I can tell this conversation is way over my head now just by reading the last page (over my head because I can't even really tell who is arguing for which side), but here's my two cents on it.
I went to Catholic school for 9 years and was spoon-fed the usual weird religious stories over and over before I just thought about it too much and decided I didn't believe any of it. HOWEVER, any of the students in my classes who would ask a teacher/preacher/etc about any of the stories that sounded ridiculous would get the answer that the story is just metaphorical, ie. Adam and Eve.
That being said, most modern Christians that I've spoken to (including my Biology professor, which I thought was really interesting) have more lenient views on the stories. For example, they don't believe god made humans out of dirt like play dough and voila, there we were, but rather that through "intelligent design" helped play a part in the evolution process. If you really look at some of the things living creatures have evolved, they're pretty damn convenient, and a lot of our planet forming and evolving was blind luck after blind luck after blind luck that allowed life at all.
I don't believe in the typical "god" that watches us but doesn't show himself or do anything like santa clause but we're supposed to believe or we don't get presents. Another thing that always bugged me that my Bio prof brought up is the big bang theory, which is usually people's argument against the creation story. We all know before the big bang, there was nothing. No space, no empty universe, just absolutely nothing. Then there was an explosion of some sort, and the universe was created and expanded from there.
What exploded? At what point in the nothing and nothing and nothing backwards into infinity was there that one tiny particle with enough energy to explode?
I'm not saying that any "god" snapped and voila, there it was, but I do know that there's some kind of things going on that we don't and prob never will understand, excuse the cliche phrase. I'm more inclined to call it "fate" than "god", since I find it hard to believe something omnipotent that supposedly cares about life just simply won't show itself or give any signs that it exists. Why test our "faith"? Why screw us over when we don't believe blindly? Just to be petty or childish? Seems like a silly concept for a deity, so it's easier for me to believe it's nothing particularly sentient.
Anyway like I said sorry this wasn't quite as intelligent as the current convo is but I just have to get my thoughts out of my head when things like this come up even when I'm way too late, lol.
I went to Catholic school for 9 years and was spoon-fed the usual weird religious stories over and over before I just thought about it too much and decided I didn't believe any of it. HOWEVER, any of the students in my classes who would ask a teacher/preacher/etc about any of the stories that sounded ridiculous would get the answer that the story is just metaphorical, ie. Adam and Eve.
That being said, most modern Christians that I've spoken to (including my Biology professor, which I thought was really interesting) have more lenient views on the stories. For example, they don't believe god made humans out of dirt like play dough and voila, there we were, but rather that through "intelligent design" helped play a part in the evolution process. If you really look at some of the things living creatures have evolved, they're pretty damn convenient, and a lot of our planet forming and evolving was blind luck after blind luck after blind luck that allowed life at all.
I don't believe in the typical "god" that watches us but doesn't show himself or do anything like santa clause but we're supposed to believe or we don't get presents. Another thing that always bugged me that my Bio prof brought up is the big bang theory, which is usually people's argument against the creation story. We all know before the big bang, there was nothing. No space, no empty universe, just absolutely nothing. Then there was an explosion of some sort, and the universe was created and expanded from there.
What exploded? At what point in the nothing and nothing and nothing backwards into infinity was there that one tiny particle with enough energy to explode?
I'm not saying that any "god" snapped and voila, there it was, but I do know that there's some kind of things going on that we don't and prob never will understand, excuse the cliche phrase. I'm more inclined to call it "fate" than "god", since I find it hard to believe something omnipotent that supposedly cares about life just simply won't show itself or give any signs that it exists. Why test our "faith"? Why screw us over when we don't believe blindly? Just to be petty or childish? Seems like a silly concept for a deity, so it's easier for me to believe it's nothing particularly sentient.
Anyway like I said sorry this wasn't quite as intelligent as the current convo is but I just have to get my thoughts out of my head when things like this come up even when I'm way too late, lol.