Originally posted by Elok
					
						
						
							
							
							
							
								
								
								
								
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Evangelical Protestants and the GOP
				
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Wouldn't a physical manifestation of god actually be a good thing then, because it would require people to confront reality and not hide behind their own picture of god? For those who believe in heaven and hell, that would seem to be especially important given the stakes.
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When you say things like, "I skimmed over it" and it looked like nonsense, it's obvious that you don't understand it.Originally posted by kentonio View PostFunny how whenever the religious get asked to justify or support their arguments about religion they always seem to resort to 'You just don't understand it!'. Have you ever stopped to think that maybe we do understand it and what we understand is that it doesn't actually make any sense when you strip away the pretty coverings?I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
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No, the last time He did that He got whacked by a gang of people offended because His real idea of piety trumped the fake one they'd invested so much time and energy in believing. Also it undermined their social status. Very few people really, truly, and in their innermost being want to do what God says. Even for them it's probably an evanescent thing that comes and goes. The rest of us may have a portion of that desire, but it's drowned out by vanity, resentment and laziness. The Christian life is a continual effort to train ourselves toward obedience.Originally posted by kentonio View PostWouldn't a physical manifestation of god actually be a good thing then, because it would require people to confront reality and not hide behind their own picture of god? For those who believe in heaven and hell, that would seem to be especially important given the stakes.
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Quite a bit both experientially and academically. Grew up CoE, checked out a number of religions and spiritual beliefs looking for something that could stand up to examination and found them all fundamantally wanting. I could very easily have been a religious person, but I cannot get over infinite regress and irreducable complexity.Originally posted by Jon Miller View PostHow much time have you spent trying to understand it?
Just 'academically', I am not even talking about 'experientially'.
JM
Although to be fair if I was religious it'd almost certainly be a form of deism. The ide aof a god interfering in the affairs of mankind is just too far out there.
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But that seems like you're saying christian life is a continual effort towards x but you don't want to be confronted by x because its too difficult?Originally posted by Elok View PostNo, the last time He did that He got whacked by a gang of people offended because His real idea of piety trumped the fake one they'd invested so much time and energy in believing. Also it undermined their social status. Very few people really, truly, and in their innermost being want to do what God says. Even for them it's probably an evanescent thing that comes and goes. The rest of us may have a portion of that desire, but it's drowned out by vanity, resentment and laziness. The Christian life is a continual effort to train ourselves toward obedience.
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Say we're currently in the process of weight training to get stronger. What you're suggesting amounts to throwing an anvil at us and saying "catch." Maybe some people have trained that hard, but most people would either shriek and get out of the way or be crushed flat.Originally posted by kentonio View PostBut that seems like you're saying christian life is a continual effort towards x but you don't want to be confronted by x because its too difficult?
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I actually think that, without any revelation/experiential knowledge, deism is the most rational position to hold.
Meaning no offense, but from your posts on apolyton I would not have guessed you had read any major theological works.
JMJon Miller-
I AM.CANADIAN
GENERATION 35: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation. Social experiment.
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Wait, isn't "irreducible complexity" just one of Michael Behe and company's sham arguments for creationism? Or does it mean something else?
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You're the one who says God doesn't exist because I can't study him under a microscope and figure out everything about him.Originally posted by kentonio View PostThanks Sigmund, anything else you want to tell me about what I think?
If you want to know about yourself, read the Bible. But you don't know your own self.I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
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I can kind of see that, but you could also argue that children would have a far easier life if god was demonstrable.Originally posted by Elok View PostSay we're currently in the process of weight training to get stronger. What you're suggesting amounts to throwing an anvil at us and saying "catch." Maybe some people have trained that hard, but most people would either shriek and get out of the way or be crushed flat.
Its used as an argument by the ID nutters, but it can also be used as an argument against a creator figure.Originally posted by Elok View PostWait, isn't "irreducible complexity" just one of Michael Behe and company's sham arguments for creationism? Or does it mean something else?
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Children rebel against authority just as much as anybody else.Originally posted by kentonio View PostI can kind of see that, but you could also argue that children would have a far easier life if god was demonstrable.
How? Are you talking about flaws in human anatomy, like the blind spot in the eye? Even that's not really "irreducible complexity," though...wait, are you talking about the argument that God must necessarily be even more complex than His creation, and so demands a creator Himself? That's a fine answer to the flawed argument from nature--a sort of debater's judo, using their own argument against them--but it depends on the assumption that our deductions about a thing are applicable to its maker.Its used as an argument by the ID nutters, but it can also be used as an argument against a creator figure.
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