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ReasonToFollow wrote:1) Let's suppose there is a god. This means the teachings of jesus are 100% correct. He said 'follow me and you shall have eternal life' i.e. spend eternity with god.
2) Jesus said he was the son of god i.e. like god. Therefore if we disprove jesus as a person then there is no god. Through a scientific experiment prove to me that he never set foot on earth.
3) Science can't touch the existence of a person therefore it can't disprove jesus therefore it can't disprove his teachings which are of god because he WAS god.
4) In conclusion science is parallel to the word of god. That is, they can never and WILL never intersect and disprove each other.
5) If this is the case, then why would god want us to prove an infinite amount of scientific facts so that we can eventually say 'yes god, you are real' (still hypothetically thinking there is a god). Humanity would never enter heaven because of the nature of how they will trust god to be god.
My question to you atheist is this: If your life depended on answering the 'god question' right, who would you trust? Jesus christ i.e. god or a scientist claiming 'no' for the time being UNTIL (if ever) he gets an answer?



RtF wrote:Let me ask again.. Let's ASSUME (for argument's sake as you said) that there is a God. Is it not logical to think that He wanted to make himself known in a much more obvious way instead of us spending generations trying to expand our understanding and eventually (if ever) discover that He is real? Because hypothetically if He is real, then we are sending ourselves to Hell as we speak through our curiosity in the natural world. Did he meant for us to be doing that? Or is that MAYBE why He sent Himself in the form of Jesus to let us know?

Moonwood the Hare wrote:I know it's a popular idea that we have free will in relation to what we believe but is it true? Can I chose to believe one thing or another? Am I not sometimes compelled to a belief by the evidence? Do I not sometimes simply experience things as true? If I believe firmly that 1+1=2 how easy is it to make myself believe 1+1=3? So when you say a person is an atheist because they have free will does that not assume a level of choice that simply is not there?

Moonwood the Hare wrote:I know it's a popular idea that we have free will in relation to what we believe but is it true? Can I chose to believe one thing or another? Am I not sometimes compelled to a belief by the evidence? Do I not sometimes simply experience things as true? If I believe firmly that 1+1=2 how easy is it to make myself believe 1+1=3? So when you say a person is an atheist because they have free will does that not assume a level of choice that simply is not there?

JustJim wrote:You're not only assuming that there is a God. You're also assuming many other things about your God
JustJim wrote:If God is exactly as you believe God to be, then everything you say about God is true and correct - using your beliefs as the standard of truth - and there's no more room for debate or disagreement.


mitchellmckain wrote:Nope.
These are objectively undecidable issues. There is nothing compelling one conclusion or the other.

Because now after we accept all those assumptions we are left with no where to go with the conversation.Aaron wrote:JustJim wrote:You're not only assuming that there is a God. You're also assuming many other things about your God
What's wrong with those assumptions. If you are going to assume there's a God for the purposes of rational discussion it seems perfectly reasonable to me to also offer some additional assumptions to help define what you actually mean by that God. But I agree that just because a person offers these assumptions doesn't necessarily mean they will always draw logical conclusions from them.
I feel like this has been going on for a while now. People have been arguing against the Christian side with great success (logically at least, maybe not popularly or as popular as I would like it.) People all across the board have shown how Christianity "doesn't even hold water" but you guys don't care. You will continue to believe because, somehow you know you are right. You may not have any good demonstrable evidence to support it, but you know you are right, so the discussions only produce impact-full responses from a few theists, and sometimes from a few atheists.What's wrong with arguing on the Christian side of the fence? In fact, in my opinion, the best place to argue is inside of the other sides own camp, if you can show that their side doesn't even hold water in and of itself what more could you ask for?


Here's my reasoning as to why God exists and why science never had a thing to do with it, but rather they live IN PERFECT HARMONY.
NOTE: these 5 steps I will show you are all hypothetical.
1) Let's suppose there is a god.
This means the teachings of jesus are 100% correct. He said 'follow me and you shall have eternal life' i.e. spend eternity with god.
2) Jesus said he was the son of god i.e. like god. Therefore if we disprove jesus as a person then there is no god. Through a scientific experiment prove to me that he never set foot on earth.
3) Science can't touch the existence of a person therefore it can't disprove jesus therefore it can't disprove his teachings which are of god because he WAS god.
4) In conclusion science is parallel to the word of god. That is, they can never and WILL never intersect and disprove each other.
5) If this is the case, then why would god want us to prove an infinite amount of scientific facts so that we can eventually say 'yes god, you are real' (still hypothetically thinking there is a god). Humanity would never enter heaven because of the nature of how they will trust god to be god.
My question to you atheist is this: If your life depended on answering the 'god question' right, who would you trust? Jesus christ i.e. god or a scientist claiming 'no' for the time being UNTIL (if ever) he gets an answer?
Keen to hear your thoughts on this!

Aaron wrote:What's wrong with those assumptions. If you are going to assume there's a God for the purposes of rational discussion it seems perfectly reasonable to me to also offer some additional assumptions to help define what you actually mean by that God. But I agree that just because a person offers these assumptions doesn't necessarily mean they will always draw logical conclusions from them.
I think there's plenty of room for debate, unless the other person has their fingers in there ears shouting their beliefs at those foolish enough to try and reason with them. What's wrong with arguing on the Christian side of the fence? In fact, in my opinion, the best place to argue is inside of the other sides own camp, if you can show that their side doesn't even hold water in and of itself what more could you ask for?
2) Through a scientific experiment prove to me that he never set foot on earth.
4) In conclusion science is parallel to the word of god. That is, they can never and WILL never intersect and disprove each other.
and the award winning:
If your life depended on answering the 'god question' right, who would you trust? Jesus christ i.e. god or a scientist claiming 'no' for the time being UNTIL (if ever) he gets an answer?

Aaron wrote:JustJim wrote:You're not only assuming that there is a God. You're also assuming many other things about your God
What's wrong with those assumptions. If you are going to assume there's a God for the purposes of rational discussion it seems perfectly reasonable to me to also offer some additional assumptions to help define what you actually mean by that God. But I agree that just because a person offers these assumptions doesn't necessarily mean they will always draw logical conclusions from them.JustJim wrote:If God is exactly as you believe God to be, then everything you say about God is true and correct - using your beliefs as the standard of truth - and there's no more room for debate or disagreement.
I think there's plenty of room for debate, unless the other person has their fingers in there ears shouting their beliefs at those foolish enough to try and reason with them. What's wrong with arguing on the Christian side of the fence? In fact, in my opinion, the best place to argue is inside of the other sides own camp, if you can show that their side doesn't even hold water in and of itself what more could you ask for?

I don't think anyone (at least anyone who is reasonable) would ever try to show that Jesus never existed as a person. For one I don't think its possible to accurately do that, and two no one needs to. Whether or not a person named Jesus existed is of little consequence to me. We don't need to prove he didn't exists for us to not believe that there are supernatural forces guiding life and the universe.ReasonToFollow wrote:I don't know about you but the penny dropped for me. It's a historical video and he turns to science. So what is he implying? That through an experiment he can show Jesus never existed as a person?!
I actually think that you can. It depends on how you define existence. You exist already because of your post and your interactions with the rest of us. Do you exist as a person? I don't know, you could be a computer program that is sophisticated enough to communicate with sentient beings like ourselves, but none the less you would still be in existence by the act of interacting with things that already do exist. In other words we can demonstrate through evidence and observation that you are in fact interacting with us, thus granting you the title of existence.ReasonToFollow wrote: Let's ask the opposite. Can you prove I've existed through an experiment?
it both has nothing to do with Science and lives in perfect harmony with it? interesting.ReasonToFollow wrote:Here's my reasoning as to why God exists and why science never had a thing to do with it, but rather they live IN PERFECT HARMONY.
Indeed.ReasonToFollow wrote:Here we go:
Just because we are supposing a God exists does not mean the teachings of Jesus are 100% correct, so how did you get to that conclusion? Is this an other assumption we must accept to further the discussion? Are the teachings of Jesus 100% correct because there is a God? or because he said to follow him? This first statement makes very little sense.ReasonToFollow wrote:1) Let's suppose there is a god. This means the teachings of jesus are 100% correct. He said 'follow me and you shall have eternal life' i.e. spend eternity with god.
A book claims that this person "Jesus" said he was God (vaguely). We have no actual knowledge of Jesus actually claiming he was God. For all we know Jesus could have been a person who was trying to teach people how to live and his message got mangled into something that didn't really represent his views. Also disproving Jesus as a person has nothing to do with the proposition of a Gods existence (how could you even disprove Jesus?). If Jesus did not exist than it would logically follow that there is no God, of the bible (NT). That is perhaps what you meant to say?ReasonToFollow wrote:2) Jesus said he was the son of god i.e. like god. Therefore if we disprove jesus as a person then there is no god. Through a scientific experiment prove to me that he never set foot on earth.
Suppose a God created us with our innate curiosity and our intellect with the inability to just accept propositions without first being convinced they are true. You actually think that expressing our curiosity and behaving in accordance to how we have apparently been created, is sufficient justification for punishment,ReasonToFollow wrote:5) If this is the case, then why would god want us to prove an infinite amount of scientific facts so that we can eventually say 'yes god, you are real' (still hypothetically thinking there is a god). Humanity would never enter heaven because of the nature of how they will trust god to be god.
If my life depended on answering a question about philosophy/religion wrong. I would have to ask myself how the hell did I get myself into this mess and who the fuck is going to hurt me based on not knowing the correct answer? Anyways I am pretty sure this question is absolutely meaningless to the audience you are asking it of. We don't believe in Jesus Christ, so how can we trust that in which we don't even believe? Let me ask you this. Would you trust a data sheet based on trends in the stock market, or Gabanon the Great, if you were trying to decide on what stocks you were going to invest a large portion of your stock portfolio?ReasonToFollow wrote:My question to you atheist is this: If your life depended on answering the 'god question' right, who would you trust? Jesus christ i.e. god or a scientist claiming 'no' for the time being UNTIL (if ever) he gets an answer?


JustJim wrote:I was responding to the conditions he set up. He's asking us to assume everything he believes about God is true, and if we agree to do that, there's no need to go any further. If we express disagreement, then we're not assuming his beliefs are true, which is what he wants us to do in order to discuss it with him.
There's no room for debate if the person you're going to debate first demands that you assume everything he says is true.


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