RE: [asa] The God hypothesis- a test

From: Alexanian, Moorad <alexanian@uncw.edu>
Date: Fri May 16 2008 - 13:29:22 EDT

My post may have been misunderstood. If you can have a test for the existence of God or His workings in Nature, then why would one need faith in order to believe. Yes, believers live by faith as attested in Hebrews 11, not by certainty. I am sure that God always answers our prayers, of course, not necessarily the way we want. If one is truly in the will of God, then all prayers are answered.

 
Moorad

________________________________

From: David Heddle [mailto:heddle@gmail.com]
Sent: Fri 5/16/2008 1:06 PM
To: Alexanian, Moorad
Cc: Dehler, Bernie; asa@calvin.edu
Subject: Re: [asa] The God hypothesis- a test

Moorad,

Well, Gideon put God to the test repeatedly and he is in the Faith Hall Of Fame (Hebrews 11). It is a non-trivial topic.

David Heddle
Associate Professor of Physics
Christopher Newport University, &
The Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
http://helives.blogspot.com <http://helives.blogspot.com/>

On Fri, May 16, 2008 at 12:54 PM, Alexanian, Moorad <alexanian@uncw.edu> wrote:

        It seems to me that a God test nullifies the need for faith and so such tests are nonexistent. It is a bit like wanting experimentally to violate Heisenberg's uncertainly principle.
        
        
        Moorad
        
        ________________________________
        
        From: asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu on behalf of Dehler, Bernie
        Sent: Fri 5/16/2008 10:24 AM
        To: asa@calvin.edu
        
        Subject: RE: [asa] The God hypothesis- a test
        
        
        
        
        So RC, suppose you were able to hand-pick the test groups. Group 1 was
        Christians, trained in prayer as you suggest. Group 2 is avowed
        atheists. Group 3 is a control group mixed with unknown people. Do you
        think you could conduct a test to show that God is real because he
        answers pray, even sometimes, and show it statistically?
        
        Also, if you could do such a test, would it displease God? Jesus said
        "don't put the Lord your God to the test" when tested by Satan in the
        desert. But in Malachi God says "test me in this..." in regards to
        tithing; and in Isaiah he mocks those who are superstitious and says
        "come let us reason together." My atheist friend said something
        interesting, that God doesn't want to be tested because He's not there,
        and a test would prove it. Would God be insulted or displeased in a
        
        test of his existence? By the way, people who debate and show evidence
        of God using logic, such as William Lane Craig and others (like CS
        Lewis), isn't that a way of "testing God" to see if He holds water
        logically? The assumption is that if God didn't pass "logical tests"
        then He wouldn't be worth believing in, like the invisible pink unicorn
        or the flying spaghetti monster.
        
        
        -----Original Message-----
        From: RC Metcalf [mailto:rcmetcalf@thinkagain.us]
        Sent: Friday, May 16, 2008 6:19 AM
        To: Dehler, Bernie; asa@calvin.edu
        Subject: Re: [asa] The God hypothesis- a test
        
        
        I have yet to see a scientific test designed to study the efficacy of
        prayer
        that is able to control all outside factors. I don't think such a test
        is
        possible, which is why I think testing for God's existence from
        sociobiologic prayer studies is misguided. There are other, more
        reasonable, methods of testing for God's existence.
        
        If you consider the biblical criteria for prayer suggested by the late
        19th
        century Princeton theologian Charles Hodge, the inadequacy of prayer
        studies
        becomes self evident. Hodge said effective payer must exhibit:
        
        1. Sincerity
        2. Reverence
        3. Humility
        4. Importunity
        5. Submission
        6. Faith
        7. Asking in the name of Christ
        
        Dawkins, Harris and Stenger all cite the same prayer study in their
        books.
        If I recall accurately, that study had people in various cities in the
        country pray for people they didn't know, except by first name. Even if
        
        every other factor existed, I submit that it is impossible to pray with
        sincerity and importunity under such circumstances. I think many modern
        
        Christians have adopted a more lackadaisical approach to prayer than we
        ought, hence we aren't as apt to recognize the importance of importunity
        in
        our prayer life unless we're thrown into the middle of a dire situation
        and
        the target of our prayers is someone dear to us.
        
        Blessings,
        RC
        
        ----- Original Message -----
        From: "Dehler, Bernie" <bernie.dehler@intel.com>
        To: <asa@calvin.edu>
        
        Sent: Thursday, May 15, 2008 11:24 PM
        Subject: [asa] The God hypothesis- a test
        
        
        Hi all-
        
         A scientific question about God. Is it possible to test for the
        existence of the Christian God? Here's a scenario.
        
        Hypothesis: Those who are born-again Christians are born of the Spirit
        and have a new relationship with God. They can pray to God, and God
        will sometimes answer their prayers.
        
        Test: Take two groups. One group has self-identified born-again
        Christians, the other are self-described atheists. Both groups
        write-down their goals (career, medical needs, etc.) The Christian prays
        for their needs, while the atheist doesn't. Then see if there is a
        statistical difference. (This is a broad outline; a real test would
        have much tighter rules and controls.)
        
        If God exists, wouldn't this "catch Him in the act?" Is this a valid
        test and hypothesis? I'm vaguely aware that some have actually tried
        such a hypothesis/test (similar) and saw no statistical difference. If
        there's no difference between the groups, does that mean that either God
        doesn't exist, or God doesn't care (as Jesus taught that God our father
        cares for us)?
        
        
        
        
        
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Received on Fri May 16 13:29:45 2008

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