Faith is simply defined as believing in something you can’t prove. That is what we, as Christians, do. Of course God can’t be proven any more than He can be disproven. It will always be a stalemate. You don’t need a philosophy degree to figure that one out.
Our faith dictates that God gives us the free will to choose Him-or not. He doesn’t belittle and berate us into choosing Him like one or two posters here seem to be doing to the atheists. Let us learn some charity. Evangelizing doesn’t call for hostility.
As a recent de-convert or ‘struggling’ Catholic (in the sense that struggling = not believing), this aspect has been extremely frustrating for me. I
do want to prove that god does or does not exist. It angers me that out of all things, the one that is
most important is the most
impossible to prove.
Where I might draw issue with you is when you say
‘It will always be a stalemate.’
The problem is that Christians along with every other religion in the world
doesn’t really believe this. Maybe you do, but I’d place a bet that if you currently believe (I noticed your ID says ‘struggling’), you don’t actually believe it’s a stalemate. You believe that you’ve found the truth and have it securely.
A lot of atheists might agree that it’s a stalemate, but have issue with making political decisions based on the opposing side of the stalemate. Namely in matters that are the current ‘hot buttons’ (e.g. homosexuality, birth control, abortion, and creationism/ID).
What do you think about that? I imagine that in the public sphere you would reject, say, same-sex marriage. But why? At some level you’ll resort to (internally but perhaps not verbally) it being what god intended… or perhaps if god’s will isn’t so easily accepted, one will turn to natural points like: obviously we were born this way, something about the government only supporting couples that can bear children, etc.
But what if science can identify genetic tendencies such that it’s simply in the human makeup to be homo/heterosexual (hint: they can)? What if it’s not as much about choice such as most religious like to make it out to be? What then? Now it becomes much more on the level of restricting love of one art form vs. another, stopping someone who just loves ice cream, or what have you. I’m being slightly facetious as I realize sexual matters are of more gravity than ice cream, but the point is that it becomes a
preferential matter rather than an intentional abhorrence resulting from the will and disregard for god’s commands.
Anyway, that was one long post to simply challenge you on the ‘stalemate’ hypothesis. It’s stated and used… but no one seems to believe it.
An atheist would simply point out that without any
positive evidence, there’s no justification for believe whatsoever. That will bring us to an analysis of the resurrection, miracles, scripture, and the like which is why people write books.