Unfortunately for MG, his church (so therefore he) believes in an interventionist God. Interventions by God can be documented, tracked, analysed, and assessed. Interventions by God can be measured. Again unfortunately, the incidents that are claimed to be interventions by God in the lives of Mormons are so random, so unpredictable, so untied to levels of faith, righteousness, innocence, etc as to render them impossible to distinguish from random chance and coincidence. So even if MG’s God is interventionist it is irrelevant, because if one cannot reliably identify the circumstances or conditions for, or result of, that intervention, it’s the same as God being non interventionist. Which in turn renders a lot of Mormonism’s claims to the level of “you can rely on the magic 8 ball for accurate guidance”.Limnor wrote: ↑Tue Jan 27, 2026 11:38 amI’m not reading malkie’s point as claiming certainty or “absolute victory.” Nor do I think he is saying “we don’t know, therefore God does not exist.”MG 2.0 wrote: ↑Tue Jan 27, 2026 12:26 amI pointed out in a recent post of yours (page before this one) that your arguments/logic were sound. This time around I wonder if you might be claiming a ‘win’ from ignorance. One can expect a theist to provide incontrovertible evidence for God if starting from the beginning premise of neutrality.
But to then, knowing that you are, in essence, ignorant…not knowing one way or the other…if there is a God, and then claiming absolute victory, isn’t that a bit presumptuous?
Maybe this isn’t what you’re are doing? You are actually allowing wiggle room for logical/reasonable belief and/or faith?
Regards,
MG
What he seems to be saying is that “if” a god is defined as non-interventionist, then “it is what it is” really does tell us nothing either way.
But “if” a god is defined as interventionist, as the Mormon god is—through guidance of its leaders, prayers being answered, and binding himself to covenants with claimed observable outcomes—“then” continued failure to detect that intervention counts as evidence against that specific claim. It’s not ignorance, it’s expectation failure.
You have to redefine your god if you intend to counter malkie’s claim, and you seem to have done so, by changing the starting position to total neutrality and saying that absence of evidence should never count against belief—and faith should retain “wiggle room” indefinitely.
But that only works if the god under discussion is non-interventionist and isn’t expected to fulfill the outcomes listed above.
For an interventionist God, like the one MG believes in, the believer needs to rationalise child abuse, bad things happening to good people, wrong answers, failures, why God seemingly assist in trivia like finding lost car keys, but fails to get involved in, say genocide. Of course there are no good answers, and so we get the mealy mouthed crooked lines and straight writing nonsense. Or worse, the abhorrent excuse that child abuse is necessary so that the perpetrator can repent. There’s more, but you get the gist - that there is zero observable difference between MG’s interventionist God, and a non interventionist God, or a non existent God.