AB,
You have used a considerable amount of contrived logic to create a bizarre comparison between cracks in the pavement and answers to prayer.
There’s nothing “contrived” about it – I was merely explaining to you the
post hoc ergo propter hoc fallacy. Sadly, it appears to have fallen upon deaf ears but it’s a fallacy nonetheless regardless of how you populate it – prayers or pavements, it makes no difference to the principle.
The irony is that without your gifts of perception and intelligently driven free will you would never be able to contrive such a scenario.
That’s not an irony, and it’s the
appearance of “free will” as you think it to be for reasons that have been explained to you many times now but that you fail nonetheless to grasp.
I do not consider answers to prayer to be the foundation of my Christian faith - it is just a consequence that once you have faith, you realise that God can answer prayers.
Again, you miss the point. I do not suggest that “answers to prayers” are the foundation of your faith. That’s
all you have though – personal faith. You can no more “realise” that a god can answer prayers than I can “realise” that pavements affect football scores. All that each of us is doing is deciding that something is true by applying bad reasoning to a sequence of events.
People often ask why God is apparently selective in the prayers that get answered, and use this as an argument that God does not answer prayers, but that they are just random coincidences.
Sort of. What “people” actually do it to explain that the incidence of surprising outcomes after praying for them is exactly the same as it is when you don’t pray for them. So yes, “random co-incidences” is the default until and unless anyone can finally suggest a coherent reason to think otherwise.
It’s a secondary issue though to point out that a supposedly good god would in fact be a pretty scummy god if prayer actually worked – concerning himself with getting you the promotion you wanted for example rather than with curing the baby with cancer.
Does a parent always answer a child's request by giving the child anything that is requested? The parent will listen to the child's request, then use their judgement on the best way to respond, which may not always be what the child wants.
That’s called “casuistry” – another example of bad reasoning. If you want to go with it nonetheless, what kind of parent would exercise his judgement to allow one child to win the school raffle, but the other not to be cured of a serious disease for example? Surely a good parent or god should grant his favours to do the most good rather than just according to the pattern you’d expect to see if there was no parent/god don’t you think?
Also, the request might me impossible to implement.
How can something be impossible for a god who can do anything he wants to do?
We, as a child of God, do not see the big picture. I just have faith in God's love for us all, and know that every prayer will be answered.
First, clearly every prayer is not answered – people pray for lots of things that don’t happen.
Second, yes I know you have “faith”. The problem though is that’s all you have – which is fine for you personally, but you have no arguments of any kind to suggest that your faith beliefs are objectively true for anyone else too.
Third, you still have no basis to suggest that prayer works in the absence of any method to show that praying can be causal of outcomes.