W
warpspeedpetey
Guest
i dont think there is any lack for evidence of G-d. the empirical evidence is the existence of the universe. we can go this route through the cosmological argument. which i am happy to defend.I think there are lots of objections to God’s existence. I think though the two main assaults against God in the present time come along these lines:
- The lack of evidence for God’s existence
but we need not go to metaphysics to have the best evidence of all. eye witnesses. we have several dozen books written over 1500 years, these books all describe the relationship of G-d and man. these books make dozens of Prophecies about a Messiah, and then other books descibe their fulfillment in Christ. these books were gathered together because they all verified this narrative, we call these books the Bible.
given this is the same evidence kind of second hand evidence that we have for the existence of the magna carta, the moonlanding and the American Revolution. it would be a double standard to reject them. further to reject them on the basis of incredulity, because they seem implausible, would be a logical fallacy. their plausibility says nothing about their actual occurence. simply not understanding the process by which they occured doesnt mean they didnt occur.
this is actually both the easiest and hardest one to deal with. its easy in that one can show its little more than the opinion of the proponent, its based on a house of cards. it doesnt stand to rational examination.
- The problem of evil.
it is the hardest in that for people unaware of the philosophical ramifications of the argument, people who understandably tend to trust their emotions more than logic will hold to this like a life raft. incessantly repeating their emotional position instead of any rational support for it.
here are both a theological exposition on Suffering by Pope John Paul The Great, “Salvific Doloris”
vatican.va/holy_father/john_paul_ii/apost_letters/documents/hf_jp-ii_apl_11021984_salvifici-doloris_en.html
for a more technical rejection, i have devloped this refutation. this thread carries a discussion of it.
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?t=367987
for me, the most rational position is belief.