Don’t change the goalposts. I am talking about here and how. Not some 2000 years old mythology.
When you said “physical realm”, it seemed you were talking about things that were, well… in the physical realm – like Jesus, or the assertions of God’s interactions that we assert happened in antiquity. No goalpost change.
You weren’t asking for “physical realm” in the context of God’s existence, were you? I thought we already agreed that He’s not physical.
Again, you can’t have it both ways. Either there is a miracle of transubstantiation, even when there is no change, or the miracle only occurs when the bread actually changes to meat? No matter how hard you try, you can’t have your cake and eat it, too.
No. You’re misunderstanding the claim. Let’s start over.
Catholics claim that the Eucharist is truly Christ, substantially present in a sacramental mode. We do not claim that every Eucharist is physically, observably flesh or blood. So, the Eucharist occurs in a way that isn’t physical.
On the other hand, there are claims of “Eucharistic miracles” in which actual, observable flesh and blood is present. These are not claims that ‘prove’ the Eucharist, theologically speaking. If we want to evaluate these sorts of claims, then we would want to demonstrate that it’s actual flesh and blood. However, that would still not get us where you claim it would get us: it would only demonstrate the presence of human matter. One would never be able to conclude “since there is flesh and blood, then empirically it’s a miracle.” (That’s the whole point: a miracle, by definition, is a physical event that is unexplainable by ordinary means.)
So, I’m not trying any sleight of hand. We make claims about the Eucharist that are not empirically verifiable (since they’re not claims about physical matter, per se). On the other hand, when folks make claims about ‘Eucharistic miracles’, we really
can ask for empirical observation… but that would only ID matter, not cause.
Again, that’s non-responsive to the question “demonstrate why God must or should act in the way you demand He acts.”
Not just to me, to everyone who needs enlightenment.
There’s one commonality among these cases of “everyone who needs enlightenment”: they’re telling God “do it
my way, man.” For those who do not make that demand, the problem disappears. (That would imply that the problem isn’t God’s, but the persons’.)
The old phrase “blessed are the ones who don’t see and yet believe” is just another cop-out.
Actually, that’s a direct quote of Jesus from the Gospels. So… I’m gonna go with “not a cop-out.”
In my whole life my parents always answered me when I asked something, or asked for something, and they always explained why my questions cannot be fulfilled - when that was the case
Oh. So, what you’re telling me is that this isn’t an objective consideration – it’s you projecting your personal experience on the rest of the world.
The “silence of God” is the most damaging problem
For those who feel entitled, I can see how that would be a shock to the system. For those who don’t feel entitled, it can be pretty difficult to understand the perspective “I should get it because I asked for it.”
Come on. That “qualifier” of “if it be thy will” is simply a preventive cop-out.
No; it’s actually what the Church teaches. You can scoff at it, but you don’t get to tell us “no, you don’t really believe what you say you believe.”
Not that it is being explicitly uttered.
Dang. And here I was sure that’s how I prayed! I’m so glad you corrected my misunderstanding of what I actually pray!
Somehow, the millions of prayers for alleviating the hunger and illnesses in Africa go unheeded. Presumably it is more important to help the Mexican team to score a goal, than it is to stop the famine in Africa.
You’re on a roll today, VL. Maybe we can pick up conversation again when the hyperbole and snark clears…
Really? What would it be? I am interested in your method.
We can talk about philosophical discourse and logical inference.