I see that many of the points you raise have been dealt with but I will post this as is.
(emphasis mine)
Before I get picked up on it, I’ll make it clear that what I am saying is a belief about what is true, not a certainty.
Okay. To be absolutely precise, those of us who, like me, are totally lacking a belief in any god whilst acknowledging that there is just the remotest possibility that one might be found one day, disregard that chance.
You seem to have had an interesting journey! Some of my best friends are Muslims and Sikhs. From a belief perspective, we could all be wrong, but we can’t all be right. I wrestle with that one sometimes because I see a commitment to their religion that has to be respected.
Why ‘respected’? acknowledge, understood, both historically and culturally, but since there is zero evidence for anything supernatural – call it what you will – why, ‘respected’?
You said, “and will continue to be on the look-out for the one fact which will change the world's atheists to believers or vice versa” My journey on this revolved around looking for explanations for the something. Do I go for natural only explanations or do I go for a non-natural explanation? I had arguments for both but the deciding factor for me going for non-natural explanations was when being presented with naturalistic explanations that were contradicted by what can be observed.
The Theory of Evolution deals with much of your list. I will comment on the moral point:
• Morality from non-morality
the word ‘morality’ is simply a label to cover behaviours that were advantageous and pleasing to our species and assisted their survival. When civilisation and language development formed them into a code they simply became a set of rules, but that was not the
start of morality.
Ok. So why the creator route? Human beings design and make things. What are the attributes of these? Is there anything comparable in the world? In my opinion, absolutely. Having a creator therefore solves the something from nothing problem.
No, it simply adds the question of infinite regression – who created the creator, etc.
So what is the nature of the creator?
All attributes and characteristics ascribed to any kind of god or creator come from the imagination of humans.
Over to religious belief. I was brought up in a Christian environment, so it made sense to start there. I spent much of my teenage years trying to get away from it because I didn’t have any say in whether or not I could attend church. So I kind of went along with it. Ultimately, it came down to whether or not I could believe that Jesus rose from the dead. When I was 18, I came to the conclusion that I needed to decide one way or the other, so made a decision to commit to it and take the Christian faith more seriously.
I don’t know how old you are, but for those of my age, there was really no option. However, I consider myself fortunate in one way – the only part of belief in my family was that of belief in God. All other ideas, myths, legends, biblical stories, miracles etc were, self-evidently, simply stories, many aimed at promoting goodbehaviour and showing why anti-social behaviours were wrong.
So, to answer your last question (in bold), it was an inductive approach that led me to the conclusion that there was a creator, a step of faith based on believing that Jesus Christ rose from the dead …
I really have to stop you there. In the face of everything we know, and that humans have known for thousands of years, however much they may have wanted to believe otherwise, all living things die; why do you wish to suspend your disbelief to such an extent to believe that a person can be resurrected? Do you think that people 2,000 years ago were better informed than we are today?
…and if that is true, …
The word
if has a lot to answer for here – there is overwhelming evidence that it Is vanishingly unlikelythat it is even remotely possible, so why is it more believable to you that it
could happen? What logic do you use to arrive at that idea?
…then there is no reason for me to doubt other things that are said in the Bible, and in terms of what is true with regard to the Christian faith,…
If you only believe those bits, then you are being very selective I think.
I try and take a deductive approach based on what the Bible says.
Why would you do that? Do you think that the words and stories written down pretty much 2,000 and more ago are more worthy of belief than our up-to-date knowledge of our planet, our galaxy, space, the universe, etc