Why Believe In God?

sanctus

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If someone were to ask you the question, “Why believe in God?” what would you say? Would you be able to answer his or her question or would you just answer by saying, “Because He is here”? Consider the following points.

Why believe in God? We can feel Him calling us.
Every culture throughout history has been convinced that there is a higher power that watches over them. This desire to reach for that higher power is man’s search to get reconnected to God. All of these people have the idea of God in their consciousness because deep in their hearts they know that He is there (Romans 1-2). Who put the desire in their hearts as well as our hearts that we should seek after Him? God did.

Why believe in God? The complexity of all life and of our planet
When we look to all of science, we can see that there is order and that there is a definite pattern to the layout and structure of not only the human body, but also the universe in which we live.

The distinguished astronomer Sir Frederick Hoyle showed how amino acids randomly coming together in a human cell are mathematically absurd. Sir Hoyle illustrated the weakness of "chance" with the following analogy: "What are the chances that a tornado might blow through a junkyard containing all the parts of a 747, accidentally assemble them into a plane, and leave it ready for take-off? The possibilities are so small as to be negligible even if a tornado were to blow through enough junkyards to fill the whole universe!"

Who created this universe in such a set a pattern that no man, when he looks carefully enough, can deny that the hand of God was used in its creation?

Why believe in God? Sense of right and wrong
Even from our earliest years we all have an innate sense of right and wrong. This “conscience,” as the world refers to it, keeps us in a moral as well as ethical balance and without it the world would break down into total chaos. Who put that sense of right and wrong in us? God did.

Why believe in God? The Bible
The endurance and longevity of the Bible should help us to see that there is a Creator. The Bible has existed for years, even though there have been numerous attempts to destroy or discredit it.

The Bible has existed for centuries and is still the best-selling and most read book in the world. Who made sure that the Bible would be around from generation to generation in order to ensure that His Word could still be read? God did.

Why believe in God? Jesus Christ
No other religious leader, not Buddha, Mohammed, or Confucius has ever claimed to be the Son of God. That is what Jesus did; He claimed to be God in the flesh. He not only claimed to be God, He backed up His claims through His life, death, and resurrection.

The presence of Jesus can still be felt today -- not only in all the lives that have been changed by Him, but also by the very idea that the structure and keeping of time has evolved around His birth. Who made sure that we would never forget His Son? God did.

Why believe in God? These are only five of the many reasons that point to the existence of God. Look at them carefully and you to will see that God has left evidence for us to see and to know that He is here!
 

Dexter Sinister

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Well Sanctus, you started three rather preachy threads today almost simultaneously, trying to argue essentially the same point. I’m going to respond to all three of them here. I’ve put your words in italics, mine in a regular font, to avoid the bulkiness and tediousness of having to do the open and close quotes in square brackets thing. Besides, one essay is easier to write than three and I can't spend all day on this.

For the “Why believe in God” thread:

Why believe in God? We can feel Him calling us. Every culture throughout history has been convinced that there is a higher power that watches over them.

Utterly irrelevant. The number of people who believe something to be true has nothing to do with whether it’s actually true or not. Many people have feelings they interpret as god calling them, but that's all it provably is, an interpretation of an emotional state.

This desire to reach for that higher power is man’s search to get reconnected to God.

A heroic assumption. There are much more parsimonious explanations for that, starting with the well-known human propensity for magical thinking.

Why believe in God? The complexity of all life and of our planet. When we look to all of science, we can see that there is order and that there is a definite pattern to the layout and structure of not only the human body, but also the universe in which we live.

Ah, the old Argument from Design, the creationists’ favourite. Fred Hoyle’s tornado-in-the-junkyard analogy is an extraordinarily ignorant idea from someone with such intellectual credentials. It could have been made only by someone who knows less than nothing about natural selection. Natural selection is not a theory about chance, it is, in the relevant meaning of the word chance, precisely the opposite. Evidently you don’t understand it any better than Hoyle did.

Who created this universe in such a set a pattern that no man, when he looks carefully enough, can deny that the hand of God was used in its creation?

I can, and do. Actually, if you really look carefully, what you find is evidence of a lack of design, poorly assembled structures thrown together in a slapdash fashion from available materials. The appearance of design is completely superficial, and is exactly what you’d expect if a process like natural selection is operating.

Why believe in God? Sense of right and wrong.

Again, there are much more parsimonious explanations for human morality than that, rooted in our sociability and the need to cooperate with each other.

Why believe in God? The Bible.

It’s not a legitimate argument to cite the Bible as the source of its own authority.

Why believe in God? Jesus Christ. No other religious leader, not Buddha, Mohammed, or Confucius has ever claimed to be the Son of God.

That’s simply wrong. Lots of lunatics have claimed to be the son of god, to hear god’s voice in their heads. Ever heard of Appollonius of Tyana? More or less a contemporary of Jesus; exactly the same claims were made about him.

For the “Is there a God” thread:

Is There a God? - Creation. Unless we are able to explain satisfactorily how each of these things exist, without resorting to a supernatural force, and find empirical evidence to support our conclusion, a Creator is default.

False dichotomy. You’re implying we must invoke a Creator whenever we encounter something we don’t understand. If we’d done that, we’d still be stuck in the 16th century.

Is There a God? - Atheism
Is there a God, or isn't there a God, depends on our ability to disprove God.


Oh come on, Sanctus, you know better than that.

The burden of proof rests upon atheism to validate its position.

Nice try. Most atheists of my acquaintance would not categorically state that there is no god. Not even Richard Dawkins makes that claim. If they did, you’d be right, but they don’t and you’re wrong. They’d state that the evidence is insufficient to justify the conclusion that there is one. You’re the one making the extraordinary claim that there’s a supernatural being that has some interest in us and is endowed with logically inconsistent characteristics like omniscience and omnipotence. The burden of proof’s on you.

... the Big Bang Model of Origins.... violates two of the three Laws of Thermodynamics, and the Law of Cause and Effect. ... violates the Law of Conservation of Angular Momentum.

Completely, utterly, massively, wrong. You need to go back to the textbooks.

...Big Bang is unable to explain uneven "voids" and "clumps" throughout the universe.

Not quite true, there are several possible explanations under investigation, but even if it were true, so what? So we don’t understand everything. Doesn’t mean we never will.

Plus, there remains the question, "where did the Big Bang come from?"

Again, several possible explanations are under investigation out on the fringes of string theory. There also remains the question, “Where did the Creator come from?” And if you expect me to be satisfied with something like “He was always there,” I’ll expect you to be satisfied with, “the Big Bang just happened.”

Is There a God? - The Implications ... we are not educated, we are indoctrinated.

Uh huh. And what are these three long posts of yours an example of, if not merely a different kind of indoctrination?

Unfortunately, the ultimate result is that we and our children are taught that there is no Divine Lawmaker.

And where are we taught that? Despite what you seem to be claiming here, every poll I’ve ever seen on the subject indicates that by far the majority of people everywhere in the world are believers of one sort or another. That teaching doesn’t seem to be working very well.

No one stops to consider why or how morality developed,

That’s not true. That’s a very common issue in philosophy, and even the biologists are getting into the act these days.

Evolution is unable to account for the development of the moral code inherent in all of us.

Why should it? It’s not a theory about morality, and never claimed to be.

Society suffers tremendously as a result of our children being taught we share a common heritage with rocks and plants. Individuality, meaning and purpose no longer mean anything. And we wonder why our kids act like animals today.

My kids don’t. Most kids don’t, in my experience. You must live in a pretty bleak neighbourhood to believe that. I suspect you’re guilty of the fallacy of composition here, a belief that a few representatives of a group are typical of the whole group. Besides, the fact is that we do share a common heritage with every living thing on the planet, and you’ll have to do a bit of work to demonstrate your claim that knowing that is harmful. Putting rocks in there is a bit of a stretch, I don’t think anyone’s ever claimed we’re related to rocks, but it’s perfectly obvious from genetic studies that all living things are related.


For the “Why Am I Here” thread:

Wrong answers to important questions aren't helpful.

Well, at least we agree on one thing.

Why I am here? Well, if God doesn't exist, that means that life must have come about through some natural impersonal, unintelligent, and ultimately purposeless process.

Ah, we agree on two things.

That means we're ultimately as purposeless as the very process which brought us into existence.

We’re perfectly capable of creating our own purposes. They may not have permanent cosmic relevance--few things do, except the cosmos itself--but they certainly have relevance to us. Why can't that be good enough for you?

Life's just an accident and so are you.

Highly doubtful. Current research suggests it’s an inevitable consequence of how physics and chemistry work. And no, that’s not an argument in favour of a Designer. Do some reading on complexity theory and self-organizing systems.

Life is one big accident.

There you go again, mistaking natural selection for chance.

You serve no purpose, you'll cause no lasting effect, and in the grand scheme of things your life is utterly meaningless.

In the grand scheme of things, i.e. on the cosmic scale of all time and space, that certainly appears to be true. There was a time when this planet had no life on it. There will be a time again when it’ll have no life on it, the sun isn’t going to last forever. In fact there have been at least five times in the history of the planet when it was almost reduced to lifelessness (any idea why the Creator would do that? Got it wrong and wanted to start over maybe? And no, I'm not being facetious.), and it appears to be currently undergoing a sixth great extinction event. Those events mark the boundaries of the major divisions of geological time. The end result for all species is extinction, and always has been. I don't comprehend your apparent need to define so many absolutes in life. Absolute ethics, absolute justice, absolute purpose...

Without a Creator in the beginning, there was nobody around to put you here on purpose which means you aren't here for a reason. It's that simple.

Three things we agree on...

Our worth is ultimately subjective.

You say that like it's a bad thing. What’s necessarily wrong with that?

Philosophers generally agree: without an absolute God to make the rules, there is no such thing as a moral absolute; there are only preferences. You don't actually have a right to live; you just prefer not to die. Someone else on the other hand might want to kill you regardless of how you feel about it, and who is to say that they're wrong? In the absence of absolute morality, power reigns supreme; the strong survive and the weak get exploited.

You appear to have a pretty dim view of your fellow man. In the absence of absolute morality, why can’t there be relative morality? “Who’s to say they’re wrong?” Us. Other people. The societies and cultures we’ve created. And we do say so, and we create institutions to enforce the rules. Moreover, philosophers, when dealing with matters of ethics and morality, generally try to figure things out in ways that don’t invoke anything supernatural, because that doesn’t really explain anything. It just avoids the need for an explanation. God did it, and that's that.


Why Am I Here? - The Theistic Worldview
Why am I here? Well, if God does exist, that means He is ultimate reality.


Well, subject to assorted assumptions about his nature, motives, and characteristics, all of which are absolutely unverifiable.

God makes the rules. The question is: will He enforce them?

Read a newspaper lately? Given the state of the world, he doesn’t appear to be doing much in the way of enforcement. Or is it only after we die that he enforces them?

The prevailing instinct among the majority seems to be that, yes, God will hold us accountable. It's as if most people instinctually know that one day they're going to have to explain all the bad things they've done (which of course means that they also instinctually know that there is such a thing as moral absolutes).

Is it only fear of god’s retribution that keeps you on the straight and narrow? And once again, of course, the number of people who believe something to be true has nothing to do with its actual truth content.

The point is, if God really does exist, terms like "justice," "purpose," and "morality" aren't abstract notions

Sure they are, they’re just as abstract as they ever were. Rooting them in god doesn’t make them any more concrete, it just makes them more authoritative, and authoritarian.

So begin at the beginning.

Okay. Has it never struck you how relative to culture religions are? Every culture invents one, and they go extinct when the culture disappears. The old Greek, Roman, Norse, Egyptian, Assyrian, Babylonian, etc. pantheons are extinct by any reasonable measure, and it’s perfectly clear from the writings we have from many of those cultures that there were believers in their time just as fervent in their faiths as you are in yours. Belief in divinities appears to be something deeply rooted in human nature, not necessarily reflecting an empirical fact about the cosmos. There is no argument you can make in support of your beliefs that hasn’t been made countless times before (with minor differences in names and dates) in support of other beliefs you would probably dismiss as mythology. I know of no compelling reason to think you’re any more likely to be right than they were. You certainly haven't provided one here.

Does God exist?

Almost certainly not.
 

L Gilbert

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If someone were to ask you the question, “Why believe in God?” what would you say? Would you be able to answer his or her question or would you just answer by saying, “Because He is here”?
My answer would be, "There is no reason for me to believe in such things, but if someone else wants to, it's their choice". So your following points are pointless to me. :D

Geeez yer a windy (wordy) bugger, Dex. ;)
 

Dexter Sinister

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Geeez yer a windy (wordy) bugger, Dex. ;)
Heh... yeah, well, I suppose sometimes I am, but usually it's in response to lengthy pronouncements from others that I feel are a direct personal challenge to what I think is true. There are a few articulate thoughtful atheists on this board, I'm one of them (no false modesty here), and I just couldn't let those three long posts of Sanctus' go by without rebuttal. There was so much disinformation in them...

Sanctus is a bright and thoughtful guy, and I enjoy his provocative and articulate posts, but I think he's fundamentally wrong.
 

Colpy

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Why believe in God?

Because it is more rational than believing that life, the universe, and everything is some kind of colossal freak accident.
 

L Gilbert

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Really? That's hilarious.

From Scientific American's "15 answers to creationist nonsense":

The creationist nonsense -
8. Mathematically, it is inconceivable that anything as complex as a protein, let alone a living cell or a human, could spring up by chance.

The scientific answer -
Chance plays a part in evolution (for example, in the random mutations that can give rise to new traits), but evolution does not depend on chance to create organisms, proteins or other entities. Quite the opposite: natural selection, the principal known mechanism of evolution, harnesses nonrandom change by preserving “desirable” (adaptive) features and eliminating “undesirable” (nonadaptive) ones. As long as the forces of selection stay constant, natural selection can push evolution in one direction and produce sophisticated structures in surprisingly short times.

As an analogy, consider the 13-letter sequence “TOBEORNOTTOBE.” Those hypothetical million monkeys, each pecking out one phrase a second, could take as long as 78,800 years to find it among the 2613 sequences of that length. But in the 1980s Richard Hardison of Glendale College wrote a computer program that generated phrases randomly while preserving the positions of individual letters that happened to be correctly placed (in effect, selecting for phrases more like Hamlet’s). On average, the program re-created the phrase in just 336 iterations, less than 90 seconds. Even more amazing, it could reconstruct Shakespeare’s entire play in just four and a half days.

Um, evolution being a part of life and the universe. :)

 

Colpy

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That is fine. Evolution is a demonstrable fact, I don't argue that life changes over time to better suit it's environment.

That simply does not address the beginning........we don't even know what the spark that is "life" is.........

There is a big difference between change through selection of the life-form best fitted to its own environment...........and the initial creation of life. One is easily described by chance.......the other can not be chance.
 

tamarin

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God will always spur debate. And then there's that fascinating tidbit- Judgment Day. People the world over are always mimicking scripture of some sort: judge not that ye be not judged. Quaint stuff and the first line of defence of a host of miscreants.
One of our greatest sins is that we delegate.Delegate to God what we should be taking care of ourselves.
 

jimmoyer

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..., if you really look carefully, what you find is evidence of a lack of design, poorly assembled structures thrown together in a slapdash fashion from available materials. The appearance of design is completely superficial, and is exactly what you’d expect if a process like natural selection is operating.
----------------------------------------------Dexter Sinister-----------------------------------------------------------

As Colpy said, "There is a big difference between change through selection of the life-form best fitted to its own environment...........and the initial creation of life. One is easily described by chance.......the other can not be chance."

I would add to Colpy's response, that the initial creation of everything is a 50 percent chance of
something or nothing, and that the conditions for life are peculiarly stringent, in that the placement
of the larger Planets protecting us from a lot of bombardment, the location and size of the moon
protecting our axis from too much wobble like Mars thus inducing wild seasonal extremes is quite
interesting that all of it is "JUST SO".

There's enough out there that a selective atheist or selective religionist can neatly defend
their own belief. Which makes atheism a belief system as well. We've been through that excercise before.
 

Curiosity

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I think we've come a long way from our swampy beginnings ....and we have a long way to go.

If there is a master planner or structural engineer or "creator" hovering over his masterwork, I hope he has more plans for us than the faulty character we are in our present state.

At least he has endowed us with a sense of humor to get through it all....

I know my life is Woody Allen movie material.
 

Curiosity

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Life isn't a report card - you know what is best for yourself - and the choices you make are a gamble at best - enjoy as much as possible - at each stage of knowing. I think the greatest compliment we can
give ourselves and our "creator" and our world is to say: I have lived the best way I know
 

Dexter Sinister

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There is a big difference between change through selection of the life-form best fitted to its own environment...........and the initial creation of life. One is easily described by chance.......the other can not be chance.
Wrong on both counts. Natural selection isn't about chance, it's about preserving favourable variations. All it takes for the process to get started is the creation of the first self-replicating molecule, and given all the inter-molecular collisions that must have been going on in the primordial soup 4 or 5 billion years ago, chance provides a perfectly plausible hypothesis to explain that. Invoking a deity as the cause explains nothing, it's just a way of avoiding trying to figure out how it really happened.
 

Tonington

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Why believe in God?

Because it is more rational than believing that life, the universe, and everything is some kind of colossal freak accident.

To think that the present organization of the universe is the result of a greater designer is much more complex and irrational than the non-theistic view of things. Of course if we look at the present time and think of the complexity, it would seem that things are too complex and must have an implicit design, but that disregards the small incremental changes made since time imortal.

Like Mr. Gilbert says, belief in a God is fine for some, but not my cup of tea.
 

Mogz

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I find religion and the concept of some creator, a giant mess of contradictions. Religions as we know them on this planet, are a farce. The Catholic religion being by far the worst. I think Denis Leary said it best:

They just change their rules too much in the Catholic church for me. Remember the latin mass? They changed that. Every now and then they just change some rules. Like God just called up on the hotline?

What gets me however, is the evidence that exists in these modern times that utterly refute religious claims. For example, "religious historians" have claimed that Adam and Eve were flung on to Earth by "God" around 4,000 B.C. Now, folks, i'm no expert, but in the 50 years, we've made extensive headway in the field of geology, paleontology, and archeology and much has turned up in years past that utterly sink this fairytale. For example, I am an avid reader of Scientific American. In the December 2006 issue, there is a whole feature on Selam, a 3.3 MILLION year old skeleton of a baby girl found in Ethiopia. Couple that with the find of Lucy, a 3.2 MILLION year old skeleton of a woman found 4kms away from Selam, and I say that pretty much sinks Adam and Eve. Science has proven time and time again that we (humans) have evolved from Apes. They have found a clear link leading back to your basic, garden variety ape. Why is it so hard for people to let go of religion. Do they NEED that security blanket of a mythical creator? Think about it folks, we grow up with fairytales our entire lives; Santa Claus, The Easter Bunny, The Tooth Fairy. Jesus and God, Adam and Eve, are simply others in a long list of child stories that have been taken literally. The ancient Greeks once believed in Eros, Hera, Ares, and Atlas (to name a few), today that religion is long dead. Over time religions fade, people wake up, or on our case, we learn the truth. Religion (whether or not people want to believe it) is on the decline in Western Society. Consider this:

The following was released by Phil Zuckerman at Pitzer College in Claremont California

  • According to Norris and Inglehart (2004), 25% of those in Australia do not believe in God.
  • According to Gallup and Lindsay (1999:121), 30% of Canadians do not believe in God or a “Higher Power.”
  • Inglehart et al (2004) found that 22% of those in New Zealand do not believe in God
  • According to a 2004 survey commissioned by the BBC, 9% of Americans do not believe in God.
  • Greeley (2003) found that 29% of Latvians, 41% of Norwegians, 48% of the French, and 54% of Czechs claimed to not believe in God
  • According to a 2004 survey commissioned by the BBC, 44% of the British do not believe in God
  • According to Norris and Inglehart (2004), 64% of those in Sweden do not believe in God.
  • According to Inglehart et al (2004), 31% of those in Norway do not believe in God.
  • According to Inglehart et al (2004), 81% of those in Vietnam do not believe in God
  • According to Norris and Inglehart (2004), 65% of those in Japan do not believe in God.

Just like with previous religions, the ones we have today are on their way out. It will take many generations, but eventually, society will abandon belief in a fairytale. Especially when faced with overwhelming scientific evidence.
 

Dexter Sinister

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Notice that mere 9% for Americans? Everybody else is well up into double digits. You have to go into Islamic countries to find levels of religious belief that match those in the United States.
 

talloola

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Why believe in God?

Because it is more rational than believing that life, the universe, and everything is some kind of colossal freak accident

If you consider the proper mixture of water along with "whaever" it takes to make things grow, a "freak
accident", then I guess it is, but I think it is a wonderful, comfortable, natural event of nature, and
that makes me feel a natural part, "along with all other lifeforms" on "our" earth.

The other lifeforms don't have the problem that we seem to have trying to figure everything out, but I
am secure in my belief that we are just like "them", with our "higher form of intelligence" which gives
us the ability to take care of our earth and all of its animals, which we are definitely having some
difficulty with.

If we weren't so preoccupied with many other things, such as, "lack of tolerance", "hatred", "being to
judgemental", "greediness", "materialsim", we could concentrate on taking care of our earth, as it is
our earth which should be thought of as our "savior", as without it, we won't be here.

It's sad that so much time is wasted in trying to convince others that there is some kind of "entity"
way out there, which noone has ever seen, and never will, as, there is so much to do here on our
earth, that could make our lives here so much more successful
The environment is so very important, and the millions of evangelical christians seem to think that
supporting a "faith based" republican government instead of helping the environment is what they
should do, saying it is obeying the wishes of their religion. Nonsense.

We are not a freak of nature, we are a product of nature, and we should be thankful for that, and
treasure every moment on earth, so that when we leave, our earth is healthy and vibrant.

And, the idea that "if" we don't have a god to believe in, there is no meaning to our lives is
"very sad for those thinkers", and I pity them.
 

L Gilbert

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There's enough out there that a selective atheist or selective religionist can neatly defend
their own belief. Which makes atheism a belief system as well. We've been through that excercise before.
rofl
I don't believe in evolution, I know it happens. Same structure as science, my nose, and facts. I know it all exists because there is proof of it. There is no evidence, let alone proof, that all these superstitions are based on anything but imagination. I don't believe there are no gods outside of the imagination, I know it. :)

Here ya go: http://www.atheistfoundation.org.au/belief.htm