God: the central question

by ixthis 46 Replies latest watchtower beliefs

  • ixthis
    ixthis

    Of all the issues affecting every person's picture of reality, nothing is more fundamental than questions about God.

    • Is there one God, Creator and Sovereign of all?
    • Could there be more than one god? Or no God at all?
    • If there is a God (or gods), then what is that God (or gods) like?

    Nothing determines your worldview-and the course of your life-more than how you answer those questions. Yet some atheists like to make light of the God question. Richard Dawkins brushed it aside this way in The God Delusion:

    "I have found it an amusing strategy, when asked whether I am an atheist, to point out that the questioner is also an atheist when considering Zeus, Apollo, Amon-Ra, Mithras, Baal, Thor, Wotan, the Golden Calf and the Flying Spaghetti Monster. I just go one god further."

    Its force (since it is) depends on the idea that in counting gods, as in counting inches on a ruler, the distance between one and zero is no different than the distance between two and one. Just tick off the gods one by one, and gradually, without fanfare, you find yourself believing not in ten gods, not two, not one, but finally no gods at all. Knocking off that last one is just as easy and inconsequential as subtracting the several before.

    Dawkins and his followers think this is amusing.

    Suppose we were go out next week to count unicorns trotting down the street, and we came up with a grand total of zero. That wouldn't mean much, would it? Suppose instead we counted a pair of unicorns: it would be an instant worldwide sensation. But then what if we counted exactly one unicorn? Would its significance be halfway between zero unicorns and two? Certainly not. Whether we saw one or two (or a hundred), still it would be all over the news. The distance between two unicorns and one is not at all the same as between one and zero.

    Now, unicorns in any would make quite a splash, still the world would mostly be the same with or without them. That's not so for God.

    In worldview terms, our view of God has everything to do with how we see the world we live in and the decisions we make every day. Nothing could be more different than a worldview with God in it, and one without.

    • the difference God makes in the Universe
    • the difference God makes every day

    We who believe in one God see all of creation as permeated with personality, packed with moral meaning, and filled with eternal purpose. One God is not just slightly less than two, by the way. There's a huge difference between monotheism and any kind of polytheism. There is no cosmic battle going on between deities, no ultimate contest over what's really right or what's best. These things are forever settled in heaven, without strife or competition. The universe is suffused with God's goodness, even where it's hard to see it, and it is heading toward a good and perfect end.

    Atheists, on the other hand, see reality as the product of mindless, impersonal, and purposeless processes. That's the difference "one god further makes," and it's huge. Humans (in this view) differ from other animals only in our complexity and self-awareness. If there is justice in the world, it is defined only by humans. In the world we live in, justice is carried out imperfectly at best. Most wrongs will never really be made right. In the end it could hardly matter, since we're all going to just go away into nothingness when we die.

    Goodness (according to atheism) is a matter of human judgment, and nothing higher than that. It's impossible even to imagine how goodness and justice could have existed before humans came on the scene, and what those terms really mean is still up for grabs. Some atheistic philosophers even think that self-awareness, justice, and goodness are strictly illusionary.

    Do not think that this is just obscure philosophy: It has a profound effect on how we live.

    Lets illustrate that by focusing on some of today's contentious "culture war" questions:

    Christians believe that when God created the world and called it good, right from the beginning there were male and female and there was marriage:

    So God created man in his own image,
    in the image of God he created him;
    male and female he created them.

    (Genesis 1:27, ESV)

    Therefore a man shall leave his father and his mother and hold fast to his wife, and they shall become one flesh.
    (Genesis 2:24, ESV)

    Right from the start, these passages begin clearly to define humanness, manhood, womanhood, and marriage, based on the way we were created. Our Creator is also our sovereign King, so to attempt to alter these things would be to rebel against him in both his goodness and his rightful authority.

    Some, however, see God as having no part in what it means to be human. That being the case, naturally they see human nature and ethics as matters for us to figure out for ourselves. We can redefine marriage if we want. We can decide for ourselves at what stage in a baby's life there might be moral ramifications to killing him or her.

    And here we see how crucial the God question is: If one is going to decide there is no God, those are perfectly sensible things to think as a result.

    Suppose, after all, that there were no God, no creator, nothing higher to decide what it means to be human or how best to live. Why then shouldn't we take responsibility for such matters ourselves? Who else could do it? If we decided it was time to change the meaning of marriage, who could overrule us? Who could find fault with us?

    The big "culture war" issues, then, have everything to do with our views on whether God exists, whether he has spoken on these matters, and whether we're responsible to listen to what he has spoken. At some risk of over-simplifying the opposing positions, it comes down to this: one side considers these things to be ours to decide, the other side says no, these are matters that God has determined for us from the beginning. As Brad Bright puts it, God is the issue.

    These matters are sometimes described as questions of "traditional values." I can't agree with that approach. They go much deeper than that, down to the way each of us views the very core of reality. If God exists as described in the Bible, then abortion, same-sex "marriage," embryonic stem-cell research, and so on are clearly wrong. If not, then whether they're right or wrong is ours to decide, and no decision we made could possibly be wrong. It all depends on whether there is a God, and what he is like.

    God at the Center of Worldview

    Of course the situation is not the same for God as it is for Zeus, Apollo, Amon-Ra, and the Flying Spaghetti Monster. I'm convinced there is plenty of reason to believe God is, and that he is as the Bible describes him, and that if there were no God, none of us would be here asking these questions anyway! The question of God is the most fundamental issue in worldview-and in all of life.

    HT: BreakPoint

  • still thinking
    still thinking

    nice post ixthis...enjoyed reading that

  • wobble
    wobble

    I don't think God matters at all.

  • ProdigalSon
    ProdigalSon

    Interesting. Neal Donald Walsch, author of Conversations With God, just posted this on his blog yesterday.....

    http://www.theglobalconversation.com/?p=272

    The most important question in human history....

    I am now going to answer, in this blog, the most important question in human history.

    What does God want?

    For many people that answer will be startling.

    Even for those who aren’t completely surprised, the answer will be dramatically different. It will not even come close to the ideas that people usually hear about God.

    Humanity’s ideas about God produce humanity’s ideas about life and about people. Dramatically different ideas about God will produce dramatically different ideas about life and about people. If the world could use anything right now, that’s it.

    We stand today on the brink of a global cultural war. The opening volleys have already been exchanged. The really major clashes, the unthinkable FutureWorld battles, may be yet to come.

    Given the direction in which humanity appears to be moving, it may seem as though this larger conflict is inevitable. It isn’t. There’s something very powerful that can stop it: dramatically different ideas about God and dramatically different ideas about life and about people.

    Such ideas, if accepted and adopted, will produce dramatically different ways of living and being. Values will change. Priorities will change. Power structures and power-holders will change.

    When all is said and done what will change…or, at least, what could change…is humanity’s Cultural Story. And that is what we are “up to” here at The Global Conversation. We are “up to” changing our Cultural Story; proposing and co-writing, with you, a new one.

    Are you up to this with us? If so, stick around here now….visit this blogsite often…because I am going to be offering you here a new idea — actually, many new ideas — surrounding what our New Cultural Story could look like.

    Chief among these are our ideas about What God Wants.

    I think that we desperately need to change our thoughts about that. Now for people who really want things to stay the way they are, this could be a dangerous idea. Because the new idea that is going to be proposed here could change everything. And change can be a dangerous thing to suggest, not only around people of power (to whom change is the ultimate threat), but also around ordinary people (for whom change is threatening simply because it leads to the unknown).

    Former U.S. Vice President Al Gore had it exactly right in a September, 2004 interview in The New Yorker:

    “In a world of disconcertig change, when large and complex forces threaten familiar and comfortable guideposts, the natural impulse is to grab hold of the tree trunk that seems to have the deepest roots and hold on for dear life and never question the possibility that it’s not going to be the source of your salvation.

    The final part of that sentence (italics mine) tells the tale of humanity’s belief about God and life in 15 words. Mr. Gore confirms this with his next statement. “And the deepest roots,” he says, “are in philosophical and religious traditions that go way back.”

    Al Gore’s insight leaves us all facing a thunderous question: Is the way forward to be found by going way back?

    The answer is, no.

    And while, as the former Vice President notes, we never question the possibility that our philosophical and religious traditions are not going to be the source of our salvation—presumably because we feel threatened by such questioning—could there be times when not to question those traditions presents an even larger threat?

    The answer is, yes. And this is one of those times.

    So stick around. Come back here every other day at least. We’re going on a roller coaster ride — and you’re in the front car!

  • cantleave
    cantleave

    God is irrelevant, as are leprechauns and fairies.

  • cofty
    cofty

    Tom Gilson laments that without god there are no absolute standards of ethics then he goes on to illustrate this with the example of heterosexual marriage.

    Go and take a poll of beleivers and ask them what they think god thinks about homosexuality or stem cell research or just war or the role of women etc etc

    Funny how god always agrees with our personal predjudes

  • OnTheWayOut
    OnTheWayOut
    Nothing determines your worldview-and the course of your life-more than how you answer those questions.

    That is so wrong. I know plenty of agnostics and believers of various sorts. Many many many people live as if the God of their beliefs doesn't interfere in their daily lives nor their morals. While it is true that many believers carry more guilt for violating some supposed rules from their god, that is not universally true.

  • designs
    designs

    First off Dawkins does not 'Brush it aside', that is just your wishful take on the matter.

  • unshackled
    unshackled

    god is a waste of time

  • designs
    designs

    'there is no battle between gods'..........ixthis you must read the Bible on Pogo Sticks.

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