warpus
Sommerswerd asked me to change this
Whether or not you believe or disbelieve in God, you are taking a leap of faith.
What leap of faith am I taking, as a weak atheist?
Whether or not you believe or disbelieve in God, you are taking a leap of faith.
Whether or not you believe or disbelieve in God, you are taking a leap of faith. Christians take that leap of faith hopefully based on the evidence that is presented to them. I agree that some (many in fact) Christians base their entire belief based on what the bible says and don't try to verify their belief with anything.
Moss said:But, what I meant was that for many Christians, they don't go around questioning God's existence, they believe in him through faith and reason and logic for those that actually use reason and logic. It is more of a test of faith for most Christians, however, that God is interacting with them in their everyday life.
Moss said:Not sure if I explained that any better...I'm not saying faith isn't important, I'm just saying that I think many non-believers give some Christians a bad rap for not using reason and logic.
Also, in regards to using reason and logic, as Plotinus has said many times in his Ask a Theologian thread, Catholics (and many other Christian denominations) agree that you should try to prove God's and Christ's existence through reason, logic, and empirical means.
On the other hand, Christians do have to take a leap of faith - because they essentially assume that God exists, for whatever reason, without there being sufficient reasons to establish their belief as one that is unreasonable not to hold.
What do you gain from preaching atheism
Yup. The same God that is at once everything and allthing. He (for some reason he definitely isn't a she...) is the beginning and the end.
At the same time he is Yahweh, God (all of the Catholic, Protestant, Jehovah's witnesses, Mormon, and cultish versions included) and Allah. He is also and isn't also Jesus and the Holy Spirit. He is always merciful, always vengeful, with unlimited love and never-ending hatred. He is extremely pity and extremely gracious, he's malevolent and magnanimous, never changing or going back on his word, but always changing and going back on his word.
He is omnipotent and omniscient, but is always surprised at the good and evil thoughts and acts that humans do. Which he didn't foresee when he made them. Even though he has planned how everything will work out from the beginning (Except the Tree of Knowledge-part. He knew that was going to happen, he made Lucifer/Satan (which is and isn't also the snake which did and didn't have legs while talking to Eve) and the humans and made the garden and put the tree and the humans and the snake there, but was shocked when it happened).
I should go on, but I'm bored. Go read the some "holy" scriptures if you want all the details...
It is implied that "their" god refers to the God of Abraham, rather than the solely Christian interpretation; after all, you would refer to the God worshipped by Methodists and assume that it would be understood to refer to be the same God worshipped by Catholics. What is meant is that it assumes that this particular deity exists, rather than, say, Zeus, Thor or Perun.You mean their God that is the same God as the Jewish and Muslim God?
More leg-room in heaven?What do you gain from preaching atheism
No. What do you gain from preaching atheism?What do you gain from preaching atheism
Not really; Jesus saw his religion as the fulfilment of Judaism, and himself as fully and entirely of that faith, while Buddha appeared to see his as superseding Hinduism.IIRC, Buddha was a Hindu just like Jesus was a Jew.
The same thing that'slostgained by preaching religion.
What do you gain from preaching atheism
The same thing that's lost by preaching religion.
Fixed. Religion in itself doesn't hurt anyone. Insensible religions do. But sensible religions don't. Don't mission where it is unnecessary.
I agree with your post. But I don't see how my response to his would need fixing.
I was just giving the question (as it is) a measured and symmetrical answer.
Religion is like a hammer. You can build a bridge with it, or use it to bash someone's skull. When you bash in someone's head with a hammer, the hammer is not to blame, but the one wielding it is. The same goes for Religion. It can be used for good things and it can be used to make people do bad things.Religion in itself doesn't hurt anyone. Insensible religions do. But sensible religions don't. Don't mission where it is unnecessary.
Religion is like a hammer. You can build a bridge with it, or use it to bash someone's skull. When you bash in someone's head with a hammer, the hammer is not to blame, but the one wielding it is. The same goes for Religion. It can be used for good things and it can be used to make people do bad things.