snowbird:
If you can accept the fact that you came from something smaller than the question mark at the end of this sentence, why can't you accept the fact that some things, from our standpoint, are simply inexplicable?
Because that fact is something we have discovered by virtue of not accepting that things are inexplicable, but through examining and hypothesising and testing and probing. As a result we know not just in broad principle but in exquisite detail where babies come from. By not just accepting "stork theory" or "cabbage patch theory" our lives are enriched and the sum total of knowledge has increased. This approach is the exact opposite of what you seem to advocate.
The example you cited of Jesus' multiplying the loaves and fish was a miracle - neither you nor I can explain it, but that doesn't mean it couldn't and didn't happen.
True, but that's not the place to start. The first question to ask is: Did it happen? Well, did it? Maybe it did, maybe it didn't. Maybe it was completely made up, maybe it was an exaggeration, maybe it was a case of human generosity, and maybe it was a bona fide miracle. Is there any way to know? Why do you automatically take what seems to be the least likely explanation possible?
I believe it happened. My convictions are that as Creator, Jesus could overwrite, as it were, the creative process. What seems like the end to us may be only the beginning for Him.
Bu why do you believe that? Certainly not because there's any evidence that it happened. In fact, why do you believe that this Jesus character not only existed but created the universe? Again, not because there's any evidence for it. This is where you usually play the "faith" card but what is faith other than believing something for no reason? To me, it seems like a lazy copout. You've picked your beliefs, and when it's pointed out that the events you believe happened are impossible and have no evidence to support them, you merely claim that nobody can prove they didn't happen and that there's a special kind of magic involved that allows impossible things to happen. Do you at least see why some of us have difficulty accepting that?
Compared to creating a universe, what's multiplying a few loaves and fish?
Not a lot. In fact, it's such a trivial parlour trick that it's hard to imagine that a being who created a quadrillion solar systems even bothered to do it.
No, I haven't abandoned my reasoning abilities. I just know where to draw the line.
Of course. You couldn't function if you completely abandoned reason. You'd quickly starve to death or get hit by a bus. What many of us find fascinating is why a normally rational person is happily and defiantly irrational when it comes to the big questions. You'd check the identity of someone who came to read your meter but when it comes to who made the universe you're happy just to believe the first thing you were told.