Of course he would and could if he wanted to, but how can you be sure that he would care at all whether you believe "his" declaration or not? I think you're assuming too much here. In short, where is your evidence that God would have this effect on people?
Why would you want to have a conversation with someone who thinks they are God? You should be putting some distance between you and this person who has delusions of grandeur.
If God did not care if I believed that he was God, why would he declare himself to be God to me? If he is actually God, then he must wish me to have some amount of belief in his declaration. Unless we are reverting to the trickster God, which has always been a nonstarter.
(yes, I'm switching to the default masculine)
Good luck with that. I think you'll find suitable medication would disabuse them of that notion long before you would.
Why would you want to have a conversation with someone who thinks they are God? You should be putting some distance between you and this person who has delusions of grandeur.
For just about infinite reasons, he could just be walking around down here and decide to have some fun talking to people. I don't understand where you get the idea that God must wish you to act in any particular way at all?
But, I don't think you are playing the game I had in mind, though. If you catch me on some things where my knowledge of the bible is not good I can always say that this is not true anymore (I am God after all, and can change my mind and everything else whenever I want to) or whatever I can imagine, and you would just have to accept it or not accept it, purely on faith.
If we are simply positing that God is just doing things 'just because' then everything becomes irrelevant. We could have all been created last Tuesday. Discussions like this could just be the result of you typing to yourself and imagining the replies, because God finds it funny. The laws of mathematics could break down next week because God got bored of them.
It's not a sustainable postulate because of that. If we must choose between an insane universe and a sane one, I observe a sane one. Those observations may be the result of an insane universe being whimsical, but at that point it's turtles all the way down.
Kuko 4000 said:But, I don't think you are playing the game I had in mind, though. If you catch me on some things where my knowledge of the bible is not good I can always say that this is not true anymore (I am God after all, and can change my mind and everything else whenever I want to) or whatever I can imagine, and you would just have to accept it or not accept it, purely on faith.
This is exactly what I'm going to do, and it works just fine -- because the Bible itself warns us that supernatural creatures may be liars, and that we can use our existing knowledge of the truth of the Bible against them.
According to Paul's letter to the Galations, we are to reject anyone who claims to preach a Gospel other than that which is already preached.
So, sorry -- you don't get to give any answer you want. Your wrong answer to my question has already proven that you cannot be God; God would answer correctly.
I'll point out, again, that I'm not "pretending" to "play the role" of a believer -- I actually am one.
You made the claim.Ok, I don't know if this is something old, but this approach / variation came to my mind recently and I hope you guys could test me a bit and help to spot any obvious holes and problems there might be. I haven't given it that much thought yet, but it seems a pretty solid way to illustrate a point. I like talking to people about their beliefs. Here in Finland it's mostly christians, and this approach is aimed at them.
It goes like this:
"I am God."
There.
How would you differentiate between a real God that wants to change rules and a fake god who wants to change the rules. Or are you saying that a real God cannot change the rules because of what the Bible says?
I am saying that the God of the Bible will not change the rules because of what the Bible says.
That's the God you claimed to be, and in that you failed.
Ok, hold on a moment, give me a chance, this is quite interesting. Correct me if I'm wrong, but are you not open to the possibility that the God of the Bible could change his own rules in the middle of the game if he wanted to (for some reason that we just don't understand)?
That's correct; I am not open to that possibility.
Again, the possibility of deception by evil supernatural creatures is met in Biblical texts, and its instructions are clear -- if the message is inconsistent with the rules you already have, the message is not from God!
It's already been demonstrated. The trickster God, the God of the gaps is a philosophical non-starter, that simply does not work with a rational universe. We have observed a rational universe. This could be part of an elaborate deception (it is certainly possible for God), but postulating so beggars belief - as if the entire universe was structured solely to appear rational, just so you could get some sort of jollies asking Christians if you were hypothetically God on an internet forum and see what their answers were while you had the pleasure of knowing you were actually God.The only thing I'm saying is that an omnipotent God could do anything, including having created us last tuesday as you suggested. You seem to say that there is no good reasons to believe in this kind of God, and I agree. But this is not the issue I'm talking about here. If you were a Christian, how would you prove that I am not a God?
That's correct; I am not open to that possibility.
Again, the possibility of deception by evil supernatural creatures is met in Biblical texts, and its instructions are clear -- if the message is inconsistent with the rules you already have, the message is not from God!