On being a Christian
Revenant wrote:
You're assuming that an atheist would say Jesus didn't exist, which is not necessarily so. Conversely, a person who used to be a Christian can come to believe that Jesus never existed with no contradiction. It is perfectly possible to have a relationship with someone who doesn't exist. Anyone who's ever read a good, character-driven novel will tell you this.
If an atheist says Jesus exists, then he would not be an atheist, he would be an agnostic. By definition, an atheist is someone who denies the existence of God and Jesus is God Incarnate. Therefore, you are changing the definition of the word for your own purpose and that's an invalid form of argument.
Secondly, no one is in a relationship with someone who does not exist. You cannot, again, by definition, be in a relationship with someone who does not exist. It takes two real people or one real person and one real God. You cannot change the definitions of words to make them fit your argument. That is what you are doing here and it is an invalid manner of refuting an argument.
Revennat wrote:
It seems to me a Muslim would say a person was never a true Muslim if they departed from the faith for Christianity. Or a Hindu might say the same.
Anectdotal evidence of 'truth' isn't enough in the days of many religions, as a Christian, a Muslim, a Buddhist, and others of other faiths would all give anecdotal faith of just how their faith helped them.
Neither does prophecy help us either, as few would claim to ever know which of the twenty interpretations is correct, or could even know if the prophecies will be fulfilled.
Scriptures are read different ways, and a fundamentalists reading and a liberal Christians reading will be very different. Scriptures themselves need reason to come to a closer understanding of the truth. A fundamentalist who cries God's hatred of gays lacks a certain amount of reason. We must define love then!
So then, reason and philosophy are needed in determining the truth, and the truth we are trying to discover is the truth of love and happiness. After all, why would you want to go to heaven if it were a place of misery!
Christianity must stand up to reason, or it cannot be taken as truth!
But again, you are ignoring the definition of what it means to be a Christian. Being a Muslim only means following the five pillars of Islam, reading the Koran, etc. Being a Hindu means only following the tenets of that religions. No religion other than Christianity offers a personal relationship with God because no other religion is OF God! Being a Christian is being in a relationship with Christ and you cannot be in a relationship with him and then decide he is not real any more than you can believe in a relationship with your brother and then at some point in time decide he is not real. However, a Muslim or a Hindu could walk away from a belief system since beliefs can change and be replaced. That was my whole point, that Christianity was NOT just a belief system.
Again, you are trying to re-define words to suit your argument and that isn't allowed anywhere, not in your dealing with Christians about Christianity and not in your dealing with non-Christians about business, history, science or whatever! It's an invalid approach to the world that would not be accepted even in secular circles talking about secular matters.
Atheism is an untenable position. To be able to state with certainty that God does not exist a person would have to have know EVERYTHING there is to know in this world. Since no atheist does, then he cannot state with certainty that God cannot exist. At best, he can say that he does not think God exists but he cannot be sure. Therefore, he is really an agnostic because, as I said, atheism is an indefensible and, therefore, an illogical position, not a reasonable one at all. In fact, it is less reasonable than Christianity.
Faith in Christ is most reasonable. Consider the following:
Everybody has faith in something. We have faith that the pills the doctor prescribes are going to make us better. We have faith as we stand at the bus stop that the bus will come and take us where we want to go. We have faith that the sun will rise every morning.
Some people have chosen to put their faith in science. Science is only as good as the scientists behind it and, being human, scientists make mistakes and fail. History records many examples of scientific facts that everyone believed that turned out to be totally false. Science is unreliable.
Some people, atheists in particular, put their faith in their own intelligence and in what they refer to as logic and reason. And yet, their intelligence is flawed and therefore they can misapply logic and reason and come up with the wrong answers.
There are some people who think that, when it comes to faith, it stands in opposition to reason. In some cases, it may. There are people who say, in faith, that
the Holocaust never took place. This is unreasonable given the valid evidence to the contrary.
There are some people who think that Christian faith is unreasonable. This, too, is completely false. Christian faith is based on knowledge and reason. Here is how the Christian understands faith:
Hebrews 11:1 reads: Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen (New Revised Standard Version).
Notice the words used here -- assurance and conviction. We are not just talking about blind faith or wishful thinking. Nor are we talking about faith that demands that our brains not be involved. In fact, the opposite is true. There is evidence to believe, evidence that satisfies the mind as well as the heart. We are talking about being certain about Christ.
If you start with the wrong premise, you end up with the wrong conclusion. Because atheists start with the wrong understanding of what it is to be a Christian, they end up with the wrong conclusion about faith in Christ. When you understand that being a Christian is all about being in a relationship with the living God, that puts a whole new perspective on the issue of faith.
It is like this: when you meet someone for the first time and you do not know him well, you are not like to trust him. But if you get to know someone better and better over time and see that he follows through on his promises and is honest and trustworthy, your faith in his ability to do what he says he is going to do grows and grows and grows.
That is the way it is for Christians. The longer I walk with Jesus the better I get to know him and the more I see him acting in my life and in the lives of others. I read his promises in the Bible and I see him fulfill them in my life. That means that my faith is not based on a bunch of ideas from a book but on personal experience with the living Christ.
Just as it is reasonable to trust a person who has proved himself worthy of your trust, so too is it reasonable to trust Jesus when he continues to prove himself over and over and over to be just who he says he I and able to do all the things he says he can do.
It is interesting to look at the original Greek of the New Testament to see the nuances of the words used to talk about knowing Christ and believing in him. In the Gospel of John we read that he who believes also knows (John 5:24, John 6:60) and he who knows believes (John 10:38). The word ginosko, meaning to know refers to an acquired knowledge. In other words, we learn about Christ by interacting with him thereby acquiring knowledge of him.
In other words, we are talking about faith being based on experience, not faith in some pie-in-the-sky fantasy or unproven theory. Consider 1 John 3:23 which speaks of believing in the name of his Son, Jesus Christ. In Jewish society, a name is more than just what somebody is called. It means the whole nature and character of the person bearing it as he is known to us. Again, we are talking about knowing and therefore having faith in what we know to be certain and real, not just imagining or hoping without any evidence to justify that hope.
One last verse with its Greek word origins -- in Matt. 7:23, Jesus says that there will be people who call him Lord who never really knew him. As he puts it, I will profess I never knew you. The word newin the original Greek is means never came to observe you as having experienced me.
So were talking about experiential truth here backed up by the Word of God and the testimony of millions of Christians down through the ages. I hope that gives you a better understanding of Christians and the issue of faith.
I know that you believe that experiential knowledge of Christ is not valid. Yet you are basing your non-belief in God in a lack of experience with him. I find THAT invalid! You cannot prove God does not exist, but you are willing to believe that based on the fact that you do not personally know him. Your faith that he does not exist is not based on anything real at all! You have made your decision based on something that you cannot prove. That takes faith! And unreasonable faith at that!
I agree that reason is needed when approaching everything. But the atheist himself is unreasonable in many ways. Christianity is NOT unreasonable at all. It is just misunderstood by atheists because they are NOT informed by the Holy Spirit.
Re: your statement that God hates gays. That is a complete and utter lie! God LOVES all of humankind, every single person who has lived, is living and ever will live, no matter what their sexual proclivities. He sent his son Jesus to die on the cross for all of us, you, me, homosexuals, heterosexuals, liars, thieves, murderers, the proud, the selfish, the cowardly, the weak, the dying -- everybody! He did not have to do that. He did that voluntarily, sacrificing Christ for one reason and one reason alone -- love!
As a Christian, I do not hate gays any more than God does. But God defines what is sin and what is not. God cannot have sin in his presence. Therefore, we all have to be cleansed of sin before we can enter heaven to spend eternity with him.
God defines homosexuality as a sin just as he defines fornication, adultery, lying, stealing, etc. as sins. Homosexuality is NOT any more vile than any sin that a heterosexual person commits. God points out sin so that we can recognize it, come to him and confess it, repent of it, and stop committing that sin.
And why does God hate sin? Because it hurts us and he loves us and he doesn't want us to be hurt.
I speak out about homosexuality out of love, not hate. I speak out because I want everyone, including homosexuals, to get to know Christ and they can稚 do that if they insist on elevating their sins above him and pursue them instead of a relationship with Jesus. If I hated homosexuals, I would not say a word about homosexuality being a sin, I would just let them die and spent eternity separated from God. THAT would be hatred!
If you would like to understand more about reason and truth from a Christian perspective, I would suggest looking at the following links:
Stand To Reason at
http://www.str.org/
The Christian Thinktank is another excellent source of information. It is here:
http://www.christian-thinktank.com/
Being a Christian does not involve shutting off the intellect. In fact, your intellect can be applied to Christianity and be totally excited and fulfilled by it!
Too many atheists only read what other atheists write about God and Christianity. That is like asking a blind man to describe a sunset for you! If you want to know about God and Christianity, read what people who actually know God personally write.
After all, if you wanted to learn about Queen Elizabeth, you would learn more from people who knew her personally than from people who have never met her, right? So talk to Christians about Christ, not atheists, eh? Talk to people who actually know him personally!