I'm not making God anything other than what He is by definition. I think the likelyhood of an incontingent God can be touched upon by the scientific method. If the Bible is true about the nature of God, there are some observable things we would expect to see in our universe, like that it has a beginning and has signs of intent. But I don't think that there's anything about the character of God that says that He necessarily exists in all possible worlds or that He can be assumed to exist by default. As for if we start from the Christian position, I think we can only agree to disagree.There is no "default" position that says that, it is a methodological assumption. "either He exists or He doesn't" is not a position, it is a proposition, and I've already showed why that is invalid in the case of the existence of God. You cannot make the existence of God propositional, because then you are already making His character and existence subject to other axioms (principle of causality, for example). Unless you believe that the Christian God is something other than what He is, you cannot but start from the point of His existence. Remember, apologetics is a Christian task, and we are therefore required to start from the Christian position. There is nothing to be gained to start from an agnostic or atheistic position.
I don't see why I should believe that you've considered all approaches any more than the evidentialist has. And I'm not trying to make insults directed at anyone, I'm only trying to address the arguements.Also, your statement about ability seems to be an insult or slight directed at other Christians. It not a question of ability, it is a matter of being properly logical, reasoned and in accordance with the character of God. Do you honestly think that we have not considered all methodologies and approaches?
I already did many times in my previous posts in this thread as well as the other thread about presuppositional apologetics.As for your charge of "That is completely fallacious., please prove it. Start by showing how you know the meaning of the words you use in that statement, and be sure to account for your premises in any following argument.
Here's the problem. You're assuming right from the start that there exists a being who is incontingent. There can be non existent things that are non contingent by definition. So it doesn't follow that things necessarily exist because it's in the definition.If God does not necessarily exist, then He is not God. I am surprised you would even propose that. The Christian God, by definition, is not contingent. Given your way of reasoning, I can see why you may say that though, as your methodology has to make Him propositionally dependent, and therefore contingent.
For instance, I can imagine in an interdimensional sphere made of solid gold. This sphere has always existed, is uncaused, is incontingent, and exists outside of our universe. It is infinitely simple and has no parts subject to contingency, it's goldness and it's sphericalness are inseperatable parts of it's nature. Does this sphere of gold necessarily exist? I would say it doesn't yet it's incontingent by definition and is not subject to the scientific method. Yet it does not necessarily exist.
We'll I've been reading your posts in their entirety and I haven't seen where you have done this and where I haven't addressed it.We know that absolute truths exist, as I demonstrated previously and you chose to gloss over.
What's the alternative? Do you have a better method? I've been a Christian for 11 years and I've never recieved a revelation or knowledge directly from God or anything of the sort. I don't think we Christians have better ways of evaluating truth than non-Christians.Yes. Is the question of God's existence a scientific question? Again, to state that it is, is to make God subject to the contingency of the scientific method, which in itself is a presupposition on your part, in addition to presupposing that the scientific method is the only way by which we can acquire knowledge or evaluate truth claims. If you wish to do that, you need to prove the validity of the scientific method by its own devices and methodology.
I do not think I've done this.While you are campaigning strongly against presuppositional apologetics, you have a whole bunch of your own presuppositions, as continuously pointed out, which you do not account for. You just assume and carry on, while holding presups to a different standard.
Well you're building a strawman by saying that I'm assuming neutrality to gain favor with the world. In reality it's because I think it is a more sound logic than what you're proposing. We as apologists don't have to pretend that we are 100% sure of our beliefs. You can believe something 95% and still make efforts to show evidence for it's truthhood. In fact I think non-believers will be more willing to listen because we are being intellectually honest with them and ourselves.As Christians, we are set apart by God. Assuming neutrality to gain favor with the world is at the expense of refusing to be set apart by God, and is to remove the antithesis between believer and unbeliever. It is to remove the very grounds of the Gospel.
I'm not 100% sure that I will go to be with God when I die, and I'm not going to pretend that I am. I also think that no one is 100% sure, even some will say they are. There's no way you can know 100% untill you're actually there. But I believe it is true compared to the alternative. I say I most certainly can still take part in apologetics. I'm argueing for what I believe to be true, not what I know with 100% certainty to be true. If I'm about 95% sure it's true, I think I can still tell people why I think it's true. Again there's no need to live in a world where all beliefs need to be known beyond the shadow of a doubt.Seraph, What August talks about here:
Also, if you do not believe that you can know 100% if God exists, how can you know if you are saved? We know that absolute truths exist, as I demonstrated previously and you chose to gloss over.
Hits at exactly what I was thinking when reading your arguments. If you're not sure if God exists, then how can you be sure of your salvation? If you're not sure of your salvation, then you can't argue using apologetics, can you?
Cam you be 100% sure that you aren't a brain in a jar in some other reality being fed experiences through a machine? No, but yo aren't going to believe that you are and you're going to believe the alternative.