Actually no there is only one path to know God, it's through Jesus and only him. He is the one who reveals the truth to our soul. And yes I think he must reach an intellectual or indivual on a level they can understand. How he does it I'm not sure but I do believe faith only comes by hearing God's Word. It's up to each of us to believe and receive it so I do not know what it might take for someone to get to that point.
I realized after I'd posted it that 'there are many paths ...' would be open to misunderstanding. I believe that there are many paths (through Jesus) to truth. God isn't just another object 'out there' - He is in all our doings and immanent in the world. So there isn't a special category of things that lead us to Him; He is in all good things - and, many mystics hold, in all sin too, in that it can lead us closer to Him.
Faith indeed comes from the Word of God (the Logos - again, it helps if you know some Greek and Greek philosophy here), but the Word was never limited to the words on a page. As John 1 makes clear, Christ is the Word that we worship. Unless we fall into the heresy of Bibliolatry. Or another way, the Word is a living thing. So I've seen atheists weep at the 'Et resurrexit' from Bach's B Minor Mass, because we all know what suffering and resurrection feels like. We all know what sacrifice is. We all know what feels miraculous. Etc. God's Word is written on our hearts (cf Hebrews 8), and if it isn't then it's dead ink on a page. We can only speak God's Word from our hearts; if it becomes divorced from openness to people's real and honest experiences, then we are speaking not out of love and empathy and the Spirit, but out of our own spiritual poverty.
People believe all kinds of things that people teach but for some the Bible just doesn't fit what they want so they throw it out of there list of books to go by. I say this is a big mistake but I guess it's up to each person to choose for themselves. Not all will get it, I know that but I can hope so.
From my observations, most atheists know an awful lot more about the Bible than most Christians. But they truly, honestly and genuinely feel that it has nothing to offer them at this time. That shows more respect, I think, than those Christians who don't bother to read it, or don't bother to read it properly, learn about it and think about it. When I used to lecture undergraduates I loved it if they argued with me and told me I was an idiot - at least they were engaging with my arguments. If they sat there mute or just went along with what I was saying I began to suspect that they either didn't care or had switched their brains off. Either way, I wasn't getting a whole lot out of them.
I think there's no point shutting off huge parts of oneself and then desperately offering the remainder, the small bits we think are acceptable, to God. Denouncing atheists is often, I think, a way for Christians to externalise their own doubt. Even - perhaps especially - the most faithful Christians have times when God appears absent; we can either accept our doubts and unbelief as part of faith or push them desperately down into our subconscious while denouncing and damning those for whom unbelief is their primary mode of engaging with the question.
Again, I have only a tiny concept of what God might be, but I'm guessing he might be a whole lot more amused and pleased by some atheists than by some Christians. There's a whole lot of people on this board who are a whole lot smarter and a whole lot better people than I'll ever be, and who on earth am I to say what God thinks of them?
Do you believe that all who call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved or don't you? I do!
I sure do! Saved from what is an interesting one. I don't think that we can ever be taken out of sin in this life - I prefer Julian of Norwich's formulation that through all sin God will keep me safe, "all shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of things shall be well". She was able to say this because she knew from a vision of the cross that while sin is all-pervasive, God does not
blame us for our sin, because we cannot avoid sinning - that's the true meaning of the doctrine of original sin. It's not a juridical concept about individual crime and blame, but a statement about how the world just is. The meaning of the Cross is that God works to keep us safe in the midst of the structural sin of the world and our inevitable complicity with it. Again, I don't think I know what form 'calling upon the name of the Lord' will have for everyone. If it is not a mere ritual or sign (form of words) then it has a deeper meaning which goes beyond words and may be found in many different ways by many different people. All of us, atheist, Christian, Buddhist, or whatever, knows what it feels like to be complicit in bad stuff or to act against our own deep moral judgement, and many people think and meditate deeply on this to try to find answers. I believe Christ works with that.
God is bigger than we can ever begin to understand, Kathy, and He is love. Love your neighbour, don't denounce them or act towards them in ways guaranteed to hurt them and put their backs up, and He's working in you. Deride or denounce other humans and you're a long way from Him, in my view.