hurst:
Yes, by those who had faith and experienced the grace and revelation of God and wrote it down (Moses, et. al.), so in the case of the Bible, I believe you are correct. I can’t speak for the Koran, though.
But often people have their own ideas of what “God” is, and it is not according to what has been revealed in Scripture, and thus can count as an invention, or at least erroneous.
The issue is, the scripture contains many things that you have not yet proven, or shown at all. If the scripture is 100% accurate and is indeed a definition, then you have to show those many other traits that are proposed in it.
Also, many people have an idea of God that is not consistent with what is naturally knowable about God, so their definition can also be counted as an invention.
The God of the scriptures is such a God. The God in the Scriptures has sentience, has power over what composes it, and is said to be “all-loving”. That is not consitent with what is “naturally knowable”. I still contend that the “logically knowable” parts you’ve shown me are nothing more than traits of existence. It’s like pointing to a lump of coal, showing that it has some traits of a diamond, and trying to sell it as a diamond. That doesn’t work.
I believe the Bible is truly from God. I don’t believe the Koran is from God, but rather from a fallen angel. Either way, neither of them would count as originating from man’s imagination.
And what do you base these beliefs off of?
We cannot know for certain by our natural reason. But we can know for certain whether it is consistent with the naturally knowable aspects of God. That is, it is “falsifiable” by means of natural reason. So, if any text says something contrary to what we can naturally know about God, then we know that text is false (or else our understanding of the text is wrong). But if nothing in the text is contrary, then it may or may not be true.
The same reasoning I applied above applies here. You can’t simply show some traits of a being that can be knowable and assert that it, therefore, is. Especially when the traits you’ve shown are consistant with something we already do know, (existence) and the other traits you have yet to show are some of the core traits of what you’re trying to prove.
What I have been saying all along:
- that it is logical to believe a God exists, and we can base this on the use of our senses and human reasoning.
- that our existence is “in Him”: we don’t really exist except insofar as we participate in His existence.
1.) This is not true. You have shown me existence, not God.
2.) This is not true of a number system, or any infinite existence as I have already shown.
But I have never said that it was “logical” to conclude all that has been revealed about God. In fact, it is not logical, but contradictory. For who would conclude that an all-powerful God would become a man and suffer at the hands of His creatures? I say it is not logical, but I mean it is not logical from the perspective of our natural existence. By faith I would say it is logical (and amazing) from the perspective of the supernatural.
This is a false conclusion in of itself. You can not logically believe the existence of such a God, because you have not shown it to be a God.
As I have said countless times over in this debate, you can not reclassify God as existence. If there are other traits that further seperate God from existence, you must show them.
Secondly, we can not argue from the perspective of the supernatural because we can not know the supernatural. We only know what is natural, and have no knowledge of something supernatural. Furthermore, there is no logic or reasoning in the supernatural, so to say it is logical from the perspective of it is an oxymoron of sorts.
I cannot demonstrate to you with certainty what the naturally unknowable aspects are. It can only be done supernaturally, in faith. Neither can we even try to know them, for we don’t know what we are supposed to be looking for. But God can and does reveal these things to whomever He pleases.
Is this an admission that you can’t logically show me God? Remember, you still have yet to classify Him as anything more that the definition of existence, you have not shown the traits of a God.