No, you do. And by “you” I don"t mean delson, I mean whoever makes the claim to have arguments should be able to give them and not hide behind " ‘Why’ is not for us to ask".
I had a girlfriend who asked me: “Do you love me?”
My response in the affirmative did not satisfy her because she asked further: “No, but do you
really love me. Can you* prove* it?”
I thought for a moment. “You mean, like scientifically? With a scientific study?”
I was met with several swings from her purse. “No, you idiot! You just don’t care about me! How could I have been so stupid to fall in love with an unfeeling dope like you!” She stormed away in tears.
I was in the doghouse for almost a month after that.
How does one prove love? If you read above through this thread, you would know I am a scientist. I can attest with all my professional career that there is no science method that can supply a sufficient answer to a woman’s question to her boyfriend: “Do you love me?”
Even if there was one, that’s not what a woman’s asking for, some unfeeling empirical set of results that have been proven and validated that demonstrate, scientifically, that you do in fact have “love” for your girlfriend. If you give that as a gift for Valentine’s Day you may end up with bodily injury if your girlfriend carried the same heavy purse that mine did!
No, that type of question was more arbitrary. The “proof” had to fit her personally. It had to be what she was looking for to reassure her personally.
It’s the same with what you’re asking for. There is no law in nature or science that says that anyone’s religious convictions about transcendent deities have to have arguments to back up their claims or reasons for their convictions. The demand you have is an arbitrary one. It’s how you measure what you accept or don’t. If there is not a good argument to support some conviction, you reject it. You believe that such is a requisite.
But there is no evidence to support that such a “requisite” is in fact required. Not everything that is needs to fit what you demand here, does it? And you don’t even live up to this standard in all you believe, either.
Can you prove the love for those you cherish in life? How does one prove the emotion of love, how deep it is, when it began, how far it will go? What tests and measures do you use to do so?
Just because people can’t prove their love empirically doesn’t make it is any less true, does it? Or do you demand empirical proof of all those who claim to love you before you believe them? I’ll bet you don’t. “No, Mother, you don’t love me. The test from the labs prove you don’t…See this table here?..”
No, I am sure you believe people who say they love you, even if they don’t have science or a good argument to back up their claims.
You don’t live or accept things on the standards you are placing on others here. You pick and choose what has to fit these standards based on what you want to believe. You don’t believe in God so you put such a belief to standards that aren’t even universal in your own life.
Belief in God is a love affair, not an exercise in academia or logic. We worship God because we love God, not because of the evidence of some empirical study.
Christians believe God is the personification of love. Love is above logic.
If you don’t think so, demand logic to define your next great love affair. I am sure and hope you will be happily disappointed because it’s love’s ability to defy logic that makes it so wonderful!