M
Mr.Ex_Nihilo
Guest
Meh, at least you got spend a lot of time with him and had the chance to show him you loved him. My dad blew his head off with a rifle-- so you’re not getting much sympathy from me.That is all heresay. Let me give you a real example from my own personal experience. My grandfather was very religious his whole life. He prayed often and went to church often until he was no longer able. He was overcome by senility the last few years of his life and was barely able to understand what was going on around him. He was always a strong man. He was in pain most of the time for the last year of his life.
I watched him dehydrate to death the last few days of his life. He was unable to digest food. Keeping him hydrated would have just resulted in a longer drawn out death of starvation. A more humane course of death by euthanasia was not possible due to its religiously motivated illegality in my state (suicide is a sin). If this is what you mean by prayer affecting “the way they go” then you can have it.
The question of pain, in my opinion, is actually the weakest argument against God’s existence-- because many people do continue to believe in God despite the painful things they go through. In fact, many are made stronger by the pain they go through.
Their growth in God despite suffering contradicts the claims of those of no faith who assume bad things disprove his existence. In fact, stuggling is good if you want to learn how to fly. It’s really a matter of perspective, counting it all good so to speak.
And yes, God can even bring something good out of something evil. So get over it and stop feeling sorry for yourself. Life and death happens regardless of what you want to happen. So too does God exist despite the pain we go through.And we rejoice in the hope of the glory of God. Not only so, but we also rejoice in our sufferings, because we know that suffering produces perseverance; perseverance, character; and character, hope. And hope does not disappoint us, because God has poured out his love into our hearts by the Holy Spirit, whom he has given us.
On the intellectual side, I’m still curious as to what atheism offers over and above religion-- and I’m still wondering why one would bother with atheism in either it’s passive or militant form?
As I said before, the examples you gave were not particularly compelling for either form of atheism-- except to those who are already atheists. I haven’t really seen any compelling arguments for either to be fair