It might seem like that but in context of creationism this question is all consuming. The "which came first" question is humerus to a scientist but not to the religionist. In the world of religion there must have been a chicken or an egg first since no other process is recognized. The hand of god decided the facts for the relkigionist. So it is clear that you do not even understand the "which came first" question. If you did you would realize that it's central to your argument not mine.
I don't mind comparing Scripture to science, and it never comes to anything that would be akin to 'slamming down the phone'.
In this case, going with what Scripture says, God came first. If man 'created God' then he also came up with the things we would call 'wisdom from God'. How accurate is the 1st chapter in the Bible.
It mentions Heaven and Earth in that order. That would seem to be correct, our observable sky (even what we can see today with our optics) existed before this rock we live on. How close was He on the building blocks that resulted in something that that was complete about 5,000 years ago.
It had form.
It arrived at a temperature that has water in both liquid and vapor form.
It has plants starting to grow because the water came down as rain.
It has the orbit and rotation established only after the water is all gathered on earth.
It has the seas formed when the water began to support life as a result of a lot of rain. Birds flying.
It has the forms of life that live on the land multiplying.
It has man existing.
By the end of that day all things that were previously started are now complete. (ie the grass existed when given but it did not cover all the land it would until the end of the 6th day, same for the rest of the things mentioned.
Man either had that information figured out by themselves by the time Moses wrote it down or 'somebody' gave them that sequence of events. That should have been common knowledge throughout the ages if it came from man, each isolated pockets of man has a different view.
My point is that if "God" handed down teachings to these prophets then there would be no need for incremental little steps (your little houses). The little steps are, however, exactly what we should see if religion is man made i.e. fiction.
It was only creation that was complete 5,000 years ago, knowledge (about God) was still being written after 50AD. Creation is about things our 5 senses can interact with, nothing new was ever created after the end of the 6th day. Knowledge was just beginning then. That came in over time, a little bit at a time any you are right in that is was based on it being an increase, built on what wisdom there was at any certain time.
Your confusion about the chicken and the egg is showing again. The point is that if "God" created all things, even religion, then there is no need for small incremental steps. That is the intelligent design argument after all. Irreducible complexity states that some systems could not have grown out of small steps. Evolution proves that they did. Here now your arguing for small steps which would mean there is no god. The irony is funny. You can't have your cake and eat it too.
Not the best example I could have given. For some reason putting things back in order take what we would call a 'long time', so He decided to pass on what was going to happen in bits and pieces. The 70 weeks of Daniel took almost 500 to play out, we are approaching 2,000 years for some promises to be fulfilled. What point would there be to giving all the information 4,500 years ago and the silence?
Now there is the standard argument that god could create something so heavy he could not lift it, and if he could not lift it then he isn't god. Perhaps you are confusing my argument with that one? I wouldn't make that argument because it presupposes human limitations on god and I find it lacking because of that. This isn't what my argument is meant to do. I am putting the limitation on humans and examining that we can not know god because we (humans) are what-is and god is what-is-not. In my argument one would expect to see your little houses. In the religionist "creationist" and irreducible complexity arguments there should be no little houses at all - it should just be and it should just be perfect; like the universe. We don't see that in religion however, we see incremental steps of little houses, which is exactly what we should see if religion is man made (which it is).
I would use the same argument here as I did in the point above, information was given out on a need to know basis. Some things were also only determined by the way things were going. The flood wasn't determined back at the fall, that came hundreds of years later. Satan's fate was determined right then and there. So while He may seem slack in some areas, other areas see quick action.
Then it is fair to say that Satan created the universe in the same exact way he created myths of gods because both have the same effect. If you look at the universe then clearly you see Satan's devilish hand at work because there is also no physical evidence that the universe was created by anyone, which in turn, must surely test the faith of any clear thinking religionists.
Satan didn't create anything that can be sensed with our 5 senses. A lie can be told, but that isn't anything that physically exists. A lie can certainly 'create' a false-hood, even about somebody being god, since it is a lie there wasn't any god that actually existed, what existed was Satan's lie, nothing more.
If Satan created the gods he too then must have created the universe because both have the exact same purpose in context to your argument. If it is a test of faith and necessary to disbelieve in gods then too the universe must be a test of faith because it too demonstrates there is no god. If you mustn't believe in gods then too you mustn't believe in the universe or even your own existence! Great is the power of Satan indeed that he could create a universe to test you!
Already covered above. Satan's power isn't great, that is why he had to lie, real power doesn't require telling fibs.
Your argument is easily demonstrated thusly as depending on yet another fictional character; this time Satan.
I wonder why Satan is mentioned so seldom, it isn't like he isn't mentioned in Scripture on numerous occassions. Is it hope that he doesn't exist? Is it that if you mention his name you become his possession? I hardly ever hear anybody say, "Bad Satan, bad!",
Again: you know a myth is a myth because it challenges your belief. So too the universe must be a myth because, for a lack of evidence there is any god, it must be the greatest challenge; either Satan created the universe as a challenge to you or the universe does not exist; it is just a myth.
Already covered Satan not being able to create, Angels are brute beasts, great strength but lacking the wisdom to use that strength correctly all on their own.
So to believe in your own existence is to deny god! To believe in god is to deny your own existence!
Neither is correct.
You can claim the devil made the universe to challenge your beliefs and therefore you must not believe in it (or yourself) or you will be denying god! I think this is dangerous though and may be a fast track to a padded cell.
That isn't what I claimed so the padded cell doesn't apply.
I think you missed the central point of my argument:
I've been known to that from time to time.
There can be nothing outside of the universe except more universe. What-is-not can hold no place, time or mass; it is what-is-not. Place and time is reserved for what-is. Anything that occupies a dimension of place and/or time is created - it is part of the universe not separate from it (even if it is invisible). There is nothing outside of the universe and if there is it is simply more universe by reason of its existence. If god is part of the universe then we are back to facing the forest as gods habitation and also the very huge question must necessarily be asked: if god is part of the universe then who made him? Someone must have made him if there is a god, but god can't be a part of what-is, so the god your talking about must have been created. Who created your god then? Man did. Man created religion in small demonstrated incremental steps. I recommend you study history for a demonstration of those steps. You won't find them in the bible because it is a man made deception based in wish thinking. I don't mean to ascribe any malicious intent to the authors. I'm sure most were just as well meaning as you are.
God isn't part of the universe (home of the Angels), it is smaller than God. The created cannot be greater than what created it.
Again you have missed the point of the argument. This time I must give credit where credit is due: Parmenides. He correctly argues that what-is can not find solace in what-is-not. He has made a case for the conservation of energy (a concept way ahead of his time) and this scientific principle validates what he says. When you die or the world dies it does not disappear but the state of its energy changes. It does not nor can it become what-is-not and neither can you! You are eternally bound to what-is. Even your "soul" is what-is and thus bound to the universe; if it actually exists at all.
Man is both, dust (what is) that can be detected by one or more of the senses, and breath of Life (what-is-not) which includes things like thought and wisdom. It takes both of those things to make a living soul, take one away and the living soul is no longer.
The leap your quotation takes is in that it seeks to circumvent logic, evidence and what is clearly impossible. These are the very tenants of wish thinking. This is the crux of a leap in faith against all logic and evidence and is why religion fails. I understand the need for it because the prospect of death is very scary to some people. The solace in death however, is that no one was uncomfortable before they were born and they won't be once they are gone; in fact they won't even know they are gone.
I agree that there is no memory in death, no knowledge of anything around you.
Now your quotation can be interpreted another way too once wish thinking is left behind. Prophets seem to be very clever people and I think it is reasonable to speculate that they themselves are not wish thinkers. If Jesus means that what-is can never die (conservation of energy) then it is reasonable to say what he did. Wish thinkers will interpret his words as meaning an everlasting consciousness (eternal life) but what he probably meant is that your star stuff (which is what your made of) will continue forever in some way. This is absolutely correct. The people that dwell here will die but his followers can rest in the knowledge that their matter will continue, not in the wish thinking way, but rather in the way of conservation. He is very correct in what he is saying but not in the way you think.
Except that is not what He was saying, He was saying what existed before as a living soul (each one being different) can be broken (death) can be put back to the same exact state. The only thing the person is aware of is that he 'blinked'.
There can not be a "whole of God" because that would mean he is what-is. Even portions of god would mean he is what-is and therefore not god. Once again he would thus need to have been created and that would mean he isn't god.
Okay, those observations were about things left behind from when God was there.
At the outset of my argument I said that I could make a case for god. In all fairness to you I think I need to bring this up again since I am not seeking to convince you of anything but rather I am exploring your belief. I am also quite confident that religion is man made. I have put a lot of thought and work into these concepts and can make an argument for god complete with experimental evidence that has been reviewed by a peer. My argument reworks many basic concepts of science which I think are incorrect and have demonstrated to myself and my peer that they are. This journey began once I finished reading A Brief History Of time by Stephen Hawkins wherein I found fundamental errors. Anyone who has been following my posts will know I have alluded to these already. Once again I will state that I am not prepared to discuss what I have found because, given the current state of the world, such findings could be used for great acts of evil (things not in our species best interest). I have the model of the atomic bomb which came from relativity as evidence that I am correct in my assumption. My great uncle played a fundamental role in developing that weapon and regretted his actions to his death. I am not interested in making his same mistake. Though I lack the engineering skills necessary to create anything from my discoveries I do not doubt there are many people that do have such skills.
Thank you for not sharing those details.
I have told you this so that you can understand that I am sincere in my arguing against religion and the current concepts of god. I am not arguing anything that I do not believe. When I say there is no god I mean it. Though what I just said above would seem to contradict that, it does not, but I won't explain why or demonstrate how for the above mentioned reasons.
But saying something doesn't make it a fact, it is only an opinion. So is my view, since I can't produce something for you to actually 'handle' it is an opinion. Both based on some conclusion we made from what information we have.
I would remind you that many of the signs you would give as evidence were also given by Horus to validate his existence. Am I to believe in Horus also? What am I to make of the fact Horus gave his signs first? What am I to make of the fact that most of these signs are deeply rooted in ancient thoughts on astronomy?
Well it might be as difficult as thinking maybe Satan knew some things about the way Christ's arrival would be like.
I suppose your beloved Satan the trickster will make another appearance in your argument?
I never have and never will use those two words together. I'm not shy about using words like evil, nasty, liar, murderer to describe Satan's general character.
"We are never only persons, we are also Mothers and Giants and Victims and Heroes and sleeping beauties. Titans and demons and Magnificent Goddesses have ruled our souls for thousands of years; Aristotle and Descartes did their best, and the analytical minds that followed them are still at it, but the mythic forces have not been slain." - James Hillman
Never all at the same time.
Many of them and indeed, the better the optics become, do not exist at all but died millions or billions of years prior to their light reaching us. As our optics get better we become better at seeing what does not exist, we only see what did exist, and the assumption is that they continued to exist. So though we can not see them as they are we see them as they were and conclude that there is some current incarnation that we will not see for a few billion more years. So to answer your question: logic and reason would let us presume they exist though not as we now see them.
I never said continued to exist. I'm quite sure there are new stars born from the remnants of many old stars whose light has yet to reach us, I just can't point to that one speck of shy that the light will appear from.
Not at all. If I did then it would be a baseless belief. I believe in that I have reason and evidence to believe as I do. Given new evidence I would change my mind. This is the difference between "faith" and evidence: faith requires no argument but belief does. This is why those that rely on faith do not really believe.
Certainty would require a what-is and a what-is-not to be both present would it not?
You need to read up on history. Your statement is simply false.
That is what a Prophet does, he speaks of things that will happen.
As it so happens yes. This is the beauty of cryptic "revelations" in that they can be construed to mean anything and given relevance as needed. I know many enemies of Jesus could demonstrate that he didn't actually fulfill any prophecies. Who is right? The big question though is who cares? It is all exercise in the esoteric, in that, it is meaningless if it is cryptic, void and empty if it will not be specific.
I agree a verse can be cryptic, but verses are a part of a passage, the more verses a passage the less cryptic that verse becomes. If there are more than one passage that deal with one subject then the odds of finding a cryptic verse goes down even further.
You tell me? Your the expert on prophecy. All I know is that I arrived at my conclusion with logic and reason to the best of my ability. If you can demonstrate with evidence that I am wrong then I will accept your argument - that doesn't sound like prophecy to me.
I was probably getting a bit tired at that point, no offense meant as you do seem quite sincere. If I apply my logic and reason to Scripture I still come up with the opinion that it holds the truth about God and mans relationship. It isn't concrete proof, but then then there doesn't seem to be that available for either side of the coin.