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But even with that, you’ll get similar people. My point was that you keep asking questions that ultimately come down to “but maybe God doesn’t exist.”Starting a new thread
“Why are you spiritual?”
But even with that, you’ll get similar people. My point was that you keep asking questions that ultimately come down to “but maybe God doesn’t exist.”Starting a new thread
“Why are you spiritual?”
They certainly didn’t doubt the existence of the spirit world. They believed in God, or gods, and in spiritual things.So you believe every single human that existed before Marx believed in God? Interesting.
Even the term “natural selection” implies an intelligence behind the scenes making value judgements that “this is better, and should be kept. This is worse, and should be discontinued.”Still, no religious person on here is able to offer a good response to my concern about all current religions being human inventions and survivors of natural selection.
Only you can make that decision, to believe or not. It takes a leap of faith. No one can prove it to you.That is my concern because I just don’t want to be religious without knowing it is true. Even if we have some sort of desire for God, it might be a weakness.
I will attempt not to do that. I will read responses and try to at least imagine that God/gods/spirit world(s) exist.But even with that, you’ll get similar people. My point was that you keep asking questions that ultimately come down to “but maybe God doesn’t exist.”
Abraham was the first person in recorded history to realize that there is a God. It happened to him in the middle of the night.I still think no religion makes the most sense. Even if there is God, why care? Why not remain apathetic?
Why do you need God? You don’t unless you believe you need God. There are all the proofs, etc and the notion that if there is a God then there is a reward etc…but to believe you do not need God is your perogative?This is like the whole “Christianity is not a religion but a relationship” thing I heard from Protestants/non Catholics when I was Catholic
This board is to complicated for such a paradigm shift.
Maybe the question I should ask is:
Why do you need God?Why do you need to be spiritual?I feel fine without it.What is so wrong with the idea that there is no afterlife, no Creator , etc? YES, we experience immaterial things like love, etc…and religion/God explains those things…but why not just go without explanations?
I’m not saying you’re all wrong, but what about life without God/religion/spiritualism, etc? I really want to understand this.***
Peace
THANK YOU!Abraham was the first person in recorded history to realize that there is a God. It happened to him in the middle of the night.
His reaction was not to think, “OH, so that’s what that is. Isn’t that interesting?” and then roll over and go back to sleep - no.
He immediately got out of bed, dressed in his best clothes, ran outside, built an altar, and captured a variety of different animals to offer in sacrifice to God.
God responded by making a Covenant with him.
If/when it ever dawns on you that there is a God, you will most likely react in a similar way - you will want to do something - something that for want of a better word will probably look “religious” to the various bystanders and onlookers. They’ll say, “Oh, look - he’s got religion.”
P.S.S. 108 posts.THANK YOU!
I get it. Assuming that story is true, Abraham knew of God, and felt a “draw” to worship. In the same way, we do things for people who love. I get it. Know, I just need to be convinced of God, then what religion. Objectively/historically, Catholicism is the only one that makes sense to me.
Thomas Aquinas’ 5 Ways are convincing. I would recommend you pick up the book Aquinas by Edward Feser (available as Kindle ed too) and also The Last Superstition by the same. Visit also Ed Feser’s blog at edwardfeser.blogspot.com and follow the discussions there. Thomas Aquinas 5 Ways are compatible with any cosmology you like.THANK YOU!
I get it. Assuming that story is true, Abraham knew of God, and felt a “draw” to worship. In the same way, we do things for people who love. I get it. Know, I just need to be convinced of God, then what religion. Objectively/historically, Catholicism is the only one that makes sense to me.
An athlete desires practice and exercise to be in top performance; his desire is not a form of weakness but a aspiration to become better. So to it should be with most religious people (at least for Christians), a belief in God isn’t a weakness, but am aspiration to become a better person - both for the sake of themselves and for other people.That is my concern because I just don’t want to be religious without knowing it is true. Even if we have some sort of desire for God, it might be a weakness.
Thanks. Might as well continue here.Thomas Aquinas’ 5 Ways are convincing. I would recommend you pick up the book Aquinas by Edward Feser (available as Kindle ed too) and also The Last Superstition by the same. Visit also Ed Feser’s blog at edwardfeser.blogspot.com and follow the discussions there. Thomas Aquinas 5 Ways are compatible with any cosmology you like.
Another interesting book to read is Vox Day’s The Irrational Atheist. Vox also had an interesting debate with an atheist on the existence of God/gods. I think the debate petered out but you can also find it on his website.
Anyway, thinking about the important question “Why is there anything at all?” is bound to lead at least in some way to God. As for evolution/natural selection/etc. remember science is an evolving venture and it is provisional at best. Evolution even if true, and I think it is true in most regards, does not deny God in any way, in fact evolution is more compatible with a non-tinkerer God. Behaviour of matter and energy (laws of physics) gives rise to life and us. It’s convincing the God of classic theism (and Catholic Church/Christianity) is sustaining a very rationally ordered universe, right down to quantum theory.
This bothers me. All current religions are either human inventions and a continuation of what humans have always been doing (see my comments about history and anthropology of religion, etc) or one of them is true, namely Catholicism.
Can you prove this?
Because it’s True.OK. God exists, in your opinion. Good. I’m apathetic.
I want to know why you can’t be satisfied life without being religious, without talking to God , , being “friends” with Jesus, etc.
People in the developing world, where I spend much of my time, are usually more religious. They usually lead harsher lives then the rest of us. I think it is the luxuries which drive people to other points of view. After all, the bling is attractive. The language in the Bible pretty archaic and the modern secular pop world of media pseudo-intellectuals far removed from God. It’s easy to lose faith this way.Thanks. Might as well continue here.
Whatever reading/studying I do is just because I happen to be born in a well to do country, educated, and money to purchase books to access to the internet, etc. I mean, I have the LUXURY of being able to study religion and then pick one. Others do not, or have less means. I just have trouble with the idea of being a certain religion to picking one (being able to go to church etc) because one has the luxury to do so?
Yes it does. Again I think these people have less to worry about then people in the West, in this regard.What about impoverished villages, etc? They are limited to whatever spirituality exists in their locality, which might not be Catholic. Whatever they conclude to may not be true, assuming the Catholic Church is true. But then, Catholic theology states something along the lines of "those who through no fault of their own do not know to Gospel…can be saved…etc". I hope you understand this concern.
But none of this has anything to do with whether or not God exists.Thanks. Might as well continue here.
Whatever reading/studying I do is just because I happen to be born in a well to do country, educated, and money to purchase books to access to the internet, etc. I mean, I have the LUXURY of being able to study religion and then pick one. Others do not, or have less means. I just have trouble with the idea of being a certain religion to picking one (being able to go to church etc) because one has the luxury to do so?
What about impoverished villages, etc? They are limited to whatever spirituality exists in their locality, which might not be Catholic. Whatever they conclude to may not be true, assuming the Catholic Church is true. But then, Catholic theology states something along the lines of “those who through no fault of their own do not know to Gospel…can be saved…etc”. I hope you understand this concern.
You can’t start a flame war the mods won’t allow it. I am Catholic because God called me directly to the Church. There is a God. I have never “practiced religion” I don’t think. Maybe I should, probably a lack on my part. As for why I go to Mass, to Adoration, all of that: I just like it.Hello,
I am not here to start a flame war. I would like to know why some of you need to practice religion Even if there is a God, why do you need a relationship with him/her/it? Did it ever occur to you that you are Catholic or some other sort of Christian because you were born into it,…
If you ever hear someone say that you should respond: That is nonsense. Religion comes from the Latin word religare, which means “relationship”.This is like the whole** “Christianity is not a religion but a relationship”** thing I heard from Protestants/non Catholics when I was Catholic
This board is to complicated for such a paradigm shift.
I can’t prove it I wasn’t stating it as fact or even theory in the way that gravity is a “theory” but as rather a possibility. To me, it seems more likely that Catholicism is another invention rather than the Catholic explanation that it is God’s final revelation and everything else before it was a precursor or “man searching in the shadows”, etc. But, I could be wrong. Trying to figure that out.Can you prove this?
On what basis do you say that?I can’t prove it I wasn’t stating it as fact or even theory in the way that gravity is a “theory” but as rather a possibility. To me, it seems more likely that Catholicism is another invention rather than the Catholic explanation that it is God’s final revelation and everything else before it was a precursor or “man searching in the shadows”, etc. But, I could be wrong. Trying to figure that out.
Every civilization (I think) had/has some spiritual element, maybe Christianity is just another one of those elements and thrived because of favorable conditions, etc. The idea that everything else before was a a precursor seems like an invention/excuse.On what basis do you say that?
Christianity reduces to Christ. If Christ did not rise from the dead then He was not God, then Christianity is false. Theism may still be true then, based on natural theology.Every civilization (I think) had/has some spiritual element, maybe Christianity is just another one of those elements and thrived because of favorable conditions, etc. The idea that everything else before was a a precursor seems like an invention/excuse.
I could be wrong.