AB,
I have made my reasons quite plain…
But your reasons turn out to be very bad arguments and assertions of personal faith. Why then should anyone else take them seriously?
…and there are millions of other people who have found reasons to believe.
First that’s just a repetition of the
argumentum ad populum fallacy, and second it’s not true in any case – “millions of other people” believe in countless
different gods. What makes those gods the wrong ones and your god the right one?
If you wanted to believe…
If you “wanted to believe” then you would have pre-judged there being something to believe in and so would risk falling prey to any manner of biases to confirm what you already wanted to be true.
…you too may discover reasons to believe.
But only bad ones. Wanting to believe doesn’t in some way make bad reasons into good ones.
And I know of some who did not want to believe, but found reasons which changed their mind.
No doubt the same is true for every other faith belief too. Changing your mind for bad reasons doesn’t though help you, and nor do anecdotes constitute data by the way.
So, rather than keep prevaricating why not finally try to answer the questions you’re actually asked?