Miracles recognised by the Church are relatively rare but there is no doctrine to that effect. Christians believe in the power of prayer to influence the course of events.
Do
you believe only that which is supported by double blind experiments?
Others whose judgment you respect and who have far more competence in the subject…
Are there? Examples, please.
How I know whose judgment you respect?
They are implicit in many objections made to your arguments - particularly when you make such derogatory references to God as “bumbling and competent”…
You are seriously mistaken if you think that I am talking about God. I have explained many times that I use the word “God” as a simple way to express the “hypothetical being who is believed by Christians to exist, and who has certain attributes”. I base all my assessments on what you, apologists say about God. And you describe a bumbling, incompetent being.
You are forgetting rule 7 of this forum:
“Non-Catholics are welcome to participate but must be respectful of the faith of the Catholics participating on the board.”
Then you lack “a feeling of profound love and admiration” for anything…
Nonsense. Worship is to put something on a pedestal.
Metaphorically:
wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=worship
If there are no human rights there is no reason why God shouldn’t let Satan exist to do evil things to us!
True. But then he cannot expect us to be grateful, can he?
You have changed the subject - maladroitly - to evade the fact that your objection no longer has a foundation.
By the way, the first commandment is in dire contradiction with the First Amendment, which grants the freedom of religion. God does not grant it.
How is this related to the OP?
We don’t live in a possible but a real world.
And the real world is also a possible world.
It’s not possible but actual! We’re no longer in the realm of theory.
The point is, which you may have overlooked that the actuality of evil is not a logical consequence of free will.
My point is that we are not dealing with the logical but** real **consequences of having a mind! Your argument is that the mind is something that can be modified at our convenience whereas in reality it is an integral entity capable of rational thought, moral judgment, love and self-determination. It does not consist of parts like a material object.