by Dennis Jensen » Fri Mar 06, 2015 1:25 pm
You’re both touching on, in my thinking, the most difficult issues in Christianity. On the one hand Jesus said that anyone who seeks God will find and will discover that Christianity is true (e.g. John 7.17) and I could give you examples of numerous people who claim to have discovered once they began to seek God. A friend was about to cut her wrists out of deep depression when she cried out to God. She said that nothing happened and then she just felt—a presence. It was just enough to hold on to until she ran into other kinds of evidence that did fully persuade her. This brings up the point that God doesn’t always give an experience; sometimes God leads people to other reasons to believe. And remember that the evidence can never be overwhelming or undeniable. God will give us enough evidence to believe, but usually not more than that. God wants our choice to be uncoerced; God allows the evidence to be weak enough so that if we don’t want to believe we can persuade ourselves that it is not true and eventually feel justified in doing so.
So on the one hand we have all those people who say that by seeking they have found. On the other hand, there are many people like yourself and Jim who haven’t had the kind of experience you thought God should give. What do you do if you honestly do not believe God has given you enough reason to believe: no experience of the presence of God and no awareness of what you would consider persuasive evidence (scientific, historical, philosophical, etc.)? Now I suspect that if you look around Jim’s webpage here you will run into some pretty good evidence. (One of the most persuasive lines of evidence I’ve ever run into is just the testimonies of other people. Sometimes after hearing them, I walk away with a deep sense of certainty that it is true. And I think this kind of experience is justifiable reason to believe.) But let’s just suppose that, for whatever reason, nothing is really persuasive or you have intellectual blockages to faith that make you judge the evidence as insubstantial.
If someone can honestly say they have not run into sufficiently persuasive evidence, then I would simply say, keep seeking. I wouldn’t say you should take some leap of faith and just believe. No, I think you should never claim something is true you have no reason to believe is true. One should maintain an honest but humble agnosticism. I know of very hateful atheists who say they have asked but have never experienced God. Just because they have not found is no reason to turn against God. God may have reason for keeping silent for the time being. One may have no reason to believe, but one does not have reason to disbelieve. If you have to admit that you don’t know that God is there, you should also honestly admit that you don’t know that God isn’t there. The latter is another very big point Jim makes in this website. The arguments against God just don’t have any substance.
An honest agnosticism does not merely mean maintaining humility before God (on the possibility that God is there) but it also involves living a moral life. You know right from wrong. Live by the moral awareness that is built into you (I would say the moral awareness God has planted into you) until God shows you that he is there.
My suggestion is that if you honestly feel that you have no reason to believe, just keep asking God. Maybe take some time each night before you go to sleep and read a chapter from one of the gospels. I’d suggest John’s Gospel to start. Before you read, just ask God to show you if this is true or not. Tell him that you would give him your complete commitment, that you would do all that he asks of you, if he would just show you that he is there. If nothing happens, keep doing this. I know of someone who honestly sought the truth from God and only many years later did God give him an experience which was sufficient to persuade him that God is there. God just gave him a simple awareness, a sense of certainty, that this is really true. If you want to question whether such an experience is justifiably sufficient to persuade an honest person, I would argue that it definitely is. This is the same grounds we have to believe most of the things in the world we think we have reason to believe (e.g. the existence of an external world, memories, other minds, etc).
So what happens if you keep seeking like this, asking God for the truth every night, and nothing ever happens? No experience, no chance encounter with persuasive evidence; none of that. Well, Jesus never promised you would find the evidence you need immediately; he never said how long it would take. I don’t think it will happen that you will spend your life seeking but never finding, but if you do, then God would never hold you responsible for failing to believe so long as you have no good reason to believe. If Christianity is true, you will discover it to be true eventually and you will then be obligated to give your life to him. Until then, just maintain an honest and humble agnosticism. I feel very certain that you will find eventually.
Last bumped by Anonymous on Fri Mar 06, 2015 1:25 pm.