PureX
Well-known member
We do.Who gets to decide what's denying evidence and what's seeing the thing called that and finding it insufficient?
That's what all this debate and contention is about. But none of this discredits the value of reason, and some people reason far better than others. So that with some luck and persistence, the debate can also illuminate some of us, and not just divide us.
Right, like you aren't popping up to play the religious apologist at the drop of nearly every negative religious observation! :chuckle:No, better to leave off that sort of thing all together.
Nine times out of ten we aren't going to get to know what the result is. We just think we do.It never amounts to much outside of an invitation to discord, stumbling, and poor conduct that convinces no one of anything worthwhile.
Man! You're an optimist! "He'll" be fantastically fortunate if he even manages to realize it's not working for him. Let alone find the will, the courage, and the wisdom to change!If it doesn't work for him he'll change.
But there are still lots of people who don't think they've already got all the right answers. And they can still hear, see, and learn.Everyone who thinks they have a thing right feels that way.
I think you're defining theism by your own, and that's too narrow for the reality of it.The atheist and the theist have a fundamentally different context for how things came to be and continue. This is that line of demarcation.
I consider it part of a religious story, intended to convey an idea, and a message. No supernatural feats occurred in the writing of this story. No supernatural feats are required to grasp the idea, and the message. And no promises of supernatural feats are being made through it, that I am aware of.Unless you consider the resurrection of a body three days dead to be something other than the intervention of God into the otherwise natural process of decay, you're in the group.
So the insistence on believing in them is unnecessary, irrational, and encourages dishonesty. All we have to do is recognize that we're reading a story, and the problem is resolved.