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| Important Notice |
| Philosophy of Religion The philosophical study of religious beliefs, doctrines, and history. Focused more on the whole and not any certain Religion.. What is God? Theology - study of nature of God and religious truth. Theology uses documents, philosophy uses reason. |
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| Re: A proof of God's self-evidence Quote:
If the Abrahamic religions' holy books weren't meant to be taken literally --which by I mean poetry is poetry, narrative is narrative, events are events, figurative language is figurative language, etc.--, why do they have abundant quotations implying the opposite? |
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| Re: A proof of God's self-evidence
I guess that means what i said was right. seeing as how no one responded to me Last edited by Justin; 07-15-2008 at 03:53 AM. Reason: Merged double post |
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| Re: A proof of God's self-evidence Quote:
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| Re: A proof of God's self-evidence
attempting to understand something when you have no basis or start for learning merely puts you into more ignorance thats why you'll hear people say the word faith in trusting the Bible.
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| The following users say: THANK YOU - OntheWindowStand for the above post! | ||
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| Re: A proof of God's self-evidence Elaborate, please!
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| Re: A proof of God's self-evidence Because any progress appeared to be made just dilutes why you tried to learn before. It will always be rout with speculation and misapplied lessons. That is why when dealing with something so complicated like God you need help along the way. People often look for this help in the Bible which takes a great deal of faith in it because if its wrong nothing they learned about God is valid anymore. |
| The following users say: THANK YOU - OntheWindowStand for the above post! | ||
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| Re: A proof of God's self-evidence
Paul did say "If we have hoped in Christ in this life only, we are (A)of all men most to be pitied." (BibleGateway.com - Passage*Lookup: 1 Cor 15:19; |
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| Re: A proof of God's self-evidence
Indeed he did, philosophy in the Bible. That actually reminds me Paul actually get into a deep discussion with the philosophers in one the towns he was staying in sorry i cant remember which
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| The following users say: THANK YOU - OntheWindowStand for the above post! | ||
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| Re: A proof of God's self-evidence
I see. We cannot apply human concepts to God, but we can at least try to analogize, can we not?-protoman 2050 But would it not be a human concept to which we draw our analogy, a process which is itself human in origin, thus godly in origin thus still a part of a whole and no more applicable than anything which we can use to describe a human conception of god. I think the rationalization and adopting a doctrine can only muddle the idea of the devine and unkowable by covering it with mental blankets. A doctrine is not truth, no matter what, your truth comes form within you but thus from god as you are of god. If you take your truth form a doctrine or from fear of pumishment or from anything but yourself and your perception you will find that those beliefs to be a hinderence and a burden rather than anything worth keeping. I first realized that to act in fear of god is not true morality when I was 12. My confirmation speech (I found the whole process of confirmation obligatory and agreed to it in order to please my parents) was mostly an attack upon the injustice of exculsion based on faith when the person in question was truely a great person and was not christian. The adults found my view 'interesting' and held for me no answers I could accept. One example which I included was ghandi, due to the fact that at the time it had been indicated to me that you could not be non-christian and still be admitted to "the kingdom of heaven". I questioned how it could be just to exclude those who have never heard of christianity from this 'kingdom' based upon a mere formality dispite the greatness and compassion in their actions. I recieved no answers that were remotely satisfactory. Bear in mind that this was a very liberal church, most of its congregation was upper-middle class and left leaning. I found the contradiction in acceptance of al men and discusion of those who are not up to the standards of the organization and the blindness to the glareing ideological contradiction and lack of wisdom held by the adult members and pastors disgusting. I rejected the literal interpretation of the bible very quickly, but I still found value in the philosophy of a non divine jesus and the allegorical lessons in the old testament to a lesser extent. I still hold the non literal interpretation of the bible and the deeper, psychological and sociological implcations of jesus' philosophy to be of great value if considered properly and carefully. Just my take on it all. |
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