That’s a dodge. If God doesn’t exist, then it behooves you – or any atheist – to logically and rationally explan how reality came to be. You don’t look at a car, for instance, and then just irrationally decide that it must have just come together by random circumstance. Everyone would laugh at you if you made that pronouncement because it would mean you are deranged.
I am coming to understand that that is a common argument from the religious, that for an atheist, the only possible way for creation to have occurred is so unlikely due to
random circumstance. However, it has come to my attention recently that atheists do not believe at all that it is a
random occurrence, knocking that argument.
The simple fact of the car means that someone created it. If you are arguing against that idea, then you need to provide an alternative.
A car could only be man made: it isn’t biological. No one argues that. There are no lower forms of cars that a car in question could have evolved from. Through an extremely long period of time, simple processes slowly developed into more complex ones. This is not the same as a static car disconnected in possibility that its structure has been created by natural processes.
So, actually the burden of proof is entirely on you as the non-believer. You must explain how life came about in a scientific, logical and rational way.
So, your construct is at its base irrational.
When things that are empirically unfalsifiable, the burden of proof does NOT fall upon the opponent, but instead the proponents. The opponent cannot empirically prove that the Spaghetti Monster is the creator either.
Now in terms of moral obligation, you might have something there. I mean, we have no obligation to prove to him anything, right? (<-sarcasm)
So, I’d like someone to tell me why it would be ethical within our Catholic beliefs to shun helping to become convinced. I guess if he doesn’t see it, then he’s going to hell, right? (<-sarcasm again)
Again, your notion is that there is no proof of the existence of God… that there is no evidence. There is an abundance of evidence, historically, scientifically and philosohically. You need to grapple with that reality and refute it in some way.
This is good advice (<- no sarcasm). I really think he does need to pick up some books. There is a wealth of good books on this subject, and while I think others have pointed out a few good ones, it might be best to point him to some more examples just for variety.