A
alongexpected
Guest
Wow. Insightful. No offense to everyone on this site, but there’s now exactly two other people I’ve read that are using their own rational thought process and common sense to think about things instead "man shall not lie with a man as with a woman so-I-must-condemn-gays line of thinking.Indeed. Moreover, the more we do discover, the more questions we generate; but also the more unlikely this classical idea of a god is. I’m not necessarily saying the broader concept of a god or a creator, or even a soul of some sort, is an unreasonable idea or even for that matter unlikely. But can we really imagine a god who can create things perfectly and ex nihilo (from nothing) but instead chose a drawn out, inefficient process like evolution or the big bang?
Don’t get me wrong, I’m past arguing over this issue, because there’s not much of a point really. I certainly don’t view western Christianity as threatening (most of my family at least nominally identifies as Christian). But, when I hear stories of miracle cures, isn’t it proper to wonder why god never seems to cure amputees, and only seems to cure illnesses that could have gotten better on their own (even if the chances were small)? Does god hate amputees?
Isn’t it proper to wonder how we could call a god “all loving” who allegedly murdered all the male infants in ancient Egypt? When mainstream archeology says the Exodus narrative is outside the range of reasonable historical possibility, should I ignore it? Or should I assume all the worlds scientists are colluding in a mass anti-god conspiracy?
Sure I could say there’s no god, but I think there’s some very interesting phenomena out there that science cannot explain, which does leave the door open to that sort of thing. So I say if there is a god, then it seems virtually impossible to think he’s omnipotent. It’s much more logical to think he doesn’t cure amputees because he can’t cure amputees. If there is anything to these stories of miracles and prayer then maybe god is able to bolster our spiritual energy, or whatever, and somehow enhance our ability to recover from illness, but within the parameters of nature. In other words there’s no evidence god can cure what cannot be cured, like for instance spontaneously regrowing a limb, or create using a process other than what we see in nature. I think, therefore, if there’s a god these facts imply limits on how the spiritual realm (or whatever you want to call it, if it exists) can interact with the physical world.
Anyway, I blabbering! In other words, I have no clue what might exist. I can only take what science knows through observation and match it up the best I can against the human idea of a god, what we see in medical science and the world more generally; and try to come up with something that might make a little bit of sense (or at least has scent of logical constistency)![]()
Good for you.