(Sorry, quotes not behaving as I expected)
Responding to "oi_antz": "Were you a Christian at the time, and did Jesus respond at the time as He said He would? Also, how many times have you heard Him knocking and invited Him in?"
As John Wesley felt his heart "strangely warmed."
But there is the moment, the experience, and there is the interpretation of it.
A range of things can produce a "heart strangely warmed" and only one of the possibilities is the presence of the risen Lord Jesus.
Coolly: that data fits a particular hypothesis is not evidence for the truth of that hypothesis if the data fits alternate hypotheses just as well.
I have encountered the parallel in discussions with Hindus. Those who have had mystical experiences take them to be (summarised horribly) transcendental insight into the non-duality of nature. The hypothesis that the experience might not be transcendental at all is not only not considered, it is not even conceived of.
I've had a range of "heart moments", some of them very powerful. Not all of them with a Christian or even religious setting. What they meant or signified beyond their "happening", that's not a given, unless a particular understanding or framework of world view is held to be trustworthy. And that remains the question.
Responding to "oi_antz": "Were you a Christian at the time, and did Jesus respond at the time as He said He would? Also, how many times have you heard Him knocking and invited Him in?"
Yes, I was a Christian at the time, and yes, I believed that what I felt "in my heart" was a response.
As John Wesley felt his heart "strangely warmed."
But there is the moment, the experience, and there is the interpretation of it.
A range of things can produce a "heart strangely warmed" and only one of the possibilities is the presence of the risen Lord Jesus.
Coolly: that data fits a particular hypothesis is not evidence for the truth of that hypothesis if the data fits alternate hypotheses just as well.
I have encountered the parallel in discussions with Hindus. Those who have had mystical experiences take them to be (summarised horribly) transcendental insight into the non-duality of nature. The hypothesis that the experience might not be transcendental at all is not only not considered, it is not even conceived of.
I've had a range of "heart moments", some of them very powerful. Not all of them with a Christian or even religious setting. What they meant or signified beyond their "happening", that's not a given, unless a particular understanding or framework of world view is held to be trustworthy. And that remains the question.
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