Iacchus said:
What other position would you expect someone to take if they actually knew something about it?
But you don't actually
know if there is a God. If you did, you could produce evidence. You merely
believe it.
Iacchus said:
Absolutely, huh?
Ah, you got the joke. The only thing I know for sure is that I don't know anything for sure.
Iacchus said:
So, what do you need to know? That's really all I care about. Which by the way, can only be answered in the moment. Everything else is non-existent.
There's lots of stuff I
need to know, such as a marketable skill, but I
want to know as much as possible, especially about the world we live in. I hope I never reach the point where I no longer wish to know anything else. That would be intellectual death.
Iacchus said:
Well you better have an idea where you're going, otherwise what's the point in getting in the boat?
The only way you have an idea where you're going is if you are steering. I'm doing my own steering. But I'm also willing to try out unmapped territory, simply for the joy of finding something new. I'll make new maps as I go so others can follow.
If somebody else is steering, then you really don't know where you're going, do you?
Iacchus said:
The boat is my life. The rudder is what helps me deterimine what I do with it.
This analogy presents a situation which does not require a God. You control the rudder, not vice versa.
Iacchus said:
Ultimately yes, He must reveal Himself to us individually, otherwise how would we ever know? Why call Him a personal God then?
So there isn't one God, but many, and each person has their own version of him? What's the point, then? What if God reveals one "truth" to you, but the exact opposite of that "truth" to another? This looks like a good argument for the
absence of any kind of absolute truth. Each person has his own. Which, of course, is what I believe.