An odd turn of events here. I started off this this thread somewhat critical of William Lane Craig and the analytical approach to “proving” God exist.
So I remembered I had a little booklet written by Craig laying around in the basement titled “God Are You There? Five Reasons God Exist” and I figured I’d thumb through it. Well what do know! After going through all the cosmological arguments and kalam arguments and the rest that I think are overrated, Craig comes to the “Fifth Reason” we know there is a God, and he ends making the same points I was making in this thread. Part of Craig’s “Fifth Reason” below;
FIFTH REASON
God Can Be Immediately Known and Experienced
This isn’t really an argument for God’s existence; rather it’s the claim
that we can know that God exists wholly apart from arguments simply
by immediately experiencing Him. This was the way people described
in the Bible knew God, as Professor John Hick explains:
God was known to them as a dynamic will interacting with their own
wills, a sheer given reality, as inescapably to be reckoned with as destructive
storm and life-giving sunshine. . . . They did not think of God
as an inferred entity but as an experienced reality. . . . To them God
was not a proposition completing a syllogism, or an idea adopted by the
mind, but the experiential reality which gave significance to their lives
For these people, God was not inferred to be the best explanation
of their religious experience and so they believed in Him; rather in
their religious experience they came to know God directly.
Philosophers call beliefs like this “properly basic beliefs.” They
aren’t based on some other beliefs; rather they are part of the foundation
of a person’s system of beliefs. Other properly basic beliefs
would be the belief in the reality of the past, the existence of the
external world, and the presence of other minds like your own. When
you think about it, none of these beliefs can be proved. How could
you prove that the world was not created five minutes ago with builtin
appearances of age, such as food in our stomachs from the breakfasts
we never really ate and memory traces in our brains of events
we never really experienced? How could you prove that you are not
a brain in a vat of chemicals being stimulated with electrodes by
some mad scientist and made to believe that you are now reading
this book? How could you prove that other people are not really automata
who exhibit all the external behavior of persons with minds,
when in reality they are soulless, robot-like entities?
In the same way, belief in God is for those who seek Him a properly
basic belief grounded in our experience of God, as we discern
Him in nature, conscience, and other means.
and then at the end he adds
Now if, through experiencing God, we can know in a properly basic
way that God exists, then there’s a real danger that proofs for
God could actually distract one’s attention from God Himself. If
you’re sincerely seeking God, God will make His existence evident
to you. The Bible promises, “Draw near to God and He will draw
near to you” (James 4.8). We mustn’t so concentrate on the proofs
for God that we fail to hear the inner voice of God speaking to our
own heart. For those who listen, God becomes an immediate reality
in their lives.
I guess I was wrong, I agree with Craig, especially on reason number five