Doodsmack said:
my entire point is that what you just told me is a part of the invention. to believe that "god disseminated his uncomprehendable wisdom in the form of the comprehendable old testament" is to believe what other people have told you. yes you have come up with a possibility to explain why it might not be an invention. but, in fact, that possiblity is an integral part of the invention which serves to legitimize the invention. everything you believe about god and his nature you take on faith - it is the testimony of other people. as i said, you can define god however you want, because he is a product of your imagination. thus you feel that you can counter anything that is thrown at you. that is the hallmark of a religion - it is the final word, it is absolute and impenetrable. i don't think it is useful for humans to pretend that they possess the final word.
For the Theist, it IS the final word, and the final word is not an 'invention'. This steadfast belief (faith) is what seperates Theists from Agnostics. An Atheist would assert that religion is merely an 'invention'. I think that it has long since been established that there are clearly defined differences between these groups.
Your assertation that my faith is simply an 'invention' is your opinion as an Atheist. There is however, a significant difference between merely expressing an opinion and asserting that your opinion is the absolute universal truth. My explanation(s) have served only to locally legitimize my beliefs (as a Theist) not merely as an 'invention', but rather as a steadfast faith in uncomprehendable truths elucidated by divine revelation-- a revelation authorized by God and transmitted through the action of the Holy Spirit. And in this respect TO THE THEIST, it is not an 'invention', for the prophets were not the source but rather an intermediate.
As they should be, my assertations of the legitimacy of faith is applicable only to Theists. They are not universally applied.
To the Theist, religion is an institution of a common belief in certain incomprehendable truths-- which by definition, cannot originate from that which can not accommodate them without divine revelation. It is however, quite obvious that the
Athiest would assume that there is no divine entity to reveal these truths, and therefore they are merely an 'invention' by the individual. That has been established-- it is what defines atheism and what distinguishes them from the Theists. So how exactly is what you are telling me new? Unless that is, you are claiming your ideology is the absolute truth? To that I would say that's wonderful, that is your opinion and that is what makes us clearly different in the Theological spectrum.
Tell me, can you prove the
universal illigitimacy of my faith (among Theists, Agnostics, and Athiests) any more than I can prove its universal legitimacy? If you answered 'yes', there is no reason for you to be partaking in discussions or debates. If you answered 'no', the boundaries that demarcate the uncertainty of your beliefs and mine are becomming clearer and clearer. So inasmuch as my beliefs require faith in the acknowledgement of the deific, as do yours in its denunciation.
With regard to your labeling my faith as a personal adaptation to an ideology formulated by another, I'm guessing that you would deny that there are gradients of agreement and disagreement with respect to every aspect of doctrine within a given faith? Furthermore, I'm assuming you'd doubt the individual's ability to reason? Before you make the accusation that we are all following the lead of the person in front of us, you should know that Christians believe in two phases of divine revelation: the first being God's divine revelation to the world initially through the prophets which was completed and perfected by the Christ-event, and the second being the process of divine revelation to the individual. Divine revelation to the individual establishes steadfast faith, is initiated by an interaction with the Holy Spirit, and is solidified in our subsequent concurrence which is governed by free-will.