T
Tuno
Guest
By saying that God is not amenable to “proofs” I had no intention that those are meant to convince God of Deity. That is silliness. And I have read no “proof” that is reasonably compelling either from St Thomas or anyone else. I reject those “proofs” not on the basis of reason, necessarily, though I think that they fail there as well, requiring assumptions many do not offhand accept, and rightly so. I reject them, as did St Thomas in the end, on the basis that they do not apply in the realm where actual Meaning lives. God, Deity, is as Self the Unitary Principle. The problem is not that there is or isn’t God, it is beliefs about God. Theists and atheists are actually in the same boat in this regard.Hi, Tuno,
You are right when you say that God is not amenable - but, the ‘proofs’ are not for Him - rather, they are for us. The idea that St. Thomas had was to demonstrate from natural reason that God existance can be proven. The desire to accept or reject these proofs is strictly up to you. If you can disprove them, I would be interested in reading what you have to say. Here is a link you may find helpful; aquinasonline.com/Topics/5ways.html
Actually, I think St. Thomas’ proofs are not only quite useful but establish a definitive stand against those who claim there is no God or God existence can not be demonstrated. Again, the pages of history are quite full of early man’s recognition of a Power greater than man Who brought all of creation into existence. This is not a point to be easily dismissed.
Actually, the section I quoted from St. James was to clearly identify that even the devils believe in God - and this does not help them. I am not sure what the “Unitary Principle” (physics? biology?) has to do with this - so, please clarify.
God bless