dhh712
Mrs. Calvinist Dark Lord
- Jul 16, 2013
- 778
- 283
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Female
- Faith
- Presbyterian
- Marital Status
- Married
I think we are already more or less on the same page wrt your first sentence, above (before the parenthetical aside) whatever clarification is needed on details--and also on the same page wrt your last above sentence.
What I am still curious about is how you relate Rom. 1:19-20 and my above remarks on the chapter to empirical and scientific evidence that suggests or demonstrates something about God in Rom. 1 terms. You say, "Creation itself is subjective evidence. Sure it points to a creator," but my understanding of "subjective" is that it is "based on or influenced by personal feelings, tastes, or opinions" (to cite Google), which is epistemologically insubstantial and could not be considered adequate to explain Rom. 1 "they know" and judgment language. Granted I am trying to clarify my own thought here, but would not "objective" better describe the knowledge people in Rom. 1 have of aspects of God's nature such as His power and--how does one put it?--transcendent stature (and apparently wrath)? Or should we abandon (as I currently favor) attaching "subjective" and "objective" language to the knowledge of God Paul describes in Rom. 1?
You mention "God has made it very clear in this world that he is revealed" (which I think adequately represents some of Paul's words in Rom. 1). Your post then seems to suggest you would affirm there is empirical evidence for intelligent design (which in any case I would affirm). And you seem uncertain that repeatable experiments could be imagined and executed which would suggest, instantiate, or demonstrate the existence of "a creator" (or God who could be known universally only in Rom. 1 terms)--we both would abandon the possibility of designing an experiment to substantiate the existence of the Trinity or God with post-Chalcedon attributes; knowledge of that God has been derived elsewhere, as you perhaps imply.
Of course the problem with executing experiments concerning the origin of matter or life is human and technological and energy limitations. Recreate the Big Bang (or fill-in view of the origins of mass/energy). Create a bacteria cell starting by using amino acid soup, temperature variations, a few assorted chemicals, and electricity. In this respect I mean, naturalistic atheists and theistic creationists are on equal epistemological footing (despite recent political success of anti-supernaturalism, e.g. at Dover). There are subjects for experimentation which we cannot experiment on, especially when it comes to origins and, in our case, regarding a Creator.
But apparently we both wonder if there are no experiments which can be done which in some way or to some degree suggests, instantiates, or demonstrates the existence of some attribute of God. Or perhaps many such experiments have already been done. One may consider double blind studies on prayer and healing, which suggest the presence of a power(s?) we may not fully understand (and which does not fit conventional western naturalistic models of the mass-energy universe), but I am thinking more in terms of implications, such as failures in mutation studies to encourage belief in such macroevolutionary leaps as the origins of mammal or bird eyes with visual cortexes to process the "pixels." I say leaps without substantial extra-probability nudges in design despite naturalist faith that becomes a kind of infinite regression into "we don't know mechanisms yet, but we believe we will."
And here I'm rapidly going too far afield, being too terse and incomplete, and running out of time. Nonetheless, I do hope our conversation benefits heartsrose74 per her OP, at least indirectly (not to mention the two of us). Belief in a Creator God is intellectually viable for those who care to look into it.
Rom 1:19-20 is of course natural revelation--creation clearly reveals there is a God and many of his attributes: beauty, glory, nobility, wrath, peace, all-powerful. Now what may creep in here is that all such things can be seen as subjective. I personally can understand this as subjective for what is beautiful to one person may not be to another. My fiance states that (and I may have the wording wrong on this, but I think I got the basic point--in case he corrects me) a significant accomplishment of Satan is to get people to understand glory and such things as subjective, that these things are in fact objective. This can be if we take our definition on these adjectives from the Bible. I haven't thought about this much before though so am still trying to place my thoughts on it.
What natural revelation can't provide however is salvific revelation. So, while we are without excuse for knowledge of God, that there is a God and we should seek him, however because of our sinful nature no one does--because we want to be God. We want to be in control of our lives and the idea of submitting to an all-powerful God is foreign and quite frankly repulsive to the natural man (after the entrance of sin into the world); after all, if he doesn't comport with our own mindset and idea of what a God should be then he is not worth our worship (thus we become the judge of God and not he of us).
Everyone knows there is a God even though they may not want to admit it. Here's one evidence: Does any one person know everything? If so, they're God. It should be obvious to everyone in existence that they don't know everything and therefore based on that alone should acknowledge that a God exists; yet we, some of us at least, still persist in the foolish idea that there isn't a God (and those of us who do admit it, specifically the existence of the true living God, are able to do so only by his mercy else we still will be baring the sword against our Creator).
Here's something that the OP may want to say to her friend, though I think she may be agnostic so it may not apply. Still, I think it's something to think about (especially for the atheists out there): What do you have to do to prove there is no gold in Alaska? Well, you'd have to turn up every inch of ground, uncover every possible place in the entirety of that state. You probably can spend several life-times trying to accomplish that; and, it probably may not even be possible since some of that land is under the ownership of private property--not likely the owners thereof are going to co-operate with you on your mission. Still--even if you could have access to every square inch of it, probably going to be pretty tough to prove that. On the other hand, what do you have to do to prove there is gold in Alaska? Pretty simple--just turn up with a particle of it.
Another commentary is that actually, it is quite impossible to prove there is no God. Since you'd have to know everything to prove there isn't. Then, as soon as you accomplish this then you become God so you've just disproved what you set out to prove.
I was an atheist for many years and I can't believe how stupid I was to have this mindset; yet, I was only taken from it by the mercy of our Heavenly Father, else I still would be stumbling around in the dark not really thinking through what I actually believed (most likely many atheists would admit they're actually agnostic than atheistic, yet many of them seem so strong in their denunciation of the existence of any God; they really should back off on their virulence and show some humility as to the actual state of their situation. I guess I should say "good luck" to myself on that).
Sorry if I didn't cover everything in your post too (and probably wasn't especially thorough in what I did write--for instance, the discussion really needs to begin with, "how is it that we're defining God"). However I don't have a whole lot of time (definitely not enough to go into the definition, we're probably on the same page on that) and it takes me a lot of time to write these posts (why I don't come back to them many times). I actually only had time to get back to this since I didn't have to go into work today because of the snowstorm.
Upvote
0