Laurie wrote: I have thought about religious matters for 50 years and do not think the evidence for God’s existence is very strong.
“Evidence” suggests a scientific approach to God; this is one of the weakest and perhaps least successful methods.
What’s in a word? Evidence, justification for belief, reasons to believe, anything that backs up the belief… take your pick.After all if I said that I firmly believed in the Loch Ness monster, you would ask me for my ‘evidence’ ‘justification’ … You would think it seriously wierd if I just believed without any reason to think the belief true! I would not call this a scientific approach - just plain common sense
If you drop the word evidence and switch to an “approach” to God – much softer and suggests maybe you’re not the one in charge of the relationship, you might find this reading of some help:
But ‘approach’ [like the similar term ‘search’] implies there is a being to ‘approach’. Why should I assume that?
Blaise Pascal once wrote: “The heart has its order, the mind has its own, which uses principles and demonstrations. The heart has a different one. We do not prove that we ought to be loved by setting out in order the causes of love; that would be absurd. Jesus Christ and St. Paul possess the order of charity, not of the mind, for they wished to humble, not to teach.” (Pensées 298)
I do not understand the relevance of this quote. Until I believe there is a God the question of whether to love him or not does not arise. You cannot love a possibility.
Peter Kreeft has offered by way of interpretation: “It is a prejudice of rationalism (not reason) that rational order, the order of the mind, is the only kind of order. In fact, the heart’s order is just as much order, but a different kind. The head seeks truth, the heart seeks goodness. This is why reason’s order is that of a map or outline of truth, while the heart’s order is that of a journey to its goal, its heart’s desire….How can humbling be better than teaching? …**In regard to nature, the highest stage of knowledge is knowledge. But in regard to God and his images, the highest stage of knowledge is love. **We know God and man only by loving them.
Same comment, I am afraid.
St. Thomas says that it is better to know a stone than to love a stone but better to love God than to know God, because
love conform the lover to the beloved, while knowledge conforms the known object to the way-of-knowing of the knower. When we love a dog, we become more doggy, but when we know a dog, we raise it up to our own level: thought. When we know God we drag him down to our anthropomorphic level, we make God more humanoid than he really is; but when we love God, we are raised up more closely to his level, we become more God-like than we were (for ‘God is love’).”
Same comment - until I am given some reasons to think there is a God, how can I consider how he might be approached?
Don’t know if that makes any sense to you – it makes no sense to a materialist or a practitioner of scientism, I know that. I came to my knowledge of God existence through poetry, Scripture and Literature. The First Vatican Council, in the course of the document
Dei Filius declared “The one and true God, our Creator and Lord, can be known through the creation by the natural light of human reason.” I prefer Gerard Manley Hopkins magnificent sonnet celebrating the beauty of all things great and small:
payingattentiontothesky.com/2010/07/01/drawing-closer-to-the-heart-of-the-lord-gerard-manley-hopkins%e2%80%99-pied-beauty/
To convince me you would have to explain what it was that the poem or book said that convinced you. If you tell me that you just had a feeling, I would reply that I know of no reason to think that your feeling correspond to the truth.
Ah yes,” says the modern agnostic with a taste for religion (Laurie?) . “I don’t know whether God exists, but I do know that if he does, then He is love.Actually I do not know this. There seems so much natural evil in the world that I find it doubtful that a hypothetical God could be all love.
For if God is love and not necessity (since what is determined or compelled cannot be an act of love), then none of this universe need have been. Nor need it have been the way it is now. The belief that God creates from nothing, freely, is a logical consequence of believing that he creates from love."
I do not see the logical consequence at all.
All sorts of things follow when you throw out the tired demands of scientism for demanding proof or evidence.
This is a classic ‘straw man’. I make no such demand. All I ask is an answer to a very simple question which I would pose to any of the advocates of hundreds of different religions and ways of life - 'Please give me some convincing reason for me to conclude that your beliefs are true?'dj
Sadly D/J, as you can see I am a hopeless old reprobate! But thanks for trying.
Laurie