cslewislover wrote:Jac, you seem to be getting a little overly excited by my posts. What I'm getting at is, there is a certain point where a person knows enough, I think, and has to come to terms with what they know and make a choice. But at the same time, it is not just up to us, God's will is involved too. Just as you said at the end of your last post. To me, Kioku seems to actually know a lot already. If he wants to know more, of course that's great and wonderful. But where is his will in this, and God's will? When does submission of the will and the intellect to the Lord happen? I'm thinking of these things.
I'm hardly excited, csll . . . just posting here at work.
In any case, you and I simply have a fundamental difference in the nature of belief. You think it is a choice. I don't. I have a huge, massive problem with the idea that submission of our will to God has anything to do with faith or salvation. That's a human work, and we aren't saved by works. We're saved by faith. Faith, as I defined it in the other thread, is trust in someone or something else's ability to perform according their nature, and that, usually, based on evidence. There must be, then, persuasion along with the will to rely. But persuasion is passive, and thus, I can't "muster up" faith. I just don't believe it works that way. If I could just change my mind about belief, I would. But that's part of the problem with belief. It is what it is, regardless of what we want it to be.
Kioku wrote:I've been raised Lutheran and my grandfather was a Catholic. I'm most certainly not a closet atheist who came here to pick fun. In fact, this was the only place I felt safe enough to ask these questions.
Forgive those of us who are just a bit gunshy, Kioku. I'm sure you can imagine the number of people we get who say that they are real questioners but really have an agenda. In any case, I thoroughly believe, as does pretty much everyone else here, I bet, that you mean what you say and aren't out just to pull a debate.
Regarding the rest of your post, I think it's clear--and it has been acknowledged in this thread--that you have been introduced to some of the material. No one thinks you are ignorant. My central point, the one I keep on returning to over and over again, is that you need to grapple with the hard evidence. I know you have not exhausted it because men who have spent their entire lives explaining it have not exhausted it. Further, from your brief comments about the resurrection (and the fact you have not yet read the books I suggested, which are absolutely standard) tells me that you haven't yet thoroughly investigated the HISTORICAL evidence for its reality. There is nothing wrong with that. It just gives you a place to go looking.
Finally, let's take this statement:
You wrote:I have to agree that morals do in fact exist.
Now, this is a huge place to start from. Let's forget the argument about whose morals are right. The very fact that you believe morals exist will require you to acknowledge that a MORAL God exists (which, ultimately, will require you to believe in an afterlife).
The reason is simple: if God does not exist, then morals don't actually exist. There would be no such thing as right or wrong. There would only be personal preference. I could not even say, "Well I think that so and so is wrong." The problem there is that while, yes, it does deal with personal preference, it is still a personal preference about
reality itself. But what would it mean for something to be right or wrong in reality itself, outside of what someone thinks? Such a notion is meaningless. So we must agree that no one human being is the source of morality.
Who, then, is?
It must be God. More specifically, for reality itself to have a moral aspect, then morality must be embedded into existence itself. But what would you call a pure moral existence except God? Existence cannot cease to exist, and thus, such a being would be eternal and would be the support of all beings in the universe.
So, it is, again, evident, that if you believe that morals are real--that they are a part of reality in itself--the next logical and necessary step is to acknowledge the existence of a MORAL God. That is, a God who actually cares about Right and Wrong. C. S. Lewis ably demonstrates that such a Being would Himself be Morally Perfect, the very notion of Righteousness, Goodness, and Holiness in itself. And against that, are you perfectly righteous, good, or holy? No, and I'm sure you are aware of that. Before such Goodness, your faults are magnified.
Further, such Goodness would be forced to judge and condemn your evil (for Justice is Good, and perfect Goodness would be perfect Justice, and Justice demands the punishment of evil). You and I and everyone on this board, then, stand condemned before such a God. Nothing you can do would make up for the fact that you have done evil, that you are infinitely more evil than it is Good, no matter how good you think you are. Thus, you, me, and everyone else on this board, stands condemned.
How to resolve that problem???
Christianity says that this God, because He is also Love (love is Good, remember!), became a man and took that condemnation for us. "God so love the world that He gave His only Son, that everyone who believes in Him will not perish, but will have everlasting life." Jesus' death on the cross took that punishment; His resurrection gives us life in this perfect God.
So, your belief in morals, if taken to their proper conclusion, will actually take you all the way to Christ.