Justhuman wrote:Though... the real issue was me being irrational, which I still think I'm not. I' ll try and write some lenghty text about why...
I mentioned previously, either the Christian is correct and the Atheist irrational, or the Atheist is correct and the Christian is irrational. Both can't be rational, and by rational, I mean seeing the truth clearly via reason (rationality). As a Christian then, my hands are logically tied to the position that Atheists are irrational.
As I hope you've seen in our discussion, it's not that I disrespect you, or your opinions. It's not that I don't believe you're a rational human being. Rather it's that your rational faculties are being affected in a manner so far as your inability to perceive God is concerned.
Understand, the lyrics in Amazing Grace, particularly the "
was blind, but now I see." What does Newton mean here? What did he see? What happened that allowed him to see? Something about amazing grace I'm guessing, but what is this grace of which he sings?
Here the Christian believes that we are all in darkness, all of us. We all begin life with a veil over our eyes which hides the truth and knowledge of God. Sin is seen as the primary reason, our hearts desire to seek after ourselves and turn away from God. None of us truly want to even seek God. If true, then those who don't believe God exist, their ability to see is clouded. Their minds are made up, their reasoning leads them to non-God conclusions. Such can't reason to God for their hearts cloud their rational faculties from correctly working to perceive what is so obvious to many believers, namely God exists.
I've written in the past on this board that I believe God chooses to remove this darkened veil to those He chooses to reveal Himself clearly to. As a Christian, coming to Christ is seen as key to this. Many of the Christian posters here I dare say have had an immediate awareness to God in their life and His existence in the world around them. This may not necessarily be a strong spiritual experience of a mystical kind, but rather a spiritual perception. Upon conversion, the world looks different, makes more sense, God becomes evident. Something like this is often what is reported by many new Christians upon coming to Christ.
This explains why when Christians look at the world they see evidence for God all the way through it, whereas when a non-Christian/Atheist looks at the world they see absolutely no evidence, perhaps mainly a cold, cruel and even chaotic world. A well known theologian Jonathan Edwards believed certain moral and spiritual qualifications were required to appreciate the force of evidence for religious truths. Another theologian, William Wainwright, building on top of Edwards puts it down the "properly disposed heart" required to rationally appreciate God in the world.
Consider the following so far as human "reason" is concerned. 1) Many theologians and philosophers believe the evidence for God proves His existence. On the opposite end we have 2) many secular philosophers believe there is no significant evidence to warrant or justify belief in God's existence. Both sides are equally rational and intelligent, many have a deep understanding with the various arguments. Yet, both sides reach diametrically opposed conclusions. Why is this? Shouldn't reason allow us to know?
The only conclusion is that one's side reasoning ability is impaired. So, as a Christian, there seems to me much merit to Wainwright's ideas of a "properly disposed heart" being required that allows one's rational faculties to be correctly aligned to see the truth. Thus, Atheists are irrational because their rational faculties are impaired from seeing the truth due to the condition of their hearts.
On the other hand, the story from the Atheist side through the likes of Freud and Kant, is that Christians experience an illusion or delusion of sorts. They believe in their "religious experience" because they really want it to be true because of psychological factors. Therefore, the argument is that Christians' rational faculties are "tainted" if you will. They're irrational as such, believing in what is "rationally" not there.
You see, the two only honest positions are as follows:
- If you're Atheist to believe Christians are irrational so far as God is concerned.
- If you're Christian to believe Atheists are irrational so far as God is concerned.
There's no politically correct answer that allows us to say both sides are rational. One side is clearly being irrational. The question is, which side? And, I dare say if no belief in God leads us to reject much of what we perceive is real, for example, that we have a free will, and as such a belief in "goodness", "justice", "fairness", "love" and the like... that it isn't me who is being irrational.
Furthermore, I have had spiritual experiences, a new-found perception, which I dare say the majority of Atheists haven't had. Imagine if everyone around you saw the world in black and white, yet you saw colour. You point at the rainbow and exclaim, "
Wow, doesn't that look colourful!" Others might look at you oddly, and if you tried to explain it to them, think you're pulling their leg or delusional. But, how can you now deny what you see so clearly? No one would be able to convince you that the rainbow is truly just black and white. Given the people around you haven't experienced both "black and white" and "colour", it also seems to me they are speaking from a lesser vantage point about that which they do not understand making you more justified in your knowledge of colour.