(edited: Previously directed to the wrong guy)
Bodyless
I can remember another possible answer:
God, altough He would like you to believe, made it possible that you don't:
- By not giving you full knowledge of everything
- By generally only hinting His existence.
Also, the Biblical God didn't established any particular deadline for people to get to know Him. And you will find in the Bible plenty of references to the fact that no-one (other than Jesus, and that is in the New Testament) really knows God in all His reality. How can, such a statement be coherent with the notion that God really want us to know Him? The point in the answer to such a question rests of the When and of the How. And that, the Bible is not the least clear about.
Believing in an afterlife also helps a bit, when a Christian tries to reason with the question of When and How.
Bodyless
I can remember another possible answer:
God, altough He would like you to believe, made it possible that you don't:
- By not giving you full knowledge of everything
- By generally only hinting His existence.
Also, the Biblical God didn't established any particular deadline for people to get to know Him. And you will find in the Bible plenty of references to the fact that no-one (other than Jesus, and that is in the New Testament) really knows God in all His reality. How can, such a statement be coherent with the notion that God really want us to know Him? The point in the answer to such a question rests of the When and of the How. And that, the Bible is not the least clear about.
Believing in an afterlife also helps a bit, when a Christian tries to reason with the question of When and How.
Comment