I've been thinking alot lately about the minute little details that xtians get into to try to prove the existence of their god.
They say god is everywhere, but you cant see him anywhere unless you know how to look. Science proves god if you look at it through this particular lens or interpret it in this particular way.
I guess the point is that, if god is everywhere and in everything, shows up in science all the time, has left all these obscure little clues to his existence and readily opens the door if we only knock, then why is there even a discussion here? Isn't this god so obvious that we shouldn't even have to have this discussion?
I can't understand why, if this god is so obvious, the xtians try to find all these twisted, obscure ways to prove he exists. It seems a bit silly and self-defeating to me. If you have to work that hard to prove something exists and you still fail on an epic level, at what point do you start to question all of this nonsense and begin looking at real facts and evidence to find out what the truth really is?
They say god is everywhere, but you cant see him anywhere unless you know how to look. Science proves god if you look at it through this particular lens or interpret it in this particular way.
I guess the point is that, if god is everywhere and in everything, shows up in science all the time, has left all these obscure little clues to his existence and readily opens the door if we only knock, then why is there even a discussion here? Isn't this god so obvious that we shouldn't even have to have this discussion?
I can't understand why, if this god is so obvious, the xtians try to find all these twisted, obscure ways to prove he exists. It seems a bit silly and self-defeating to me. If you have to work that hard to prove something exists and you still fail on an epic level, at what point do you start to question all of this nonsense and begin looking at real facts and evidence to find out what the truth really is?
"Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the universe." -Einstein