants some people to believe in him, he wants every person to experience him in different ways and take different things away from that interaction and he wants some people to be oblivious of his existence. For me personally this means that God has a reason for not being in contact with me. God knows me. It knows I will not take the word of others, however much spiritual authority they may claim to have. It knows I have been open to personal contact and tried to get in touch but got no response. Cruel as it may seem at the time, it would have it's reasons.
This does mean however that proselytizing is going against the will of God. Would someone convince me to believe in God, it would be without those personal experiences which people use as the base for their spirituality. In other words, I'd be 'damned' by people who try to 'save' me since I'd be going against what my personal experiences have revealed to me.
Does that make any sense … at all?
I've been remarking about this in other threads, but I think it's about time I start a dedicated thread about it to see whether I took a wrong turn in reasoning somewhere and not to trespass on those threads.
The reason for this train of thought was that people have a certain outlook on God and religion based on their personal experiences and background. Based on that and for the sake of the subject of this thread I am going to make two disclaimers. God's existence and it's characteristics cannot objectively be proven. If you have a problem with this, no worries, there are a host of other threads to vent any issues you might have with this. Second disclaimer is that I'm not arguing here: God is this or that. My conviction is still God's existence and characteristics are unknown. My argument is going to be: based on my personal experiences and those of others, it's not unreasonable to conclude that God could be like this.
One problem I faced was the many different ideas about God that exist. This is caused precisely because the interaction is a very personal one. If it's characteristics are determined by personal experiences, but there is only one God then it stands to reason that God presents itself in different ways to different people but is still the same god.
Next problem is a personal one. I'm an atheist. But I do allow for the possibility that God exists, however remote I might feel that possibility is. This is why I felt I needed to give this possibility a little more attention and see whether I could conjure up an image of God based on my own personal experiences, since this is the same way theist arrive at the way they see God. The one problem that becomes immediately apparent is, I have none of these personal experiences. So I'll need to incorporate that in my hypothetical theism. The same God who has manifested himself to others and sparked their religious believes has not manifested itself to me. When God has manifested himself to people, he has done so in many different ways and people have had varying spiritual experiences as a result of that.
So, based on that, I find it reasonable to conclude that if God exists, he wants some people to believe in him, he wants every person to experience him in different ways and take different things away from that interaction and he wants some people to be oblivious of his existence. For me personally this means that God has a reason for not being in contact with me. God knows me. It knows I will not take the word of others, however much spiritual authority they may claim to have. It knows I have been open to personal contact and tried to get in touch but got no response. Cruel as it may seem at the time, it would have it's reasons.
This does mean however that proselytizing is going against the will of God. Would someone convince me to believe in God, it would be without those personal experiences which people use as the base for their spirituality. In other words, I'd be 'damned' by people who try to 'save' me since I'd be going against what my personal experiences have revealed to me.
Does that make any sense … at all?
