Mr Clingford
Master Poster
- Joined
- Nov 22, 2003
- Messages
- 2,104
Er, maybe it was me that was doing the rambling, but I think I can speak better by responding to your next points.I'm not sure I get what you mean. Of course there are a lot of things that were formerly thought by many to be impossible (like television) which are now commonplace. One could even argue that they have been "life changing" since they have significantly altered our society.
But even so, when they were proposed, they were always proposed to be things that would be objectively verifiable to everyone. Sometimes spiritualists have proposed similar things, but so far, it has always been shown to be just plain old trickery. That has proven so true that these days that most of those who propose some sort of spiritual power rarely even bother to claim that what they assert to exist can be objectively verified. It is always something like, "you will feel it in your heart" or "you will hear the words, but no one else can".
It is so difficult to get any objectively verifiable spiritual claim that the Randi million cannot even attract sincere applicants.
I'm rambling 'cause I'm not sure what you intended to communicate here.
I don't think that is quite what I am getting at. I know that disbelieving in God has been a life-changing experience for some people. I have found it very helpful to disbelieve in certain ideas of God. I think people's ideas of god are influenced by parental figures, common images, that kind of thing, but I would argue that they bear little relation to God himself. Part of the faith journey is letting go of harmful images, for some they have to let go the whole idea of God because their experience has been just too awful. That's why I'm not surprised that Dawkins is very antagonistic to the image of God that he portrays, but it bears very little relation to the God that I think exists. I think that God may actually be pleased that some people become atheists and have good, loving and fulfilling lives because I believe he loves everyone and if this has to be achieved by people believing that he doesn't exist then perhaps he thinks, 'So be it'.I don't doubt for a second that accepting God as real can be life-changing for the better -- or for the worse (see stories of Slingblade and Roadtoad). That a religious catharsis can change your life is not really at question. The question is whether what you have accepted is actually real. If your life has been changed positively by accepting God, then I am very happy for you. A number of people here, including myself, can relate how their lives were improved by discontinuing belief in God. You might even say it was a life-changing experience.
That says to me, again, that it is your experience that changes you, not an actual God.
Remember I just said try and be still, quiet and meditate in the presence of the unknown, I said nothing about trying to believe in God, or even the Xtian God. But I think one has to reach out and try.I am quite open to the possibility. In fact, I would welcome evidence of a truly loving God. I'm afraid that the God described in the Bible doesn't fit that bill, but I suspect that if there is a loving God, the Christians are very wrong about His nature.
I believe that this loving God is far removed from a bloodthirsty harsh bastard that some Xtians seem to go on about. I have no faith in this God either. It's just that I believe I have glimpsed a fragment of the true nature of God, which is supremely loving.
I will reply to others but I am out of time now.
