F
fhansen
Guest
We experience that God does the convincing, if we give Him the benefit of the doubt by seeking Him on our own at some point after we’re past the young age where we’re “susceptible to arguments based on authority.” You’re right about doubting being good, though. I’d have never come to believe if I’d never questioned my faith. It would’ve remained someone elses’ faith instead of mine.Hi Chaz,
It is wonderful to see so many people being honest about their doubts. I remember having such doubts at your age. Now I look back and can’t understand how I was ever hoodwinked into thinking that it is somehow a virtue to try to believe or claim to believe things that I doubt to be true. Of course it’s a good thing to doubt. In any other area of our lives it would be an extreme liability to claim to know things that we don’t actually know. What I can’t understand is how anyone ever convinced me that I ought to make a special exception for religious beliefs. Well, yeah I do, they started at a very young age when I was very susceptible to arguments based on authority. But like you, since then I’ve learned about other religions, and recognized that we simply do not have the sort of evidence for the truth of any of the world’s religions that we would need to be convinced of far more mundane and far less extraordinary claims about history or science or anything else but religion. And I can see no reason why religion should get a free pass. Plus, even if I were going to believe one of the religions of the world, it would be hard to make a case that any one of them is based on more convincing evidence than any other.
Best,
Leela