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How can an atheist have a relationship with God?

Athée

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Well, sure, athiests miss out on this comfort of knowing that there is a God, which makes me wonder, if there really is such a being, why does He not reveal Himself?
If I found out for certain that the Christian god existed as depicted in the bible I would not be comforted....
 
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Athée

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So what does one do if they are currently living a life without faith in God and want to change? Can you fake faith, or will it into existence?
My experience is that you can do as Pascal suggests (if you are unable to find real faith) and fake it till you make it. I wanted it all to be true so badly and lived as if it were. The human ability to deceive oneself is remarkable. I was ultimately bot able to sustain this but I did have myself thoroughly convinced for several years.
 
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Athée

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I think your response points out pretty well that neither the good or the bad should be construed as evidence at all.
 
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Athée

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Point of clarification. When you give something to someone then you no longer have it. It seems to me that God didn't give us Jesus so much as loaned him for a bit.
 
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Athée

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That is a great story and I am glad you found peace : ) When I say that I have a relationship with my wife, that means many things, we talk together, laugh together, raise our kids, fights, make up!, sing together, discuss how to pay bills etc. When you say you have a personal relationship with the god of the universe, what does that mean specifically?
 
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Athée

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To the original question: No, an Atheist cannot have a relationship with God.


Hebrews 11:6 And without faith it is impossible to please him, for whoever would draw near to God must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who seek him.
How does one get faith then?
 
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Athée

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So the elect we read of in the bible really means everyone? Are you a universalist?
 
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Athée

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I'm not sure it is entirely a red herring. Couldn't an adherent of those beliefs equally say that there exists a contextual angle from which MG might view their traditions as epistemic realities just as you do about yours. Isn't this insistence on angles of context, another way of saying that Christianity is epistemically possibl, even if it can't be shown to be probable within most epistemological frameworks?
 
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Athée

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I'm glad you survived that and are happy today.
I wish I had a similar experience (not the beating!) but so far nothing despite years of prayers.
 
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Athée

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Ah this makes more sense of what you meant by angles. I still think people from those other faith traditions would say that when you apply their hermeneutics and cultural frameworks etc that their faith is the most justified. You could argue about internal coherence of their position, as they could about yours (or mine for that matter - pardon the naturalist pun!) but I see now what you were getting at.
 
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Athée

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Hi Athee. Came into the forum today for the first time in a long time and was wondering what you were discussing and found this. I don't remember asking you this so: How and why were you a Christian?
Hey Once, good to hear from you. How are you and the family doing. Was Christmas as crazy on your end as it was here?
The readers digest version of my story is that I grew up non religious, in my late teens I met my future wife who was (and is) a strong Christian. I went with her to church, read a bunch of the new testament gave my life to Christ, repented of my sins before a holy god and lived for Him for many years. In my study one day I came across 1 Peter 3:15 and decided to really dig in to the supper for my faith. I wanted to be the best evangelist ever So, being academic by nature I started reading what the atheists were saying (started with the compilations edited by John Loftus of all things ) and read the Christian responses to them. In the end, after a period of 2 years or so I admitted to myself that I no longer believed.
Hope that helps.
 
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Athée

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I'm with you on the Mormons and the Jw's, not sure that it is fair to write off all other worldviews as having little to no substance though, although maybe for her this will turn out to be the case. And I guess if she was raised in a western family there is a good chance than many of those ways of knowing and being will not feel inherently right and normative for her.
 
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Deadworm

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Remember, I conceded that connections with eyewitnesses are not quite proof. Rather, I treated these connections as necessary, but not sufficient conditions for a credible faith. The actual method for verifying the Gospel is yet to come.

Athee: "You assume that Paul received this from the Jerusalem apostles and I don't see why you make this assumption."

I make this assumption for these 3 reasons and more:
(1) Because Paul introduces his list of resurrection appearances with a standard formula for expression the transmission of tradition acknowledged by all the academic commentaries: "I passed on to you of first importance what I in turn received (1 Corinthians 15:3)."

(2) Because the sequence of an appearance to Peter and then to the 11 is independently confirmed by Luke.

(3) Because in Galatians Paul makes it clear that Peter, James, and John checked out the accuracy of Paul's Gospel (2:2, 6-8) and the Resurrection appearances are part of that Gospel (see 1 Corinthians 15:1).


Athee: "A lot of this depends on the assertion that the gospels are written by the authors to whom they were later attributed and that they were in fact eyewitnesses, or recording the recollections of eyewitnesses. Could you make the case for these positions more plainly for me."

All we can do is identify the connections with eyewitnesses and combine that with logic. Again, consider these 3 points:

(1) Mark is our first canonical Gospel and it is used by both Matthew and Luke, but not by John. Mark is not a disciple and is otherwise a very minor figure in the early church, in fact, a figure whom Paul disgraced for his cowardice during Paul's first missionary journey (Acts 15:36-38). It seems unlikely that he would be invented as the author of the Gospel that bears his name. if the ascribed authorship were invented, one would expect an apostle to credited as the author.

(2) Papias says he dislikes written sources and claims to get his information from direct conversations with Jesus' disciples and those who were personally disciple by them. John the Elder, a disciple of Jesus (but not 1 of the 12) is Papias source for identifying Peter as the source of Mark's Gospel. Mark's role as Peter's assistant in Rome is independently supported by 3 sources: Papias, Justin Martyr, and 1 Peter 5:13.

(3) The Latinisms in Mark offer independent support for Papias's claim that Mark wrote his Gospel in Rome, just as Papias claims.

Then consider these 2 related points:
(1) Paul himself reports his own resurrection appearance, one that transformed him from a guilt-free hitman for the Pharisees into Jesus' greatest defender and promoter.
(2) In Paul's list, he mentions the appearance to Jesus' brother James. That appearance is the best way to solve a difficult puzzle: how the hostility of Jesus' brothers to His earthly claims was dropped after the crucifixion. Apparently, His brother James's Easter appearance was a key to the family's conversion.
 
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Athée

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This is a great question (as usual) and I while I have no idea how MG responded I have asked myself this many times. I still don't know. So I tend to just accept whatever the Christians who claim they have a personal relationship with this god tell me I should expect. They would know ...right?
 
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Athée

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I would love to take you up on this but I will respect my commitment to deadworm first
 
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Athée

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Hey all, I have been a bit snarky in some of my responses tonight, if one of those was directed at one of your comments I apologize and will try to limit such occurrences moving forward. Scoring snark points can feel good in the moment but doesn't properly respect this subject, this forum, nor your willingness to engage in deep discussion.
Apologies
 
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Athée

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1) I don't see how the phrase you highlighted there links to a revelation from other humans. Paul nowhere that I can recall says that he gets any of his teachings from other diciples or apostles etc. He always received it from visions. Even if the others agree with him (and they don't always seem to) I don't agree that the phrase you bolded males any connection to a flesh and blood source of revelation.

2) But that is not the sequence in Paul. He says the appearances happened in this order: Cephus, the 12, the 500, James, the apostles (apparently different people than the 12) and last to him.

3) if they are checking it out doesn't it stand to reason that he didn't get his gospel from a source that they were already familiar with and trusted?
 
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2PhiloVoid

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Could they "equally" say? No, Athée, I really don't think so (and excuse me while I step on Loftus' big left toe. ) How would those other adherents be epistemically "equal" given the contextual parameters/considerations I mentioned to Mountain Girl?

Sure, we can say that Christian faith has a certain epistemic angle, as do the other religions in each of their own respective ways, but we should refrain from insinuating (from the outside looking in) that all of the religions are really just playing something along the line of the same sort of epistemic game. Given all of the historical, linguistic, cultural, perceptual and conceptual indices involved, we need to be observant of the full contexts into which each religion exists, and has existed, so as to avoid sinking into a quicksand of epistemic equivocation. An orange is not an apple; an apple is not a pear; a pear is not a strawberry--but sure, they are all fruit! And it is understandable that for someone who has a taste for toast (the foundation for butter ), none of the fruit will likely seem to be a satisfying option at the moment.

Christianity is epistemically possible, but only partially so. The human mind can start with the religious texts, experiences, and interaction with other religious minds, but God has to come into the play at some point and lead the interlocuter to the final destination of faith. It's not just brain work, although it can start with that.
 
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2PhiloVoid

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Well,....what I meant was that since I know that MG is mathematically and scientifically inclined, she'd probably have similar evaluations of those "other" religions as mine, but only a posteriori. I don't know that as a fact, but as a notion of experience. On my part, I don't discount them simply because I'm a Christian and have no further room for other religious thought from other quarters of the world, but because I have studied them on a philosophical level and found them wanting in various ways. And of course, it could all turn out I was confused and wrong in the end about each of them. ....................nah!
 
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2PhiloVoid

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Loftus, ay? He's an apostate after my own denominational heart!
 
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