F
fredystairs
Guest
I understand.
Would you care to know how I know that God exists?
Would you care to know how I know that God exists?
I’m going to be very honest here. Is your experience something that I can experience, too? Otherwise, you are just making a claim that I can’t investigate, have to take you at your word (a complete internet stranger to me) and have never experienced myself.Would you care to know how I know that God exists?
How do you explain electrons in motion right this instant? (Or anything else in motion right this instant?)Yet, our brains have developed to appreciate enormous beauty within a natural world that is amazing itself. I see no evidence of God in any of this.
So have I.I’ve witnesses Brownian motion . . .
Honestly, no. Oh sure sometimes in trying to understand a paper or explanation of a scientific article I’ll do a deeper dive but as far as spending a great deal of thought over constant motion in the universe, nope. Now, medical questions will pique my interest a bit more but I’m just not that into astronomy and physics…interesting but not at the top of my list. Nor would the thought of constant motion existing in the universe necessarily lead me to God, either. Do you ever wonder if God vibrates?Don’t the “whys” of such things intrigue you?
Excuses.There is very little I can say in response to this. What you are saying is not subject to testing and does not result from observation of reality. At best it can be said it does not contradict observed reality.
No. There are NO statements of this sort.There are an infinite number of possible statements of this sort.
I agree. Scientists used to have a nice workable model for the expansion of the universe. Problem is, with more measurements the reality is, at this rate of accelerated expansion the universe would have collapsed and become a soup of particles. So they had to introduce dark matter and dark energy to make the model workable again. But these two are currently scientific ‘mysteries’. We could as well assume that none exist and God is holding the universe together.
- Reality is not always testable or observable, darkness is real but is not testable or observable
@FiveLinden replied . . . .
But what did they teach? St Thomas, what did he teach in India? What were they taught in Greece? What were they taught in Egypt?I don’t want to derail the thread but would be happy to discuss the witness issue as ‘proof’. For example I find it remarkable that Matthew, Mark and Luke never say that Jesus is God in any sort of direct way. And do we have any direct testimony from people who knew Jesus? Please think about starting a thread!
I believe the evidence shows 1st century Christians were taught, by the witnesses of the Apostles, Chist as true man & true God.
Good point Justin_Mary.I believe the evidence shows 1st century Christians were taught, by the witnesses of the Apostles, Chist as true man & true God.
https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03539a.htm
There were many more witnesses recorded in scripture to hundreds of dead people rising from their graves after the resurrection and walking about. Strangely, if this were true, no other record of the event has survived. You are of course free to believe as you wish but if you believe not because of faith but because of witness testimony contained in scripture you have a big problem with consistency if you consider scripture authoritative history.Not only was there witnesses (Gr = martus) to the Risen Jesus, but the testimony was so strong, we have had 2000 years of martyrs defending that passing on of ths testimony.
Show me ANYTHING close to this @FiveLinden.
It just does not exist.
This is WHY the Resurrection is avoided like the plague in school history classes.
Not because it is false, but because the Resurrection is TRUE
These are not Resurrections.There were many more witnesses recorded in scripture to hundreds of dead people rising from their graves after the resurrection and walking about.
First of all I have no probem with consistency.You are of course free to believe as you wish but if you believe not because of faith but because of witness testimony contained in scripture you have a big problem with consistency if you consider scripture authoritative history.
No I am not. I never think about perpetual motion. Why would I? Everything of which I am aware is in motion. This is observation, not faith. You, on the basis of faith (I think) believe there must be a first mover. Why?The atheist is forced to assert a denial of perpetual motion based upon science,
but an affirmation of this (with no accompanying rational reason) based upon their BELIEF system.