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Quote from: Alan Burns on June 04, 2015, 08:53:48 AMQuote from: Leonard James on June 04, 2015, 08:31:08 AMQuote from: Alan Burns on June 04, 2015, 07:59:00 AMI have always had a fascination of science and technology, but I can verify that it all pales into insignificance compared to the wonder and awe of knowing God.Not so! It all pales into insignificance compared to the wonder of believing you know God.Len, God is real. More real than anything I perceive through my human senses. God has made Himself known by becoming part of me. You will most likely write this off as total delusion, but there are many others with the same insight.Ah, but the God you believe in is a capricious being, bursting into the lives of some, unbidden, whilst stubbornly refusing to materialise for others who spend time earnestly 'looking' for him. This is not a God deserving of worship to my mind, it is a far lesser being than one that was available to all without fear of favour, with none of this silly hide and seek business.
Quote from: Leonard James on June 04, 2015, 08:31:08 AMQuote from: Alan Burns on June 04, 2015, 07:59:00 AMI have always had a fascination of science and technology, but I can verify that it all pales into insignificance compared to the wonder and awe of knowing God.Not so! It all pales into insignificance compared to the wonder of believing you know God.Len, God is real. More real than anything I perceive through my human senses. God has made Himself known by becoming part of me. You will most likely write this off as total delusion, but there are many others with the same insight.
Quote from: Alan Burns on June 04, 2015, 07:59:00 AMI have always had a fascination of science and technology, but I can verify that it all pales into insignificance compared to the wonder and awe of knowing God.Not so! It all pales into insignificance compared to the wonder of believing you know God.
I have always had a fascination of science and technology, but I can verify that it all pales into insignificance compared to the wonder and awe of knowing God.
Quote from: Shaker on June 04, 2015, 02:50:21 PM... in the case of Catholics especially one can hardly blame them I personally know of many, many very happy Roman Catholics who endeavour to obey all the rules of the church in addition to doing other good works. I know there are also many who cherry pick what rules they wish to obey in order to suite their lifestyle, but sadly they miss out on the absolute joy and inner peace of being at one with God.
... in the case of Catholics especially one can hardly blame them
There's nothing evil about using your evolution-given brain to reason with, Al, but I'm not remotely surprised that you should think there is.
Quote from: Sriram on June 04, 2015, 04:38:55 PMQuote from: Leonard James on June 04, 2015, 08:40:50 AMI would never be so daft as to deny the possibility of such an intelligence, and will obviously accept it when I am presented with any reliable evidence for it.Well...that is good enough for a start, I think. What you now need to realize is that the brain that you are so proud of, DNA... and everything else that exists in the world......IS the evidence for this Intelligence. There is no other special evidence labeled as 'evidence for God' and hidden somewhere for us to find.That's fine. I'll line myself up behind Einstein's take on religion.I do not believe in a personal God and I have never denied this but have expressed it clearly. If something is in me which can be called religious then it is the unbounded admiration for the structure of the world so far as our science can reveal it.
Quote from: Leonard James on June 04, 2015, 08:40:50 AMI would never be so daft as to deny the possibility of such an intelligence, and will obviously accept it when I am presented with any reliable evidence for it.Well...that is good enough for a start, I think. What you now need to realize is that the brain that you are so proud of, DNA... and everything else that exists in the world......IS the evidence for this Intelligence. There is no other special evidence labeled as 'evidence for God' and hidden somewhere for us to find.
I would never be so daft as to deny the possibility of such an intelligence, and will obviously accept it when I am presented with any reliable evidence for it.
Yes, but that seems to be intrinsic to theism generally, certainly in my experience of listening to many theists. They talk a good game about an infinite God this and an awesome God that, but when push comes to shove they oftentimes betray that they appear to believe in a God functionally the same as a tired and petulant four year-old.
Dear Leonard,But you can't quote wee Albert, what does the greatest scientist who has ever lived know about theology.When I post telling the forum that wee Albert is on record as saying Our Lord was most definitely no myth I am told what does he know about the subject.But I prefer when he talks about the universe and the fact that we can understand it, that is one of the big questions, why!Gonnagle.
Quote from: Alan Burns on June 04, 2015, 07:30:00 PMQuote from: Shaker on June 04, 2015, 02:50:21 PM... in the case of Catholics especially one can hardly blame them I personally know of many, many very happy Roman Catholics who endeavour to obey all the rules of the church in addition to doing other good works. I know there are also many who cherry pick what rules they wish to obey in order to suite their lifestyle, but sadly they miss out on the absolute joy and inner peace of being at one with God. How do you know that they don't 'experience the same joy' as you? How do you know that in using contraception and limiting their family size they don't use the extra time this frees up for prayer or good works?
Quote from: Shaker on June 04, 2015, 09:12:59 PMYes, but that seems to be intrinsic to theism generally, certainly in my experience of listening to many theists. They talk a good game about an infinite God this and an awesome God that, but when push comes to shove they oftentimes betray that they appear to believe in a God functionally the same as a tired and petulant four year-old.That latter remark is a rather silly and sweeping generalisation. I venture to suggest that as a life-time Christian, who has undoubtedly had more experience and interaction with Christians than you, the allusion you make is something I simply do not recognise. It is just your usual, unsubstantiated, attempt to deride Christians. It won't do.
Quote from: BashfulAnthony on June 04, 2015, 09:28:50 PMQuote from: Shaker on June 04, 2015, 09:12:59 PMYes, but that seems to be intrinsic to theism generally, certainly in my experience of listening to many theists. They talk a good game about an infinite God this and an awesome God that, but when push comes to shove they oftentimes betray that they appear to believe in a God functionally the same as a tired and petulant four year-old.That latter remark is a rather silly and sweeping generalisation. I venture to suggest that as a life-time Christian, who has undoubtedly had more experience and interaction with Christians than you, the allusion you make is something I simply do not recognise. It is just your usual, unsubstantiated, attempt to deride Christians. It won't do.It's been my experience that in many cases deriding Christians is unnecessary, since some of the things they come out with - things they purport to believe - make themselves look silly without any other input. As our Alan is doing a sterling job of demonstrating right now, as it happens.
Quite! I wouldn't trust an old book on medicine and nor would anybody else of any sense, so why an old book on anything else should be deemed trustworthy I have no idea
But true.
No, I concede that you might be able to find one or two oddballs somewhere who think that a 2,000 year-old treatise on medicine is an accurate and reliable medical textbook, true.
Neither was I; I used that as an analogy.