Floo,
Just because a person has an experience, which seems very real to them, doesn't mean it works for others. One size doesn't fit all.
The problem here is this word “experience”. I don’t doubt that Vlad and others like him have had episodes of some kind – that is, I’m fairly sure that in general most at least don’t deliberately say, “I’m just going to make this story up”. Where it falls apart though is when they reach for a narrative to explain what
caused the episode. There are lots of reasons why, but here are a few:
First, there are lots of possible reasons for episodes of this kind, only one of which involves the divine. They can be induced artificially for example. There is though no means to eliminate the naturalistic (but less exciting perhaps) ones, or even to assign a probabilistic value to “God” versus the others.
Second, “God” answers nothing – it’s just white noise. There’s no method, not process, no
anything to explain the event – a bit like the cartoon torri posted with the big formula on the blackboard and in the middle the words, “miracle happens here”.
Third, there have been countless beliefs in countless gods in countless places over the millennia. Yet those who have “experiences” always seem to reach for the one that’s most proximate and to which they’re most enculturated. The Amazonian tribesman reaches for whatever god he believes in, the Sumerian reached for his god, Vlad reached for the Christian god etc. It’s not a knock down argument, but you’d think it would at least give pause to the people who claim these things to consider the astonishing co-incidence of the one true god just happening to be the very one at the time and place they happened to have their “experience”.
By contrast, if instead a previously undiscovered tribe was found that had the details and particulars of a god from a particular faith other than their indigenous one then at least there’d be cause to wonder how that happened if not for the god in question paying a visit.
Fourth, the arguments attempted for why it must have been their god are always hopeless – “this in not what I wanted” etc, as if somehow a conflict between the conscious and unconscious mind validates the claim.
Fifth…well you get the idea I’m sure. The list could go on and on, but essentially causality is the big problem for those who claim “experiences”.