Sword,
You pack a lot of fallacies into very few words. Briefly:
Hmmm...I've responded to a post in a similar vein else where BashfulAnthony, so I'll give another angle...
You will no doubt be familiar with the Lord Jesus' many exchanges with the Pharisees, teachers of the Law, etc. Why wouldn't they accept Him as the Messiah? Because their worldview wouldn't allow for Him being the Messiah.
Either that, or he wasn't able to make a cogent argument for being the "Messiah, or he wasn't the Messiah at all. There are various options here.
They decided that He didn't fit the bill, so it didn't matter what the evidence said, what He did (miracles, healings, etc., their minds were already made up. In short, their worldview was not falsifiable.
No, that's just your presumption. You have no way of knowing either that he was the Messiah, and nor what evidence would have been persuasive even if he was.
Like you, I took a break from posting on these types of forums, but for much longer than a year. I decided to look at how the Lord Jesus tackled the problem. He exposed the flaws in their worldviews and premises.
If you say so. Why don't you try the same approach then, starting with an explanation of what you think your interlocutors' "worldview" to be.
What I learnt also was to apply properties of truth. Truth does not depend on what we think about it.
Actually it does. "Truth" is what we determine it to be - it's not some mysterious force just floating around "out there". Try some basic epistemology for further details.
Truth is supported by evidence. A statement can be shown to be true directly, or to be not true by showing that the converse is true.
Sort of. A propositions can be shown to be provisionally, probabilistically true but that says nothing a supposed absolute truth.
Where truth cannot be verified directly, it has to be accepted by faith,...
Pardon? Whose "faith"? Yours? Mine? The cat's?
What on earth do you think faith has to do with truth?
... but as it will be supported by evidence, it is not blind faith.
How would you differentiate "faith" from "blind faith" exactly?
A problem arises when we start deciding in advance what the nature of the evidence must be, so there's one point to address. A second problem arises when we start deciding how the evidence must be handled.
Actually the real problem is in deciding what you mean by "evidence". If you think "faith" has anything to do with it, you've given yourself quite a job to demonstrate that. Good luck with it though.
I have given the questioners here ample opportunity to show how their commitment to a naturalistic philosophy is falsifiable. None has been forthcoming. If they could demonstrate that all causes/effects have natural explanations, there would be no need for religious belief of any kind, but hey, I'm shifting the burden of proof again
That's not true - I've given you a method to do that several times now but you've just ignored it. Here it is a again: try taking the lift to the ground floor, then try jumping out of the window and relying on an angel to carry you down. Now tell me whether the statement "the naturalistic lift options is probabilistically more likely to deliver you safely to the ground than the non-naturalistic angel option" is true or not.
Let me know how you get on.