Immanuel, let’s flip this around for a second: What do you think your God can actually do that wouldn’t otherwise happen on its own, according to the laws of nature? If your God is constantly at work in the world, as you seem to imply, then surely you can identify a phenomenon or event that is so unmistakably divine, it couldn’t be attributed to natural processes or the known interactions of the universe.Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Jan 26, 2025 6:53 pmThis is unrelated to my question. Let's stick to the relevant.BigMike wrote: ↑Sun Jan 26, 2025 4:08 pmImmanuel, if the best you can offer is hearsay from the late Bronze Age...Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Sun Jan 26, 2025 3:11 pm
That's not true, of course. It's only a matter of what you'd accept as evidence.
But let's clear that up, just so everybody can see if I'm right about that: supposing there were a God, what evidence of His existence would you accept?
Great. What would that evidence look like: the stuff you would accept today. Give a very practical example of how God could convince you...You ask what evidence I’d accept. Simple: verifiable, repeatable, observable phenomena that unambiguously demonstrate the existence of a divine being. Something that doesn’t rely on subjective interpretations, emotional appeals, or leaps of logic. If your God exists and wants to be known, surely an omnipotent being could provide clear, undeniable evidence that transcends the hearsay and wishful thinking of ancient texts.
Because here’s the thing—if you point to everyday occurrences like a sunrise, the birth of a child, or a fortuitous coincidence and call it "God," then you’re not really proving anything. You’re just slapping a label on what nature, physics, and biology already explain. So, what’s left? What’s this God doing that couldn’t happen without him? Let’s hear it.