K
KindredSoul
Guest
Yeah, the forums really have a way of drawing you back into a discussion even though you could’ve sworn it was already over.Last post? Okay… I lied.
Ah…I understand this, and how deeply I empathize may surprise you. I have long admired the idea of a world in which everyone is truly convinced of the same ultimate truth. I have longed for certainty, absolute certainty, for a long time now. Even finding Chrsitianity as the most convincing possibility, this does not mean I don’t have doubts, or that sometimes the margin by which Christianity wins me over isn’t thin sometimes. Depending on my brain’s mood, sometimes I am not even as convinced of Christianity as I have been during this discussion. Faith can be difficult, even for one so willing to fight for it as I. That’s exactly what I look forward to in Heaven: An eternity of absolute certainty, the day when I will not need faith anymore, for I will know. Everyone will know. That unity of belief, that knowledge of the truth on the part of every last soul, will exist. You might only imagine how much I crave it; it is one of the major reasons I look forward to Heaven, only slightly behind the hope of a blissful eternal life for me and my loved ones and entering the Beatific Vision. In desiring certainty, we are alike, you and I, although our common desire definitely affects us in different ways.This is tempting to some degree. Alas, I’m just not there yet. My intellectual issues right now outweigh that part of me that wishes. I desire certitude. I desire everyone in the world to know the truth about this area, whatever it may be: no gods, one god, multiple gods, evil gods… whatever it may be, I want the whole world to know and be unified.
The strange thing is, that unity will, realistically speaking, never be ours if Atheism is true. There is nothing that could possibly, even conceivably, settle the question of Atheism being true for an absolute 100% certainty that would convince the whole world–or even the grand absolute 90%+ majority, since a universal negative in the natural world can at best be “proven” to only relative certainty. And as long as room for doubt remains in the least, no matter how small, a significant portion of people will most likely (based on how humans tend to behave and think) reject Atheism and opt for a more optimistic reality in which there is something more. Indeed, who can fault them, even if they are mistaken? So your hope for total unity can, realistically speaking, never be realized in that world. You would have no choice but to bid farewell to [practically] the very possibility of it. I’m not arguing against or criticizing Atheism with these words, just making a realistic prediction based on human behavior and the nature of universal negatives.
It is most likely true that your only hope for that unity is if a religious type of reality exists, especially one with some form of Eschatology in which, in some age to come, God (or whatever other deity) will reveal Himself definitely. If our religion, for example, is true, then one day the unity of belief and total certainty you wish for will come, guaranteed. It’s just a matter of waiting…and waiting can be hard, especially when the wait may literally be until beyond the grave and when the world as a whole may have to outwait one’s own personal lifetime. But such a reality is not merely our only hope for eternal happiness, it’s most likely our only hope even for your own dream to come true. And even though it may only commence after this mortal lifetime, in view of eternity the wait will definitely be worth it if such happy certainty is our reward. That thought is one more thing to encourage me to persevere in faith even when absolute certainty is lacking.
My heart goes out to you. It is my prayer that, no matter what the odds, you may seize upon just that opportunity. I don’t know how or when, but I pray that time will come.I would like nothing more than to have an opportunity to ‘bend my knee’ should Jesus be real. If he exists, I want to know that truth. Were I to be unable for whatever reason (personality, my criteria for belief, etc.) to bring myself to belief but my life was one of service and love to my fellows, I suppose I don’t exactly expect a god to allow me the opportunity to worship, but the hypothesis strikes me as fair. I have loved his creatures well and therefore would like the opportunity to love him if he exists.
CONTINUED…