J
j1akey
Guest
This statement really got my attention. When you say faith is everything, how far does that go? Is faith the most important thing in your life? How about family? Is it so important that people are unwilling or unable to question their religion or the people who govern it? Does it extend to the health of loved ones? Do you pray for a cure or treatment to an illness rather than seeking a medical professional? I’m not really going anywhere with this except just curiosity because these questions have been on my mind for a while.Faith is everything. It is a choice and commitment, so when people make it they are in all the way.
You basically say that faith is all or nothing. Why is this? If one thing is false then is everything false? Not that I think any of it is true but I’m trying to get my head around this line of thinking. It seems as if faith prevents people from thinking about anything that may be a threat to that faith for fear of losing it.
I honestly don’t see how faith and reason can’t be opposed. Faith by it’s very meaning is to believe something without something that doesn’t necessarily have anything to back it up, which is unreasonable.The issue is reconciling what we observe and interpret with Revelation (what we were told). The points of intersect must be resolved. It will in time as faith and reason cannot be opposed.
Actually no, I don’t. When you say methodological naturalism I’m going to assume you’re talking about science in general here. If science is such an affront to Revelation then you should stop using all the devices that have been invented over the last hundred or couple hundred years or so becuase everything you have today came from science. I really don’t see why there is a conflict in the first place. Science doesn’t create the conflict. Science finds or discovers something and religion instantly reacts as if it’s an affront to long held beliefs.You must admit that methodological naturalism is an attempt to undermine Revelation.
I don’t see why religion is so special that it requires this wall of protection around it and for all intents and purposes make itself off limits to argument or question. All kinds of crazy people attack science because many discoveries oppose that which is found in any given religious text and no one makes a big deal out of it becuase people claim religious freedom. While at the same time if anyone says anything bad about religion then they’re suddenly anti-catholic or anti-christian or they’re waging full on war on the church and every cries about the “war on christianity”. It’s completely rediculous.
As for the NCSE I’m not sure what you mean when you say they’re trying to reconcile science and religion since there isn’t anything to reconcile. Either you believe in god or you don’t. Neither stance has any effect on whether or not science is true or not or you ability to look at the evidence that comes with science.