Define 'answered'. Is this a voice booming from the sky saying 'Granted / Denied / Pending'? Or is it the consequence itself: if you pray for rain, and rain comes, does this count as answered?
If I prayed for an event to happen, it happened, even if it wasn't very likely (some things were not likely at all!). And if I prayed for guidance, etc, then sometimes God answered it by communicating with me (I tried to describe this in my previous post on this page). I've never heard a voice from the sky. The Holy Spirit is in us, not in the sky.
Enter me: I was a staunch Christian for eleven years, and none, none of my prayers 'came true' (once I prayed for my mother to be cured of a rather painful earache; three weeks later, it hadn't changed in the slightest. It took a specialist to drain excess fluid). Was I not 'faithful' enough?
Since I'm not God I can't answer your last question, but when you were a Christian have you ever prayed for forgiveness, etc? If you have, then you have answered prayers, cause God always answers that. I've had prayers that God answered 'no' to but the reason was revealed later...I had to wait, lol. It turned out that His will was better anyway. And sometimes my prayers are doubtful and aren't answered, but many are.
As they say, it is always darkest before dawn.
Not always...and when you're in darkness, you don't know dawn is coming. You just hope for that. How do you know that God isn't responsible for the 'dawn'?
So this is your justification for saying, 'Oh, if your prayer didn't 'work', then you were doubtful'. You have the audacity to dictate what people think?
I didn't make this up, I got it from the Bible. I have no idea how much you believed when you were a Christian, or how much you sought God. I just have my experience, which I've just described.
So why isn't the entire human populace Christian (or, at least, theistic)?
As far as I know, atheists don't faithfully pray, believing that God would answer them. Or they wouldn't be atheists. God answers people who faithfully pray in a way that they could understand.
During my eleven years of Christianity, I recieved no answer. I might as well have prayed to my cat for all the recognition I got.
No offence meant, of course. This is simply my experiance.
oki, I cant' comment on your experience...mine has been very different...I honestly don't know why.. Do you pray to any gods/goddesses now? Do you get any answers?
He sacrificed himself to himself so that he might appease himself enough to modify a law that he himself put in place. Does this sound a tad redundant?
I know this sounds off-topic, but your argument fails unless you can justify the self-sacrifice of God.
This only makes sense if you believe in the Trinity. Would you rather that He sacrificed one of His creations? He sacrificed Himself because He is perfect, and the only one who could defeat death. He is life, there is no death or darkness in Him. And His law never modified! That's why the sacrifice was needed in the first place, because He didn't want to lower His 'standard' or law.
I object to the implication of your wording: you seem to be saying that unbelievers go, 'Oh, I know the Judaeo-Christian God exists, but I choose to follow another path'.
Given that there is no evidence for your deity, the logical stance is one of nonbelief. To criticise people for making the most rational decision is... dumb.
No, that's not how it is. It doesn't matter what the reason, if the person is not a believer they
can't be close to God. It's impossible. And everyone chooses what they believe, or don't believe.
"Faith is to believe what you do not see; the reward of this faith is to see what you believe."
Saint Augustine
It's like..God is saying: "if you choose to believe, you'll get the evidence you're looking for". And the unbeliever says: "I want evidence first". I don't think it generally works that way, because we're supposed to make a
free choice. When I opened myself up to the possibility that there's God, I saw that He's there. Maybe there are unbelievers who have gotten evidence (like Thomas

), maybe that was God's plan for them. But people who want evidence first don't usually get it.
There is a difference between rejection and seeing no reason to believe. Do you reject the wisdom of Gautama Buddha, or do you not believe said wisdom?
I don't reject Buddha's wisdom, I think some things he said were wise, even though I disagree with much of his philosophy. But 'wisdom' is sort of a subjective thing for us humans. Christianity talks about an event: the Resurrection. You either believe it, or you don't.
Of course we can. Ever heard of Aleph-nought?
Is it something mathematical?

sorry I don't know about that. But to put it simply, do you really believe that your mind or my mind can ever hold an infinite amount of knowledge?
Explain. 'Infinite' has many meanings, and since I am a mathematician and physicist, I comprehend more than most (not to toot my own trumpet, but still...).
That's cool that you're a mathematician!

I'm definitely not, lol though I wish I were, sometimes. When I say that God is infinite, I mean something like: He is outside of creation and time (since time is part of creation), and has no beginning and no end...He sees everything and knows everything, and is perfect in wisdom, love, power, etc. Maybe 'infinite' isn't the best word for it.... maybe 'absolute' or one of Plato's 'first things' that we can't describe or comprehend? It still remains that the human mind can't grasp all of that, because we are in time and are bound by space, experience, etc.
Of course he does. Quantum mechanics is nonsense, yet he Created it.
Oki thankfully I know a little about quantum mechanics (not much though). I don't think it's nonsense, because if something looks random to us, it doesn't mean that it is. Maybe we're just not seeing the big picture.
Indeed.
So is disbelief part of God's plan? Because the fact of the matter is that those born in Islamic countries are very unlikely to convert to Christianity. Why, then, would God place some people in such unfair conditions (with respect to the afterlife) compared to, say, the Bible Belt of Middle-America?
Personally, I believe that those who have never heard the gospel would get a chance to accept/reject it after death. Anyway, Christ told His disciples to tell everyone about Him, which they are still doing today. As I said before, sometimes He uses people to help establish His Kingdom.
Eve was tricked by one of God's creations. This does not equate to the totality of humanity turning away from God.
We're getting into theology here, aaagh.... oki:
Rom. 5:12, "Wherefore, as by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned"
Here's how I see it: at first, Adam and Eve were sinless, and were made to live and never die. They were united with God. (edit) They were tempted, and chose evil, and sin entered the world...they began to die...and their children were born with that knowledge of evil also, and were able to commit sins, and died...and we're born the same way, and we sin too. But if we want to, we can be saved and live forever.
Compared to the garden of Eden, I think we're all quite miserable. God made the world to be a better place than it is. That's what I was saying.
What?! Nonsense. There cannot be an entity who is simultaneously omnibenevolent and omnipotent in our reality, given that such an entity has done nothing to aleviate suffering. It has nothing to do with what we want; is it do with what said entity won't.
I dont really see what you're saying here or how this applies to my original comment....God makes a perfect world where we can be perfectly happy, and we reject it, and so He dies to give it back to us. How is this 'doing nothing'?
We die because our cells have a built-in lifespan of ~70 years.
And why is that? No scientist has answered that question. No scientist has been able to conquer death. I'd say that our bodies changed with the fall, due to separation from God, the source of life. Someday, we'll have immortal bodies again (hence: eternal life and Resurrection in the Bible).
The words attributed to him contradict reality: if he wants us to be happy, and happiness only lies with him, he would force us to be with him. Is this morally wrong? No, becuase we would be happy. Indeed, given the nature of omnipotence, we needn't be aware of such force.
Sadly, this is evidently not the case. Ergo, an omnimax entity cannot exist.
A loving being would not force anyone to be happy, He made us free. That is more loving. And it's so easy to come to Him! He did everything necessary to make this possible, all we have to do is to agree, and it's done. He gave us a choice and is offering us a free gift..we are enslaved by sin and He wants to make us free from that, and happy. I think that's so much more loving than having a colony of ants.
Why did he die for us in exactly the same manner as 'heathen' deities in adjacent cultures?
CS Lewis and JRR Tolkien had this idea that other religions are sort of like 'prophesies' of the real event. I think it's a neat idea. It's like God was trying to prepare the world for Him.
Nonsense. I want happiness. I want the world to be happy. I so, so badly want absolute and unending happiness for every entity across all the universes.
That it hasn't happened is direct proof that an omnimax entity does not exist.

I think you're still not getting what I'm trying to say. I know that everyone wants happiness! The reason "it hasn't happened" is because the human race has rejected the only true source of happiness and began making up their own: like money, pleasure, etc. He's trying to give it to us, and we're rejecting it. People want happiness but are not willing to sacrifice their pride. This is theology, I'm not just making it up.
The arrogance of calling us prideful.
We're all born prideful. That's our human nature. I'm prideful too. I don't want to be though, and I'm trying to get rid of that to be closer to God.
I knocked for eleven years. One beings to think that noone is home after such a long time.
Let me ask you this question: what
sort of answer were you looking for? Maybe God is just different than what you were expecting.