Philosophy_of_Guitar wrote: ↑September 13th, 2023, 3:22 am
Hey there! Thank you for welcoming me and thank you for your post I have to say that I disagree with some of your premises but I really like your post nonetheless! I like your open-mindedness towards other religions as well as respecting that people are not to be held by the morals of Christianity unless they're Christian. Nevertheless, you still express that you uphold (and live by?) the core tenets of the Bible such as the monotheistic God and the Ten Commandments. That's interesting!
You’re very welcome; I’m glad you found my post to be of interest and am happy to be able to continue the conversation. I learn a lot from discussing these things as it helps me greatly to better understand and articulate my own ideas. No problem that you disagree with some things I say, that’s to be expected, and even invited – one of my favorite sayings is ‘if two people agree on everything, one of them is unnecessary’!
Your new post has given me a lot think and talk about, but I’ll do my best to stick to the important points stay as concise as I can.
Philosophy_of_Guitar wrote: ↑September 13th, 2023, 3:22 am
Something which irks me with many believers is that they don't have a balanced idea of their faiths and they do things that go against the tenets of the religions, sometimes starkly so! I don't understand the idea of truly believing that the Biblical God exists and simultaneously regularly breaching the Ten Commandments. That's so irrational. You appear like you understand the importance of following the core tenets of the religion you believe in. That's great.
I do think you’re correct in observing that faith is something that needs to be lived, not just believed. When I was considering becoming Catholic, a friend recommended to me that if I really wanted to know what the faith is all about, I should not just look to dogma or theology for answers, but rather should learn about the lives of the Saints, that I would gain a better understanding of the faith by learning how people have lived it rather than what particular tenets people espouse. Over time, this has proved to be valuable advice. The lives and writing of people such as St. Francis, Mother Theresa and Thomas Merton have been a big influence on me and have helped me understand more about faith than just studying the catechism or dogma would have. And that’s not to mention just meeting and talking with ordinary people about their own faith, which is also important.
Philosophy_of_Guitar wrote: ↑September 13th, 2023, 3:22 am
However, like you said, according to the Bible, worshipping or even looking at other gods is a grave sin. So then that becomes a big logical inconsistency.
...
But because Yahweh would think otherwise according to the Bible, it becomes an irreconcilable logical rift to believe in both Christian and Hindu metaphysics.
That’s not what I said, but I think I see where you’re coming from. Let me say it a little differently and see if it makes more sense: for me, there is only one God - there
are no ‘other gods’ to worship. The meaning of the first commandment is not that it’s a sin to worship God in a different manner or by a different name or as part of a different religion – it means that it’s a sin to worship
false gods. In other words, we must not treat things are not God as if they were God. It’s an important distinction.
As I mentioned in the earlier post, there are different ‘conceptions’ of God, and persons of different faiths will describe God differently, use different names for God, even conceive God as being multiple entities rather than one. This does not mean that they are worshiping an ‘other god’, nor does it necessarily imply that they are worshipping a false god. (And conversely, just because someone is of the same faith as me does not mean they are not worshipping a false God – there are people who call themselves Christians who are clearly not following the same God that I am.)
What is or is not a ‘false god’ could be yet another whole discussion. In Biblical times, those false gods were referred to as ‘graven images’, the worship of which consisted in false beliefs that sacrifices to these could bring favors. But in modern times, I think of such things as power, wealth, pleasure, fame, pride, etc. – things we align ourselves or pursue that we imagine have the power to bring us fulfillment in life, but which ultimately can lead us away from what is good and right.
The one God I believe in is a God of Life, Truth, Love – that is not a different God from the God of other religions. Insofar as a person of another faith is living a life oriented to love and honesty and justice, then they are following that same God, regardless of how they speak of it. It can appear on the surface to be an ‘irreconcilable rift’ if you are looking at religion or scripture as a body of factual information about God. Rather, I see religion (all religion, not just Christianity) as the human response to God’s self-revelation to us, and scripture as the record of that revelation and its evolution over history. This is why I brought up the parable of the three blind men and the elephant, which I think is an excellent metaphor for understanding different faith traditions that may appear to contradict each other.
Philosophy_of_Guitar wrote: ↑September 13th, 2023, 3:22 am
Thomyum2 wrote: ↑August 20th, 2023, 5:06 pmI think that it’s worth starting by examining the question itself as there are some interesting ideas here. My first thought is that nothing ‘makes’ me believe. Rather, I choose to believe, or perhaps more accurately I choose to have faith, which is I think is really more akin to an act of trusting that God exists rather than a decision to believe or think that God exists.
My problem with the choosing to believe is that many other people are choosing to believe in other religions and gods that are mutually-exclusive with Christianity, which is every religion other than perhaps Judaism. Every believer is convinced that their particular god is the true God just as you are convinced that Jesus Christ is the true God. As someone who is agnostic as to who's the real God, this does not convince me that the Biblical God is the true God.
I don’t think this is a fair assessment of my beliefs. I would rephrase it, in light of what I said above, to say: I do believe there is only one true God, and I have chosen to be part of that faith tradition and community in which Jesus Christ is central to how that one true God has revealed Himself. My belief does not imply that another person cannot encounter that same true God through a different faith or a different spiritual practice. Any one faith can be
unique in what it offers and in what is revealed through it, without being
exclusive. I do not see the world’s major faiths as being ‘mutually exclusive’. In my opinion, the divisions between peoples of different faiths are man-made thing and are not a necessary outcome of faith.
Philosophy_of_Guitar wrote: ↑September 13th, 2023, 3:22 am
I have qualms with the concept of dogmatic faith. Faith is acceptance that a set of propositions is true based on bad evidence. I believe that one's epistemology is paramount to how their life will turn out. To the degree that we have any freewill, it is through a solid epistemology all the way from first principles in your mind down to action in the world and being logically-consistent through that whole chain of processes between belief and action. Because of this, I believe that accepting any kind of proposition based on bad evidence in one's subconscious can truly hurt someone.
First of all, I don’t think faith is about ‘propositions’ – faith is about that relationship with someone (or something, if you prefer) beyond ourselves. Propositions (or creeds or dogma) are statements by which people of a religion communicate in language a shared understandings of their experiences of that relationship. A discussion of the role of dogma would be best saved for another thread (or taken up with someone who has a better background in theology than I do), but I would just suggest for now that creed and dogma are meant to be statements of the core beliefs of a community and are of limited use if taken outside of the context of that community.
To your second point, I suppose there may be people who choose to believe something ‘based on bad evidence’. I certainly don't feel that I have done that. Perhaps ‘incomplete evidence’? I think of faith as being more akin to trust than to knowledge. There’s a game people sometimes play where one person will close their eyes and let themselves fall backwards and let another person catch them before they hit the floor - it’s an act of trust. Faith is kind of like that for me – everyone does need to reach a certain level of comfort with what you’re choosing, but at the same time, after a certain point you also need to let go and turn yourself over to another power greater than yourself and put yourself in their hands. Faith is, in a sense, an offering of oneself and one's life. In a way, it’s like a marriage (a metaphor that’s often used in scripture) where you agree to persevere ‘in good times and in bad times’, out of a commitment you make and not due to receiving proof that things will be a certain way with the person you are marrying. At the same time, I don’t think it has to mean that a person should give up their faculty of reason or their conscience or their commitment to the truth when they take that step.
Philosophy_of_Guitar wrote: ↑September 13th, 2023, 3:22 am
Thomyum2 wrote: ↑August 20th, 2023, 5:06 pmThe second thing I observe here is the phrase ‘the God of your religion’. This is a problematic way of looking at things for a person of monotheistic faith because, of course, there is only one God, there aren’t different gods for different religions. Rather, there are different human conceptions of what God is, or different ways that humans will express their experience of God, any of which will naturally have its limitations or shortcomings since humans are finite and limited beings. (The parable of the three blind men and the elephant comes to mind here.) But there is and can be only one God, and the purpose of faith is to come to know the one God, not to find the best or most correct conception about what God is. It hasn’t always been so, but I think that in this day and age, all the major faiths (or at least the ones that I take seriously) recognize that it is the one and same and only God that is revealed to all and is not an exclusive right belonging to any single faith tradition. Different religions may differ greatly in the way they relate to God and how they understand and describe that relationship, but they aren’t actually worshipping different gods.
Yes believing only in the Biblical God is rational if you are Christian, I agree with this.
I disagree that Gods of different faiths are the same true God. You could make the argument that Allah is the Biblical God, however, while Islam considers Jesus to be a holy prophet, they deny that he's God. And that's a stark problem. Either the Quran is right or the Bible is right about Jesus. Hinduism is a fascinating philosophy, theology and corpus of stories, however, the Hindu Gods are not the same as the Biblical God. Both the characterization of the Gods and the metaphysical propositions are at odds.
Nevertheless, this is something I heard a lot of people from different religions say: whichever form of God you worship, at the end of the day it's the one and only God that everyone is praying to. Perhaps there is something there and some merit to this argument. It'd be interesting to explore this idea and expand on it.
On the surface it may appear that different religions are at odds, but I think that if you look deeper into the faiths you would begin to find that this isn’t the case. I believe that the religions of the world are gradually beginning to understand this as well, though it sometimes seems to be a slow process. Really though, it’s only been in the last two hundred years or so that the world’s vastly different cultures and traditions have really started to come to know each other at more than a very superficial level.
For example, it might surprise you that what you’ve said here is the official position of the Catholic Church. The Second Vatican Council in 1965 published its
Declaration on the Relation of the Church to Non-Christian Religions, in which it stated that:
The Catholic Church rejects nothing that is true and holy in these religions. She regards with sincere reverence those ways of conduct and of life, those precepts and teachings which, though differing in many aspects from the ones she holds and sets forth, nonetheless often reflect a ray of that Truth which enlightens all men.
However, I do acknowledge that there unfortunately are many people of various faiths who still focus on the differences between faiths rather than the similarities and are perhaps doing so because they gain some sense of pride or superiority in being able to think that they are right, and others are wrong. Or it may have something to do with the overly literal interpretation of scripture that many people cling to. Or perhaps nothing more than an insufficiently developed understanding of their own faith. Such people may be louder and more militant and thereby get more attention for their beliefs, but I don’t think they represent the majority of people of faith. Faith is a very individual matter and a chosen path that’s about establishing a relationship and aligning oneself with God, by whatever name you call Him, and should not be about elevating ourselves above other people. Personally, I try to adhere to the saying that ‘God’s job is to judge; my job is to love’. After all, I’ve known plenty of people of many faiths, or even of no faith at all, who have led far more exemplary lives than I have, so who am I to say what is right or wrong for them to believe.
Philosophy_of_Guitar wrote: ↑September 13th, 2023, 3:22 am
Thomyum2 wrote: ↑August 20th, 2023, 5:06 pmThe third point I’d make is that I agree with Pattern-chaser when he says that it’s not possible to prove, through logic or reason, that God exists. This is because God, as understood by all of the major faiths, is not a ‘contingent being’. God’s existence cannot be dependent upon any other things existing or occurring first, or otherwise God would not really be God but rather would just be another human idea. In more philosophical terminology, one could say that God’s existence is a premise, a foundational axiom, and not a conclusion that can be derived from other truths. There’s a quote, attributed to various people including Saints Thomas Aquinas and Ignatius Loyola, that often comes to mind when I see this topic brought up: “For those who believe, no proof is necessary. For those who disbelieve, no amount of proof is sufficient.” And of course, how could it be otherwise if the most basic premise is not shared?
Taking the existence of God as a fundamental axiom makes sense if you're a believer.
I don't agree with this quote because I think that believers get "proof" of God's existence through their own subjective experiences. And on the other hand, I'm not anti-theist or atheist and I in fact want the existence of a good God and an eternal life in heaven to exist; so if good evidence is produced, I'll be the first to jump on it. There is definitely a level of good evidence that would persuade me and I would welcome it even though I'm currently not convinced.
I still maintain that there can be no proof of God’s existence - you can’t prove an axiom. Remember that all proofs take the form of ‘given a and b, then c’. Proofs can only derive truths from other truths – they can’t generate truths out of nothing. (Have you ever read Lewis Carroll’s essay “What the Tortoise Said to Achilles”?)
As for what level of evidence is necessary, well, that is a tricky matter for me because it introduces a lot of other questions such as what kinds of evidence you will accept, who gets to judge and interpret the evidence, how much is sufficient, what happens if new evidence comes up later, etc. As I said above, everyone needs to reach a certain level of comfort to make a choice to believe something – that I can relate to – so asking for some basic evidence is reasonable. If we were to wait for perfect evidence or proof, we’d be waiting a very long time. But if you are just looking for evidence that will give you that level of comfort to 'jump on it', then I'd just suggest doing as I did: don't look for extensive rational arguments about theological questions that may prove things to your mind, but rather, seek out and read or talk to people about the role that faith has played in their lives and let your heart guide you as to whether or not that is a good thing for you. Faith is more about the heart than the mind - the mind will always go on doubting and looking for proof.
At the risk of failing to remain concise, I’ll share a quote with you that meant a lot to me when I was first beginning the process of becoming a Catholic, that I think captures this idea so well. This is from Graham Greene’s novel
Monsignor Quixote, describing a dream that the title character has just awakened from:
He had dreamt that Christ had been saved from the Cross by the legion of angels to which on an earlier occasion the Devil had told Him that he could appeal. So there was no final agony, no heavy stone which had to be rolled away, no discovery of an empty tomb. Father Quixote stood there watching on Golgotha as Christ stepped down from the Cross triumphant and acclaimed. The Roman soldiers, even the centurion, knelt in His honor, and the people of Jerusalem poured up the hill to worship Him. The disciples clustered happily around. His mother smiled through her tears of joy. There was no ambiguity, no room for doubt and no room for faith at all. The whole world knew with certainty that Christ was the Son of God. It was only a dream . . . but nonetheless Father Quixote had felt on waking the chill of despair felt by a man who realizes suddenly that he has taken up a profession which is of use to no one, who must continue to live in a kind of Saharan desert without doubt or faith, where everyone is certain that the same belief is true.
Philosophy_of_Guitar wrote: ↑September 13th, 2023, 3:22 am
Here's the problem: if God is omnipotent and omnibenevolent, that means he wants everyone to go to heaven and he has the ultimate power to do so. He could so easily show up once just to guarantee that a maximal amount of people will follow the Bible and go to heaven. Just once for 5 minutes would be enough but he doesn't. It's illogical that an omnipotent and omnibenevolent God never shows up to everyone even just once for a gentle push in the right direction.
Never shows up? That I’d disagree with. In addition to omnipotent and omnibenevolent, God is also omnipresent. God doesn’t ‘show up’ because God is always there, all around us – it is not God’s failure if we are the ones who fail to recognize that. The spirituality of St. Ignatius of Loyola speaks to this, that our spiritual path should be one that leads us to find and recognize God in all things. I think we’re all of us receiving lots of gentle pushes (and some not so gentle) in the right direction all time.
Philosophy_of_Guitar wrote: ↑September 13th, 2023, 3:22 am
And in terms of faith, again I personally have a big issue with the concept for the reasons I explained above. But maybe I'm wrong, maybe faith is good. Care to expand on why you believe faith is good?
When you talk about someone led by their heart (courage and kindness) and core principles and that this is the door to cultivating a relationship with God, this may be surprising but I believe in this very deeply. My version of this argument is just semantically different because it's secular (I would swap the words "God" with "the greatest good" and "religion" with "ontology" but it's essentially to the exact same effect. I think this principle is fundamentally true about the human condition. I call that Eudaimonia. It's interesting to reach the same conclusion and destination coming from fairly different starting assumptions
Yes, for me faith is good for many reasons, too many to list here. Maybe to say it in a nutshell, faith has been good for me because it has helped me to better see the beauty and the good in creation and in other people, and thereby has helped me to be more patient and understanding and forgiving. In short, I'd say that I hope it has helped me to be a better person and live a better life.
I have no objection to your substitution of “the greatest good” for “God”, and I don’t think that’s such a different starting point at all.
Philosophy_of_Guitar wrote: ↑September 13th, 2023, 3:22 am
Thomyum2 wrote: ↑August 20th, 2023, 5:06 pmAs for the other questions and issues you’ve brought up here, they are all thoughtful points well worthy of further exploration. I do find it a little difficult to keep up in a public forum where it seems like discussions get taken in a lot of different directions at once, and I am also sometimes reluctant to share things that are of a more personal nature that accompany these topics. But I’d certainly enjoy continuing a conversation on the thread or you’re welcome to send me a private message if it’s of interest. Thanks for your posts.
I understand. Sure we can do PM. I am interested in getting your takes re: the problem of evil, freewill and arguments in favour of faith etc. I also would like to hear about your Spiritual experiences.
Talk to you later then.
Seems like I’ve been typing far too much here, so hopefully I haven’t been rambling or sounding like I’m preaching and I’ve at least addressed of few of your questions. Do feel free to PM me or start a new thread if you’d like and I’ll continue the discussion as best as I’m able to!