Dave RP
Well-Known Member
- Jun 9, 2015
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- United Kingdom
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- Faith
- Atheist
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- Divorced
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- UK-Liberal-Democrats
How many miracles has J.K. Rowling worked? How many times has J.K. Rowling attributed her "creative inspiration" to Divine Voices & Visions ? And for how many thousands of years running have others been adding to that body of writings, in an (allegedly) supra-naturally complex, mathematically structured, and sophisticatedly self-referential way?
And, of course, how many times has anything in those pages actually been born out in (archaeologically attestable) physical reality, for all human eyes to plainly see?
Abrahamic Scripture is not just some single fire-side story. It is a (supposed) historical record of "God in heaven's" (alleged) miraculous wonder-working upon this planet over the past ~8000 years.
What about the (claimed) "Plagues" vs. Ramesses' Egypt that do coincide archaeologically, not only with the end of Ramesses the Great's reign, the onset of identifiably Israelite occupation of Canaan, as well as some sort of retaliatory raid against "ISRL" by Ramesses' successor Merneptah attested on an Egyptian stele... but also the "Bronze Age Collapse" which wiped out civilizations around the region and plunged the eastern Mediterranean into centuries of Dark Ages?
Something major happened. Troy fell. The Greeks collapsed. The Hittites failed. The Egyptian empire crumbled. Other than perhaps the Philistines (who themselves appear to have fled to Canaan from somewhere else), the only humans around to actually benefit was a group of refugees hiding out in the Arabian wilderness, claiming to receive Divine Guidance via Divine Voices & Visions from "God in heaven".
I guess if you actively desire to reject such claims, you could claim it "just happened" to be a one-in-a-zillion string of fortuitous random coincidences which "just happened" to turn a bunch of Egyptian slaves into the regional power of Israel...
I guess what I'm trying to say, though, is that I find no reason per se to reject the claims. If there actually factually was (and is) a "God in heaven" capable of communicating meaningful, intelligible audio-visual messages (Divine Voices & Visions) to humans on Earth, then such an "uplink" to Divine Guidance would be able to steer a group of humans through plagues, locust swarms, earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, tsunamis and/or whatever else happened to power & prominence in the (supposedly) "Promised" land.
I see no reason to dismiss such a scenario out of human hand. Are humans somehow doing anything to somehow "stop" or "prevent" or "shield against" such Divine Voices & Visions being communicated successfully to humans on Earth?
Why are you so incredulous? What might you know about "heaven" that the rest of us don't? Humans don't really know exactly how Quasars, Blazars, or Gamma ray Bursts work, but we think we detect them regularly all the same. It's a puzzle, hopefully humans will figure it out some day. Meanwhile, other humans think they perceive a "Divine Presence" from "God in heaven", communicating to their minds audio-visual Voices & Visions. Why is that impossible? And if it is possible, what is anybody around here doing about it, much less to (say) somehow stop it. I don't understand your dubiousness. Nothing I notice in any way "violates the fundamental fabric of space-time" or anything. "God in heaven" can affect our "pale blue dot"... insofar as we now know our "pale blue dot of a planet" isn't really much of a big Cosmic deal, then such a claim is not really much of one either.
I have just attended the British Museum exhibition "Living with gods - peoples, places and worlds beyond."
The exhibition looked at religious beliefs around the world, it looked at how people worshipped their gods, the stories, objects, images, prayers and rituals of the innumerable religions around the world.
There were several threads running through the exhibition including the certainty that each religion had got it right, they had the mystical connection with god(s) necessary for peace, eternal life, connection with ancestors etc.
In addition the use of ritual to reinforce faith was virtually universal, chanting, prayer beads, prayer wheels, sacred texts are in almost universal use.
Every religion has absolute certainty, it's the arrogance and dogma of religion which I find incredible - "MY sacred books are correct, yours are not, you are doomed I am saved" - if you look at the world as a whole it seems glaringly obvious to me that if there is a god, and if that god "cares" about humanity and offers soem form of afterlife, it is the same god for everyone. No ones sacred texts, rituals or beliefs are better then anyone elses.
Personally I still believe that religious belief is mostly about humanities need for answers, our enquiring mind, wanting to believe in something special outside our normal humdrum existence, seeing our loved ones again, having some respite from a brutal life, hence why there are so many different interpretations. If there was one all powerful god, there would be fewer religious belief systems because this all powerful god would have made us very aware of his presence.
It was an interesting exhibition.
Living with gods
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