2Bits wrote:I said "God is" not belief about God. God is whether I believe or not.
McCulloch wrote:Saying "God is" or even "Gravity is" is not really a statement of fact. It is a statement that you believe that the statement "God exists" or the statement "gravity exists" is true.
twobitsmedia wrote:Well. I guess it is clear why you have never experienced God. You can pray to something that you believe might be based on you, or to the God that is. Prayer to a belief makes absolutely NO sense. You may as well just pray to yourself. And you will get those results.
I think that I am beginning to get it. In order to be a Christian you must believe that God exists and that God's existence is so self evident that evidence, reason and logic cannot be used. To you God is not a belief, because that implies that there is some uncertainty. God is a fact, which cannot be argued or debated but just is. And it must be so, in order that your prayers be effective.
McCulloch wrote:I agree with you that the existence of God or gravity is not dependent on your or my belief in it. On the other hand, if you assert that God exists, then there should be some objective evidence to support that assertion. "God is" because spirit (which itself cannot be objectively defined or measured) tells me so. "Gravity is" because every measure and test objectively done, regardless of the situation, confirms gravity.
2Bits wrote:Gravity describes a theory which explains why things fall down. I could not provide evidence of gravity for you either. I could only tell you what it does....and you will accept it or not based primarily, on the source of the information. It would not be me, though, it would be the faith you have in the traditional science explanations you have probably heard since grade school. You would then assimilate the information I might give you an explanation and say OK, I believe gravity exists. I myself do NOT believe gravity exists, but I do believe the word describes the phenomenon in which things fall to the ground.
Did you get past High School physics? Gravity is not a theory which explains why things fall down, although it does explain that on the surface of a planet, massive objects are attracted to the center of the planet. Gravity, in the classical sense, is the observation that all particles with mass are attracted to each other with a force proportional to the product of the masses and inversely proportional to the square of the distances. Einstein had some adjustments to that, but they can be safely ignored for the most part.
I suppose that if you live in a metaphysical world of magic, you might say that God exists and gravity does not. But in the real world, gravity exists and can be confirmed to exist. God cannot be confirmed to exist.
McCulloch wrote:I don't know spirit either.
2Bits wrote:That is without dispute.
McCulloch wrote:I know that God does not exist because of heliochromatofixatives. You know that God exists because of spirit. Until either of us actually defines our terms in an objective way, we are at an impasse.
2Bits wrote:You can call it an impasse, but I will agree that your imagination stops you.
I have an imagination, it is not the lack of imagination which stops me. It is just that I don't take what I imagine to necessarily be real. That is called delusion. I don't know what spirit is, so trying to prove to me that God is real because of spirit is like trying to prove the existence of irrational numbers to someone who does not understand primes. Let's do this one step at a time. Show me what spirit is and prove to me that spirit exists. Then show me how spirit proves God.
2Bits wrote:God is spirit. Circular to you probably. But you have a void outside of your evidenced reality.
2Bits wrote:Logic describes a way of thought that can also depends on input and experience. Logic, by itself, is NOT is the the foundation for reality. So, no I will stick to it being circular for you. God is quite logical to me but I am not void of information (input, etc)
If you believe that logic is relative, by saying that it is logical to you but not to me, then you do not have a proper understanding of logic. Logic is a formal way of thinking about the truth value of statements and the relationship between the truth values of related statements. If something is logically true, it is logically true and can be shown to be logically true. I think what you are trying to convey is that even though your argument depends on circular logic, it seems right to you.
You stated that the fruits of the spirit are love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control. These attributes, while subjective are evident in the lives of Christians and non-Christians. So, I must conclude that you either think that the spirit is dispensing these fruit regardless of individuals' relationship with the spirit or that the love, peace etc experienced by non-Christians must be of a different (presumably lesser) sort than that experienced by the Christians.