E
epiphany08
Guest
God does not shower you with rain if you ask for rain. He doesn’t give you food if you ask for food. Instead, he teaches you to find a solution; in this case, like you said, irrigation & fishing. But what happened when people did learn those things, was God thanked for it? No, like I said, people became arrogant attributing all their success to themselves. And as for local shamans, I suggest you to speak with some native Africans. You’d be surprised at some of the stories you hear. I’m an open minded individual, I don’t dismiss anything just because I don’t understand it personally.And when “we” prayed, what happened? Either it rained, or it didn’t. When it rained, the gods got the credit, even though it may also have rained on the fields of the village over the hill, where nobody prayed; so it would have rained whether we prayed or not.
If it doesn’t rain, that didn’t ever in a single instance mean that prayer was considered useless. Instead, we invented reasons: the gods were angry, which meant that animals, children, or the mean old woman down the road, who had obviously put a curse on us, were sacrificed. After that, same as above.
When people learned about the environment, they also invented irrigation, which made farming manageable, more widespread, and fed a lot more people than prayer ever did. I think that result could excuse a little arrogance (presuming we are justified in the assumption that there was any; and what about the arrogance of the local shaman, shaking his rattle and shrieking his prayers and accepting the payment and gratitude, and enjoying the fear, of the villagers even though all his tricks and mumbo-jumbo had absolutely no effect?
Your mother’s belief is actually comforting to me whether you believe it or not. Hard to explain where I’m coming from but nonetheless she believes it with good intentions. Its hard to understand where belief originates from, some from the mind, others from the heart. You seem to be well adept at reasoning with the mind but it will only tell you so much. I use to be like you until my personal experiences shaped my perception of the world. Now I view things in a much larger scale with the attitude that truly nothing is impossible in this world.The problem with understanding with your heart is that nobody’s heart has any sense, or ability to discern what is likely from what is merely liked. My mother feels and understands from her heart that aliens from a distant galaxy dwell among us, guiding us to the next level of spiritual enlightenment which will result in an age of peace, love, and rock n’ roll for everyone. No amount of reasoning can convince her that this is a pathetic delusion. I have known people whose heart told them that they could channel power into an earring to deflect the influence of God on their soul. I’m not making this up. That’s what relying on the heart, without guidance from the intellect, will lead you. I don’t think that’s an improvement.
Ideally, of course, we should have both; but each in its proper sphere; the heart for feeling and loving, the intellect for understanding and guiding the heart to love’s proper object.
You ended with a great sentence in which I agree. You should have both and at times they may conflict with each other. It is your decision to then decide which you side with. I generally side with the heart though irrational. It is just what I believe and it has guided me through many situations which seemed impossible for a good outcome. That is where faith comes in.
You may think what the Nazi’s did was unfathomably cruel and I agree. However, you must understand it from a larger scale. Their whole existence is doomed for future generations because of what they did. There is a purpose to everything, maybe you won’t understand it now but eventually it will serve its purpose. Look at the Jewish people now and where they stand as a community. Do you consider them to be happy, successful, flourishing? Or are many still bent on the torture of the holocaust? And if they are, do you think its a good reminder to them of God and how He is able to make your life the worst nightmare imaginable but then make you the most powerful community in the world?So when the Nazis took pregnant women and used them for vivisection, or threw living children into the fires of the crematorium, or picked particular prisoners to load those too weak to stagger by their own power to the gas chambers to carry them there in wheelbarrows, knowing that it may well be their turn tomorrow? Or forced to throw still living victims into the flames; and systematically starved, murdered, tortured, and brutalized God’s own people, the apple of his eye, he did it so they would LOVE him? Can a sane person really mean this?
And how’d that work out for him? Ever read holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel’s book “Night”, about how his experience taught him that a god couldn’t possible exist? I’m sure he wasn’t the only one led to that conclusion.
I’d like to know what your definition of a sane person is. If its a person who always thinks as majority then no, I am not sane.
I have in fact read that book. The part where his father was beaten and he was standing in line but too afraid to do anything really stuck out to me. His conviction that God did not exist at that time happens to many people. Ask any religious person whether his faith has ever been in question and if he tells you no then I can almost guarantee you he is lying. You should ask Elie Wiesel today whether or not he believes in God. I wouldn’t be surprised if he gave you a different answer.