Until you have established it as truth, it remains opinion, and you can put down the "foolish and self-deceived" stick.
I think it has been well-established as truth, or I wouldn't believe it. The arguments and evidences for God are many and sound and may be discovered in a host of books, videos and websites that explain the arguments and evidences. Now, you may reject it all as "opinion," but it nonetheless exists and properly satisfies the rules of logic and the principles of reason and evidence against which such things are assessed. Until you can demonstrate that it all fails to do so,
you are the one exerting an opinion and may well be foolish and self-deceived.
lol. Demons are as good as an idea as any? thank goodness the pioneers in the field of medicine thought differently.
As I said,
in the absence of any good reason to think otherwise, it's as good a reason as any.
As I have come to the conclusion, from the appearance of things, that gods like those in the bible are not real, and I have not been presented with good reasons to reject that conclusion.
Or is that only reasonable for people that agree with you?
Well, as I said, there are good reasons in abundance to think God exists. But they are good, not just if you happen to think that they are, but in their conformity to a more objective standard, which I have mentioned a couple of times now. Until you've shown that the reasons for belief in God truly fail to meet this objective standard, your rejection of it
is unreasonable.
On what basis do you disagree? Can you provide some objective measure that points directly to your "God"? No?
An objective measure? Of what sort, exactly? Deductive reasoning (which is an objective measure) points directly to God, as the Kalam Cosmological Argument demonstrates.
You have misrepresented what I said: the raping and serial killing do not disqualify them. How is that justice?
God's holy justice demands the punishment of our wickedness. This is at the core of what justice is. But the demands of God's justice are so high
no one of us could ever fully satisfy them - not the serial killer nor Mother Theresa. Only God, in His perfection and power, could ever make full atonement for our sin. And since God is also loving and merciful, He paid the penalty of our sin for us, suffering and satisfying the full extent of His justice on our behalf. Thus, God's salvation of vile sinners does not ignore or circumvent justice but meets it head on, satisfies it, and as a consequence is able to extend to us
all mercy, forgiveness and love.
I have not been presented with a coherent definition of "God".
If you're looking for a very exhaustive, philosophical definition you can find one here:
www.reasonablefaith.org
Observations of nature do not comport with the stories of the "God" character in the bible poofing a pair people and some animals into existence,
Why would you expect the natural to comport with the supernatural? The material universe is to God what a clay pot is to the potter who made it. Do you expect the clay pot to possess all the attributes and abilities of the potter? Obviously not. The potter can do an enormous number of things of which the clay pot is not capable. So, too, with nature and the God who made it.
I do not see anything about my own moral sense that cannot be explained by evolutionary theory.
Well, obviously, I don't think the theory upon which you're relying is the best explanation of the human moral sense. I think a Moral Law Giver makes more sense.
I have not seen any compelling evidence that there is any such thing as an "eternal destination" beyond the death of my brain and the distribution of my constituent matter back into the world.
Well, "compelling" is a pretty subjective and shifting standard. What is compelling to one person is not necessarily compelling to another.
Or how many they have slaughtered.
Exactly. Though, if they reject God's atonement for their sin, they will spend all of eternity paying for their sin themselves.
In common terms, it is morally bankrupt.
No. Justice is satisfied. God has made sure of that. What you're really objecting to, it seems, is God's
mercy. Apparently, you think God should be as unmerciful as you are. I'm very glad He is not. Maybe one day you'll be, too.
Or, a means of having a religion that appeals to even the lowest members of society.
Yes, it is wonderful how God stoops down even to the vilest of people and offers them mercy, grace and forgiveness! How good He is!
Selah.