First off, there have been
a lot of posts in the 12 hours since I went to bed

so this kind of feels like the initial post was forever ago even though it wasn’t.
Anyway, I don’t think he was denigrating your faith just the method by which Faithdancer claimed he was sure his faith was correct.
The argument boiled down to:
- There is a method that claims to show that X is true.
- But that same method could also show that Y is true.
- All parites in the discussion claim that Y is not true.
- Therefore the method is incapable of demonstrating that X is true.
First of all, in fact Faithdancer was using specific Christian terminology, which Mr. Empiricism rather absurdly pressed into the service of Thor. That is not to say that there aren’t equivalents. But to find them, Mr. Empiricism would have had to make some inquiries into what worshipers of Thor used to say or do say today (since the worship of the Aesir has been revived and you can read “Asatru” posts on the Internet), and obviously he didn’t want to bother to do that. Which was, from the start, condescending.
More importantly, though, Mr. Empiricism seemed to assume that Christians disbelieve in the existence of Thor. Why would he assume this? Why this assumption that “we all know” pagan gods aren’t real?
That’s why the comparison to the Easter Bunny–which no adult believes in that I know of–was particularly offensive. (Santa Claus is more complex because there’s more of a real basis for that, but the specific modern forms of Santa Claus are, like the Easter Bunny, obviously made up and not a serious object of belief.)
I myself would not commit myself to denying the existence of any being who is or has been the object of serious belief by adult human beings.
Nothing about the Christian faith commits one one way or the other. What we are committed to, as monotheists, is to
worship only the one Source of all Being “whom all call God.” But in Catholicism even this is defined more narrowly than in Protestantism, since the veneration of saints and angels is allowed and even encouraged.
It’s as straightforward a demonstration as possible, and in doing so we need to present a Y (something in the same category as X but not true). As MrEmpricism said he’s not comparing X to Y. He is showing that self-evidence of works can’t be used for something that may or may not be true (Yahweh) if there is no difference if used for something that is certainly not true (Thor).
So he needed to present actual evidence of the same kind for Thor. He didn’t do that.
How else could MrEmpiricism have been able to show the fault in the idea of self-evident works as a means to satisfy the burden of proof if he didn’t apply the same method to a known false deity?
Well, he needed to do a lot of work in actually showing what this evidence might be in the case of Thor, and he should not have assumed that “everyone knows” Thor doesn’t exist. That is very far from self-evident, and the fact that you and Mr. Empiricism both think it’s self-evident says a lot about your lack of understanding of the whole question.
What else there is to do is take the argument on its merits. If Faithdancer or anyone feels that self-evidence of works can be used to demonstrate Adonai and not Thor then that person can lay that out in a post.
For one thing, the fact that you feel the need to use OT names for God is significant. From a Christian point of view, the being worshiped as “YHWH” in the OT was indeed the true god, but “YHWH” in the OT represented a very imperfect understanding of God.
Again, the complete unwillingness to deal with the very well developed Christian philosophical tradition is sticking out like a sore thumb, and really gets in the way of serious discussion.
Edwin