I'm not Ryan. XP But I think maybe I can say what I think!
Mr. Rogers wrote:You can never really prove ANYTHING. When we make honest decisions about something, we look at the evidence as unbiased as we can (no one is unbiased) and we make the best decision from the evidence we have.
Eh...I think that's true, technically, but some stuff has to be accepted as proven regardless. For example, I believe that it is proven I exist. To quote Descartes, "I think, therefore I am." People also react to posts I make, things I say and do, so it is pretty much proven that I exist, unless we want to go the "THE ENTIRE WORLD IS AN ILLUSION INSIDE MY HEAD" route.
Likewise, certain processes in the world have been proven. For example, the laws of thermodynamics are just that--laws--because they are 100% proven. You can't get more energy out of a device that you put in, energy can't be created or destroyed (nor can matter).
You're right though that most stuff in the world isn't proven. Gravity isn't completely proven, nor is our explanation for fires. A lot of processes are still a mystery to us, and we just kind of explain it as best we can, and if we later find out it didn't fit, we change our theories.
(I would say Naturalism has even infected Christians to some degree).
I don't know that I'd use the word "infected." I think it honestly depends on the type of naturalism. In fact I'd say that there isn't really any contradiction between some types of naturalism and Christianity (some types, not all types).
In fact I think that naturalism is to a degree required in Christianity. Otherwise we'd still think that people with autism were demon-possessed and that the way to cure pneumonia is to pray really hard.
Since the 20th century, when the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation was discovered, it was scientifically proven that the universe did have a beginning. All other challenges to this idea (steady state universe) have since been dismissed. Modern scientific discovery shows that we can again use arguments like this.
Right, but then the response is "Of course the universe had a beginning, it was called the Big Bang." When scientists say the universe always exists/is eternal, they don't mean in its current state. Going any further into this would break the cosmogony debate rule on CAA, so I'll just leave it at that.
The Kalam Argument also helps with questions like, "who created God" since it demonstrates that an infinite cycle of events/creations/beings is not possible. There was a definite beginning which can be demonstrated mathematically, philosophically, and scientifically.
Oh, absolutely. An infinite cycle of events and created beings isn't possible. What I am saying is, we differ from atheists as to where the beginning of that cycle is. Their beginning is "the universe" and our beginning is "God." Again, when we ask "Who created the universe?" their response will be "Who created God?" To us, God needed no creator because of His nature. To them, the universe needed no creator because of its nature. We're "adding an unnecessary step" in other words.
And the problem is, any argument we can make about how we know the universe has to be created, they can make as to how God has to have been created. The universe is ordered, therefore it was created. God is ordered, therefore he was created. Things like that. Or as I've heard said before "If God knows the difference between right and wrong, then someone must above God must have dictated what is right and wrong. Who was that then?"
Our response is that God Himself dictates what is right and wrong, obviously, but to them, the fact that there is a universal "idea" of right and wrong shows there must be an even higher power. In other words, instead of seeing God as the embodiment of righteousness as we do, they instead see him as just having knowledge of it. And that gets tricky to try and explain.
that suggest irreducible complexity at the molecular level.
That is a pretty loaded statement. The problem is that you can't really say what is irreducibly complex. "We aren't sure how this happens" is a completely different statement from "There's no way this could happen without someone designing it." Again, to avoid breaking CAA's rules, I won't say more on the subject.
Another great evidence of God is the way He changes lives. This has been a big one for me. I am also inspired by how much sense Jesus makes when looking at the world, others and myself - everything I see, I see Him.
Which is awesome, and a good argument. However, what is the response to people of different religions who say the same thing? Personal feelings about something are hardly evidence]The last few months I have heard a few people say, "I don't care if you can prove it to me, I will never follow it!". There can also be pain, bitterness and hurt in someone's life that blinds them from seeing things as they are. Also, some people just don't care
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Well yeah. See, these things are only applicable to people who are willing to accept God as Christianity says He is, they just don't think He exists. It doesn't account for those who believe that, say, God is a horrible tyrant and the embodiment of evil.
Certain types of Satanists, the ones who actually believe in Satan and God (there are many kinds of Satanists, most of which from what I understand don't think Satan is a real being, but symbolic), say that God is evil and Satan is good. They base this on Genesis, where God forbids Adam and Eve to eat of the Tree of Knowledge. They say no good, loving God would forbid humans to have knowledge, and so Satan was the hero for going against God and giving humans knowledge.
Those people are a little bit harder to deal with.
Without that self-choice there could be no Hell.
I don't believe that. Hell was never intended to hold human souls. Hell was created as a place of torment for the fallen angels and Satan. It was only after sin infected humans that it turned into a destination for humans. So even if humanity had remained sin-free, there would still be a Hell...just no humans would be in it.