by jimwalton » Sun Apr 05, 2020 3:26 pm
> When he went to pray alone, he wasn't teaching us how to pray.
Correct. When he prayed alone, He was actually talking to the Father.
> If he was a separate person from the father, then my point is made.
Your point is not made unless you ignored everything I said (with no rebuttal or refutation, I observe) and have also ignored Christian theology for the past 2000 years. The Trinity has been the subject of much thought and writing through the millennia; just because Jesus prayed to the Father does not substantiate your point that the Trinity was not unified.
> But I view the Trinity as a conundrum for Christians
Of course it's a conundrum, but not one without explanation or reason to it.
> I'm really more interested in serious matters like proof of an afterlife.
1. We all have an inner awareness, at least a wondering, that there's more to this life than living and dying, more than just trying to make it through the day. This common awareness speaks more to the reality of an afterlife than a denial of it.
2. The history of humanity shows that every culture, globally and throughout human existence, had a belief in deities and in an afterlife of some sort. It's as if the idea were carved right into our beings. And yet the idea has no particular evolutionary advantage or contribution to survival (which is the four Fs: fight, flight, food, and, um, reproduction). It speaks more to the reality of an afterlife than a denial of it.
3. Human ideas of morality, self-sacrifice, and charity often run counter to the Darwinian drive to outcompete one's neighbor. The postulate of an afterlife enables us to make sense of human goodness, beneficence, sacrifice, and forgiveness, among other qualities as well.
4. Jesus's resurrection is postulated by Christians as a proof of an afterlife (1 Cor. 15). If we examine the claims to the resurrection logically, juridically, and scientifically, we arrive at the great probability of an afterlife.
5. So many Near-Death Experiences (NDE) seem to indicate the possibility, if not the probability. Not the hokey NDEs, but the legitimate ones that have been examined and seem too remarkable to be explainable.
6. Science tells us that our understanding even of what we see is only about 5% of what's there (dark matter and dark energy make up 95% of all the universe, and they are not understood well at all). String theory? Quantum? Multiple dimensions? Multiverses? How presumptuous of us to think that with lack of scientific proof in the last 100 years (of modern science) according to present-day standards is enough to say heaven and hell aren't real.
> When he went to pray alone, he wasn't teaching us how to pray.
Correct. When he prayed alone, He was actually talking to the Father.
> If he was a separate person from the father, then my point is made.
Your point is not made unless you ignored everything I said (with no rebuttal or refutation, I observe) and have also ignored Christian theology for the past 2000 years. The Trinity has been the subject of much thought and writing through the millennia; just because Jesus prayed to the Father does not substantiate your point that the Trinity was not unified.
> But I view the Trinity as a conundrum for Christians
Of course it's a conundrum, but not one without explanation or reason to it.
> I'm really more interested in serious matters like proof of an afterlife.
1. We all have an inner awareness, at least a wondering, that there's more to this life than living and dying, more than just trying to make it through the day. This common awareness speaks more to the reality of an afterlife than a denial of it.
2. The history of humanity shows that every culture, globally and throughout human existence, had a belief in deities and in an afterlife of some sort. It's as if the idea were carved right into our beings. And yet the idea has no particular evolutionary advantage or contribution to survival (which is the four Fs: fight, flight, food, and, um, reproduction). It speaks more to the reality of an afterlife than a denial of it.
3. Human ideas of morality, self-sacrifice, and charity often run counter to the Darwinian drive to outcompete one's neighbor. The postulate of an afterlife enables us to make sense of human goodness, beneficence, sacrifice, and forgiveness, among other qualities as well.
4. Jesus's resurrection is postulated by Christians as a proof of an afterlife (1 Cor. 15). If we examine the claims to the resurrection logically, juridically, and scientifically, we arrive at the great probability of an afterlife.
5. So many Near-Death Experiences (NDE) seem to indicate the possibility, if not the probability. Not the hokey NDEs, but the legitimate ones that have been examined and seem too remarkable to be explainable.
6. Science tells us that our understanding even of what we see is only about 5% of what's there (dark matter and dark energy make up 95% of all the universe, and they are not understood well at all). String theory? Quantum? Multiple dimensions? Multiverses? How presumptuous of us to think that with lack of scientific proof in the last 100 years (of modern science) according to present-day standards is enough to say heaven and hell aren't real.