I realize that you've got three conversations to keep up with and must be strapped for time. I'll try to keep my questions short.
Thanks. You are kind.
Even if a person was not indoctrinated from birth, I still cannot imagine a scenario where a person's personal and highly emotional experience would lead them to believe in specific god. A god, perhaps, but not a specific one like Yahweh. Emotional experiences don't come with nametags attached to them telling the experiencer who it was from. If it was, in fact, from a god, it could have been from any of the millions of gods that have been believed in since the dawn of mankind.
If a person has an experience that brings them to believe in the divine, what could possibly make them conclude that the influence was that of Zeus, Thor, Yahweh, Amaterasu, Ra, or whoever without prior steering toward that god? A person doesn't just have a grand experience and then jump to Yahweh because Yahweh specifically said his name to the person. They have to already have it in their head.
I understand what you mean. This question would be best answered by a convert from another religion.
But I have two general points to make.
First, in the history of Christianity, most converts have been from other faiths or religions--the vast majority of people in world history were religious in some way; atheism is a new and minority way of thinking.
Therefore, there must be something unique about the message of Christianity that other religions do not provide that persuades people to abandon their own religion and convert to Christianity.
On an even more general scale, if I may take a bold step of generalisation, every religion in the world has its own unique message, meaning different things to the same mind. So each "experience" is different. A person doesn't just have "an experience"; they have an "experience" that is attached to a certain religion.
Mind you, this is just one general guesswork, extrapolated from a Christian perspective. I don't know whether Jews, Muslims or other people have any "experience" with God. There is a tangent here, about the influence of other spirits, but we won't go there for now.
Secondly, the "experience" doesn't just happen. There must be an existing ground on which to happen (i.e. a person's previous history and personality) and the "experience" for different people will be different based on from which religion the "experience" is coming.
Therefore, some people can have the same experience, but not the same conclusion, based on the status of themselves when they had the "experience".
This is perhaps illuminated indirectly, in the case of Christianity, by the parable of the sower, found, among elsewhere, in Luke 8.
"
This is the meaning of the parable: The seed is the word of God.
Those along the path are the ones who hear, and then the devil comes and takes away the word from their hearts, so that they may not believe and be saved.
Those on the rock are the ones who receive the word with joy when they hear it, but they have no root. They believe for a while, but in the time of testing they fall away.
The seed that fell among thorns stands for those who hear, but as they go on their way they are choked by life's worries, riches and pleasures, and they do not mature.
But the seed on good soil stands for those with a noble and good heart, who hear the word, retain it, and by persevering produce a crop." -- Luke 8:11-15
The message of the Gospel is the same, but it produces different results in the hearts and minds of different people.
In conclusion, yes, the "experiences" have name tags attached--in fact, it is the name tag that allows the "experience" happen. That means that people must express an interest to the religion first before they have the experience, rather than have an experience, then assign it to a religion.
Therefore, it is impossible for atheists to ask for a sign to prove Christianity. The nature of religion is such that you must first seek the religion, before you will be shown the experience, as this verse makes clear:
"
without faith it is impossible to please God, because anyone who comes to him must believe that he exists" -- Hebrews 11:6
Returning to the parable of the sower, the grounds don't just sprout out crops for no reason--seeds must be planted first!
That's why Christians have what we call the Great Commission of the Lord:
"
go and make disciples of all nations" -- Matthew 28:19
and why we have Paul saying this:
"
Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved. How, then, can they call on the one they have not believed in? And how can they believe in the one of whom they have not heard?" -- Romans 10:13-14
Yes, it is Christians who spread the message of the Gospel, but the "experience" itself must come from God. And when people put message and experience together, they get to see God. But the experience comes from God.
As Paul said,
"
I planted the seed, Apollos watered it, but God made it grow." -- 1 Corinthians 3:6
This can be seen as simply as Googling "religion map" and see how the geographic distribution of world religions breaks down. Such things should be very unsettling to anyone that believes that they found the right God through his moving influence alone rather than how you've been culturally trained to think. Just to throw out an example, if Yahweh were the one true God then he must really favor the western world.
If our convictions weren't the product of our culture but of honest personal revelations, religions would not have geographic correlations. I was going to post a map but I don't have a high enough post count yet (no biggie 'cause one is easy to find).
I would guard against relying on a search result on Google to map the world's religious distribution. I suggest that it's impossible to do so.
First, how can an accurate measurement be made in countries where there is no religious freedom or, simply, an accurate census system? I have just described the majority of the developing world, where most of the world's population live. Any figures coming out are probably highly skewed, or based on guesswork.
Plus, as you yourself prove, there are dissenters and non-believers within each culturo-religious group. If your culture didn't influence what you believe in as an adult, on what grounds do you judge that others must have been influenced by their culture in what they believe as an adult?
So, on those technicalities, I cannot agree with your assertion that "God favours the western world".
Our conversation is unfortunately tracing ground that I'm sure is familiar to both of us. I'm sorry that I have to come back to dead-horse territory but such areas of discussion are popular for a reason.
There are always gems to be discovered in familiar territory.
And once again I'm hopelessly long-winded. Bleh. Sorry to eat your time. My best regards all the same!
Thanks. That's very kind.
EDIT: I just wanted to add that I don't wish to sound like I aim to debate. I'm not interested in proving anyone wrong. I'm more interested in the why behind many things when talking of belief. Again, I must stress that I greatly appreciate the discussion. Sometimes it's hard to find others with the patience to continue at length about such things.
I agree. There is no debate, just polite discussion.