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PrexicKehdaki -> RE: Questions, questions, questions. (6/29/2008 1:45:21 PM)
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quote:
ORIGINAL: PolarBear quote:
ORIGINAL: PrexicKehdaki I'm reluctant to post a reply to this again. The rest of the thread before you joined was about it, you'll find my explanatory questions there. Yeah, I read them. Maybe we're just on different planes of thinking. I think the answer according to the Bible is clear, and it's been mentioned several times. Well, if you have any specific questions, I'd be willing to clarify. quote:
ORIGINAL: PrexicKehdaki quote:
ORIGINAL: PolarBear Understood. I too have a long list of books to read, and am a slow reader. If you're really interested in exploring the possibility that the God of the Bible is real, those two are excellent. Samples provides logical evidence while Habermas provides historical evidence. Sounds pretty sweet. :-) quote:
ORIGINAL: PolarBear For your particular questions I think I'd recommend Samples' book as the more important of the two, if you can only get to one. Samples has an earlier book, Without a Doubt -- Answering the 20 Toughest Faith Questions which I have not read, but it may also be useful. I suspect you have received recommendations for other popular books like The Case for Christ by Lee Strobel. I've read it and like it and think it has good arguments for lay people, but you seem to have dug into deeper arguments and I think my recommendations might engage you more. hehe, alright. quote:
ORIGINAL: PolarBear quote:
ORIGINAL: PrexicKehdaki But I will argue against Islam's same claim of this.. Islam proponents argue that their holy book is somehow a companion to modern day understanding of the Big Bang, but really, it's so loose.. I don't see any purposeful intentions when the very idea of creation is essentially a mythical archetype. Islam's big on making wishful stretches of verses to claim "Hah! See, we knew it first" when really the verses aren't claiming much at all.. it's the assumption of what the verses mean that are really quite decisive, considering an assumption can be interpreted in so many ways. From what I understand, the Koran has significantly less detail about cosmology than the Biblical prophets. In any case, Islam has a HUGE problem -- it builds on the Bible, saying that its prophets including Jesus were actually prophets of Allah, but then it turns around and says that whatever parts of the Bible don't agree with it are corrupt. Well, how then do we know which parts are actually corrupt? In actuality the Biblical manuscripts from the earliest to the latest agree nearly completely. There is also evidence that the Koran diverged shortly after its writing, and a descendant of Mohammad (IIRC) destroyed all copies of all but one of them. That's a nice way to force uniformity! Not to mention the fact that the gods of Islam and the Bible are very different. Islam's god is impersonal and takes arbitrary actions, the Christian God is personal and acts with consistent character. Also, Islam claims that Jesus was never crucified -- something that is historically falsified (see Habermas' book). So, the whole basis for Islam falls out from underneath it. While I'm at it, that reminds me of an argument from either Sam Harris or Richard Dawkins (probably both) -- they don't believe in our God just like we don't believe in, say, Allah. But as I've shown, the difference is immense. Christianity is grounded in reason and historicity. Plus, He is different than all other religions in several ways -- only Christianity emphasizes God's grace as the sole agent of salvation; every other religion interjects human works in an attempt to appease a god. Only the Bible contains numerous, consistent references to the fact that God exists outside of time, created all time and space, and stretched out the heavens -- essential attributes for the Creator according to Big Bang cosmology. I can't reply within the TOS. :-( quote:
ORIGINAL: PolarBear quote:
ORIGINAL: PrexicKehdaki Is the fact that God knows all of our thoughts and actions through time, an indication that those things MUST happen? If they must, and if not by God's will, could laws of nature be dictating the actions instead? Does this interfere with free will? Dang, that's getting philosophically deep. [:)] I think that gets to issues of how God's view of everything and our freewill intertwine, and we simply can't understand all of that from our finite view in this life. Does free will require a break in the laws of nature in our brains? Can free will exist if every fire of a neuron in our brain is caused by well understood processes of sodium and potassium ion distributions? Would these processes have to be suspended for free will to occur? quote:
ORIGINAL: PolarBear quote:
ORIGINAL: PrexicKehdaki Heh, I like the idea of living forever just as much as the next person.. but I just can't escape the arguments and rebuttals I know. I debate nearly obsessively as a hobby, so it's possible some brilliant mind some day will shatter my arguments and address my rebuttals. It hasn't happened so far, and every day I find new reasons for the other side. Eh, I guess this is the price of Hell. Hm. Well if you've decided to debate against God you won't get too far with Him -- at least not until He makes a major move. Although I haven't read any books on atheism by atheists, I have seen a number of arguments by the likes of Harris and Dawkins and, frankly, they don't address any real issues in my opinion. In other words, once you have a more wide view of Christian belief and its implications, their arguments just seem irrelevant. If you have any serious questions that would be against TOS to post here, you can feel free to PM me. I've seen all the arguments and am not easily offended. But, only if you would have some interest in coming to Christ assuming your objections were to be met. If you're ONLY interested in debating, there's no point in bothering. I appreciate your offer, but I'll be ok. If debate led me to atheism, it should be able to lead me to Christianity. Let's focus on the thread's OP.
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