You may be right but it is beside the point. The fact remains that your argument relies on God being changeless. If it turns out that God isn't changeless, you no longer have an argument. What you must first do is provide proof that God is changeless, only then can you proceed with your argument.bahman wrote:
That is no question begging based on definition. The question begging or circular reason is when the conclusion supports premise.
We cannot have a relationship with God
Re: We cannot have a relationship with God
Re: We cannot have a relationship with God
Well, this type of relationship is similar to relationship we make with a painting. This type of relationship is not mutual. You can be happy with such a unmutual relationship though.Reflex wrote:Sez who? We either have, or have not; there is no "making" a relationship. And although God does not change, we do. Our relating to and with God in ongoing and progressive.bahman wrote:God is changeless. Relationship is about cause and effect. As an example, you do something to please another person (act), this act changes the person (effect), the person in reply does something to please you. This means that making relationship with God is impossible since we cannot change Him.
Re: We cannot have a relationship with God
All I am saying is that you cannot make any relationship with God if you believe that God is changeless. Changeless God is well accepted concept in many system of believes (you can google it yourself). Whether this can be proved or not is subject of another thread.Harbal wrote:You may be right but it is beside the point. The fact remains that your argument relies on God being changeless. If it turns out that God isn't changeless, you no longer have an argument. What you must first do is provide proof that God is changeless, only then can you proceed with your argument.bahman wrote: That is no question begging based on definition. The question begging or circular reason is when the conclusion supports premise.
Re: We cannot have a relationship with God
That which appears to change never changes.Reflex wrote: God does not change, we do.
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sthitapragya
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Re: We cannot have a relationship with God
Why believe God exists at all? Doesn't it make everything more complicated?bahman wrote:All I am saying is that you cannot make any relationship with God if you believe that God is changeless. Changeless God is well accepted concept in many system of believes (you can google it yourself). Whether this can be proved or not is subject of another thread.Harbal wrote:You may be right but it is beside the point. The fact remains that your argument relies on God being changeless. If it turns out that God isn't changeless, you no longer have an argument. What you must first do is provide proof that God is changeless, only then can you proceed with your argument.bahman wrote: That is no question begging based on definition. The question begging or circular reason is when the conclusion supports premise.
Re: We cannot have a relationship with God
Don't be silly. Changeless personality does not imply immobility. (No offense, but your argument sounds like the kind of superstitious nonsense atheists posit to cast doubt.)bahman wrote:Well, this type of relationship is similar to relationship we make with a painting. This type of relationship is not mutual. You can be happy with such a unmutual relationship though.Reflex wrote: Sez who? We either have, or have not; there is no "making" a relationship. And although God does not change, we do. Our relating to and with God in ongoing and progressive.
Let me explain a few things. First of all, along with being immutable, God is also described as infinite, eternal and free. To deny the possibility of his volitional self-limitation and/or self-differentiation amounts to a denial of the very concept of God's volitional absoluteness.
Second, even though some theistic models are dualistic, theism itself does not imply it.
Third, a human being is the relating of a relation -- a synthesis of the Infinite and finite, Eternal and temporal, Freedom and necessity -- relating to itself. What sets God apart from us is the absence of finitude, temporality and necessity.
Last edited by Reflex on Sun Aug 07, 2016 5:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: We cannot have a relationship with God
Because atheism makes everything incoherent.sthitapragya wrote: Why believe God exists at all? Doesn't it make everything more complicated?
Re: We cannot have a relationship with God
So God is mobile and can change? Could you please tell me what could be changeable in the case of God?Reflex wrote: Don't be silly. Changeless personality does not imply immobility. (No offense, but your argument sounds like the kind of superstitious nonsense atheists posit to cast doubt.)
That I could agree with.Reflex wrote: Let me explain a few things. First of all, along with being immutable, God is also described as infinite, eternal and free. To deny the possibility of his volitional self-limitation and/or self-differentiation amounts to a denial of the very concept of God's volitional absoluteness.
I don't understand how this could be related to our discussion.Reflex wrote: Second, even though some theistic models are dualistic, theism itself does not imply it.
That I agree with too.Reflex wrote: Third, a human being is the relating of a relation -- a synthesis of the Infinite and finite, Eternal and temporal, Freedom and necessity -- relating to itself. What sets God apart from us is the absence of finitude, temporality and necessity.
Re: We cannot have a relationship with God
You need to resolve the problem of beginning somehow. Believing in God is one way to answer the question of beginning.sthitapragya wrote:Why believe God exists at all? Doesn't it make everything more complicated?bahman wrote:All I am saying is that you cannot make any relationship with God if you believe that God is changeless. Changeless God is well accepted concept in many system of believes (you can google it yourself). Whether this can be proved or not is subject of another thread.Harbal wrote: You may be right but it is beside the point. The fact remains that your argument relies on God being changeless. If it turns out that God isn't changeless, you no longer have an argument. What you must first do is provide proof that God is changeless, only then can you proceed with your argument.
Re: We cannot have a relationship with God
Mobility is not equivalent to change. Personality is changeless -- permanence -- in the presence of change.bahman wrote: So God is mobile and can change? Could you please tell me what could be changeable in the case of God?
It's not, not really. It's preemptive: there will always be some moron who comes along who tries, in one way or another, to make the case that God implies dualism and is therefore equivalent to a magical old man with white hair and a long beard. (Sthitapragya and uwot, among others, do it all the time.)bahman wrote:I don't understand how this could be related to our discussion.Reflex wrote: Second, even though some theistic models are dualistic, theism itself does not imply it.
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Dalek Prime
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Re: We cannot have a relationship with God
Yes I can. He's on PlentyofFish. (Actually, that was his son.) 
- Immanuel Can
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Re: We cannot have a relationship with God
Harbal wrote:You may be right but it is beside the point. The fact remains that your argument relies on God being changeless. If it turns out that God isn't changeless, you no longer have an argument. What you must first do is provide proof that God is changeless, only then can you proceed with your argument.bahman wrote:
That is no question begging based on definition. The question begging or circular reason is when the conclusion supports premise.
Good point, H.
"Changeless" needs to nuanced. There are good "changes" and bad "changes." There are "changes" of personality or identity, and also "changes" of attitude or relationship.
Have we any reason to think that every kind of "change" is wrong to posit of the Supreme Being?
Sez who?
Re: We cannot have a relationship with God
What do you mean with mobility?Reflex wrote: Mobility is not equivalent to change. Personality is changeless -- permanence -- in the presence of change.
I see.Reflex wrote: It's not, not really. It's preemptive: there will always be some moron who comes along who tries, in one way or another, to make the case that God implies dualism and is therefore equivalent to a magical old man with white hair and a long beard. (Sthitapragya and uwot, among others, do it all the time.)
Re: We cannot have a relationship with God
Movement. Many have the impression that movement implies change, but the acting nature of God, the personality of God, is changelessness in the presence of change.bahman wrote:What do you mean with mobility?Reflex wrote: Mobility is not equivalent to change. Personality is changeless -- permanence -- in the presence of change.
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sthitapragya
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Re: We cannot have a relationship with God
Why do you need to resolve the problem of beginning? How will it help you? How do you think jumping to an unsubstantiated conclusion that God created the world will help? Also which God should one believe in?bahman wrote:You need to resolve the problem of beginning somehow. Believing in God is one way to answer the question of beginning.sthitapragya wrote:Why believe God exists at all? Doesn't it make everything more complicated?bahman wrote:
All I am saying is that you cannot make any relationship with God if you believe that God is changeless. Changeless God is well accepted concept in many system of believes (you can google it yourself). Whether this can be proved or not is subject of another thread.