C
caroljm36
Guest
Regarding Pascal’s Wager, my only real point–badly put–was that the skeptic’s suspicion that there is no God is no more proveable or certain than the faithful’s belief that there is. That is, if you are truly a skeptic and do not think it is possible to really, really know what the objective truth is, then you don’t know that God does not exist either.
Now, I am 56 and my mother is 85 and has been a self-proclaimed agnostic all her adult life. Why, I ask, would someone go that long without making up her mind, finally? What a terrible intellectual and spiritual limbo to be in. Believe me, you do not want to see what that kind of fatal indecision has on someone rapidly approaching the end of her life.
So why not shed your intellectual pride, admit your poverty and embrace your faith. You have nothing to lose and everything to gain.
Now, I am 56 and my mother is 85 and has been a self-proclaimed agnostic all her adult life. Why, I ask, would someone go that long without making up her mind, finally? What a terrible intellectual and spiritual limbo to be in. Believe me, you do not want to see what that kind of fatal indecision has on someone rapidly approaching the end of her life.
So why not shed your intellectual pride, admit your poverty and embrace your faith. You have nothing to lose and everything to gain.