michaelm wrote:
Dondarion wrote:
ISIS (and anyone conducting such practices, past and present) is doing evil. There is nothing of faith in those actions.
I assume you accept the same of the crusaders of the First and Second Crusades?
Absolutely, keeping mind that there were many crusaders being led from a position of ignorance, and so their culpability was perhaps mitigated. Mine is not to judge the person, but the action. And the action was evil.
And btw, while I may be embarrassed by the actions of the ancestors of my faith, I am not personally accountable, just as a modern day southerner is not responsible for all those lynchings, nor today's German citizen for the holocaust. So, let's stop attacking modern day people for the sins of their forefathers. We all have that in our lives, whether big or small, personal or national. Why do we want to take each other down, instead of lift each other up? Why? Again, the message is one of good news!
michaelm wrote:
I think I probably do accept things on faith, but I would allow my opinion to be changed if any kind of proof for or against came to light. I'm certainly not going to say I'm immune to it, but in the case of religions I see far too many gaping holes in the arguments for.
As for what would constitute evidence, I would like to at least see correlation between various things, like the text of holy book and reality; praying for something and getting a result; good things happening to good people and bad things only happening to bad people, etc.
Right now I would consider the sum total of evidence for the existence of supernatural beings to be exactly zilch. No matter how many times I have asked the question, I either get the same stock answers or someone ends up flustered and trying to argue their way out of a contradiction of their own making.
Then refute some of what has been stated in this thread making the argument for a God, and for Jesus Christ, and for a spiritual existence originating from God and meant to be holy. Throughout much of this thread, I have tried to make these cases the best way I know how. Many have taken them on and I have tried to counter (First says I have to do better, I know, but that's okay). Some I don't understand, I admit, but I try. I acknowledge where I am unsure, and where I have been wrong. I claim no absolute knowledge. I am a seeker. The agnostic acknowledges that he is likewise, and that's a good thing. It is correct that I say "I know, but I don't not know all that I think I know, and I am unsure of how I even know all I say I know". That is faith, and faith is real, but it can be supported by rational thought as well. This has been discussed in this thread (as well as the one on prostitution). Address the specific arguments, don't just say "I would allow my opinion to be changed if any kind of proof for or against came to light." Arguments have been made, so counter them, specifically. There are too many convenient generalizations without specific counter-arguments in these discussions. Hit the points that are raised, don't just cherry pick one thing, quote it because it looks like good fodder, and then take it off on a tangent and kill the whole argument because of it. The rest of the argument may (or may not) have merit, so address it all, each point. If you don't want to do that, then at least please don't post generic dismissive responses. It makes one appear as if they are simply predisposed to an opinion, and that's that. It may sound that way for me too, I have no doubt. But I will at least acknowledge merit when I see it.
For instance, nobody (except Orion) has addressed the possibilities of what could have happened on Easter morning. This ties to scripture, which is one of the things you are after. There are countless miracle stories in our world, and good things happen to good people all the time. The fact that they also happen to bad people (and vise-a-versa) is a function of man's choice. And who knows what else is at work anyway? Perhaps a great good or mercy shown toward such a person is just what he/she needs to bring them around? Who are we to judge? Before we pluck the sliver out of your neighbor's eye, we need to get the plank out of our own. (scripture).
michaselm wrote:
...praying for something and getting a result...
True story heard by me at church just a few short weeks ago:
Father and mother lose their 14 year old boy, and are heart broken. They cannot function, they are distraught. They pull away from all their friends, church groups, everything. One day, a couple months after hteir son's death, dad decides to drop to his knees and give it all up to God, but asks only for a sign that his son is okay. Within 10 minutes, the phone rings, and it's the kid's school principal calling the parents to ask them to come into school to do something. Dad goes down. The principal says it's time to clean out their son's locker, and so he does. While pulling things out, he notices a bible, and he thumbs through it and notices it has been used and marked in. He did not even know his 14 year old son had a bible, or cared about religion at all. He takes the stuff home to his wife and dumps it on the counter. When she sees the bible, she asks about it, and he says he is just as confused as she is. Curious, she opens the book, and falls on a page in the Book of Wisdom where it says:
The souls of the virtuous are in the hands of God,
no torment shall ever touch them.
In the eyes of the unwise, they did appear to die,
their going looked like a disaster, their leaving us, like annihilation;
but they are at peace.
If they experienced punishment as men see it,
their hope was rich with immortality;
slight was their affliction, great will their blessings be.
God has put them to the test and proved them to be worthy with him;
he tested them like gold in a furnace' and accepted them as a holocaust.
When the time comes for his visitation they will shine out;
as sparks run through the stubble, so will they.
They shall judge nations, rule over peoples,
and the Lord will be their king forever.
They who trust in him will understand the truth,
those who are faithful will live with him in love;
for grace and mercy await those he has chosen.
(Wisdom 3:1-9).
From that moment on, they returned to church, rejoined in life, and were alive again. God did this in them, no doubt.