Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
Faith is like sails to a ship, it is essential to moving forward in time to eternity. God is absolute truth, God is the first truth and the last fact. All truth takes origin in him while all facts are relative to him. For those who choose survival, there is no greater motivation in life than aligning our will to the will of God, from resurrection on the mansion worlds and beyond as we make our way inward towards our meeting with the Father, then onward into an undisclosed destiny as finalitors. To that end faith is desirable.Now we're getting somewhere. I won't talk about all the things you listed, but I will point out the one that is pertinent to our conversation:
I think I may need you to clarify this in your own words. Is this your definition of faith: "...the supreme assertion of human thought..."? Does that mean the the absolute pinnacle of what we can assert as a human is faith? Does it mean that we assert that there is a supreme being because of faith? I don't want to misconstrue the meaning of this statement.
But a follow up question just to keep things moving: why is faith desirable? I may need the clarification for the previous statement in order to understand an answer to that question based on the definition of faith used, but I can think of a lot of instances where I would rather "know for certain" than "have faith" so I wonder if faith is something that is desirable at all in the first place.
For those who choose survival, there is no greater motivation in life than aligning our will to the will of God, from resurrection on the mansion worlds and beyond as we make our way inward towards our meeting with the Father, then onward into an undisclosed destiny as finalitors. To that end faith is desirable.
Faith is how we move forward and become more like God.
I like to think of faith as knowing for certain. That's when the "magic" happens. Some say faith is the evidence of what is not seen. When faith is applied it seems to effect the natural world through the supernatural. As above so below. God possesses the greatest of faith when he speaks world's form and creatures arise from the mud. He dose not doubt. If we humans could fully grasp this, how anazing. It is,a mission of mine.How? Why? God doesn't have faith in anything, he knows for certain.
How? Why? God doesn't have faith in anything, he knows for certain.
Faith is something that brings much assurance, does it not? John's First Epistle speaks of the certainty of faith: "These things have I written unto you that believe on the name of the Son of God; that ye may know that ye have eternal life, and that ye may believe on the name of the Son of God." (1 John 5.13)I like to think of faith as knowing for certain. That's when the "magic" happens. Some say faith is the evidence of what is not seen. When faith is applied it seems to effect the natural world through the supernatural. As above so below. God possesses the greatest of faith when he speaks world's form and creatures arise from the mud. He dose not doubt. If we humans could fully grasp this, how anazing. It is,a mission of mine.
Faith is belief. That belief can be based on evidence or not. But faith contrarily cannot be evidence. If you want to redefine faith, this is not the thread for that. This thread is about finding God because he is hidden, and changing the definition of faith to something else entirely does not have anything to do with this discussion.Some say faith is the evidence
Again, God cannot have faith because he is omniscient. He simply knows. Faith means that it is at least possible to be uncertain.God possesses the greatest of faith
There is a difference between "trust" and "faith". You can trust that God will do what he say, and that God feels what he feels because he says it. And you can have faith that God exists based on some evidence (or no evidence at all). When we talk about having faith that God even exists because he is hidden, we are not talking about whether or not we believe God is going to keep his word, that would be a different discussion entirely.When God says something, our response should never be "prove it please". In that context, God would never stop proving Himself and the possibility of real relationship with Him would be damaged.
I would argue your definition of faith.Faith is belief. That belief can be based on evidence or not. But faith contrarily cannot be evidence. If you want to redefine faith, this is not the thread for that. This thread is about finding God because he is hidden, and changing the definition of faith to something else entirely does not have anything to do with this discussion.
Again, God cannot have faith because he is omniscient. He simply knows. Faith means that it is at least possible to be uncertain.
There is a difference between "trust" and "faith". You can trust that God will do what he say, and that God feels what he feels because he says it. And you can have faith that God exists based on some evidence (or no evidence at all). When we talk about having faith that God even exists because he is hidden, we are not talking about whether or not we believe God is going to keep his word, that would be a different discussion entirely.
The obvious answer is that it is supposed to be difficult, which I'm sure doesn't satisfy you. The truth is that there is a big part of us that will never be satisfied with any answer to this question. However, that big part of us isn't where we access our faith or determination from; it's what needs to be overcome.I'm not telling God what he ought to do. I'm pointing out to you that God chose to do things this way, since you seem to be under the impression that there was no other option. God made the choice to hide, because he wants us to seek him, and that is what the OP asked. Saying, "Because God designed it that way" isn't an answer.
Again, why did God make our particular design this way. That is the question. Not, "Why do physical eyes not see spiritual things". You aren't answering the question at hand. You're stating the question is something different than it is.
Good point! In the case of Jesus he did some rather obvious things which still proved to be unsatisfying in the end. Some even accused him of evil!If you guys don't mind me butting in, Faith is the substance our declaration that we acknowledge God for who He is. When God says something, our response should never be "prove it please". In that context, God would never stop proving Himself and the possibility of real relationship with Him would be damaged.
Faith is an essential element of relationship with God, and hiddeness as well.
Good point! In the case of Jesus he did some rather obvious things which still proved to be unsatisfying in the end. Some even accused him of evil!
Faith is the price we pay for entrance into the family of God. God doesn't need to have faith, but we do.
Well no, it doesn't satisfy, but only because "difficult" is so vague. What are we supposed to learn from believing in something without proof?The obvious answer is that it is supposed to be difficult, which I'm sure doesn't satisfy you.
Have you ever heard of a rite of passage? Before going through one, I'm sure the participant has some kind of preconceived notion of its purpose. They probably question why it has to be so difficult. What they don't realize is that the real value comes in the internal transformation that happens as a result of the struggle and the newly realized insights about themselves that they never would have been aware of before.
Okay, but what is the purpose? This isn't the purpose:So His plan of measured revelation has an ultimate purpose.
This is the method of being hidden. How much he chooses to reveal is not the purpose of why he is hidden.That we should at least have available everything He wants us to know about Him when we need to know and still maintain full relationship.
I would argue your definition of faith
Why? What is the purpose of faith? When I asked you that before you said that it was desirable. I asked why it was desirable and now you say that it is a price you pay.
So to sum up where we are at.
I asked, "Why do we have to seek God to get close to him?"
You replied, "Because faith is a good thing."
I asked, "Why is it a good thing?"
You replied, "Because that is how we get close to God".
Do you see the circle?
Thanks for that quote of Hodge's. I have one from the UB:Too true.
With regard to God's hiddeness, it seems to me that He is hidden in some measure from every one of His created intelligences. Something someone wrote prompted me to look up Charles Hodge (1797-1878) who wrote out a very detailed theodicy and purpose statement for God's creation of the universe a little less than 200 years ago.
I will paraphrase - "God created this physical universe to give Himself the best possible context for revealing Himself as the singular maximally great being to all of His created intelligent beings. That revelation is not possible in the absence of commensurate evil."
So His plan of measured revelation has an ultimate purpose. That we should at least have available everything He wants us to know about Him when we need to know and still maintain full relationship.