freesoulhope;1803663:
Is not knowing, a justification for not believing? Some who desire it, would say yes. If you don’t believe in God, then you must be some sort of atheist. Your belief is atheist, correct?
You have no evidence for the non-existence of God, yet amazingly you have chosen not to believe in God and to ignore any calling to having faith in God, and you have faith in the non-existence of God without a shred of evidence to support it! woooow!
Once again. I am not advocating the position that there is no God. That position is also unsupported by evidence. I merely saying that there is not sufficient evidence to justify the belief in God.I guess you didnt read all of it. One more time.
One cannot justifiable “know” there is a God, but one can justifiable “believe”.
I have a reasonable faith that there is a God, simply because atheism to me has no logical ground to stand on, where as theism does, since things at least do appear to be created and concurs reasonably, however indirectly, with the scientific evidence of things such as the big bang, the nature of space and time, D.N.A, and so on and so thorth.
When looking at what science has discovered, though one can say that some “beliefs” of who God may be or what God has been believed to have done historically has been made redundant, One cannot say that God cannot be seen in his creation. Therefore, apart from wilful ignorance, God is the logical option since God is the only option that is reasonably compatible with reality. If there was another option that was just as philosophically reasonable or if atheism could draw just as logical conclusions as theism, then you would have a reasonable leg to stand on. But you do not.
What is more likely to be the case? God or atheism? What other ground is there to stand on? There are no other options other then claiming ignorance. But you would not be asking the God question in the first place if you wanted to remain ignorant. This is the criteria on which to decide. Everything is uncertain to some extent, and this is where faith is justifiable. Its simply about taking reason to its logical conclusion and deciding whether or not you really want to believe. If you don’t, then take a vow of ignorance ( which isn’t very reasonable if you care about where you come from and what the nature of reality is) or you can become atheist and ignore the illogical implications that come with being one, like if time, matter and space are apart of the same mould and are products of the big bang, how can something that needs time( succession of one moment to the next) and space to occur, occur with out something outside of it, above its nature, putting it in motion, cuasing its affect? and how could that thing be physical or contained or bound by temporal time? Maybe theres a scientific answer to that? How can a chain of affects, however long, have no cause? Maybe theres a scientific empirical proof that has a materialistic explanation to that? However, atheism, if we are honest with are selves, does not satisfiably, logically, or reasonably justify are reality or why Im even talking you.
Peace.
In the end, it could be me in error. Thats why its up to you to make a reasonable choice (not an empiral one).