Right, to discuss cr05's idea first, because I promised.
I asked the very same question in Scripture lessons. "What happens to people who died prior to the birth of Christ? Or even those who die without hearing about Jesus today?" The answer that I was given isn't one that would be conceived as rational by many standards. In John 14:6 it says that mankind cannot be saved apart from the obedience of faith in Jesus Christ. It is also said that God will reveal himself to those that seek him. In a similar vein, it can be extracted that for example, missionaries do not find heathens and pass on the good news, but God orchaestrated the meeting so that those heathens can learn about God. God cannot be reduced to human philosophising, and has to be taken as a matter of faith.
In summary? Those who wanted to learn about God, did learn about him.
mitochondria said:
But I just couldn't help myself to raise yet more questions since I found some of the things you proposed are predictive (for me, as I have very pronounced memories of this kind of conversations) and stereotpyical.. (please don't misunderstand me, I do take as a fact that you are as unique as the novelty of your arguments.. I will come back to that later..)
You found my responces predictable because, I will admit it, they were not truly mine.
Most of what I say in my posts have surely been addressed (in sharper and more scholarly detail) by others before me. I'm not a philosopher, a millitant supporter of freethought, or an epistemologist, I wasn't hoping to spring some novel answer to age old questions. I just hope I've given some people here some food for thought.
However, what more we have with our parents is a physical bond, our flesh, our blood, are all part of them - and we can identify physically, and hence make logical judgements that we are part of them. Whereas our closest relationship with God (sorry if I am making wrong assumptions) is by praying and to understand Him we read "recounts" (I do not totally agree on using the word "recount".. At least not yet) about Him.
Hmm... you raise a very valid argument. Let me answer you this way; you do accept the fact that your parents had parents and that they too share the same physical and biological ties that you now have with your parents?
Say 200 such generations ago... you can imagine that your ancestor had a biological and physical bond to their parents. The echoes of this past relationship are still reflected in the colour of your skin or the shape of your ears.
Yet, do you remember these ancestors, those which you inherited your genetic structure from? Do you know what acts they did when they lived? Or what kind of people they were? It is not that you have no ties to these ancestors - science has told us this - but that through time your feeling of a 'connection' to these people were lost. My father's mother passed away before I was born, so I never had the opportunity to meet her and get to know her. But I learn that she was a chef and what her food tasted like and how skilled her needlework was, all things that my father told me because he -knew- what person she was. The closest relationship you have to your ancestors is through someone else, but my father tells me that my grandmother still watches over us and we can still talk to her and know she is listening.
We were all created in the image of God. But what -does- He look like? Does he have two arms, two legs and five fingers on each hand like we do?
We have forgotten all this, though sometime in the past someone once knew. And they've told us all that they remember. Mark made such efforts to record exactly who Jesus was and what he did when he walked among us: "Not long afterward Jesus came from Nazareth in the province of Galilee, and was baptized by John in the Jordan. As soon as Jesus came up out of the water, he saw heaven opening and the Spirit coming down on him like a dove. And a voice came from heaven, "You are my own dear Son. I am pleased with you."" I am sure you recognise where this passage is from and what event it documented.
Thus, drawing the two threads together, our knowledge of God is like our knowledge of our ancestors - we have forgotten who He is even though He is still present in each and every one of us and everything we see (the pattern of his making is like DNA), we know only of Him through what others tell us, and it is believed that He is still with us and watching over us and that when we talk to him He will be listening.
For me, a Catholic, it is not just a matter of faith. It is a matter of fact. Who and what I am today is entirely because of Him, and I have both a spiritual and physical connection to him. -We- all have a physical connection to him, but I guess the spiritual bond is one that some have and others lack (just like, sadly, the bonds between parents and children).
However, I also want to point out that those people might be a little bit too extreme. No matter what message of goodness they want to bring across to other people, not noticable by themselves, they appear to have no respect for what other people believe in.. And this absurd close-mindedness is part the reason for this series of questions..
That is one of the most unfortunate side-products of religion. But like science experiments, the one limitation that one cannot erase is the human margin of error. I have total respect for what others believe in, but I also believe that a great many of those people are wrong.
To illustrate:
I insist that fish can read minds. There is nothing that would persuade me otherwise, it was what I was brought up to believe and I have found concrete evidence to prove it. Just last week I brought a live tuna home for dinner, and I left it next to the stove and then fell asleep and forgot to cook dinner. I woke up hungry and to my surprise the tuna was lying in the pan, cooking itself. Yes, I know it takes a leap of faith to believe this, but I truly truly believe it was a sign.
Well... ahem... my purpose there was to create a story that is hard to believe. To many religious extremist, I think they may view science or other religions in a similar vein. I am not condoning some blatantly separatist religion actions (Vatican responces in past centuries have not been exactly model Catholic practice) but I again stress the limitation in all human endeavours - sometimes even one's faith succombs to one's ambition, or greed, or self-righteousness. It is, I am afraid, unavoidable. But I might add, I would like you to find any 'just' cause in society that isn't guilty of this.
I have strong feelings towards my parents, but I just cannot simply accept the fact that there is a higher-entity watching over me. Everyone wants to be love.. but let me ask you another question: "Why does cyber love fail?" (referring to those that involve no physical contact). If I am ever to be loved, I would prefer that the person who loves me can approach me physically. If I am ever to be loved, I would prefer the person who loves me help me with her own hands and thoughts. If I am ever to be loved, I would not let someone who borrows another being to love me - and claim it as her own.
I understand where you're coming from. However, God did not borrow another being to love you. He sent Jesus because he was the -embodiment- of God's love for mankind. Jesus walked among us, human just like any other one of us, to explain to us how to live our lives and to love God in return. And in the end, He sent him to show us the fallibility of the human itself. He was an example to mankind about how a person, made of flesh and bone, should live.
Accepting as a fact and accepting because of plausible evidence are different.. In my previous post I have mentioned that so many people are raised that way therefore they take that a higher entity exists "as a fact".. Wouldn't that be contradictive to the way we think? We make judgements and tell whether something is right or wrong based on evidence. Would you believe me if I tell you that there is an immortal creature by the name of
edanomel without showing you the actual creature? I almost certainly wouldn't if I were you
Human logic... like humans is not unfallible. In human perception and analysis, there is so much room for error. Yes, I was raised Catholic, and many are. And so I understand your argument about being conditioned into believing in God as fact, but I cannot conceivably accept it. Would I still have the beliefs I have today if I were raised by atheist or agnostic parents? - I don't know. The fact is, like you said, if you told me that such a creature existed I wouldn't believe you. But God told me to trust him, so I do. I wake up every day accepting the path he wants me to take. Yeah, psychoanalyse me: it must be because I need structure in life, so I'm prepared to believe in something without concrete evidence. I feel lost and alone and I need to feel as if there's a guiding hand.
"Trust in the Lord with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding. In all thy ways acknowledge him, and he shall direct thy paths." Proverbs 3:5 & 6
But the fact is... prove God -doesn't- exist. Even science hasn't managed to do this (maybe if it just gets more funding...
).
We have ceased to be impressed by miracles because the more we know about the world around us, the less miracles appeal to us. However, that does not mean only people who have spiritual contacts can percieve beyond the ordinary. I love music, I love languages, I love Science - and what they make me feel is no less than miracles. But is it really necessary to have this someone to govern everything? For example, I love jazz pianist Bill Evans' music and he brings miracles in the form of music to me. Bill Evans is who he is, he is an individual and his musical talent is his own - not given by anyone. Or for instance, I like Lainee because of who she is, and as a creation of someone.
Thanks. I think.
One question: Why is it so unbelievable that God grants each one of us gifts?
I had doubts on whether Dan Brown himself is a question so I ended up finding this on this official website:
Well.. that kept me silent for a while and tried to comtemplate whether "by attempting to rigidly classify ethereal concepts like faith, we [will really] end up debating semantics to the point where we entirely miss the obvious--that is, that we are all trying to decipher life's big mysteries, and we're each following our own paths of enlightenment." But then I don't think we are debating
I got carried away for a while.. but I think I am just trying to understand your believes
So let's carry on..
Understand my beliefs? I think I lose a bit of meaning when I try to convey what I believe, it's really quite difficult to explain a feeling. How would you answer it if I asked you to explain 'happiness'?
I tried my best to explain though, and I'm glad that you're keeping a degree of open-mindedness as well.
If I were a creator of humanity, I would still let them to "learn to skate on their own".. I would let them feel pain and sadness, but not to the point that they suffer.. Take for example - the Tsunami.. was that necessary? I almost certainly would not destroy such wonder things I have created, no matter how much they defy me, or how much they try to distant from me.
If I ever have children, I will always look after and love them no matter what they do - and try my best to teach them to love other people as well as themselves. That gives me another anology - would you hit your child when she is ill-behaved? (Yes.. I am implying something here)
Parenting is a difficult task (as documented by the wide and rather redundant selection of parenting guides available). Does a parent need to have their child fear them in some degree to afford respect? From your analogy I would assume your answer would be 'no'. The fact is that we fall and fall and scrape our knees, break an arm, crack our skulls and we still have learnt nothing. God is waiting for us to just follow the rules he set out for us, we just have been too busy arguing over who gets the bigger skateboard and who has a bigger skateboard than us and how we should steal their skateboard.
What is the will of God? Well, one that we obey him. Love one another. Obey your parents. Do not lie. Etc. Etc. Those are the rules, we have the instructions - why aren't we following them? Let's just say... and God help me if I'm totally out of line... but why not just try following those rules first before we complain that God is so unfair towards us.
I have this hypothesis that spiritual believes could have once been used as a tool to manipulate people.. Who uneducated people would fight against a spiritual entity? As I have pointed out before, lack of education, together with wars and the absence of scientific udnerstanding on nature (say, weather is the best example) - what would be more powerful than creating a spiritual entity to motivate these people?
True and true. Christianality could be the biggest hoax and most widely believed hoax that was ever invented. It could've been created by people who had nothing better to do than invent some dude called Jesus who turned water into wine, and brought the dead to life. It could've been created by people who thought religion was the best way to control people, and thus is a good tool to gain power.
But just ask yourself, would you rather live in a world without science or without religion? Is one destined to rule the other obsolete?
If science answers all worldly questions then why still do people turn to religion? Is it because we refuse to accept the obvious? If so, I think we are experiencing a case of what would be medically termed mass delusion.
(by the way
.. do you happen to know how old the bible is on top of your head? I googled a bit.. and some people say the first book - Book of Genesis was written in around 15 B.C... but some sources says the Bible is about 4000-6000 years old..
sorry about the side-track
)
That's quite okay.
The Old Testament is also part of the Jewish scriptures is believed to be Jewish 'canon' from around 200 BC to 200 AD. The oldest book of the bible is the 'Book of Moses' or the Torah, written in Hebrew, and traditionally Christianity and Judaism believe that this was written by Moses himself and thus the time given. Someone explained all this to me before, but quite frankly, I've forgotten it all. I'll see what I can find and will report back on this.
I promise that I will reconsider what I believe religion is, and I would like to ask you to do the same thing for your religion and your believes
Thankyou, and I will. I have tried, so far, to step back from my beliefs and look at things critically. But it's like looking in the mirror and trying to imagine where your heart, lungs, liver etc would be.
As for the reference to homosexuality.. I recall someone telling me that the Bible says that homosexuality is wrong. Well.. I really can't help but say that this is just wrong.. The church "just doesn't like it" and there are no excuses..
Conservative and liberal Christians interpret the Bible in very different ways. This results in two contradictory sets of interpretations on just about every conceivable topic. Homosexuality is no exception.
Personally, I would consider myself a liberal Christian. And as such I do believe in same-sex marriage, protection against discrimination, equal protection under hate-crime legislation and so forth are fundamental human rights issues. I don't accept the conservative view that homosexual behaviour is always a serious sin. I read somewhere once that there are people who suggest that three homosexual couples are written about in the Bible. These are Ruth and Naomi, David and Jonathan and, Daniel and Ashpenaz. (If anyone is interested in this aspect, I made some notes on it once and will PM or email you it just to save space here cause I'm writing way too much.
)
Please don't mind me saying this - there are too many intelligent and intelligible people like you defending religions, and since the more intelligent a person is, the better she is skilled at debats/litigation/convincing someone, and the better religions can sustain in speculations about the trueness of what they believe in.
I think you may have succeeded in trapping me into a corner! I have tried my best to be analytical and intelligent about this discussion, but in no way have I tried to convince anyone anything! I cannot explain any of this to you otherwise, if I don't attempt to sound reasonable and analytical you would not read what I have to say. I could just have written "Go God! God rocks!". I am truly hurt that you're so paranoid that I, and other people, are just using our knowledge to trick you into believing us.
Truly!
I don't think I have taken any extremists into account (take Christians for example, I know very few who do not use God as an excuse to commit "sin" - because everytime they commit a sin they will just pray or confess to someone and think that it's over, and please don't deny, there are many people who do that.. It's just that they don't realise it themselves)
There are people who tattoo themselves with green scales, fork their tongue and worship the snake god - need I say more?