My phrase "completed skeptic" comes from the slang for a Jewish person who accepts Jesus Christ as the messiah.
A completed skeptic is one who had spent a majority of their past as an atheist, agnostic, or theist who has come around to being a Christian. This tends to be a long process starting with the studies of sciences such as physics and the origins of humans. This involving research into archeology of all religions and historical facts of all religions. This involves reading into other religons. This involves the probabilities of God versus No God, and the "meaning of life". This most heavily involves philosophy.
As if it isn't a large enough jump for a person to turn from being an atheist to believing there is a God, for a person who was once an atheist to turn into a Christian is just incredible. For a one time atheist to believe that God returned to Earth in the form of man as Jesus Christ to pay a sin debt on the cross and to resurrect on the third day is as good as "predestination" gets for me.
To me, a completed skeptic is my favorite person to have conversation with. I enjoy intelligent discussion of the faith and I easily relate to the position.
The turning point is also a two part concept, the scientific acceptance of something, and the faith belief in something. If you accept that historical records and eyewitness accounts outside of the Bible show that the events of Jesus Christ's life indeed happened, you have scientific acceptance. To have faith acceptance is what changes you. For the completed skeptic to do this, you must cross the boundries of science, into faith. You must humble yourself into doing something that has no scientific foundation- Prayer. The complete skeptic finally reaches the point where he or she says "God / Jesus if you are real I need you to show me your exsistance in some way... I need some sort of sign to believe, if you can show me this ______ then I will believe in you and I will have faith and give my life over"
The strangest part of seeing that sign that only Jesus could have put there for you to see is the feeling. It is the feeling of completion.
A completed skeptic is one who had spent a majority of their past as an atheist, agnostic, or theist who has come around to being a Christian. This tends to be a long process starting with the studies of sciences such as physics and the origins of humans. This involving research into archeology of all religions and historical facts of all religions. This involves reading into other religons. This involves the probabilities of God versus No God, and the "meaning of life". This most heavily involves philosophy.
As if it isn't a large enough jump for a person to turn from being an atheist to believing there is a God, for a person who was once an atheist to turn into a Christian is just incredible. For a one time atheist to believe that God returned to Earth in the form of man as Jesus Christ to pay a sin debt on the cross and to resurrect on the third day is as good as "predestination" gets for me.
To me, a completed skeptic is my favorite person to have conversation with. I enjoy intelligent discussion of the faith and I easily relate to the position.
The turning point is also a two part concept, the scientific acceptance of something, and the faith belief in something. If you accept that historical records and eyewitness accounts outside of the Bible show that the events of Jesus Christ's life indeed happened, you have scientific acceptance. To have faith acceptance is what changes you. For the completed skeptic to do this, you must cross the boundries of science, into faith. You must humble yourself into doing something that has no scientific foundation- Prayer. The complete skeptic finally reaches the point where he or she says "God / Jesus if you are real I need you to show me your exsistance in some way... I need some sort of sign to believe, if you can show me this ______ then I will believe in you and I will have faith and give my life over"
The strangest part of seeing that sign that only Jesus could have put there for you to see is the feeling. It is the feeling of completion.