Post Reference Part AHi Hoops,
Let’s me clarify some points. You have already acknowledged that people
pray for what they see as benefit whether it be for themselves or for others.
While you rejected making up a “typical prayer of today,” you affirmed my examples and did give one of your own.
It’s no refutation to just disagree. That’s why we needed a
prayer from you that’s a paragraph or two in length. If you
pray what do you say/think? You did give two examples absent actual construction.
Previously you quote me:
JAK earlier: “Individuals
pray generally with intent to manipulate whatever they regard as God for their own purpose.”
Your response: “Not always. And, I've found, not even generally. In my own experience, rarely.”
Here is where we needed a prayer construction of yours. There is no refutation, and you fail to provide an example for analysis. Why? You said: “It’s not my game.” My request was not for a game but rather to demonstrate that prayer is an attempt to manipulate/control BEHAVIOR of their perceived
God.Later you stated: “Of course we pray for God's intervention. Why shoudn't we?
Post ReferenceI made no statement about
should or shouldn’t. Instead, I described what typical
prayers tend to contain. You admit that “we pray for God’s intervention.”
Hence, you agree with what I stated.
“Benefit” for people someone knows is also
benefit for themselves.
They who pray WANT to manipulate their God for some purpose that THEY WANT. That’s an intent of
prayer.
You said this: “We pray for protection, yes.”
You confirm the points I previously made. You also confirm, tacitly, that
prayer is a “transaction.” Of course religion is a
business. But the “transaction” is that in return for heaping praise on an
assumed God and elevating an
assumed God, the people who pray WANT SOMETHING or perhaps multiple things in return for their
prayers.
You have offered nothing which refutes that conclusion. It’s not an assertion absent evidence. I can provide endless examples of
prayers which demonstrate the validity of that conclusion. You have agreed.
You stated: “God, help that kid feel better.” That’s a
prayer. It ASKS something from an
assumed God. “God” is the subject of the verb “help.” Hence, you attempt to control/manipulate whatever your notion is of
God.
There is
no evidence for God. You have offered no evidence. Moreover, no agreed upon has any evidence been presented for any
God claim That’s why
prayer is irrelevant.
You did not address the extended analysis and information about the
evolution of the human species over a hundred thousand years or more. In that
evolution are all the examples of cultural developments including language, ideas, inventions which
evolving humans have exhibited. CULTURAL DEVELOPMENTS include superstitions, religions, practices, and every activity which can be documented in human evolution. For these there is
evidence.You have made no refutation. And, as your brief examples illustrates, you also agree that
prayer is an attempt to control/manipulate a perceived
God.
Earlier Post:
JAK earlier: Praying to
God for protection prior to a dangerous encounter has the intent to manipulate that God to intervene. The implied assumption is that safety is
more likely if
God is petitioned than if
God is not.
Hoops stated: Not at all. You want to make it a business transaction. Prayer is not that. The implied assumption is that God works in the affairs of men as we work in the affairs of God. That's a relationship, not quid pro quo.JAK earlier: Then why would people
pray to a God if not “to manipulate that
God to intervene”? Your statement is an assumption with no evidential support as you stated:
“The implied assumption is that God works in the affairs of men as we work in the affairs of God. That's a relationship, not quid pro quo.Your latest post (which I’ll identify below) does not addresses the points of my posts as I quoted you and responded.
Let’s look at some exchanges in
THIS POST.
Your first paragraph is not an accurate representation of what I stated in context. While you wanted “the kid to feel better,” your
prayer was to an assumed
“God” and YOU would have felt “better” if the kid felt better. But, that begs the issue
: PRAYER is an attempt to manipulate/control an invented
God.
I also detailed that people have
prayed for the destruction of their enemies. And, in the Bible,
that God annihilate entire groups of people and favored other groups. Hence
that God was clearly cruel and played favorites.
That God was an invention of ancient people as a way to explain. They made it up.
Hoops wrote: “I don’t pray in the way you’ve described so I don’t know what to do here.”That statement followed mine which stated:
JAK earlier post:
“In the above (earlier) post, you objected to my
prayer example but refused to provide one of your own. That objection and time-waste was exactly why I asked you to submit a prayer that might be made
in modern times. You refused then. This makes communication difficult. To shorten response words, I’ll just let you refer to your post above for some of this.”
By refusing to write
a prayer that you would pray and by claiming
“I don’t pray in the way you’ve described…” you are abdicating your own position. Exactly, how is my illustrative example different from the examples which you gave?
You admit you pray “for protection.” In that, you attempt to manipulate/control
your God for your own benefit. That is quite in line with the examples/illustrations which I offered.
Hoops, you are inconsistent and hardly defending your position.
JAK previously: “Since we have fully half the human population out of 7 billion people at or near the starvation level, your statement is
an interpretation, your interpretation that
only some are “blessed to have food” presumably by God.
Hoops wrote:
This is untrue. But, your point remains.JAK: Hence,
God believers consider that
THEIR GOD plays favorites. Historically, that has been the view of those who adhered to a different religious mythology.
God was/is perceived to FAVOR them and their kind over
others whom they do not regard as “one of them.” Religious wars are historical evidence for
prayers to God to favor one group over another.
See:
Religious War.
See:
Protestant Reformation See:
Thirty Years’War See:
The Wars of Religion.
These are wars in and over
Christianity.
Hoops, no evidence has been offered to support an entity
God nor was it offered in the past to support
the gods. This is paramount in our discussion.
Absent demonstrable evidence to support any existence of any god, PRAYER to any God is irrelevant – no matter what the words or thoughts are.You have offered nothing to address this. Your prayer:
God help that kid to feel better assumed
a God that you wanted to assume, not
a God which is established in fact.
Of course if YOU took action yourself to
help that kid feel better, then YOU are responsible for what you did. If “that kid” felt better because of what you did, you were responsible for the benefit to “that kid.”
Since you were skipping around, I’ll follow that skip here and not take time to find the post for reference.
JAK previously:
Hence, that refutes other religious claims that God is a loving, forgiving God. In fact it makes this God notion one of an evil God who demonstrates favoritism (a very human quality).Hoops wrote:
For you to make that evaluation, you have to first tell us what evil is. Good luck. That question has been befuddling us for ages. But within your comment, I suspect, is the idea that a loving God would not let these people suffer. Fine. Now what would you have Him do?JAK: You misunderstand, I don’t defend any
God notion. I would not
pray for any
god to DO anything. I make the point that the notion (belief) in
a God that gives favors to one person or one group of people DENIES the same favors to
another person or other group. There is no requirement here for a extended definition of “evil.” Your question:
Hoops: Now what would you have Him do? assumes that I accept some
God myth. You’re not understanding my comments.
While we have much evidence that ancient people believed that certain people received preferential treatment from
their God,” there is no evidence their
God inventions had merit. People today still cling to ancient religious myths which incorporate a
God of favoritism. We can identify it in
prayers they make. We can see it in the
prayers you make. “….”God make that kid feel better” and
prayer for “protection.”
Virtually everyone would agree that people, individuals, men/women have the capacity to “invent” and have
invented religions. The evidence for that is overwhelming. Are you disputing humans are inventors? If so, we have no communication going in the dialog. Many (if not most)
Christians perpetuate the notion, the invention of
a loving God. At the same time, many also
pray for the destruction of
other humans who have different views than their own. Those wars I cited above are ample illustration and historically documented.
Individuals (humans) by nature discriminate. If one gives to one charity and NOT to another, that is discrimination. If one helps one person and not another, that is discrimination. Fairy tales are literary inventions. Stories of fiction (books) are examples of
human invention. Your “dispute” has no basis in fact in this post. Do you deny the musical
inventions of J.S. Bach? Do you deny the
inventions of Mark Twain? One invented musical compositions by the hundreds. The other invented stories.
Ancient people invented superstitions and later religions. If you “dispute this,” we are not communicating. What would you call the musical compositions INVENTED by J.S. Bach? What would you call the inventions of
J.K.Rowlliing and
The Harry Potter Series?Man’s nature to INVENT is so well established, your call for “evidence” on that is unwarrented.
JAK previously: “It is to invent God in the nature of man himself.” Hoops wrote: “I dispute this. Where is your evidence of man's nature to begin with? Let alone that what you describe is inherent to this? And if you are willing to stipulate that man has a nature, then you are well on your way to seeing prayer for what it is.”JAK: Just as
the gods and
a God are INVENTIONS of man, so is
prayer an invention of man.
Articulate the details of your “dispute” above. Exactly what are you disputing? It’s a vague statement. I have articulated examples of how man (and I include women) is an INVENTOR. (Some other animals offer evidence that they invent as well. Example: An anteater devises a TOOL, a stick to put down an ant hill to pull up ants for food.)
See:
Animal InventorsSee
Zoo primates inventMan’s nature (as a species of animals) is not unlike other species of animals. While we regard ourselves as the superior
inventors, humans are not alone on this planet as
inventors by nature. Again, are you disputing that it is in man’s nature to invent? If so, you aren’t looking at a wealth of evidence to the contrary.
JAK previously: Since the prayer you submitted for analysis was not written by you, you INTERPRET as you please the words which are not yours. Hoops wrote: Except my interpretation is not unique. That's a part of faith, we learn from each other.JAK: It’s an irrelevant comment. For thousands of years, people believed the earth was flat. It was their observation and experience (mountains accepted). They also had “faith” in that belief. They were wrong. “Faith” as a topic is fine, but not particularly relevant here.
Faith is believing something. It may or may not be a valid belief.
Best end and make another post.
JAK