The Atheist
The Grammar Tyrant
- Joined
- Jul 3, 2006
- Messages
- 36,364
Marvellous stuff - given whilst debating a bloke named Sam Harris, who is clearly an idiot of the first degree. (Argue that with me elsewhere, if you must)
Whole transcript.
If this is what every christian thought, I'd join up. A 100% sanitised, harmless god-thingy, indistinguishable from Einstein and Dawkins' "merest hint of the possibility of being a miniscule amount of potential" in the concept of an extra-universal-thingy. Not that I'd believe any of it, but it'd be hard to fight against it. More humanist than evangelical.
Coming on the heels of the likes of Bishop Richard Randerson's "Agnostic" essay, I'm wondering whether some of these guys are starting to wake up.
God is a human concept. God is the name we give to our belief that life has meaning, one that transcends the world’s chaos, randomness and cruelty. To argue about whether God exists or does not exist is futile. The question is not whether God exists. The question is whether we concern ourselves with, or are utterly indifferent to, the sanctity and ultimate transcendence of human existence. God is that mysterious force—and you can give it many names as other religions do—which works upon us and through us to seek and achieve truth, beauty and goodness. God is perhaps best understood as our ultimate concern, that in which we should place our highest hopes, confidence and trust. In Exodus God says, by way of identification, “I am that I am.” It is probably more accurately translated: “I will be what I will be.” God is better understood as verb rather than a noun. God is not an asserted existence but a process accomplishing itself. And God is inescapable. It is the life force that sustains, transforms and defines all existence. The name of God is laden, thanks to our religious institutions and the numerous tyrants, charlatans and demagogues these institutions produced, with so much baggage and imagery that it is hard for us to see the intent behind the concept. All societies and cultures have struggled to give words to describe these forces. It is why Freud avoided writing about the phenomenon of love.
Whole transcript.
If this is what every christian thought, I'd join up. A 100% sanitised, harmless god-thingy, indistinguishable from Einstein and Dawkins' "merest hint of the possibility of being a miniscule amount of potential" in the concept of an extra-universal-thingy. Not that I'd believe any of it, but it'd be hard to fight against it. More humanist than evangelical.
Coming on the heels of the likes of Bishop Richard Randerson's "Agnostic" essay, I'm wondering whether some of these guys are starting to wake up.