But those clues have led believers to the God of their particular religion anyway, the very same God that they have faith in. This is why I think Sandage made the unintended point that the arguments are contrived. With or without them you would still believe by faith.
Some of the clues lead to a broad theism. Here I am thinking about the clues or evidences that led Antony Flew to abandon the atheism that he had zealously defended in exchange for a broad theism. I do not believe that he ever became a Christian, but it is clear from his later works, that he was no longer an atheist.
Flew has changed his mind, and has let it be known that he is now a theist (at least in the broad sense of the term) because: the case for an Aristotelian God who has the characteristics of power and also intelligence, is now much stronger than it ever was before.[7]
Flew says that he simply: had to go where the evidence leads.[8] His atheism truly was provisional and subject to correction by further evidence and further argument. . .[9] It speaks very well of Professor Flews honesty, observes Americas pre-eminent philosopher of religion, Alvin Plantinga: After all these years of opposing the idea of a Creator, he reverses his position on the basis of the evidence.[10]
[7]Antony Flew, My Pilgrimage from Atheism to Theism: An Exclusive Interview with Former British Atheist Professor Antony Flew , op cit.
[8] ibid.
[9] Antony Flew, God and Philosophy, second edition, (Hutchinson of London, 1966), p. 194.
[10] Alvin Plantinga, Worlds Most Famous Atheist Accepts Existence of God,
Cites Modern Science! @
thewonderoftheworld.com
So we see that some of the clues and evidences are not religion specific.
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Some of the clues and evidences lead to a broad monotheism. Arguments like the Kalam Cosmological argument can be used by Jew, Muslim, or Christian and are not Christianity specific.
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Some of the clues and evidences lead to Christianity specifically. Here I am thinking of the argument for the resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth or the evidences that the Bible is Inspired by God.
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So yes, some of the clues are not religion specific. They all however, can lead one from atheism to theism.
Being clues and evidences, they must be interpreted and accepted. No argument, no evidence is going to coerce or compel someone to adopt their conclusions.
This is right in line with what we would expect to see if a God did indeed exist who respects our freedom.
I have said often that God has put enough into the world to make faith in Him a most reasonable thing. But He has left enough out to make it impossible to live by sheer reason or observation alone. - Ravi Zacharias
I would add to this by saying that God has left enough out to make it impossible for anyone to be coerced or forced into believing in Him.
Sandage never said the arguments were contrived at all. He said that
to the modern mind they seem contrived.
And why? Well you and others who think like you are of the persuasion that apologists make use of the arguments for no other reason than to support what it is they already believe by faith.
But this is patently false. Apologists do not present arguments for God to themselves or for themselves to be convinced or persuaded about anything!
They present the arguments to skeptics, to unbelievers, in an attempt to demonstrate the intellectual capaciousness of a theistic paradigm, specifically, the Christian one.
You may retort: "Well, when they give lectures and talks at Churches and to Christian audiences, they are talking to people who already believe as it were, by faith. So why would they talk about the arguments at all?"
Several reasons:
1. Apologists are usually the ones who teach others how to do apologetics.
2. Just because people are sitting in a church pew does not mean they are Christians. There have been numerous accounts of unbelievers and skeptics giving their lives to Christ after sitting through one of Dr. Craigs talks at a Church, or Dr. Lennox's lectures at a predominately Christian gathering for example.
3. Christians are encouraged by the apostle Peter, the apostle Paul, and yea Jesus Himself, to use not only their heart in ministering to others, but their minds as well. The whole notion of Christians having a blind faith is simply based on a strawman of Christianity and of saving faith.
4. To claim that the arguments are contrived is to misunderstand what the arguments are intended for. They are not intended to be some type of substitute for faith, but rather, are to be used as a grounding, or a foundation on which faith rests.