WinterBorn
Verified User
Let me ask you...
...do you assert or claim that it is more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one?
I make no claim either way. There is not enough evidence, in my opinion, to prove either side.
Let me ask you...
...do you assert or claim that it is more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one?
Do you equally reject BOTH claims? (gods exist, gods don't exist)
or do you have faith that gods don't exist?
That sounds like agnosticism to me.
Circular reasoning after circular reasoning after circular reasoning.RQAA. Stop asking the same question over and over and over and over and over and over and over again. You've already received answers to this question numerous times from numerous different posters on this forum.
BTW, Jesus IS "The Christian God". While God the Father and Jesus Christ are different/distinct "persons", they are still one God (they share the same divine nature).
So you know more about God's creation than God HIMSELF does?
God knows all of the 'ins and outs' of his own creation.
Nobody claimed that bushes talk.
Sure they do.
Sure it is.
God knows all of the 'ins and outs' of his own creation.
Yes they can.
I've already given you some reasons to believe. So have numerous other posters. Whether you choose to vote 'yes', 'no', or 'present' is entirely up to you.
Yeah. You are someone who claims to be an atheist...but you do not have the balls to answer two small, easy to answer, questions.When I'm evaluating evidence, to decide what I believe, usefulness isn't a factor.
I make no claim either way. There is not enough evidence, in my opinion, to prove either side.
Yes... IOW, faith. Faith is the basis for ANY religion.Circular reasoning after circular reasoning after circular reasoning.
There is sufficient documentary evidence that Jesus was a skilled faith healer.I never said Jesus didn't exist. I'm quite sure he existed. The rest....the "magic".... was a common claim in those days. Lots of people were allegedly performing miracles or at least hearing stories about miracles. Gods and humans were believed to procreate in some cases, creating a half & half.
None of that happens today. Coincidence?
No, it's simply considered an incomplete argument. I can say that a rock is evidence of the historicity of Jesus. Your response is "OK, I'm admitting that rock into evidence. Now, make your case."yet it's considered a fallacy without other arguments.
Is ZenMode still claiming that religious faith is false because it's based on faith?Yes... IOW, faith. Faith is the basis for ANY religion.
it's called the appeal to popularity fallacy.No, it's simply considered an incomplete argument. I can say that a rock is evidence of the historicity of Jesus. Your response is "OK, I'm admitting that rock into evidence. Now, make your case."
If you were to say "I'm not admitting the rock into evidence because I don't know how you intend to use it to support your argument which you cannot make without the evidence that I am not allowing" then the fallacy is on your end.

So...you do not assert there are no gods...
...and you do not assert it is more likely that there are no gods than that there is at least one...
...yet you identify yourself as an atheist.
Why?
should blasphemy laws be in effect?Belief in any god is a personal choice and a private matter.
I stated what I believe. What others believe is up to them.
Nope. I look at the situation and evidence and make a decision on what I believe and to what degree I believe it...like most anything else in the world.So...when you are evaluating evidence, you depend on your blind guesses.
Belief in any god is a personal choice and a private matter.
I stated what I believe.
Yes it is. But either you are here for discussion or you are just doing a benign form of trolling.What others believe is up to them.
But there are no first-hand accounts.There is sufficient documentary evidence that Jesus was a skilled faith healer.
... unfortunately, not because of any first-hand accounts.Greek and Jewish sources refer to him as a sorcerer or practitioner of Egyptian magic.
They don't have any first-hand accounts to support the notion that Jesus was anything more than an urban legend. There are those, however, who have faith that Jesus was a real person who was the Messiah, and they believe he could heal.It's surprising these Greco-Jewish sources don't just say Jesus was a fraud and a faker.
Which is insufficient to place it into the "historical" category but sufficient to convince many to adopt the faith.Bringing Lazurus back from the dead is poorly attested (only appearing in one gospel)
... for those who do not believe as do those of the faith.Walking on water is baloney,
Catholics outside of Mississippi do not subscribe to a literal reading of the Bible.and the Catholics claim it is metaphorical.
This is a nifty meta-belief. You believe that some people believed. That's deep.I believe the preponderance of evidence is that the followers of Jesus genuinely believed they saw him after the crucifixion.
Just as the eleven witnesses genuinely believed they physically handled the thin, metallic, engraved golden plates; It wasn't just a coordinated fairy tale they invented while drinking bottles of wine.It wasn't just a coordinated fairy tale they invented while drinking bottles of wine.
Well, then, it must be true. Are you sure that even he says it?Even the esteemed Atheist New Testament scholar Bart Ehrmam says ...
Only what Bart Ehrmam says is absolutely true.The only question that then remains is, were the followers of Jesus were just suffering a mass hallucination; or did Jesus not die on the cross; or did something else strange happen.
Yeah, that is pretty much what I said. When dealing with the issue of the REALITY of existence, in particular "whether there are any gods or not"...you depend on your blind guesses.Nope. I look at the situation and evidence and make a decision on what I believe and to what degree I believe it...like most anything else in the world.
You never consider anyone else's evidence after you have been told what to believe by the people who do your thinking for you.Nope. I look at the situation and evidence
You swapped the order. First you are told what you are to believe and how to think, then you dismiss all differing views.and make a decision on what I believe
Is that so? Other gospels mention other instances of Jesus bringing people back from the dead (Jairus's daughter, for one example). If Jesus could do it with other people, why not Lazarus? And that's not even getting into the accounts of Jesus HIMSELF rising from the dead.Bringing Lazurus back from the dead is poorly attested (only appearing in one gospel) and is undoubtedly a quasi-fictional account.
People walk on water all the time, Cypress... It's very easy to do.Walking on water is baloney,
I'll let Catholics speak to what they claim about it (I'm not a Catholic).and the Catholics claim it is metaphorical.
Yes, they were VERY convinced that they had seen Jesus after the crucifixion. Many of them were even KILLED (martyred) for expressing that belief, and they stuck with that belief even unto death (instead of renouncing it and remaining alive).I believe the preponderance of evidence is that the followers of Jesus genuinely believed they saw him after the crucifixion. It wasn't just a coordinated fairy tale they invented while drinking bottles of wine.
The words "esteemed", "scholar", and Bart Ehrmann should NEVER be used in the same sentence.Even the esteemed Atheist New Testament scholar Bart Ehrmam says the disciples seem to have genuinely believed they saw Jesus after the crucifixion.
MANY were willing to be martyred for what they claim to have seen.Some were willing to be martyred for what they claim to have seen.
I doubt it.The only question that then remains is, were the followers of Jesus were just suffering a mass hallucination?
I strongly doubt it.; or did Jesus not die on the cross?;
This. I believe that Jesus actually DID rise from the dead (IOW, having authority over death). If God was capable of creating the heavens and the earth (IOW, having authority over all things), then it stands to reason that he would likewise be capable of rising from the dead (having authority over death).or did something else strange happen?