Re: [asa] Greetings from a new member

From: George Murphy <gmurphy@raex.com>
Date: Mon Apr 09 2007 - 23:14:13 EDT

Note of course that I included the qualification "in the vast majority of
cases." But the reality is that in that vast majority of cases phenomena
are found to conform to regular patterns which science can discover and
require no invocation of God to explain them. The best argument for God -
specifically, for the God revealed in the cross-resurrection event - is not
that inexplicable things happen but that such a belief gives some point to
what is an otherwise "pointless" universe (Weinberg).

The only sign you get is the sign of Jonah.

Shalom
George
http://web.raex.com/~gmurphy/

----- Original Message -----
From: "Merv" <mrb22667@kansas.net>
To: "George Murphy" <gmurphy@raex.com>; <asa@calvin.edu>
Sent: Monday, April 09, 2007 7:52 PM
Subject: Re: [asa] Greetings from a new member

>I am actually replying to one of George's remarks below -- but all the
>same: Glad to have you with us, Christine. Some of us lurk more than we
>post, so keep in mind the audience size could be larger than the "prolific
>posters." -- somebody here recently compared his learning from ASA posts
>to 'trying to drink from a fire hose.' I like that --
> it's true.
>
> George, while the God working 'in, with & under' the activities of
> Scriptures matches daily experience, atheists smirk when they hear it. A
> God who mysteriously and consistently chooses to remain concealed just out
> of our observational reach is, oh so convenient for us theists. While I
> can respect (from our Christian perspective) that God values trust and
> faith without bludgeoning us with direct knowledge and sight, there is
> also Biblical precedent for God wanting his work to be visibly attributed
> to him. I just read about Gideon asking (a couple times no less) for
> the sign of the dew on the flax which was a significant enough deviation
> from the normal ways of things that Gideon was convinced. Or again, when
> God tells Gideon to send away most of their army because, at its larger
> size, they wouldn't give God the credit for the victory. God apparently
> wanted enough deviation from natural ways so that He would get the credit
> or so that it could be effective as a sign to somebody. Would you say
> that such things only apply to miracles (like the signs in John, and the
> resurrection itself)? How do you reconcile the incognito version of God
> with the 'signs and wonders' worker of Biblical times?
>
> --Merv (a kindred doubt & faith wrestler right along with you,
> Christine.)
>
> George Murphy wrote:
>>
>> At least in the vast majority of cases God works "in, with & under" the
>> activities of creatures so that we don't see God at work directly.
>> Luther called the created things through which God acts "the masks of our
>> Lord God, behind which He wants to remain concealed and do all things."
>> This means, I think, that we shouldn't
>> be surprised if, among other things, human beings don't contain any
>> special "supernatural" component.
>>
>> 2. The historicity of Biblical events also remains a
>> challenge. Although I've never taken the Bible
>> literally, or have assumed that it was 100% accurate
>> in terms of historical events, the atheists raise good
>> questions (they claim that temporary burials were
>> common back in Jesus's time, and that Jesus could have
>> been reburied without his disciples knowledge), and
>> even some Christians seem to take the Bible much more
>> figuratively than I do (i.e. Jesus was in the desert
>> for a long time, not necessarily 40 days, etc.); thus,
>> I'm not quite sure through what eyes I should read the
>> Bible at this point.
>> ...............................
>>
>
>
>
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Received on Mon Apr 9 22:15:09 2007

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