(I am transferring this reply from another thread due to the content, which is more appropriate to this SFG thread)Yes, I do have a profound knowledge of God and His creation and His love.
How can you be confident in this, given the well documented liabilities of the human mind? We have fairly conclusively shown that human beings, in isolation, are fundamentally flawed observer in a number of ways, and we have to design our quests for knowledge carefully to try to eliminate or reduce those limitations. What have you done to eliminate your own, say, confirmation bias?
God and His works are certainly beyond human understanding, but that does not imply that God does not exist.
It's one possible explanation that fits the evidence, though. As to whether the natural world is beyond human understanding... four or five centuries ago, significantly more of it was 'beyond human understanding' than is the case now, and there's justification in thinking that at least some more of it will be understood in the future than is now. Is it that the world is beyond CURRENT understanding, or do you have a basis for presuming that something about reality is inherently beyond the human capacity to investigate? If so, why?
It is not silly to acknowledge the existence of something beyond your understanding.
Whether or not I understand it isn't what determines whether or not it's silly to acknowledge it; whether or not there's evidence to support the claim. I don't fully understand quantum theory, but it seems evident to me that there's something there. I don't fully understand Higgs Bosons, but gravity is an observable phenomenon.
What makes it silly to 'acknowledge the existence' of god is that there's no evidence for it. There's nothing that conclusively proves there isn't a god, it remains technically a possibility, but there is a space between acceptance of the idea and the presumption that it's therefore the case.
My certainty that God exists is based on far more than our gift of free will.
Well that's lucky, given your inability to explain how that could even be a thing, let alone demonstrate that actually is a thing.
My gift of free will just opens the door to prayer and devotion which brings us into intimate knowledge of God and His love for us.
Wow, a perfect trifecta of unevidenced nothing - free will, prayers and gods... did you want to throw in Bigfoot and morphic resonance for a Full House?
O.