(click image for larger, more easily readable version)
What point are you trying to make?
(click image for larger, more easily readable version)
What point are you trying to make?
What point are you trying to make?
So the bible says the earth is 5000 years old but science tells us it is very much older, we are still supposed to believe the bible is the correct and only alternative to the existence of the universe and the origin of life?
except that's completely untrue.
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Beorhthelm, I'm not sure what your point is. You don't tackle a question only relating whether something exists by defining it, first you establish if it exists and then you define it. The very concept of defining a creator God is most likely a fruitless exercise, as our powers of conception and perception are only those which that God would have given us. The mistake a lot of religions seem to make is that they try and compartmentalise their God and try to characterise that God as loving, liberal, conservative, inclusive, exclusive etc etc. The reality is that if there is one creator God then all those ideas and concepts were God's invention and that God probably see's good and value in everything. Just as God created people who see the good in tradition and discipline and order he created people who see good in freedom and equality and liberty. All of this is irrelevant to the question 'does God exist?'
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There is evidence throughout the world of God’s hands and purpose, the Bible even says so itself in Romans 1.
A Creator God, if He exists, must, by definition, exist beyond the limits of the universe in order to have created it. The laws of physics tell us that we cannot make measurements beyond the limits of this universe. Therefore, scientists can conclusively determine that we cannot ever detect God using any of our instruments.
Scientists have always recognised the plausibility of God, many see the idea of God as a crucial part of how they do their work and see the world. The idea that science and religion are somehow in opposition to one another is laughable.
The world is rationally and beautiful structured, ordered and intricate its a natural feeling to think that there is a mind behind it. I simply find Christianity the most intellectually and emotionally satisfying explanation. I do not claim is that my religious belief, or anyone's, can meet a scientific test. My experience of God has been regular, consistent, irrefutable and matches with the same experiences of so many others I've met or spoken to.
There's an astrophysicist called Hugh Ross who puts it into better words than I ever could:
"My observation that the Bible's multiple creation narratives accurately describe hundreds of details discovered much later, and that it consistently places them in the scientifically correct sequence, convinced me all the more that the Bible must be the supernaturally inspired word of God. Discoveries in astronomy first alerted me to the existence of God, and to this day the Bible's power to anticipate scientific discoveries and predict sociopolitical events ranks as a major reason for my belief in the God of the Bible. Despite my secular upbringing, I cannot ignore the compelling evidence emerging from research into the origin of the universe, the anthropic principle, the origin of life and the origin of humanity. The accumulating evidence continues to point compellingly towards the God of the Bible"
Sorry for the long post but lots of people have made comments that I wanted to address
Bit of a heavy subject to make my NSC bow
And as for One Love's 'spiritual experience'. So what. A non-tangible experience you can not describe, that no one else experienced and that you can provide no proof for other than your unsupported word.
Meaningless, other than to yourself.
Could you explain the rational and beautiful structure at work in the Japanese earthquake and tsunami?
The BIBLE seems to think that this one god DOES, but humans have existed for THOUSANDS of years BEFORE that book came about. And they worshipped all KINDS of gods before then.
GOD.
Your figure is completely wrong, studies have shown that between 39% and 52%* of scientists don't believe a God. One pattern across these is that a very small percentage actually consider themselves atheists despite not believing in a God.
Lets not play scientist top trumps, would hate to pull out my faraday, mendel, kelvin, planck, newton, pascal, descartes, bacon, copernicus, galileo and einstein quotes
*the question for this one was actually 'do affiliate yourself with a religious group' so a bit different
I agree completely.
I'm not trying to prove anything to anyone which I have told you many times before.
Please stop feeling challenged by my experiences.
I'm actually not challenged tbh. I can already see you are a highly intelligent person and I suspect I would rather enjoy meeting you for a pint and a chat - no joke. I just find it somewhat strange that you believe in an intangible entity based on no more than a feeling you once had.
Beorhthelm, I'm not sure what your point is.
It wasn't an apocalyptic event. We know the human race is trying so hard to destroy everything.