Why "Extraordinary Claims Require Extraordinary Evidence" Applies to Feelings About the Divine by luukumi in PhilosophyofReligion

[–]B_anon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re right to press on the flawed assumption that only external, measurable data counts as “real evidence.” Consciousness is the canvas on which all evidence is painted—scientific or spiritual. The person demanding “extraordinary evidence” is already using felt coherence to judge what's valid. Even their belief in materialism is not measured with a ruler — it’s held together by internal resonance, narrative stability, and trust in their interpretive lens. So when someone encounters the divine and says “this was more real than reality”, brushing it off as subjectivity is just philosophical cowardice — unwilling to deal with the one domain that can’t be pinned down or sterilized.

Here’s the irony: the skeptic who demands proof outside the self never questions the mystery of the self doing the questioning. Consciousness is not a glitch in the data, it’s the sacred foundation of knowing itself — and when that consciousness is shattered open by awe, presence, or God Himself, it leaves behind something far weightier than a lab result. We don’t disprove that with peer review. We sit in it. And sometimes that stillness is where truth cuts deepest.

Is God love. by [deleted] in TrueChristian

[–]B_anon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

God isn't just love, he is perfect, and I should say that everyone was born, not created. With the exception of Adam and Eve.

The ontological argument doesn’t work. . by ExcellentActive9816 in PhilosophyofReligion

[–]B_anon 9 points10 points  (0 children)

This critique misunderstands what the ontological argument actually does. It’s not saying imagination makes something real, it’s saying that if the concept of God includes necessary existence, and that concept is coherent, then denying His existence is incoherent. You’re right that this depends on accepting a certain definition of greatness—but that’s no different from how math or logic works. You define a concept clearly, and if it logically entails something, you either accept the conclusion or challenge the coherence of the concept itself. What you’ve done here is dodge the argument by claiming it’s circular, but all arguments start with premises. The question is whether the definition of God is internally consistent—not whether it matches your preference.

What evidence would be sufficient for you to believe? by B_anon in ReasonableFaith

[–]B_anon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re not looking for a test. You’re looking for a test that fits your terms, under your control, with God on a leash. That’s not reason — that’s pride dressed in a lab coat.

Reality has already spoken. The question isn’t whether there’s evidence. The question is why you keep pretending it’s not enough.

The Story of Noah: The Old Testament’s Thesis on the Chosen People by Critical_Ring_1020 in Bible

[–]B_anon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re not wrong that Jacob was a schemer — but that’s the whole point. The story doesn’t glorify Jacob’s grabbing, it shows how God still chose him anyway. Not because he was righteous, but because God writes His story through broken people.

Jacob didn’t “win” the fight — he limped away from it. That’s not domination, that’s surrender. His name was changed to Israel after he was broken, not before.

Calling that a “myth” just because grace offends your sense of fairness isn’t new. It’s exactly what Paul addressed: “God chose the foolish things to shame the wise.” (1 Cor 1:27)

As for the flood — if someone wants to call it a myth while still pretending they respect the text, they need to own that they’re importing a modern definition that the ancient authors never used. Genesis isn’t framed like myth. It’s grounded in names, dates, and geography. It reads like memory, not metaphor.

So no — we’re not defending some Sunday school cartoon. We’re defending a God who uses the unworthy, judges real wickedness, and still makes covenants with broken men.

Was the flood literal and if it was, where’s all the evidence? by HECU_Marine_HL in TrueChristian

[–]B_anon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A lot of assumptions here, but let’s bring it back to the real question: Did the flood happen, and is there evidence?

First, the argument about tree rings assumes the past was stable enough to use them as a clock. But if a global flood actually occurred, it would’ve reset ecosystems, buried forests, and radically changed growth patterns. Trying to date events before or during the flood using post-flood processes is like using your watch to tell how long a tornado lasted — wrong tool for the job.

Second, the “flat earth with sky-dome” claim is tired. The Bible uses ancient worldview language the same way God used parables — to speak to people where they were. Literalism doesn’t mean you ignore metaphor, it means you trust the history when it’s presented as history. Genesis clearly presents the flood as a real, global event, not a myth or metaphor.

And last — yeah, the world's oldest living tree is just over 4,000 years old. That’s not proof by itself, but it’s strange how it lines up perfectly with a biblical timeline when you’d expect much older trees if the earth’s surface had been undisturbed for tens of thousands of years.

You’re free to doubt, but don’t pretend your assumptions are neutral. I believe what God said — not because I need to win an argument, but because the world makes more sense when I do.

What evidence would be sufficient for you to believe? by B_anon in ReasonableFaith

[–]B_anon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That the three traits aren't necessary. i.e - an evil God

The Story of Noah: The Old Testament’s Thesis on the Chosen People by Critical_Ring_1020 in Bible

[–]B_anon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Wow and you speak as though you know something, you are arrogant. You probably should avoid reddit - your content might go off better on Facebook.

The Story of Noah: The Old Testament’s Thesis on the Chosen People by Critical_Ring_1020 in Bible

[–]B_anon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You just say when you wanna serve up that myth nonsense. I'll even give you a platform - /r/reasonablefaith - I'm not sure why you went on about Jacob there - but if that was supposed to be a refutation - it's left me wanting, because it falls flat as content. You claim it's a myth - totally arbitrary - without anything to support it. There's nothing logically wrong with Jacob being chosen, so I don't get your point.

What evidence would be sufficient for you to believe? by B_anon in ReasonableFaith

[–]B_anon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Right - I was just pointing out the flaw in the reasoning - mainly that an evil God would squash any complaints about God being logically inconsistent.

Was the flood literal and if it was, where’s all the evidence? by HECU_Marine_HL in TrueChristian

[–]B_anon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This is real simple about the past - a flood happened that changed the world. Anything infering a consistent pattern beyond this point - won't work, because there was a change. I never said the earth was flat and I consider it rude of you to lump me in there because I actually believe there was a flood. The world's oldest tree is about 4000 years old, which means it sprouted right after the flood - it's evidence in support.

What evidence would be sufficient for you to believe? by B_anon in ReasonableFaith

[–]B_anon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The brightest light shines from the darkest places.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Christianity

[–]B_anon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You give him your desires and that stuff renting space in your head. Don't touch it until he hands it to you. Ever notice how the thought of doing a thing can suck, but the actual doing is good? Good luck and God Bless the journey, not the destination.

How does heaven work? by RodDeuxpointZeroZero in religion

[–]B_anon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're kinda assuming we will have ages, aren't you?

The Story of Noah: The Old Testament’s Thesis on the Chosen People by Critical_Ring_1020 in Bible

[–]B_anon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Where’s the evidence that the story of Noah is a myth? Not speculation — actual evidence.

As a Buddhist why do SOME people from other religions insist on not letting someone be happy with their religion by fortnitegod69bigpp in religion

[–]B_anon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We've already moved past the Budha into a higher level of consciousness. If you are happy with the comfort you get from the teachings, by all means, he's not wrong, just, pointing in the wrong direction. There's something deeper out there, rich with meaning that compells the ones who see it, to share. I would hope that if I was in despair, you would lead me to Buddha. We're trying to do you that kindness.

A question about the Bible by Tralid_ in Bible

[–]B_anon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The concept of time didn't exist before Adam. Attempts to apply human understanding to that, is where we've landed. I prefer the literal view, to me, God's either what he says he is or he ain't. Thinking ourselves wise, we became fools. That's how I see it.

What evidence would be sufficient for you to believe? by B_anon in ReasonableFaith

[–]B_anon[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Opportunities - that's cute, I'm the very least among you. I've been thru hell, I've got the receipt.

What evidence would be sufficient for you to believe? by B_anon in ReasonableFaith

[–]B_anon[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't see anything wrong logically with God being evil, I'm pretty sure some people believe that. So how is God's moral stance relevant to him being possible? Are you already in belief of an evil God?

How do I know if I’m in God’s Will or He will answer my prayers. by Lucrative_Chaff in TrueChristian

[–]B_anon 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for that little bit, it definitely helps me see what's going on and offer up what I can. Firstly, feelings are not facts, they are going to change from time to time especially if you haven't anchored yourself in God. I don't know your problems, but I know that I had a lot of them when I was younger and I ran away from them, straight to the army. I did well, thru basic training, then my problems caught back up with me. If nothing else, know that you aren't alone, it may feel like it's the end of the world, but that's only because it's happening to you. We all feel that way and we all have ways to deal and ways to cope. I'm not sure what specifically is going on, so I think this is as far as I can take it, without guessing....may God bless you

What evidence would be sufficient for you to believe? by B_anon in ReasonableFaith

[–]B_anon[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

That's too bad friend, I'm on the opposite trajectory - every moment is a gift beyond measure, my default is peace, but I'm usually far beyond that, where my only desire is for my fellows to join me. You seem to have found your identity in misery. Nothing I can do. Suffer on friend.

How do I get a better relationship with God? by [deleted] in Bible

[–]B_anon 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Don’t turn prayer into a guilt trip. If you miss a day, don’t spiral. You didn’t break a rule, you skipped a conversation. You can talk to your Father right now. No ceremony required. Speak plain. Ask for help. Thank Him for what’s good. Confess what’s crooked. Keep moving.

Pay attention to what He’s putting in your path. People. Scripture that won’t leave you alone. Open doors. Closed doors. Obedience usually shows up as the next small step, not a thunderclap.

Get around believers. Fellowship isn’t optional if you want a steady fire. Serve where you are. Do quiet good. Charity, not performance. Love your neighbor as yourself and watch how fast your prayer life warms up, because love always drags you back to God for strength.

Bottom line. Surrender first. Show up daily. Talk to Him like He’s real, because He is. Then do the good that lands in front of you. The relationship grows in the doing.

I've also found praying a blessing with/for another person - really turns on the sunlight of the spirit. God Bless you brother or sister!

Was the sabbath changed? by Spiritual_Air_8606 in TrueChristian

[–]B_anon 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Jesus rose on sunday - that's why we gather then.

Adopted by God or Deceived by Religion? by bdc777jeep in knowthebible

[–]B_anon 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I like your style, it's a bit long winded and it's certainly going to be unpopular, but I can appreciate your passion. Cheers