Fence Sitter wrote:Do you believe in them or not?
Like I said, I haven't made a choice one way or the other to believe in them or not. It sounds like you're trying to force a choice one way or the other.
Regards,
MG
Fence Sitter wrote:Do you believe in them or not?
mentalgymnast wrote:Fence Sitter wrote:Do you believe in them or not?
Like I said, I haven't made a choice one way or the other to believe in them or not. It sounds like you're trying to force a choice one way or the other.
Regards,
MG
mentalgymnast wrote:Fence Sitter wrote:Do you believe in them or not?
Like I said, I haven't made a choice one way or the other to believe in them or not. It sounds like you're trying to force a choice one way or the other.
Regards,
MG
Fence Sitter wrote:
I can't force you to do anything. I suspect you reject any other God but your own and I also suspect you have no better reason for belief in your God than they do in theirs. Am I wrong?
Dr. Shades wrote:MG, you said that you chose to disbelieve in Santa Claus when you got a little more mature.
Well, when you got a little more mature, why didn't you choose to continue believing in him instead of choosing to disbelieve in him?
Dr. Shades wrote:You know, the same way you did with God?
Fence Sitter wrote:
What is it about an all powerful being that some how make the story more believable than a child's fairy tale?
malkie wrote:But you could choose to believe, right?
mentalgymnast wrote:Knowing that we are limited to our five senses in determining what is real and what is not, what is true and what is not, what we can know and what we cannot, and so forth, how can you know for a fact that a God doesn't exist? The evidence that you rely on is restricted/limited by the filtering system of your five senses.
How can you be so sure?
Regards,
MG
mentalgymnast wrote:malkie wrote:But you could choose to believe, right?
Yes.
Did I fall into a trap?
Regards,
MG