by jimwalton » Fri Jun 28, 2013 7:42 am
There are the well-known evidences for the existence of God (there had to have been something that started it all), the idea that humans have an idea of a perfect being, and things like order and purpose in the universe. Those have great weight, but they don't PROVE God. Actually, nothing PROVES God, because God isn't provable like that. It's as if I said, "Prove that you love your partner." Well, you can give me evidences, but it's not something that can be proven, like science proves things. Science can "prove" the physical, but not the metaphysical. When I think about God, I can tell you what gives me evidence for his existence:
1. The created order. True science is limited to the scientific method, observation, and confirmation. Speculations backwards based on theories and agendas are, frankly, outside of the scope of true science, though that is not really what is being discussed here. To me the universe exhibits an order,complexity, and balance beyond the parameters possible in a system governed by pure chance. I see evidence of other forces at work that are necessary to make it even possible to generate what we see.
2. Purpose. While science and my five senses can tell me what is there and how it works, it cannot explain the area of purpose that my observations tell me is universal to humanity. We all have a sense of purpose, a desire for purpose, and a quest for meaning that to me is evidence of a foundation in the universe consistent with the existence of a divine being, and inconsistent with the limitations of a closed system of random coincidences regulated by natural processes.
3. Consistency. My study of Scripture finds in the Bible a credible explanation of humanity that anyone is able to observe with their five senses, reliably discussing hundreds of subjects pertinent to humanity (good, evil, purpose, history, depravity, joy, blessing, health, disease, et al.) with depth, breadth, and understanding. I find in the quality of the thoughts in the writing an intellect beyond the capacity of humanity, given that the writing took place over a 1300-year span by over 40 authors from numerous locations. I see there evidence that to me in convincing of a common source, despite the varieties of personalities and writing styles incorporated therein.
4. Lifechange. I have seen lives changed in ways far different from those excited about political processes, motivated by exciting business opportunities, transformed by relationships, or enlightened by ideas. The changes I have seen in individuals give evidence that they have been acted upon by a spiritual power of a life-giving nature, and those changes encompass a complete metamorphosis of attitudes, thoughts, desires, and actions.
So maybe that helps. When we get to "how sure are you about something," that's a great discussion. Generally we know things by observations and interaction with our five senses, plus reason, plus testimony of reliable witnesses, plus our intuitions. When those elements line up, we say we "know" something. It's a judgment call, though, because sometimes our senses deceive us, we have faulty reasoning, we hear false testimony, or our intuitions mislead us. So we do our best: (1) Does it correspond to reality as best I can evaluate it? (2) is it consistent in the world and according to reason?, and (3) does it work? If we're coming up thumbs up pretty much all around, we say we "know" something.
But what about prayer, since you asked? Prayer is greatly misunderstood in the Bible by us. This is going to be tough to explain in a short post. A careful study of the Bible shows that prayer hardly EVER changes people's circumstances (though on occasion it did). Almost every reference to prayer in the Bible has to do with people's INNER lives—their spiritual lives. God is far more concerned about the heart than about good luck. So when people pray for "stuff" and they don't get it, they go, "Dude, see, there's no God." Well duh. Somebody ain't readin' carefully enough, but we're all too quick to throw in the towel and walk away bitter. This is a MUCH larger conversation, because I'll bet lots more questions are popping into your head.
How can we be sure there's a heaven? One guy 2000 years came back and told us about it. He said, "You're just going to have to believe me on this one, and since I just came back from the dead, that should give me some credibility on it." So, we're back to the previous question of "how sure you are about something". It's a matter of the weight of evidence, in all of these areas. Talk back to me as you wish. I'm gonna press the "save" button now...