You were a really shitty Christian apologist.
Spirituality
It has often been suggested that science has proven that God does not exist.
The main thrust of this argument is that Science does not presume the existence of God and therefore we don't need the concept of God in order to explain the universe and therefore there's no God.
Besides, look at the suffering and evil in this world. If God exists, why would He allow evil?
We have moved far from the world that our ancient forefathers inhabited. Back then, believing in the supernatural was self-evident
. We need to see our world through their lens if we were to discuss the existence of God.
The nature that science investigates is not the Nature we experience. Nature, to us, is alive - the plants and animals in it. Although science can tell us how milk, for example, is derived from grass, or bones from calcium, we are not yet able to replicate any of these natural processes. We cannot, for example, make milk from grass nor bones from milk. In repairing our teeth, the dentist does not have a paste that they can apply to the tooth to fill the hole that will dry into enamel.
This is odd, don't you think?
We can uncover the beginning of the universe, discover black holes, even create artificial intelligence but we have not penetrated even the simplest form of life.
It seems to me that science, despite its powerful discoveries and penetrative investigative tools, has only scratched the laws of nature that it set out to do.
The bridge between the nature that science has been able to discover and explain and the Nature we experience is life.
We live in a world of living things whilst science has only been able to study the world of the dead.
The origin of the word "spirit" is spirare, which simply means to breathe. In other words, every thing that is alive is spirit. To rationally discuss this Nature, we cannot turn to science but to psychology, philosophy and religion.
AKA the "Authorised Version"Oxford dictionary, please note. Not just any old dictionary, but The Sacred Dictionary.
They could never catch me out like that.You were a really shitty Christian apologist.* I know it's a common tactic because I used to employ it when I was a Christian apologist.
The admission by the mark that they are not omniscient, should be followed IMMEDIATELY by a demand that they accept JC as their lord and savior.
None of that dancing around with the “some creative force” bullshit - ya gotta demand that they open their heart and wallet right then and there!
Who suggested that?Spirituality
It has often been suggested that science has proven that God does not exist.
… which does not invalidate The Bible as a text on living as a human. It’s a different subject.The study of life lies in the domain of science.
That the founders of Christianity were careful not to say anything that could be easily proven to be nonsense?What on earth can this mean?
That’s why I like stuff like the I Ching.All successful long term scams do this; Christianity isn't special or different.
What on earth can this mean?
I'm sure you know what "saved" means. Having been raised in the nutty evangelical religion, I know that saved refers to being saved from spending eternity being tortured in an afterlife, commonly known as hell. And, all you have to do to be saved is accept Jesus as your personal savior. He will always forgive you from your sins, not matter how bad they are as long as you believe and ask for forgiveness.What on earth can this mean?
It seems to me that if the Christian god were real, and he wanted all of us to be “saved,” whatever that is supposed to mean, then he would have communicated in such a way that we we would not have to guess at what on earth he meant.
To me it means that John's gospel is infused with poetry. His Jesus speaks in impossibly long soliloquies, unlike the Jesus in the Synoptics. The most striking thing about Jesus as a teacher in Matthew, Mark, and Luke is his device of the parable. He tells a story and then draws a moral or a theological principle from it. The Jesus in John doesn't apparently know any parables. He instead develops poetic self-descriptions consisting of metaphor. How likely is this? John is the most fictionalized of the gospels; my eyes tell me that this is a literate writer creating his own Messiah portrait and producing long passages of oratory for his main figure -- a practice that was not considered dishonest in antiquity.What on earth can this mean?