Dave Ellis
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- Dec 27, 2011
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Mr. Ellis, I have an argument that has been formulated by a gentleman whose line of reasoning is similar to yours and I would venture to say the majority of atheists here regarding this issue. I will present the argument below and I would like for you to tell me if you think it represents your view.
1. The Christian God strongly desires a loving relationship with almost every human being, and desires it to last for all eternity. [Christian assumption]
2. A loving relationship with God is possible only if one (a) believes that he exists and (b) chooses to be in a loving relationship with God.
3. Therefore, if the Christian God exists, since he wants humanity to have a loving relationship with him, he would make his existence well-known to almost everyone, thereby ensuring condition (a). (from 1, 2)
4. There are multitudes of conflicting religions and religious beliefs (Christianity, Islam, Hindus, Buddhism, secularism, etc), and more people who don't believe that the Christian God exists than those who do. [empirical assumption]
5. Therefore, not almost every human being believes that the Christian God exists. (from 4)
6. Therefore, the Christian God's existence is not well-known to almost everyone. (from 5)
7. Therefore, the Christian God doesn't exist. (from 6, 3)
Does this argument represent your view?
Up until point #7, yes.
However I disagree with point #7, it's a possibility based on the line of argument that he doesn't exist, however it's also a possibility that he does exist, and just hasn't provided sufficient evidence to non believers.
But still, non believers are still in the same position they are now. If there isn't sufficient evidence to convince them, they still aren't going to believe even if the God in question does exist.
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