Sean, thank you for such great conversation. This is really what I’m after: reasoned dialogue. OK, a few clarifications. I did write that God most often intervenes in our hearts and not in our circumstances, but I guess I wasn’t quite clear when you think I said it happens mostly because of our interaction with the Bible. I believe that God reveals himself to us primarily through the Bible, but his intervention in our hearts is through His Spirit. Reading the Bible informs our worldview and leads us to understanding many things, but it’s through the Spirit that He acts on our hearts.
As to your theological question (Do you believe that God is a transcendent, yet relational being who exists eternally and independently of the universe He created?), my answer is absolutely yes, if by transcendent you mean that God exists apart from and subject to the limitations of the material universe. I would also condition my response, though, on the truth that God does willfully subject himself to certain limitations of the material universe to reveal himself to us in time and space.
As to your scenario, I don’t agree with the setup. It’s your word “imagining” that troubles me, because one of the marks of Christianity, as opposed to, say, Hinduism, is its grounding in history. The story of the Bible is God’s revelation of Himself in human history. Most of his revelation might go unnoticed were it not for the prophets whom God has directed to point at a historical occurrence and let us know “this is where God was and what he did. I don’t see it as somebody’s imaginative creativity, but the true revealing of God in history, in lives, with a prophet to identify it for us. Again, as I’ve mentioned before, it’s what you believe as evidence (the faith factor) that determines what your understanding is. For instance, I believe almost all of the “great works of God” in the Old Testament could possibly have happened without God in the picture. The parting of Red Sea? Maybe it was a freak wind. The falling of part of the wall of Jericho? An earthquake, common in the area. Years of drought? Happened all the time. It’s not imagination; these things happened. A prophet said, “That was God.” Doubters would say, “It was the wind, dummy.” Christians will speak of timing beyond circumstantial luck, and events that are more than difficult to explain through naturalism alone. It’s not a matter of imagination, but of the interpretation of hard facts. It’s where people struggled with Jesus. The facts were indisputable. Many claimed he was a prophet. Others attributed his power to Satan. That he did it was not debatable; HOW he did it was where everyone had to discern. Even when he rose from the dead, he only appeared to certain ones at certain times, and Matthew 28.17 says that his followers were with him: some worshiped, and some doubted. Hmmm… Wasn’t Jesus right there? Powerful stuff we got going here.
As for me, I am convinced that the historicity of the accounts related to us give enough credence to the teaching that I consider it factual beyond a doubt. The texts are historical (many have been corroborated), reasonable (moral teaching and a sensible interpretation of the world and its inhabitants), and spiritually powerful (my heart has been changed and continues to be challenged and changed. I know many others who testify to the same.). That’s how I know that I’m not just imagining a God who doesn’t actually exist, but is just a figment of my culture or wishful thinking.
You want so desperately to perceive God with your senses. There are those who claim that they have, but you don’t believe them. Their stories are in the Bible. Or you think, “Well, if they could have that, I want it too.” For the people of Israel in the stories of Exodus and Numbers, seeing wasn’t believing. Nor was that the case in Jesus himself. Many saw; few believed. The senses, honestly, don’t yield a whole lot more certainty than reason. Haven’t you seen or heard something, and then doubted yourself later? Haven’t you and your buds seen something, and you all saw it differently or interpret it differently? You’ve gone out with your friends after seeing a movie together, and some of you saw different things in it. So where’s the truth? The Bible claims that the truth was written so that you might know it and believe it, that the record was faithfully and handed down to us, complete with a reliable interpretation. Do you believe that? I do, because of the evidence.
Think about all that is possible to know: philosophy, geography, astronomy, physics, chemistry, literature, languages, history, mathematics, law, theology, art, music, etc. etc. Now think about how much of all of that that you know. As for me, I can readily admit it’s miniscule, and possibly subatomic, when it’s all added up. How can one come to certainty that God doesn’t exist, when we know so little? And yet how can we know with certainty that he does, for the same reason? It’s in weighing the evidences and coming to a belief about it. Scientists disagree with each other about their disciplines. They have to choose what they believe based on the evidence.
As far as evangelical scholars who entertain the possibility that God doesn’t exist, hmmmm… “Evangelical” usually assumes belief in the inspiration of Scripture, and therefore the existence of God. Have you read the works of Alvin Plantinga and his case for the existence of God?