by Sloth » Wed Apr 25, 2018 1:34 pm
> But this isn't so. The beginning of Islam was a military movement. People joined to conquer or to survive.
What about that can be interpreted that nobody was changed by it? We know that many early Christians were executed, but we also know the same for Islam. Sure, it's possible many of the first followers of Islam wanted to conquer or to survive, but the same can be said of Christianity in terms of surviving. We know the early Christians divided their wealth among themselves and gave people a sense of community. Does that mean they didn't truly believe? Just because they had motivation from feeling hope, community, financial security, etc.? Of course not.
> The beginning of Hinduism was a gradual subscription to a particular philosophy of life.
But it's not just a philosophy, it is a religion with particular beliefs about gods, the afterlife, etc. You don't think there were any strong adherents in its early days who tried to convert people to their religion? And anyway, Christianity never exploded until Constantine legalized it. It isn't fair to say that Christianity "exploded" if it didn't truly spread very far until a few centuries later.
And what about the origin of Buddhism? We know Buddha had followers who didn't join just to conquer or survive. Same thing with Mormonism and Bahai as well.
> This is not what I'm claiming at all (because we don't know that something natural happened, they must be telling the truth). It is undeniable that history was radically altered by this small group of preachers from Jerusalem. What they preached was nothing expected (Jesus's resurrection), nothing deemed practical (a person came back to life), and nothing considered even possible (physical resurrection).
These are all the same thing, that they claimed something that would otherwise be considered unlikely actually happened. But we know the Jews already believed that a Messiah would come, and we already know that the Jews already believed in a resurrection that would take place at the end of the world. Combine this with the new message that they don't have to follow the new law and that the church is basically a safe haven for the poor and oppressed, and hardly any reason why such a movement wouldn't be expected to gain momentum underground.
> And yet a mere two months after Jesus's very public crucifixion, in the very city where it happened, in midst of the eyewitnesses of the event, in the vortex of a different religion, this new belief caught on like wildfire, and without any political or military help, spread throughout the entire empire and the world.
Again, this explosion didn't happen until centuries after Jesus's death.
> You said it yourself. 500 people saw him at the same time. There is no such thing as group hallucinations or mass dreams.
But this isn't a testimony from 500 different people, this is just what the Christians used to repeat, and we have no idea if this was in the original creed anyway because we know Paul added "some of whom are still living" to the verse, so its origin is questionable. We have no idea what this is referring to anyway, because it isn't even anywhere in the New Testament. For all we know it could have been like a Pentecostal worship service where everyone "feels" the Holy Spirit. After all, we know Paul even considers his revelation an "appearance," even though in his own description of the experience he merely sees a bright light.
> Because there's no evidence for such a position. We're not free to make things up. The evidence we have is that they were all all-in. The traditions support the evidence. "That they just gave in to peer pressure" is pure, unsubstantiated speculation.
Of course it is illogical to say that some definitely gave into peer pressure, but the same logic also works the other way. Your argument relies on the assumption that all of them were completely and entirely genuine, that no one ever told any white lies, and that there were absolutely no external factors motivating them. All of those are assumptions that must be made.
> Uh, not it's not. Did you read what I wrote? It doesn't seem so.
So you're telling me that if you told someone who had never heard of Christianity that the Bible was completely and entirely true and all other religions were incorrect, and this person had also not be exposed to modern science, that they could read Genesis and come away unsure of whether or not the universe was billions or thousands of years old?
> You're right that maybe since the Enlightenment we have read Genesis 1 this way, but if we go back into the worldview of the ancient Near East, they had a completely different mindset...
> Genesis 1 isn't a chronology. It's an account of functional creation...
But again, God is all-knowing and therefore knows that by writing Genesis the way he does, he is going to cause serious division among believers and lead many to believe an incorrect view of the world. That's the point. Not to mention that he could take the opportunity to prove the Bible is inspired by saying "13 billions years ago, God created the universe. After millions of years, stars began to form that would produce the elements necessary for life..."
> Because God often uses processes. The Bible is an account of God using the processes of history to reveal Himself. It's no different for God to use the processes of science to accomplish His purposes. God created the processes of science; I would expect him to use them.
This seems like a cop-out. "God uses natural processes that make him unnecessary because he wants to." But again God knows that the clockwork nature of the universe and its history will cause many to doubt he's there in the first place, so how could that be worth it?
> Now, I see it completely opposite. The universe appears exactly as it would if there WERE a God
But you're again forgetting about the fact that we know that there must be trillions of trillions of planets in the universe that are absolutely useless. They don't sustain life, they don't provide signs for seasons, they don't do anything except exist.
> a delicate balance of finely-tuned parameters, purpose, regularity, order, beauty, functionality, predictability, and even consciousness, personality, and intelligence.
Firstly, I don't see any problem with a "prime-mover" kind of God, there's just simply no reason to assume that must why we're here as opposed to the many worlds interpretation, rebirthing universe etc. Anyway these are all conditions which are absolutely necessary for any observer to be able to take note of them in the first place, so regardless of whether or not we're here by natural processes or by creation we would always observe that the conditions were perfect for us. After all, if we found ourselves in a universe in which we could not live at all that would actually be proof of God, wouldn't it? Because who set the rules for God outlining the specific conditions for which life can exist? The fine-tuning argument doesn't make sense if God is all-powerful, because if he created the universe then he was the one who decided that life can only exist in certain conditions. The reason I say the universe looks exactly as it would if there were no creator is that we can see the many "failed attempts" at fine-tuning, such as the hundreds of exoplanets we've seen that are in the Goldilocks zone but almost certainly do not support life.
> I just read an article last night from Space.com. It was saying that if the universe were infinite in time and space (no beginning, no Big Bang, no borders), there would be light from every star throughout the universe. (We only see the light from stars that have had time to reach us.) That is why the universe is dark, empty, void, blackness—you know, space. If the universe were infinite, it wouldn't be dark at night. The sky would be ablaze with the combined light of gazzillions of stars that wouldn't even be diminished by any intervening dust or clouds. Maybe there are plenty of reasons for so much space.
That's if there were no Big Bang. If you talk to the majority of physicists, they'll tell you the Big Bang was the beginning of time as we know it. There's no reason why there couldn't have been something before the Big Bang. And again there are hundreds of other ways that God could have done this by using non-natural processes. Why couldn't he have created a dome with the sun moving across it? And anyway how does this solve the problem anyway? If space and time were infinite then that would be even more useless space.
> As it turns out, truth is narrow. Colors have only certain wavelengths; mathematical formulas demand precision; oxygen has a particular blend of elements.
Imagine if you have an entire house that someone says is fine-tuned for life, but it's actually only capable of supporting the life of a single cockroach. That's what the fine-tuning argument is like.
> As I mentioned, there could be many reasons. Without the dinosaurs and their millions of years on the earth, and millions of years between them and us, we would not have the fossil fuel reserves to power our civilization.
Why is God incapable of creating fuel reserves from nothing?
> Without space, there might be no night.
Not according to the hundreds of models of our world from ancient cultures. Why is God incapable of making a flat Earth with a dome?
Without this specific parameter of gravity, the galaxies wouldn't hold together, nor would life on earth be possible. To me it's overwhelmingly evidence that this was no lucky accident.
The point is that those other galaxies don't need to exist. Even if there is other life, it is definitely not present around every single star in the trillions of galaxies.