Is Religion a Scam?

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Actually, it’s not. I can tell you actually think Dawkins’ arguments are sound. Hilarious!
Actually the only reason I even recognize the name “Dawkins” is because he’s mentioned on this forum. Other than that I have no clue who “Dawkins” is or what he’s said. My opinions are my own, garnered from personal observation, traditional education, and self education (from scientific sources, not op-ed). So, feel free to inform me what “Dawkins” has said if you find it relevant, because otherwise I find this comment unhelpful.
Except that there is evidence for our beliefs and there is no evidence indicating otherwise.
To be clear, are you indicating that there is no evidence indicating that God does not exist? If so, that is a valid point. However, I can easily prove that nothing in the -known- universe is capable of even a fraction of the magical properties “displayed” by God in the Bible. But believing the stories in the Bible takes faith as there are no supporting documents from civilizations that were around at the time of Jesus to verify the claims made (if there are I would appreciate your assistance in directing me to them).

But I certainly am unable to PROVE God doesn’t exist. I also can’t prove that the Greek Gods don’t exist.
 
Actually the only reason I even recognize the name “Dawkins” is because he’s mentioned on this forum. Other than that I have no clue who “Dawkins” is or what he’s said. My opinions are my own, garnered from personal observation, traditional education, and self education (from scientific sources, not op-ed). So, feel free to inform me what “Dawkins” has said if you find it relevant, because otherwise I find this comment unhelpful.
It’s the same thing as what you said. Problem is, God isn’t complex because he’s not made up of pieces strung together a certain way. He is not made of parts, ergo, not complex. Unless you use a different definition of complex.
However, I can easily prove that nothing in the -known- universe is capable of even a fraction of the magical properties “displayed” by God in the Bible. But believing the stories in the Bible takes faith as there are no supporting documents from civilizations that were around at the time of Jesus to verify the claims made (if there are I would appreciate your assistance in directing me to them).
Well, remember that omnipotence does allow God to break the natural laws. So the fact that it’s extraordinary doesn’t give us reason to reject it. Doubt it, maybe, but not reject it. Also, many times things which we would normally deem impossible under the laws of physics happen, especially in quantum thinking but also in chemistry.
But I certainly am unable to PROVE God doesn’t exist. I also can’t prove that the Greek Gods don’t exist.
Actually, you **can **prove that the Greek Gods don’t exist because they are not located where the Greeks claimed. Lots of people have dived into the seabottom and not found Poseidon, and lots of people have seen the top of Mt. Olympus and not seen Zeus.
 
Actually said:
prove that the Greek Gods don’t exist because they are not located where the Greeks claimed. Lots of people have dived into the seabottom and not found Poseidon, and lots of people have seen the top of Mt. Olympus and not seen Zeus.

Are you suggesting that because we haven’t SEEN the Greek Gods they can’t exist?
 
It’s the same thing as what you said. Problem is, God isn’t complex because he’s not made up of pieces strung together a certain way. He is not made of parts, ergo, not complex. Unless you use a different definition of complex.
Complex simply means that God is unable to be fully understood. Think “God works in mysterious ways”, or the idea that God can defy physics, or that God is infinite… these are complex concepts. Simply believing in them because of “faith” doesn’t make them less complicated for science to explain.
Actually, you **can **prove that the Greek Gods don’t exist because they are not located where the Greeks claimed. Lots of people have dived into the seabottom and not found Poseidon, and lots of people have seen the top of Mt. Olympus and not seen Zeus.
Are you suggesting that because we cant SEE the Greek Gods they don’t exist? Please clarify because somehow I doubt you would take that stance, and so I must be misinterpreting… They are Gods after all and could very easily make themselves unable to be seen if they so chose.

LONG before Judaism became a religion people the world over were polytheist. Even to this day there are polytheists (Hinduism, Wicca). The concept of a single god didn’t start until only about 1000 years before the Coming of Christ, and at that time humans had already been around for a very long time.
 
I envy you and all religious people for their ability to simply -trust- something despite having no evidence to support them, and despite the multitude of evidence indicating otherwise.
Thank you. I personally envy people whose faith comes to them easily. My faith wasn’t even a hard-won battle, it was a hard-won war! And even now that I rest more easily in my faith, I still have battles break out once in a while. So it’s an on-going process.

As far as having no evidence to support us, there is actually some scientific evidence that prayer works (double blind studies). If you want, I could try to find them for you.
Complex simply means that God is unable to be fully understood. Think “God works in mysterious ways”, or the idea that God can defy physics, or that God is infinite… these are complex concepts. Simply believing in them because of “faith” doesn’t make them less complicated for science to explain.
I agree that God cannot be fully understood. It would be like an amoeba trying to understand a human.

I personally think God works through the laws of physics. For example, science has shown how the parting of the Red Sea could have happened. And while I’m not saying that all miracles are physical phenomena, I certainly think many of them are. In this instance, the miracle is not that the Red Sea parted, but the timing in that it was the very night the Israelites needed it to happen.

I also think some miracles are best explained by future science, i.e., things we haven’t discovered yet. For example, turning on a lightbulb to someone who’s never seen electricity would be a miracle. But now it’s not a miracle because we know about electricity. It makes the world in general and religion in particular very exciting, don’t you think?
 
There are those who use our faith to “scam” unsuspecting people, just as there are those who use politics, business, charity, etc. It is even in the Bible with Judas stealing from the money bag and with that married couple in the book of Acts. Judas hung himself and the married couple dropped dead :eek: so don’t play the Lord for a sucker 👍
 
If you don’t believe in God as our Creator and Redeemer, you will believe dogma of another kind, whether it’s paganism, atheism or scientism. The evidence for God creating the universe is there, but we must use our reason and then believe because we have “seen.”

In the 20th century, David Hilbert, the father of finite mathemaics,developed an argument for the “intrinsic finitude” of past time which implies a timeless Creator in his article “On the Infinite.” See math.dartmouth.edu/~matc/Readers/HowManyAngels/Philosophy/Philosophy.html

You might say that Quantum Theory has expanded the horizons of ontology in that it has to take into consideration “non-location and information fields” which, in turn, has given rise to new evidence for non-materialistic informatioon like dimensions of physical reality.

Besides studying the Big Bang and its implications of a creative force, there are other indications of supernatural causation and that is the occurrence of several cosmological conditions to develop and sustain life. Certainly, we must consider the Universal Constants that are so fine-tuned that if any were changed to the slightest degree, the universe could not exist.

However, science can only go so far. We can reason using modern philosophical proofs involving “conditioned” and “unconditioned causes” that redeem the classical metaphysical proofs since they are grounded in the “information fields” intrinsic to quantum fields. Their significance provide verifiable examples of concepts used to prove the existence of God. (See New Proofs for the Existence of God by Robert J. Spitzer.

I used to envy Christians who seemed to find it so easy to believe. Like Elizabeth, I was at war with my atheism to finally find my way into the Catholic Church (having left during college years). “Rome is home!” 🙂
 
Complex simply means that God is unable to be fully understood. Think “God works in mysterious ways”, or the idea that God can defy physics, or that God is infinite… these are complex concepts. Simply believing in them because of “faith” doesn’t make them less complicated for science to explain.
If that’s what you mean that’s correct but doesn’t really pose a problem.
Are you suggesting that because we cant SEE the Greek Gods they don’t exist? Please clarify because somehow I doubt you would take that stance, and so I must be misinterpreting… They are Gods after all and could very easily make themselves unable to be seen if they so chose.
I suppose that’s correct, but you have to ask why a God would go out of town the one time somebody comes to visit.
LONG before Judaism became a religion people the world over were polytheist. Even to this day there are polytheists (Hinduism, Wicca). The concept of a single god didn’t start until only about 1000 years before the Coming of Christ, and at that time humans had already been around for a very long time.
I affirm this… what’s your point?
 
I can understand why they would believe and/or think that Religion is a scam. There a plenty of believers and non-believers that are only serving God for financial or personal gain. So I can understand because there a lot of people doing things “in the name of Jesus” just to get a following. Misrepresenting Christ and God

However, Jesus Christ does not preach religion. He preaches the truth in a way of living. He’s the WAY the TRUTH and the LIFE. In fact, according to the gospel, it was the RELIGIOUS leaders that crucified Christ.

About the Atheism, it takes more faith to believe in nothing then it does to believe in something. Also I believe that the Big bang theory and some parts of evolution (not all the monkey stuff, but natural evolution like growing hair in colder parts of world etc…) can be apart of Gods creation plan. Yes the word says God spoke light and everything into existence, but why couldn’t there have been a big explosion to form the universe into what we have today? but thats a different topic
 
I can understand why they would believe and/or think that Religion is a scam. There a plenty of believers and non-believers that are only serving God for financial or personal gain. So I can understand because there a lot of people doing things “in the name of Jesus” just to get a following. Misrepresenting Christ and God

However, Jesus Christ does not preach religion. He preaches the truth in a way of living. He’s the WAY the TRUTH and the LIFE. In fact, according to the gospel, it was the RELIGIOUS leaders that crucified Christ.

About the Atheism, it takes more faith to believe in nothing then it does to believe in something. Also I believe that the Big bang theory and some parts of evolution (not all the monkey stuff, but natural evolution like growing hair in colder parts of world etc…) can be apart of Gods creation plan. Yes the word says God spoke light and everything into existence, but why couldn’t there have been a big explosion to form the universe into what we have today? but thats a different topic
A warm welcome to the forum!

I like your point that it takes more faith to believe in nothing then it does to believe in something. As Lear said, nothing shall come of nothing! Scepticism > nihilism.
 
…religon isn’t a scam XD… i mean i’m sure some poeple question if God is real and all…But God sometimes seems to find a way to make sure those people know he is there :}

I think athiests are a scam…they are to lazy to spend some time in church reading the bible or just havn’t realized who that “Mr. Big Guy Upstaires” has done for them and ECT… And their belief is so…damaged, Unrealistic, unreliable and all those big smart word…they just think we were just a big bang… and came from nothing… and that nothing seemed to become earth and the earth “Magicaly” orbited around the sun…at a perfect distance too!.. if we were 2 feet closer to the sun…we would all burn up…2 feet away from the sun…we would be colder then ice cubes…

(and i think god created evolution…not …monkeys all of a sudden just popping out human babies but. the development of life itself )
 
I envy you and all religious people for their ability to simply -trust- something despite having no evidence to support them, and despite the multitude of evidence indicating otherwise.
🤷 With compliments like that who needs insults?

EDIT: Nevermind, apparently I can’t compute sarcasm today. :o
 
There are many posts in response since my last, and I must say I appreciate all of them and agree to some extent with most of the points made.

Sadly I think MishellaLee has the wrong idea though…
I think athiests are a scam…they are to lazy to spend some time in church reading the bible or just havn’t realized who that “Mr. Big Guy Upstaires” has done for them and ECT… And their belief is so…damaged, Unrealistic, unreliable and all those big smart word…(etc.)
I grew up attending Bible school during the summers; my father is a deacon and I’ve attended church many many times as an atheist; I have fully ready the Bible (and the Koran) more than once; I’ve taken courses in college on theology as well as philosophy… I, and many atheists, find religion to be a fascinating topic.

Religion shapes entire cultures of people and defines not only our traditions, but our laws and relationships as well.

In addition, churches provide a valuable forum for a community of like-minded individuals to congregate for a united cause: the betterment of their fellow man (figure of speech, women included).

I do concede that there are atheists who are loud, obnoxious, arrogant individuals who have absolutely no interest in learning but instead try to force their limited knowledge on others. But is that any different than a religious person, sure of their convictions, admonishing an atheist for their lack of belief? Or the religious figure that insists the world is only 8000 years old despite the overwhelming evidence to the contrary?
 
I grew up attending Bible school during the summers; my father is a deacon and I’ve attended church many many times as an atheist; I have fully ready the Bible (and the Koran) more than once; I’ve taken courses in college on theology as well as philosophy… I, and many atheists, find religion to be a fascinating topic.

Religion shapes entire cultures of people and defines not only our traditions, but our laws and relationships as well.

In addition, churches provide a valuable forum for a community of like-minded individuals to congregate for a united cause: the betterment of their fellow man (figure of speech, women included).
I must say, while not all of your arguments are sound, certainly you are an honest atheist. Cheers to you! 👍
 
To mkinson:

My best friend is an atheist, and he’s actually one of the most moral people I know. So yeah, I don’t believe all atheists are the loud, arrogant kind. I would just encourage you to keep searching. And I hope you feel comfortable on this forum.
 
Last night on The Factor a noted atheist argued that religion is a scam, and many Christians know it in their hearts. They just haven’t got the courage to admit it. He invited Christians to join the atheist cause since atheism is a fact, whereas religion is governed by people who specialize in hawking wishful thinking.

Your thoughts?
It seems to me that there are very few “card carrying” atheists anymore with passion in their conviction. Richard Dawkins and a few others come to mind. Perhaps what passes for atheism today is really apathy and disinterest. The Church struggles to achieve credibility with the secular world, which is a different matter entirely, but when it fails to engage the average educated person, this disinterest is what seems to be confused with atheism today.
 
I do concede that there are atheists who are loud, obnoxious, arrogant individuals who have absolutely no interest in learning but instead try to force their limited knowledge on others. But is that any different than a religious person, sure of their convictions, admonishing an atheist for their lack of belief? Or the religious figure that insists the world is only 8000 years old despite the overwhelming evidence to the contrary?
Couldn’t agree more. What kept me from accepting God for the longest time was the type of religious person you’re referring to. I’m perfectly fine with people who hold strong beliefs but to assert them as fact with very limited knowledge of other views is simply ignorant.

Please don’t take this the wrong way as I’m not implying this is you… but I actually feel sorry for some atheists as a some of them seem to want to believe but can’t bring themselves to because of what they perceive as lack of proof. Admittedly believing in God and Jesus as the Son of God is a HUGE thing to wrap your head around. I remember seeing an interview with Charles Templeton regarding his loss of faith and it was odd… in one breath he referred to part of one of the gospels (can’t remember which for the life of me) and referred to it as (paraphrased) “an insufferably arrogant statement” and in the same interview stated that he truly missed his relationship with Jesus. It was quite sad.

I am curious though, in your studies did you not find a religion that you could relate to or find believable? Or do you just think they’re all very elaborate stories? Along the same lines was the studying that you’ve done in search of the truth or just out of interest? Please understand I’m not trying to bait you into an argument. Again, I’m just curious.
 
Pieman333272;7827740:
No offense, but that is an entirely weak hypothesis with no evidence to support it. The concept of God is that of a highly complex and unfathomably powerful entity, which seems more like an awfully convenient excuse instead of empirical evidence or even logical conjecture.
I envy you and all religious people for their ability to simply -trust- something despite having no evidence to support them, and despite the multitude of evidence indicating otherwise.
Hi mkinson,
curiously, and forgive my laziness at not reading every post: have you read Augustine? His writings on Faith and Reason are heady stuff, but signficant in understanding what he posits, which is in turn significant in understanding that for many of us, it isn’t simply trust 🙂

Interestingly, I spent some time alternating between atheism and agnosticism, and was a reluctant convert to the Catholic Church once I’d decided I did believe in God- God of the Judeo-Christian tradition. This was a process of many years, and having read Up-Napushtim or however it’s spelled 🙂 and Hammurabi and knowing the parallels between ancient Babylonian legends and Biblical “truths” hindered me more than the science side of it. As per that, and I might get blasted for recommending you read Pellegrino, but I do recommend it. He is by no means a Catholic apologist, or even Christian: he’s a self professed agnostic, because he writes, “a good scientist will questions his own questions” or something like that. He has some interesting insights you may appreciate and that may give you something to consider besides what you already know.

Here’s a take for you to consider, how I saw it.

I can’t prove God exists, an atheist can’t prove He doesn’t. So, both are positions of faith. If I am going to hold a position that is faith based, which position is most reasonable?

A little Augustine found it’s way in here, as well as some Pascal. I will rely on information next that was once given to me about probability theory, the credit for which I have no ability to give, and it will be rough as I’m going off a fading memory.
This has to do with Pascal, who was by trade a mathematician and scientist; he used probability theory to advise Counts & Princes about increasing the odds of winning when they gambled.
Pascal analyzed how reasonable an expectation was in gambling based on odds, and he sort of did the same thing as part of his conversion, His Wager is famous, but this isn’t that, though it was explained to me this way.

Pretend you have 2 boxes, one is A and one is B. Before you see the boxes, someone flips a quarter which will indicate which box has money inside. If it’s heads, A has $1000 inside. If the quarter is tails, box B has money but it’s a million dollars. So we would choose B no question-because of something called *expectation * which is a function of the probability theory: there could be money in A, it has a little bit of worth or value, but it doesnt have as much value as 1000$, because you aren’t SURE there is anything inside.
So Pascal might add the possibilities up, and multiply by the probablity (here, it’s a quarter toss)
1/2 chance of getting nothing 1/2 x 0 =0
1/2 chance of $1000 1/2 x 1000 = $500: the expectation is 500$
so the ‘expected value’ of box A is 500$

box B: the same formula, but for a million, so the expected value of box B is $500k: so if you pick, clearly B is the best choice.

What Pascal conceptualized was sort of the same, and for the sake of your question take God/Christianity or Atheism/Agnosticism.

(50/50 chance like the quarter flip above)
If you choose the “Christianity box”, there are two things that could happen. If you live as a devout Christian, believe in God and are wrong, you just die and that’s it. But if you are right, then when you die you have eternal happiness, heaven: or infinity (I will use ~ as the symbol for infinity 😉

To take the same concept as above, the expected value of devout Christianity is then:
1/2 chance of nothing 1/2 x 0 = 0
1/2 chance of heaven 1/2 x ~ = ~
the ‘Christianity box’ expected value = ~ (because 50% of ~ is still infinity)
I recall the point being that the value of faith is infinite.
If someone is an atheist and right that God doesn’t exist, there is no gain from it. But if an atheist is wrong, the loss is much greater than if a Christian is wrong about his/her bet- hell being defined as negative infinity.

the expected value of atheism is:
1/2 chance of nothing = 0 1/2 x 0 =0
1/2 chance of going to hell 1/2 x - ~ = - ~ (again because it’s infinity, even as a negative)
Atheism box expected value = - ~
So Pascals position was that wagering for Christianity made more sense, because of the concept of expected value and probability theory. Even if someone says 1% chance, infinity remains. To say that there is a** 0** chance God is real would be nonsensical: no respectable scientist or mathematician would take that position, (Pellegrino may or may not be respected in his field, I don’t know, but he did make a good point about that kind of dogmatism, as mentioned) and besides, 0 x ~ doesn’t make sense.
It’s key to note that we all believe in something, including agnostics. How they live and the choices they make tell us so.

I believe you will challenge your own beliefs on your path, as we all should. If all we know is all we have, things get stale. Consider finally that “Belief in fact is simply thought accompanied by assent.” That is true for Christians as well as atheists, isn’t it?

The difference lies in the results…and those results exist in the here and now, not just that elusive hereafter Pascal challenges us to consider.

Pax!
 
I am curious though, in your studies did you not find a religion that you could relate to or find believable? Or do you just think they’re all very elaborate stories? Along the same lines was the studying that you’ve done in search of the truth or just out of interest? Please understand I’m not trying to bait you into an argument. Again, I’m just curious.
To be honest I stopped believing in God the same time I stopped believing in Santa. Even as a child I couldn’t wrap my head around the concept of an all-powerful being. I still attended church, but while growing up I viewed it in the same unenthusiastic way I viewed classes.

As I became a teen I resented religion because I listed to stories of the religious extremists and I naively attributed the disruptive and sometimes violent views of the few as though it were the actions of the whole. I don’t think it was until I was midway through High School while dating a fairly religious girl that my viewed because less tunnel-visioned. I attended her church for a while, and then became very interested in the culture of church and religion more than I was about the “lessons”.

Although I still hold many convictions which prevent me from actually believing in “God” or the supernatural in general (spirits, ghosts, psychics, etc) I have been attempting to gather a greater understanding as to why others are so comfortable accepting what I consider too easy of an answer to life, death, and “unexplainable”. I’m still very young (only 26) and I have no doubt that as I mature my views will expand, however I strongly believe that given enough technology, scientific research, and time humans are able to answer absolutely any questions.
 
To be honest I stopped believing in God the same time I stopped believing in Santa.
I’m virtually certain this isn’t what you mean, but are you trying to say you see the evidence for and nature of God and Santa as the same?
 
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