I wish I could be a student of such a blessed brilliant servant of the most High God. may God bless you and add you wisdom, strength and 50 more years to live
There could not have been a Trinity of Persons as God without the concept of 3 or the way of talking about 3. God would have had to have depended upon some way of thinking about 3 to know Himself as a Trinity. Secondly, if God is All Knowing, then there was never a moment ( logical or chronological ) in the existence of God where He did not know that this World would exist. And that would mean there would be no need for Possible Worlds. God could not have created any other World than this World. If God had a choice of what World He would create, then He did not know what World would exist until He made that choice ( which means that God was not All Knowing ).
I always think about abstract objects such as numbers or "price", such as the examples in the video, as merely DESCRIPTIVE tools. That, for example, if there are 3 apples in front of me, the "3" is describing a reality that is linked to the apples, not making the number 3 itself exist in some idealist plane. The fact that such descriptive tools are available for us to work with them, for me, is more evidence that our minds are in some way a reflection that we humans share in a small way the divine spark, made in the image of God, for we are able to think in those abstract terms, among other things, not that we are "borrowing" those abstract objects from an idealist plane.
@@RayG817 That's like asking how God has the ability to create the universe. He simply has the ability necessarily in virtue of being a perfect being. - RF Admin
@@drcraigvideos Exactly. You just make up a definition of "God" and then wish it into existence. That is a dangerous combination of ignorance and hubris.
I think that anything which is self-existent will be necessary. This is because of the principle of sufficient reason. Everything that exists has an explanation for its existence, either in the necessity of its own nature (it is a self-existent thing) or in an external cause (it is a dependent thing). Since everything requires an explanation for its existence, and since contingent things are not self-explained, their explanation MUST be found in some external cause. So all contingent things are dependent things. And if all contingent things are dependent things, then all independent things are necessary things.
@@therick363 " the external cause is?" - I have no idea what you mean by "external cause". I never said anything about an external cause. External to what? "Are there a few options and possibilities or is there only one explanation for everything?" - If you are asking what serves as the explanation for why anything at all exists, then the answer is that there must be an independent, self-existent, necessary foundation of reality. And if you are asking if there are multiple possible options of what that could be, I am only aware of one possibility, and that would be a perfect being.
1 Corinthians 8: 6yet for us there is but one God, the Father, from whom all things came and for whom we exist. And there is but one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom all things came and through whom we exist.
yep, the usual special pleading of these cultists. Of course, they can't show that their imaginary friend merely exists, much less anything else about it.
I don’t think it’s wise to declare ideas to be of any lesser reality than physical objects since we risk ending in nominslism and ultimately nihilism. After all without real ideas, there is no possibility of a belief in God. All such ideas would merely be the imaginations of the persons in question, perhaps inspired by experiences but ultimately having the individual as their source. God therefore becomes an interpretation created by the real deity which is the self in this paradigm. Rather we ought to understand ideas as forming in some way a bridge between man and the divine, as formed from the interactions between matter and spirit or divine energies. The necessity of these ideas poses no issue however as they are or at least have thier origin ultimately in God’s energies. That is to say that insofar as they really are necessary it is only because they are part of God’s nature. On this basis we should also presume there are innumerable other ideas which necessarily are exist in God but which find no expression in matter. God rather expresses His ideas in the world, choosing which to manifest and in what way. That is a rather crude way of putting it as with God these would all have a complete unity, but we may find an example in light, which comes down as pure white and forms colors through its interactions with matter. This too is somewhat crude as in God’s case it is the light itself which chooses how to color things and even which things ought to receive color, but the example is there.
@@MrJamesdryable Here's a simple argument: 1. If God is existence, then everything that exists is God. 2. We exist and are not God. 3. Therefore, not everything that exists is God. 4. Therefore, God is not existence. This is a logically valid argument of the form modus tollens. The conclusions (3 & 4) follow from the premises (1 & 2). Therefore, to deny the conclusions, you would need to provide a reason for rejecting one or more of the premises. - RF Admin
@@drcraigvideos Your second premise is a personal opinion. Therefore, this is not a logically valid argument. Do you believe that anything that exists must have a creator?
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@@drcraigvideos That isn't an argument it's just a definition. If I say god = existence YOU have no way of refuting THAT.
@ All Christians do not have the same understanding concerning who God is, there are many that say God is Three and others say God is the Father of Jesus, which is the correct interpretation. The confusion lies not on the Bible but on our understanding and lack of knowledge added with tradition which does not agree with scripture.
@@ji8044 Christians believe Jesus is the Jewish Messiah, that is why we are called Christians. But more than him being the Jewish Messiah, Jesus is the sacrificial lamb who took away the sins or the world and reconciled us with the Father.
Great videos: what I find interesting is that things that exist that God creates in the physical world can be incrementalized with numbers and understood with the language of mathematics. The imperfect things that humans create, we humans are the scalers that determine whether theses things should exist in a philosophical realm of good and evil and we mediate it’s existence with linear language.
What is the difference between something existing "from itself" and something existing from nothing at all? I assume "from" here has the sense of "originating from", or "caused by". It seems easier to get one's head around the idea of something existing uncaused, or for no reason at all, than of something caused by itself: for to say that A is the cause of B purports to give a (partial) explanation of B, while to say that B is its own cause explains nothing at all but simply mystifies. Better, surely, to say that there is no explanation for B's existence than to speak in terms of B's causing itself, explaining itself, or existing "from itself".
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Better to avoid all that nonsense by just realizing that time space and matter are eternal. no god needed.
Not sure about time and space, but matter is created and destroyed all the time, so that at any rate is not eternal. Actually I don't really know what it might mean to say that space and time is eternal, if eternal means, as it seems to, existing outside space and time. We go about expecting to be able, at least in principle, to find our experience intelligible; that is, that it be explicable. Are we to suppose that each part of it can be explained by something else, but the whole shebang just hangs there, in Craig's terms, 'self-existent', with no rhyme nor reason to it. That seems, if not a logical contradiction, then at least a pragmatic, performative, epistemological one, given our inquiring natures and the principle of sufficient reason whose deployment has been so astonishing fruitful. On the other hand, asserting the explicability of the whole shebang by reference to some other self-existent thing seems equally hopeless. We have probably gone beyond the powers of human reason at this point. It would actually be strange if human reason were up to comprehending such matters, at least on the naturalistic hypothesis, for there is no reason apparent why we might have evolved the capacity to answer all the questions which we have evolved the capacity to pose, specifically to ask, of any particular phenomenon, "Why?".
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@@russellsharpe288 "matter is created and destroyed all the time" nope. see the 1st law of thermodynamics. matter only changes form.
If by 'matter' you include energy, then yes, though there seems to be some controversy about whether conservation of energy is compatible with GR in an expanding universe. But we agree that the form of energy is constantly changing. Perhaps eventually the universe will settle down into a stable heat-death in which nothing ever happens again, and then it will be eternal in the sense of continuing indefinitely. But will there be any sense in asserting a flow or arrow of time in such an unchanging landscape? It's not so clear. Maybe it would be simpler just to say that time comes to a halt then. All this is highly speculative and not really relevant to the question of how to conceive a chain of explanations (either ending arbitrarily in an unmoved mover, or affording an infinite regress) if there are not to be exceptions to the principle of sufficient reason which we assume pragmatically all the time in our every attempt to understand anything. My original remark was just to the effect that there seems little difference between adding a reflexive arrow from an explanatory unmoved mover looping back to itself in order to claim that it explains itself (which seems to be the sense of a God being 'self-existent') and simply asserting that explanations come to an end in that mover. The latter option finally gives up on the principle of sufficient reason, while the former seems a formal device to allow us to pretend that the principle is universally valid while depriving it in this one instance of any possible use, application or even comprehensibility. For how does it aid our understanding to say that something explains itself? It seems no different to saying that nothing explains it. (And an infinite regress obviously doesn't provide an explanation either, for then the entire chain of explanations lacks one)
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@@horridhenry9920 You're uneducated about the ontology of mathematics to suggest that it's man-made. Mathematics wasn't invented; it was discovered. It's an intrinsic part of nature; that's to say even if humanity didn't exist then the underlying principals of mathematics would still exist.
Saying something is timeless spaces in a immaterial, is the definition of nonexistence, if you’re saying God lives outside of time and space, God would have to live in another universe or Multiverse, otherwise you’re saying God exists nowhere.
What you are saying is the equivalent to saying “existence exists” which is self-evident (you used the term self-existing). God exists is a fallacious term because either existence or God has to be more powerful. If God exists, then existence is more powerful than God. That’s because without existing, God can’t be. You’ve also characterized God as a male, which confines existence on one side of the scale, whereas it evidently is a balance between two differing things (male and female). It’s likely that God or other religious characters are a fictional representation of existence and the nature of humans/the universe.
@ Existence is objective reality, hence why it is treated like an object. However, it is also subject to many things (subjective). Objective and subjective are intertwined. That’s why math is a subject that is also objective in nature. If i’m not mistaken, you have assumed that it is “bad” to treat something like an object. Many of us, including myself - treat objects such as food, electronics, and cars with utmost care to ensure they support our lives. I suggest that in our language, we simply not treat things “badly”. My question to you is; What is wrong with treating things like things (objects)? Am I nothing (no-thing)? I consider myself to be something. I consider you something as well.
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It is a logical certainty that there must exist an uncaused first cause which is self-existent. Even philosophers from thousands of years ago realized this. Your attitude is thousands of years behind the times.
@@therick363 There are things that can be known about this uncaused first cause via deductive logic. As one example, the uncaused first cause must be some kind of personal agent rather than some kind of unguided force. The uncaused first cause must have many of the properties that monotheists mean by the concept of "god", so you denying that it's God you'd simply be calling a rose by any other name.
I don't think platonism downplays God. Even necessary things can still be contingent. Numbers must exist but they are contingent on existence itself. If God is a actual actualizer he is the not the only nessessary things but the only thing that is non contingent as all other nessessary things are contingent on him even if they can't not exist. The same way God can't not exist.
The idea that there are necessary-but-contingent things (necessity ad extra) is inconsistent with Scripture, which teaches that all things other than God were created. Since Scripture is true in all that it teaches, it is false that there are uncreated necessary-but-contingent things. What is your argument for the claim that "numbers must exist"? - RF Admin
@drcraigvideos it could be that those things are just byproducts of God. Not created but eternally existing. The same way the person's of the trinity are uncreated but separate from the father. The same way we can derive the non person's that are also part of God omnipotence omniscience and Omni benevolence from a purely actual actualizer. If there is a purely actual actualizer that implies there is a quantity. That being that there is one as it would be impossible to have two.
Uhhh, no. "Biology" is descriptive. That's like claiming a picture was painted "because of art" or that gravity exists "because of physics". Physics, art, biology or whatever describe occurrences, something that happens. It's literally meaningless to say we're here "because of biology", as biology has no teleology. Your comment is no more useful than saying "we're here, just cuz". And what is "man's imagination"? A bunch of molecular interactions that can "think"? Molecules that "think" about non molecular objects that don't exist , or at least may not exist (like unicorns), but can accurately define proofs of other objects that don't exist, like triangles (as even the straightest lines like gamna rays or X rays have wave lengths). How is it that my molecules can understand perfectly all of the attributes of a thing that doesn't exist? The "imagination" is called "lconcept, and it can literally prove how a triangle must be if one were to exist, that no square-circles can exist in reality and innumerable other things. Why don't you just say that you don't remotely understand the subject, is it really that hard?
I thought my statement was clearer. We are here because of the results of evolutionary biology. And we, as well as every other living thing on earth, are still evolving. God only exists as a result of humans using their imagination to dream him up.
@davidskolik5303 Nope, not "as a result of". Evolutionary biology is a description of what has happened. It's not even theoretically possible for evolutionary biology to address Final Causation. And God isn't a product of "human imagination", but God is inferred by "human reasoning". Those are vastly different.
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@@godfreydebouillon8807 biology is real, gods are imaginary
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We KNOW that humans invented gods because it's in the historical record. Your jesus gods (there are many of them) evolved from the gods of the hebrew bible (there are many of them), which evolved from Canaanite and Babylonian gods. It's funny how you lot pretend to believe the bible but know nothing about how it was created.
"God" is a meaningless word. Everyone invents their own meaning of the word, including Dr. Craig. Saying that "God is self existent" is not saying anything. Quoting the Gospel of John does not give meaning to "God". Saying "In the beginning was God" makes as much sense as saying, "In the beginning was the Easter Bunny" Both God and the Easter Bunny are not defined and are not real, and Dr. Craig's talking about them as if they were real does not make them real. But most importantly, the connection between "God" and Christianity is so far-fetched as to be ludicrous.
Not really. God has a basic meaning that logic can refine; of authority. The word in Hebrew it's used to translate, and in Greek, as well as early English that it comes from, all meant authority, especially top authority. The rest is clarifications of what it would really mean to be the ultimate entity, that are logically grounded. And no, the Easter Bunny would be described as a thing with limits, or else you're just putting another label on God, so that attempted counter isn't really doing anything. And Christianity has sound support and uniquely happens to pass all sound tests to have the right definition of God that thorough, proper logic also confirms - so it's the opposite of that.
@@Logician-Bones What a splendid way to make people do what you want! Get them to believe in a being that you invent, that has "authority". Of course, they don't know what the being commands, but you do!
@@thegreatgazoo7579 Sound deduction from a fair test is the opposite of inventing like that. It's the solution to the very problem you're talking about!
If a bachelor existed, he would be unmarried. But that does not prove that any bachelors actually exist. The same is true for God. If the God you speak of existed, he would be maximally great. But that doesn't prove that he exists (see Kant's objection).
First, this wouldn't make sense of putative abstract objects which are not part of God's attributes. For example, Satan has the attribute of being evil. But this is certainly not an attribute of God. Second, it also depends on whether one is taking "attributes" to be existing things. If they are not existing things, then one can affirm the anti-realist, neutralist position that Dr. Craig describes in the video. There is a realist position that posits that putative abstract objects are concepts in the mind of God. This is called "conceptualism." Dr. Craig has written on some issues with the view, but considers it a fall-back position if all anti-realist options fail. - RF Admin
@@drcraigvideos What do you make of this: God consists of three persons by His very nature, yes? But that would imply that God is contingent upon the integers-a mathematical concept. The alternative is to say that God is three persons from our perspective, but then the Trinity would not be part of God’s inherent nature. A similar argument applies for God’s oneness.
@@seanpierce9386 Except being omniscient is part of the definition of God, so there's no problem there, since his being three persons is a matter of self-identity (falls within knowledge). His needing to have his definition doesn't mean he's "contingent" - that's not what contingent means.
@@seanpierce9386 Being omniscient is part of the definition of God, and being a Trinity is a matter of self-identity, so falls without knowledge. His needing to fit his definition doesn't make him contingent; that's not what the word means. He has these things intrinsically in himself.
Nothing but endless assertions without evidence or reason. BUT! It does eatablish that theists believe something can exist without a creator, which means one can just as easily assert the entire universe has always existed and doesn't require a creator. And the difference there is the universe is observable and has continously testable existence amd properties. No god needed.
That would just redefine the universe as God (or as including God), so does nothing. To exist without a creator, it needs to have no limits at all, but the universe does. Believe it not, we thought of that objection long ago LOL.
@@therick363 Do you think the universe is omniscient and entirely alive in an indivisible way? If not, you think it has a limit (or at least you don't know).
"...you might not have existed." False. If we are supposing that circumstances were different than what they actually were, then we are talking about fiction not fact.
You're having to presume the truth of determinism to suggest such a thing. If libertarian free will is a real thing then we actively make real choices in real-time that shape what happens next, and if that's the case then if our past-decisions were different it follows rationally that the present would have been different as well.
@LawlessNate I presume that things are as they are rather than not. If libertarian free will is a thing that exists, then it is not possible for it not to exist.
“God is self existent’, and you know this how? Aseity is nothing but philosophical jargon. The “word”was made up by man. Yep, theism is an adult game of make believe.
Even philosophers from thousands of years ago realized the logical necessity of an uncaused first cause. It's a 100% true fact of reality which you'd have to deny the validity of logic itself to suggest otherwise. You're simply ignorant of the topic and your attitude is thousands of years behind the times.
@@LawlessNate While I don’t fully agree with the OP, what you’re saying is a common misconception. It’s possible to get around the first cause argument by positing that time extends infinitely far into the past. And no, entropy is not a problem since an infinite sum can be finite. (Plus, it’s a statistical “law” anyway.) Even if the first cause was necessary, it isn’t necessarily God, let alone the Christian one. That’s why I don’t find the Kalam convincing at all. You have to make assumptions to force it to work the way you need it to.
Since definitions are imaginary ideas that we make up, you can define god as self-existent, or loving, or purple or aardvark-shaped or anything you like. At this point, you have an idea you imagine, in your head. If you want to justify a belief that this idea is true, you need to actually point to something in objective reality that matches up with your idea. And this is something theists never do. So, no one should believe you. You shouldn’t believe yourself.
That worked up to where you claim we never do, when we have more sound support for it than virtually anybody has for anything, so much we can't begin to count it. Also it's possible to logically show that alternatives would have to be self-contradictory too.
@@logicianbones I disagree with everything you said. I have never seen an argument for god with sound premises and a valid structure, and I've been looking and listening for roughly 15 years. There is also no contradiction in the fundamental nature of reality being not a god. Anything a god can achieve, some unknown natural process or non-god supernatural alternative could also hypothetically achieve, with no contradictions entailed. If I simply claimed one of these alternatives is true, and take it on faith, then I'd be on exactly the same footing as theists.
@@weirdwilliam8500 So you haven't done your homework, so what? "I have never seen" is only the fallacy of argument from personal ignorance. The rest of us have. To your last, if that were true, that other thing would simply be God. Clearly you don't know, or you would have known that already.
@@logicianbones Oh? I notice you aren’t offering such an argument or piece of evidence. At what point during a thorough search for something does it become reasonable to conclude that the thing simply isn’t there? If I’ve spent decades listening to thousands of apologists, believers, academics philosophers, and other religious thought leaders, and none of them can offer anything more than presupposition, provably false statements, fallacious reasoning, and emotional appeals, then I think that is probably enough to justify reasonable disbelief. I’m still open to hearing good evidence, and I wouldn’t mind if a god existed, but I’m not holding my breath. Your last point is strange, in light of your accusation of my personal ignorance. Have you not thought of any alternatives to your particular god? If a past-eternal god existed as all of reality, and chose to rupture its own being, destroying itself in the process of converting its mindless remnants into our universe, then there could be no god now. If a supernatural being analogous to a mindless fruiting plant is the fundamental bedrock of reality, and it eternally grows and periodically buds off universes containing random combinations of physical constants, that would fully account for the reality we see but would entail no conscious god. Or a council of 17 eternal necessary trickster pixies could have created our universe using their combined skills, then moved on to other pursuits without a care, interest, or thought for our existence. I could list off an infinite number of different ontologies that, if in fact true, would fully explain and account for our reality and would entail no conscious or supervening god. And they all would have exactly as much good evidence or likelihood as your religious beliefs, which appears to be none. Since I value being rational, I ought not believe such things without good reason and evidence.
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@@logicianbones we KNOW that humans invented gods because it's in the historical record. Your jesus gods (there are many of them) evolved from the gods of the hebrew bible (there are many of them), which evolved from Canaanite and Babylonian gods. It's funny how you lot pretend to believe the bible but know nothing about how it was created.
@ we don’t know that for sure , we know this current expansion possibility had a beginning doesn’t mean the universe had a beginning, we can only see far back as 13. 8 billion years.
@@Obeytheroadrules There two problems with your argument 1st: Heat Death: If the universe didn’t have a beginning, it would have always existed, right?. But according to the 2nd law of thermodynamics, entropy increases over time, meaning all usable energy in the universe would have been used up by now. Stars and galaxies would have burned out leading to "heat death." This means the universe must have had a starting point. Without a beginning, the universe would contradict the observable order we see today. 2nd: Today: If the universe didn’t have a beginning, that would imply it’s infinite, right? If time stretches endlessly backward without a starting point, how could we pinpoint 'now,' this exact moment? The very concept of 'today' relies on a specific starting point from which it emerged. If the universe has existed infinitely, it would be impossible for the present moment to exist, as there would be no defined starting point to lead us to it.
@ No, it doesn’t , the BGV , theorem, says that this current expansion possibly had a beginning. Allan Guth , co-author of the BGV theorem and pioneer of cosmic inflation says ……quote : The Big Bang was most likely not the first expansion our universe has experienced, the cosmos most likely goes through an ever expansion and contraction, and we are simply living in one of those phases. . Allan Guth : phD, professor of physics and Astro physics, Massachusetts Institute of technology .
@@logicianbones: "It belongs to the very concept of 'God' to exist." (8:08) This is the only argument for the existence of a god that I noticed in the video. But concepts are the kind of thing that it was pointed out, elsewhere in the video, don't actually exist: "We are merely pretending, or imagining, that mathematical objects like numbers exist..." (5:49) Concepts, like numbers, are merely the product of our imagination. So, yes, the argument of the video is that a god exists because he is imagined to exist.
if you are happy to accept that self-existent things can exist, why posit a god that we have no evidence for, instead of pointing to the universe, which as far as we can tell cant be created or destroyed?
I see the existence of a higher creation power through all the things that surround me in life/nature, including my own consciousness and the consciousness of others. And greater evidence I have for God is a personal relationship that is every bit as real as my relationship with any other human on this planet, except deeper and more meaningful. I, like others, have seen/heard things that are not of this world in pursuit of my relationship with God over 47+ years. Things I never imagined were possible, when I grew up as an agnostic. But I like everyone else can't give evidence of personal experiences, except for my totally changed life, desire and direction.
@@SpaceCadet4JesusAnd I don't see such. My personal relationships 1) involve REAL entities (persons); 2) occur at a REAL and particular location and time; 3) with REAL interactions that are observable; 4) are experienced within a REAL medium of communication (voice, body language, gesture, touch, affection); with a REAL initiation (phone call, invitation, visitation); 5) and REAL response (affirmation, disagreement, correction, encouragement). Does a Christian's personal relationship with this Christ exhibit ANY of these characteristic features? Yes or no.
Hi Larry, God is constantly making himself known - and to ALL people. You have more than your intellect by which to receive knowledge. I presume that you believe that there is a thing called love - and that you and others exist. You did not reach these conclusions with your mind - your mind cannot prove either of these things. Instead you reached these conclusions using your relational channel. They are relational knowledge. The bible says that God - who is Spirit - relates with our spirit - the Spirit TESTIFIES to us (Romans 8:16) - a word which implies both truth and relational experience at the same time. We can relate with God as we can relate with people - via our spirit. A person who says that they don't believe in God is not dishonest if by that statement they mean that their mind has not concluded that there is a God. But we are more than our minds. It is because we are more than our minds that the bible says that every person is without excuse when it comes to awareness of God (note in the verse below that God's divine qualities are PERCEIVED - which is a different thing to deduced - our minds can only think - they aren't capable of RELATING with God): Romans 1:21 ESV For his invisible attributes, namely, his eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly perceived, ever since the creation of the world, in the things that have been made. So they are without excuse. Spiritual truth is the consequence of relationship - relationship is not the consequence of intellectual conclusions.
@@iankerlin He also happened to appear to Paul as a special occasion, according to the Bible. But for whatever reason, He’s never bothered to do so again, even for those who are actively searching. As someone who fits that description, I have to conclude that if God does exist, then He doesn’t care enough to prove it. I know your rebuttal will be about free will. But God showing Himself will only enlighten those searching and expose those too stubborn to listen. Ultimately, it’s God’s call, so He’ll know if people are faking it.
@@seanpierce9386 Non sequitur; he's already proven it. Why need to keep on doing so over and over, when sufficient proof exists of types that stand for all time?
@@jonathanteoh5759 An argument is a set of true premises leading to one and only inevitable conclusion based on the laws of logic and the rules of proper inference. Do you agree? Yes or no.
@@jonathanteoh5759 The verity of any premise can be established to be true if and only if one of following is demonstrated: the premise is 1) axiomatic; 2) deduced logically from two other and independent veritable statements presented within the same argument (prior premises) by means of the rules proper inference; 3) can be _demonstrated_ to be true (eg, water begins to boil as its temperature reaches 100⁰ C; 4) are generally accepted to be true by the vast majority of accredited experts (eg, Scientific Theories), or 5) can be considered factual by other verified means ensuring validity, authenticity, and accuracy. Do you agree?
@@Theo_Skeptomai You offered no counter and threw up smoke and mirrors because you have nothing. well done. Happy to see you are tuning desperate to TRY and HOPE that the videos coming out from here don't shatter your view any further. You are grasping at straws and need to humble yourself. Or continue to honor yourself and worship your own intellect, because that is your god.
So what you are suggesting is that God, before creating his very first creation existed for an eternity past being the only thing in existence. That seems very strange to me. It must have been that he, God, really got board after eons and eons of time being all by himself with absolutely nothing else in existence to finally decide to pop something else into existence out of nothing. I don't see how the words, "In the beginning" actually suggest this concept. Also the words, "3 All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made." seems to say that only the things that were made were made by him. This leads me to ask if there are other things that weren't made that are also self-existent. Thus he might have made things from things that are self-existent like unorganized matter maybe. What evidence is there that nothing else existed?
Your first arguments there are close to the Loneliness Problem with Unipersonal ideas of God, so actually argues for the Trinity. But boredom isn't really a problem, since God isn't subject to emotions. In the (absolute) beginning, God did something, means God pre-existed it. Pretty simple. To the last bit, see Colossians 1, especially verse 16. Jesus wasn't made, and made all things, and all other things than God have been made, basically. (Also if there were two such things, one or the other isn't ultimate, so is contingent on the other, so doesn't really solve the problem. See other threads for more details.)
@@logicianbones So are you suggesting that God was not all alone because he had Jesus as part of his same being and the Holy Ghost? But being the same being although separate persons (very incomprehensible) wouldn't they all have the same thoughts and ideas being they are the same being? The three in one being the only thing that existed for an eternity past still seems quite lonely or boring or without much purpose for an eternity past. We are talking about an unlimited never ending past with nothing else in existence until that first creation came about. Seems very, very strange concept to me. How is God not subject to emotions and is considered a God of love? Isn't love an emotion? I understand that Jesus was the same being as the Father but a separate person (very incomprehensible) and that he created all things, but my issue is that before the very first creation they existed for an eternity past with nothing else existing. Isn't that a very strange concept? Seems like a long, long, time to not have much purpose.
@JohnDoe-po8ei No. I'm just saying that time came to exist along with the universe, it is a property of it. So that scenario of God sitting there for eons and eons until he decided to create the universe isn't accurate. God doesn't experience the flow of time as we do, He is timeless
Ah. Come on Low Bar Bill! Pretense Theory is not just the answer to Platonism but also to theism. It is also the answer to the question _"Who created God?"._ - *_"Imagine_*_ that there is a God. So there is a God."_ Not _"who"_ but *"what"* created God? *Humans* like you and theists did and are doing that in their imaginations as that God of yours and theirs doesn't exist concretely but only imaginarily.
@drcraigvideos Well, I know exactly as much of Pretense Theory as that is there in this video. If I know nothing about Pretense Theory apparently, then that's because there is nothing about it here in this video despite it being mentioned here - at least then there isn't a significant amount of it here. Oh, and where exactly is the extraordinary concrete evidence for the supposedly extraordinary concrete existence of that non-concretely but only imaginarily existing extraordinary God of yours? This video of yours also lacks that crucial information.
Sounds great, and may well be very true, we still have a very flawed creation with so much unnecessary suffering, not caused by sin, just there for no reason, and he watches as untold atrocities, cancer and disease for humans and animals, despicable acts of humans on other humans and does nothing, 2billion people will not think of him once their whole life, not what you would think 2000 years after his final plan to save his " in his image" creation
I think Rainn Wilson had it right when he said "God is an experience, not a dude". For those already committed to the aseity of God Dr. Craig's comments make perfect sense.
@@drcraigvideos By "dude" I mean a being, one substantially like us since we are reported made in His image. While seen as omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent, He has thoughts, feelings, emotions, desires as we do. He desires relationships and can forgive us when we stray. While not an old man with a long beard, this makes Him a "dude". However the omni-business is inconsistent with this "dudeness". He has to be outside of time to have created time, but he has to be within time to have this "like us-ness". Postulating some sort of "cosmic time" to resolve this paradox is a slight-of-hand trick. A more honest conception of Him is that he is not really like us at all (what "made in His image" means is a mystery). Without being like us, the only way we can be known to us is indirectly -- by experience. So, it is not rational to see God as any sort of person, superior or not. Doing so just doesn't work. On the other hand, I have experiences that have had some sort of divine nature. I can't explain them, they just happened. Thus I think Mr. Wilson is on to something.
Christianity or our Lord Jesus Christ is not about materialism or things of the flesh. He is all about the divine moral intelligence and truth of God, as he tells us in his gospels: "God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth" John 4:24 There is more to this life than just the materialistic world, there is the spiritual/emotional world of morality, and what we consider to be sacred and divine. What do we perceive as sacred? Ourselves? Our family? Other people? Do we consider the moral actions of particular individuals as divine or mundane? Only our Lord Jesus Christ can answer these questions ✝️
Hello, that whose essence - what it is - is identical to its existence - that it is - is necessary to concurrently impart existence for everything whose essence is distinct from its existence. This has nothing to do with the past or whether or not the universe has a beginning, but with the here and now. The requirement of that whose essence is not distinct from its existence follows logically from the distinction between them in other things. There are 3 main arguments for the reality of this distinction which I could describe in another comment if wanted. As those things in which they are distinct require a concurrent cause for their continual existence as obviously they cannot impart their own existence to themselves as that would require them to be logically prior to themselves in existence which is utterly nonsensical; in other words they would have to exist to cause themselves before -- either temporally or logically -- they actually exist which is logically impossible. Therefore, it requires a concurrent cause either by something where there is, again, such a distinction or in the unique thing -- there could only possibly be one as for there to be multiple would require a distinguishing feature, but then the essence would not be identical to its existence, but be existence plus whatever the distinguishing feature-- in which there is no such distinction.
Could there be an infinite regress of things with such a distinction? No. That is because this is a hierarchical causal series in which concurrently powerless-by-themselves effects must terminate in a first member -- not temporally -- who is the power source. As it is obvious that at least one thing exists with such a distinction it necessitates this first member in which the essence is identical to its existence otherwise none of the effects, namely everything with such a distinction, would exist, e.g, you, a dog, or a tree. Upon fleshing out all the details of the subsistent existence one arrives at that who is perfect, omnipotent, omniscient and much else that could not be predicated of the universe. However, this is what we mean by God. And it should be noted that these attributes are analogous and that God is identical to them. His existence equals His omnipotence and so forth. Therefore, God exists. Jesus loves you. God bless
That's not the argument. Strawman fallacy. Our ability to conceive of this maximally great being is PART of the argument. Don't conflate one part with the whole argument. (That's also composition fallacy.)
Is belief in Christ used to justify political beliefs or does belief in Christ actually change your politics? For example when Christian's vote for never ending gun violence or tax breaks for billionaires...or unsustainable health care costs or inaction on climate change do they use theirr belief in Christ to justify this support? Or when the words of the bible don't align with their political ideology do they just throw those words away? 1 Peter 3:10 NLT If you want to enjoy life and see many happy days, keep your tongue from speaking evil and your lips from telling lies. James 3:3-6 NLT "The tongue is a small thing that makes grand speeches. But a tiny spark can set a great forest on fire. And among all the parts of the body, the tongue is a flame of fire. It is a whole world of wickedness, corrupting your entire body. It can set your whole life on fire, for it is set on fire by hell itself." Most Christian leaders in Germany welcomed the rise of Nazism in 1933. They did not speak out against hateful speech or violence. After 1933, most did not speak out against legal measures that progressively stripped Jews of their rights. Do you think the Christians who lived in Germany and who voted for and supported Hitler used their belief in Christ to justify this support? Do you think the words of Hitler mattered to them or did they love his words? Do you think they ever regretted their actions or just regretted that Hitler lost? Do you think the priests that preached from the pulpits that Hilter was chosen by God for Germany are burning in hell now? Hitler - "The ultimate goal must definitely be the removal of the foreigners altogether." Trump -"You wouldn’t believe how bad these foreigners are. These aren’t people. These are animals." Trump -" If I don’t get elected, it’s going to be a bloodbath for the whole. That’s going to be the least of it. It’s going to be a bloodbath for the country." Hitler -" We must care for the purity of [our] own blood by eliminating foreigners." Trump-" Foreigners are poisoning the blood of our country." Trump - "I don’t know if you call foreigners people… In some cases they’re not people." Hitler -" I am acting in accordance with the will of the Almighty Creator: By defending myself against the foreigner, I am fighting for the work of the Lord." HItler - "With satanic joy in his face, the black-haired foreigner lurks in wait for the unsuspecting girl whom he defiles with his blood, thus stealing her from her people." Trump -"These foreigners are rapists and criminals." Hitler -"Humanitarianism is the expression of stupidity and cowardice."
Oh, you were brave for leaving the comments open, but I suspect that won't last long. "The only reason that any of us exists is that we were caused to exist. We're dependent on something other than ourselves. Our existence is contingent" -And you determined this, how? "But that's not the case with god. He exists independently of anything else." -Unless you're going to demonstrate that a god exists and is not contingent, this is just one big special pleading cake with the icing of an assertion on top. "God exists from himself" -This makes absolutely no sense. "God is the sole ultimate reality" -What? This makes absolutely no sense. "God is not just self-existent but is necessarily existent" -And you determined this, how? "Necessary existence is greater than contingent existence" -'Greater' meaning what? More impressive? Bigger? Higher in number? And 'contingent existence' would have to be demonstrated in the first place, and at this point, nobody has demonstrated that anything that exists, did not exist at some point. "If god is the greatest possible being... he exists in every possible world" -And you determined this, how? You can't just define things into existence to try and get away with a narrative. You would have to demonstrate knowledge of 'every possible world', and then demonstrate that god would necessarily be present in all of them, without simply restating the claim that he is. "It's meaningless to ask, 'who made god?'" -No it isn't. It's a reasonable reply to the assertion that god does not need a creator, or that god created everything. I'm sure it's a frustrating question to believers because you don't have a legitimate answer to it, but can only restate that that's how you simply define what a god is, but it is a reasonable response. Just like it isn't 'meaningless' to ask why all bachelors are unmarried. Though the context of these two questions is fantastically different, as someone may just... not know what a bachelor is when they are described. "It belongs to the very concept of god, to exist. He cannot, not exist" -Thaaaaaaat's not how this works. Nice try, though. I think this presentation would have been more convincing if it were from the big man himself, though.
"nobody has demonstrated that anything that exists, did not exist at some point" Is this a typo? Did you always exist? The rest is answered in more detailed videos. I keep getting the impression a lot of you think a good argument is to just object that this one video doesn't answer all questions... All this really does it tell us you're, well, new to this, to put it politely. (Some of it answers itself. You need it explained to you why a being that exists in all possible worlds is greater than one who doesn't, for example?? Also, is it meaningful to ask "What caused all existence?"?)
Sure. Let's take it from the top. //Our existence is contingent" -And you determined this, how?// Unless you have a very strange and implausible concept of yourself, you will admit that you haven't always existed. You came into existence a finite time ago as a result of prior causal factors. This makes you contingent. So it is with all humans. Human beings as a species have not always existed, so there's another point of contingency. //Unless you're going to demonstrate that a god exists and is not contingent, this is just one big special pleading cake with the icing of an assertion on top.// This channel and the Reasonable Faith ministry as a whole has provided mountains of evidence that God exists and is not contingent. Two such arguments are the Leibnizian argument and the Ontological argument. Here are the links to those: Leibnizian argument: th-cam.com/video/FPCzEP0oD7I/w-d-xo.htmlsi=GN0LxBYDX3GddJ0Q Ontological argument: th-cam.com/video/xBmAKCvWl74/w-d-xo.htmlsi=oP6EKRdOhKWZpj6E //"God exists from himself"... "God is the sole ultimate reality" -This makes absolutely no sense... What? This makes absolutely no sense.// What about these statements doesn't make sense to you? //"God is not just self-existent but is necessarily existent" -And you determined this, how?// Again, see the arguments linked above. //"Necessary existence is greater than contingent existence" -'Greater' meaning what? More impressive? Bigger? Higher in number? And 'contingent existence' would have to be demonstrated in the first place, and at this point, nobody has demonstrated that anything that exists, did not exist at some point.// Greater is meant here in a qualitative sense. A maximally great being would have all and only the attributes of a qualitatively perfect being. Granted, there's subjectivity involved in our *discerning* what those great making properties are and whether there's a being that has them, but this is very different from whether such a being possibly exists. Unless you can show some type of internal incoherence, it seems clear to Dr. Craig and other philosophers (even many atheist philosophers) that the concept is coherent. //"If god is the greatest possible being... he exists in every possible world" -And you determined this, how? You can't just define things into existence to try and get away with a narrative. You would have to demonstrate knowledge of 'every possible world', and then demonstrate that god would necessarily be present in all of them, without simply restating the claim that he is.// This is not defining things into existence. Note the conditional "if" at the beginning. Again, even atheist philosophers admit that if God exists, then he exists in every possible world. The idea of God is one of a being which is self-existent and cannot not exist. So, if such a being exists, then it exists in every possible world. //"It's meaningless to ask, 'who made god?'" -No it isn't. It's a reasonable reply to the assertion that god does not need a creator, or that god created everything. I'm sure it's a frustrating question to believers because you don't have a legitimate answer to it, but can only restate that that's how you simply define what a god is, but it is a reasonable response. Just like it isn't 'meaningless' to ask why all bachelors are unmarried. Though the context of these two questions is fantastically different, as someone may just... not know what a bachelor is when they are described.// The concept of God is that of an uncreated being. So, by asking who created God, one is essentially asking who created an uncreated being, which is logically incoherent. Such a being may not exist, but that doesn't mean the question itself is meaningful. And, yes, it's meaningless to ask why all bachelors are unmarried if you're looking for more than a definitional reply. Likewise, it's meaningless to ask who created God if you're looking for more than a definitional reply. - RF Admin
@@Logician-Bones "Did you always exist?" That is what all the evidence points to, whereas zero evidence points to a creator or creation event of any sort, but unlike some demographics of people, I don't make baseless assertions. As for the question about being "greater", you just... restated my question and asked me if I needed to ask it. Not sure what to do with that.
@@rampagingswine9475 You're seriously arguing that the evidence says that you always existed? That's pretty bold, I'll give you that! But I think virtually everybody else will leave you there as lacking any credibility... And such an argument would only argue for God in another way anyway. Next: The old "zero evidence". Way off, my friend.
@@rampagingswine9475 A few more points, so switching back to this account for them (we'll see how this goes; YT is autoghosting a lot lately). Can you answer the question about if something caused "all existence"? Also did something cause "all causes"? (Something outside of them?) Are those coherent questions? Also, are you omniscient? If not, you have distinct limits. Even if you had always existed, having a beginning is only ONE type of distinct limit. You aren't infinitely sized, you have a weight limit, etc. Even a beginningless yet contingent you would have external causes to your current nature. Even I have now become one, since I caused you to reply to me.
But honestly this is a great video, Your just missing some key points. Yall keep calling God Male bothers me so much. Like women didnt exist in the beginning. And then you say God is in all worlds, then turn around and say God is outside of its creation, huh ? I conclude nothing = something ( 0 = 1 )
LOL. Seems you don't even understand the video. And no! Calling God "him" doesn't mean anything. He was a man in the person of Christ, but no Christian believes that God has an assigned gender
He's following the Bible in the use of the male. God evidently wants us to do that. From the NT, it seems implies with the bride of Christ that far from devaluing women actually it's a metaphor God has been using for union similar to marriage, actually would suggest that by calling humanity as a whole the bride that it raises us up to some kind of equality (see Genesis 3 which predicts male domineering as a bad thing, and some passages in the NT which confirm this, despite some popular misunderstandings of others). Basically, humans are two, and God becomes a human in Christ, always foreknew he would, for among other reasons to help us related to him better since he made us as social beings among ourselves. So he had to pick one for himself in this metaphor. It does use the female in the case of the hen/Jerusalem metaphor by Jesus, and Wisdom in Proverbs (who the NT says is the pre-incarnate Jesus), though. To the other, it's more like God is no limited thing, by being all possible things in one thing without limits, like, as mentioned in another comment, when the crest and trough of two waves meet, or in this case, when that situation is the original. Similar to the "everything on a bagel" concept in Everything Everywhere All at Once. (Which probably got the idea from classical theism.)
About worlds versus creation, in other videos he clarifies that in the terminology of "worlds" he doesn't mean just a universe, but an entirety of how all reality is or could be, including God. So a "Possible World" means everything that does or could exist, including both God and whatever he creates/actualizes.
@@Logician-Boneswhy wouldn't it be omniscient and your god would? It's just your projection because you believe that we as humans are the highest for of existence in the universe, which is infinite with infinite number of galaxies, and you think that god therefore has to be similar to us, so you invited a god in our image and said that he made us in his image. That's just so silly and childish.
@@VeljaPopov It's not that the universe wouldn't be omniscient and God would, but that if the universe was omniscient, it simply would BE God. You would just be redefining "universe" to have the same definition as what we label "God." The rest of your comment seems to be imagining something about me I never said or implied, and isn't true. I'm not projecting anything about human nature onto God.
@@Logician-Bones sorry then if I misinterpreted your statement. I'm just saying that religions view of some personal god being somewhere that somehow created the universe is irrelevant. We have what we have that is our reality and it's governed by the natural laws. What is that we can't ever know, we can just use common sense, critical thinking, logic and science to make sense of the world around us, so that we can adapt better, for the purpose of our survival. I don't know about you personally and your ide of god, but religions ideas of god and literal interpretations of the Bible are pure nonsense and totally irrelevant.
@@VeljaPopov Why would they be irrelevant? And how are they nonsense? Every actual attempted argument to those ends that I've seen - having been looking in-depth and in conversations like this with skeptics, for over 20 years now, has been logically debunked where testable. So with respect, I don't think so.
Since we know the universe is somewhere over 13 billion years old, that means God just hung around for 99.99997% of that time bored until he decided to create humans for the sole purpose of worshipping him. It's an idiotic assertion that God always existed.
I think it's a very narrow and unenlightened viewpoint you present that God created such a huge Universe with such large distances between stars, planets and galaxies only so he can sit around bored until he creates a single very small Earth with teeny tiny people on it for the sole purpose of worshiping him. Although I cannot give you direct evidence, I think God created a huge variety of civilizations throughout the Universe, and I take the example of extreme variety of all the living species that lives on Earth as a tip off of his desire for variety elsewhere and his desire for creation of life through the Universe that can enjoy consciousness, progress and independent growth, besides worshipping him.
A being that is called God cannot be contingent. By definition, God is the greatest conceivable being. Observational science is contrary to long ages for the universe. At any rate, it doesn't matter. Even if the universe were a trillion trillion years old, God would still be waiting around for an eternity to create (according to your view). Actually, God wasn't "waiting" if time hadn't been created yet.
@@ji8044 I think it's a very narrow and unenlightened viewpoint that God created such a huge Universe with such large distances between stars, planets and galaxies only so he can sit around bored until he creates a single very small Earth with teeny tiny people on it for the sole purpose of worshiping him. Although I cannot give you direct evidence, I think God created a huge variety of civilizations throughout the Universe, and I take the example of extreme variety of all the living species that lives on Earth as a tip off of his desire for variety elsewhere and his desire for creation of life through the Universe that can enjoy consciousness, progress and independent growth, besides worshipping him.
Lest anyone think that the word is Jesus and not the Almighty’s powerful speech which creates and it is also personified as a he, the word is what the Almighty used to create in Genesis 1 as we read “And God said:” it is not a person as many think of the word, as I said it is personified in John just as wisdom is personified as a woman in the Proverbs.
@@ji8044 /Jhn 8:28 - So Jesus said, “When you lift up the Son of Man, then you will know that [fn Lit I AM]I am [He], and I do nothing from Myself, but I speak these things as the Father taught Me./ Jesus claimed to be the I AM of Exodus and Isaiah, the divine name, and to be the same entity as the Father, as if he was a separate entity, he would necessarily do things from himself.
@@ji8044 /Jhn 8:28 - So Jesus said, “When you lift up the Son of Man, then you will know that [fn Lit I AM]I am [He], and I do nothing from Myself, but I speak these things as the Father taught Me./
@@ji8044 /Jhn 8:28 - So Jesus said, “When you lift up the Son of Man, then you will know that [fn Lit I AM]I am [He], and I do nothing from Myself, but I speak these things as the Father taught Me./
Thanks for responding! I love your apologetics! this world needs more faith! As to creatio ex nilhilo - It became a dominant theological concept in the 2nd and 3rd century, primarily as a response to Hellenistic philosophical influences and the theological challenges posed by Gnosticism and other dualistic worldviews. It reflects later philosophical concerns rather than the worldview of the biblical authors or the understanding of the people of the Bible. Ancient Near Eastern cosmology assumed preexistent chaotic matter. Scripture portrays creation as God’s ordering and shaping of the cosmos, bringing functionality and purpose to preexistent matter Genesis 1:2 describes the earth as “formless and void” (tohu va-bohu) before God begins the act of creation, suggesting preexisting chaos. Psalm 104:30 celebrates God’s creative spirit renewing the earth, implying ongoing divine ordering, not an absolute beginning from nothing. See Scholars: Jon Levenson (“Creation and the Persistence of Evil”) emphasizes that the Bible portrays creation as God’s victory over chaos, not the production of matter out of nothing. James Barr argues that the Hebrew bara (Creation) focuses on functional creation, not material origin. Gerhard von Rad notes that Genesis 1 reflects God’s sovereignty in ordering the cosmos, not metaphysical speculation about origins. I agree the doctrine serves a theological purpose but is not rooted in the linguistic, cultural, or conceptual framework of the biblical text. Would love to hear your point of view. One reason there are 47000 christian groups and denominations is there are a lot of opinions!
@ronaldmorgan7632 he ? A man always been here ? But then your going say God was never created. Something that's never been created never been here then right ? Make it make sense all the way. Are you saying that nothingness is God ? The no thing that isn't ?
@@skurbanvintr0 You are obviously thinking in a naturalistic way because you know no other. God is often called 'he'. Maybe he isn't a gender. All we know is that 'he' is a spirit. Just think of God as a thinking software that has been around forever. He hasn't been created--he just is. The universe is just one of his many thought experiments.
@@skurbanvintr0 Only if you beg the question that all things require being created, which we don't argue and makes no sense. Does "all existence" need created by something having existence outside it? Incoherent. Same with "all causes" - do they need caused by a cause that's outside of "all causes"? Things without distinct limits like that don't need created. Beginnings and other limited things do. Simple.
@@skurbanvintr0 Only if you beg the question that all things require being created, which we don't argue and makes no sense. Does "all existence" need created by something having existence outside it? Same with "all causes" - do they need caused by a cause that's outside of "all causes"? Things without distinct limits like that don't need created. Beginnings and other limited things do. Simple.
why god exist is he obligated by existence if yes then its tragedic for us and him because he will create universe infinite times our soul will get exhausted by creating again and again 😢 we are trápped and god himself trápped in existence
Yes he's "obligated" to exist (necessary), and no, he need not make infinite universes. Even if he did, why is that itself tragic? Tragedies do happen in our universe, though. But God outsmarts evil in the end.
@logicianbones oh ok what will actually change after that isnt one life is and 1 time universe is enough to entertain and satisfy and wipe out gods aloneness
@@WaveFunctionCollapsed No, because a limited life doesn't fulfill the need for one unlimited pattern of all patterns to exist (having unlimited life in every self-consistent sense).
@@logicianbones ok next question can i go outside of god i just hate him i know he exist but i dont want to be part of him i wanna break my soul from him exist seperately forever in non existence
You are gifted brother. God bless you with the ability to think and explain things logically and clearly.
I wish I could be a student of such a blessed brilliant servant of the most High God. may God bless you and add you wisdom, strength and 50 more years to live
Fantastic video! Keep up the great work, Dr. Craig!
God is wonderful!
Excellent work Dr Craig
That was excellent!
Exodus 3:14 God said to Moses, “I am who I am"
….and Popeye said, “ I yam what I yam”.
Or "I am that I am"
Thank you I understood most of that. Leads me to do more research into the concepts and realities discussed.
wow that was great
First there is GOD and then there is me. It only makes sense. ❤
to a toddler
I love these videos so much! God bless you Dr. Craig and the entire team working on these videos! ✝️
There could not have been a Trinity of Persons as God without the concept of 3 or the way of talking about 3. God would have had to have depended upon some way of thinking about 3 to know Himself as a Trinity.
Secondly, if God is All Knowing, then there was never a moment ( logical or chronological ) in the existence of God where He did not know that this World would exist. And that would mean there would be no need for Possible Worlds. God could not have created any other World than this World. If God had a choice of what World He would create, then He did not know what World would exist until He made that choice ( which means that God was not All Knowing ).
I always think about abstract objects such as numbers or "price", such as the examples in the video, as merely DESCRIPTIVE tools. That, for example, if there are 3 apples in front of me, the "3" is describing a reality that is linked to the apples, not making the number 3 itself exist in some idealist plane. The fact that such descriptive tools are available for us to work with them, for me, is more evidence that our minds are in some way a reflection that we humans share in a small way the divine spark, made in the image of God, for we are able to think in those abstract terms, among other things, not that we are "borrowing" those abstract objects from an idealist plane.
Abstract terms are all man made.
How could he possibly know these things about God? Such things, even if true, would be unknowable.
Why think that? Is God incapable of sharing knowledge of himself to his creatures? - RF Admin
@@drcraigvideos How would he do that?
@@RayG817 That's like asking how God has the ability to create the universe. He simply has the ability necessarily in virtue of being a perfect being. - RF Admin
@@drcraigvideos Exactly. You just make up a definition of "God" and then wish it into existence. That is a dangerous combination of ignorance and hubris.
I think that anything which is self-existent will be necessary. This is because of the principle of sufficient reason.
Everything that exists has an explanation for its existence, either in the necessity of its own nature (it is a self-existent thing) or in an external cause (it is a dependent thing).
Since everything requires an explanation for its existence, and since contingent things are not self-explained, their explanation MUST be found in some external cause. So all contingent things are dependent things. And if all contingent things are dependent things, then all independent things are necessary things.
So the answer for things is?
@@therick363 You might need to rephrase; it's not clear if you had a point to make.
@@therick363 I'm not sure what you are asking.
@@Jack-z1z the external cause is?
Are there a few options and possibilities or is there only one explanation for everything?
@@therick363 " the external cause is?" - I have no idea what you mean by "external cause". I never said anything about an external cause. External to what?
"Are there a few options and possibilities or is there only one explanation for everything?" - If you are asking what serves as the explanation for why anything at all exists, then the answer is that there must be an independent, self-existent, necessary foundation of reality.
And if you are asking if there are multiple possible options of what that could be, I am only aware of one possibility, and that would be a perfect being.
1 Corinthians 8: 6yet for us there is but one God, the Father, from whom all things came and for whom we exist. And there is but one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom all things came and through whom we exist.
yep, the usual special pleading of these cultists. Of course, they can't show that their imaginary friend merely exists, much less anything else about it.
And idiots like you simply attack the person rather than his arguments. How much lower can you be?
I don’t think it’s wise to declare ideas to be of any lesser reality than physical objects since we risk ending in nominslism and ultimately nihilism. After all without real ideas, there is no possibility of a belief in God. All such ideas would merely be the imaginations of the persons in question, perhaps inspired by experiences but ultimately having the individual as their source. God therefore becomes an interpretation created by the real deity which is the self in this paradigm. Rather we ought to understand ideas as forming in some way a bridge between man and the divine, as formed from the interactions between matter and spirit or divine energies. The necessity of these ideas poses no issue however as they are or at least have thier origin ultimately in God’s energies. That is to say that insofar as they really are necessary it is only because they are part of God’s nature. On this basis we should also presume there are innumerable other ideas which necessarily are exist in God but which find no expression in matter. God rather expresses His ideas in the world, choosing which to manifest and in what way. That is a rather crude way of putting it as with God these would all have a complete unity, but we may find an example in light, which comes down as pure white and forms colors through its interactions with matter. This too is somewhat crude as in God’s case it is the light itself which chooses how to color things and even which things ought to receive color, but the example is there.
Very nice Dr Craig
Wouldn't it be much simpler to just say "Existence is self-existent"?
God is not "existence," so the two statements would not be logically equivalent. - RF Admin
@drcraigvideos Please explain to me why "God" can't be existence.
@@MrJamesdryable Here's a simple argument:
1. If God is existence, then everything that exists is God.
2. We exist and are not God.
3. Therefore, not everything that exists is God.
4. Therefore, God is not existence.
This is a logically valid argument of the form modus tollens. The conclusions (3 & 4) follow from the premises (1 & 2). Therefore, to deny the conclusions, you would need to provide a reason for rejecting one or more of the premises.
- RF Admin
@@drcraigvideos Your second premise is a personal opinion. Therefore, this is not a logically valid argument. Do you believe that anything that exists must have a creator?
@@drcraigvideos That isn't an argument it's just a definition. If I say god = existence YOU have no way of refuting THAT.
Where is the Bible verse that God exists from himself?
the god of the OT was only one of many gods and part of a divine council. low bar doesn't know his bible very well.
Dr Craig thanks for affirming my faith and give others tools to think that faith is reasonable, God bless you
God is clearly the ultimate abstract concept. Vagueness is his greatest attribute
@@vladtheemailer3223 there is no vagueness, the vagueness resides on our misunderstanding of Scripture.
@fcastellanos57 I'm talking about how God is described by christians.
@ All Christians do not have the same understanding concerning who God is, there are many that say God is Three and others say God is the Father of Jesus, which is the correct interpretation. The confusion lies not on the Bible but on our understanding and lack of knowledge added with tradition which does not agree with scripture.
@@fcastellanos57 The confusion lies with trying to create a Christian religion from a Jewish messiah.
@@ji8044 Christians believe Jesus is the Jewish Messiah, that is why we are called Christians. But more than him being the Jewish Messiah, Jesus is the sacrificial lamb who took away the sins or the world and reconciled us with the Father.
Another wonderful video from Dr Lane Craig
Another pitch from a scientifically uneducated snake oil salesman, WLC.
Great videos: what I find interesting is that things that exist that God creates in the physical world can be incrementalized with numbers and understood with the language of mathematics. The imperfect things that humans create, we humans are the scalers that determine whether theses things should exist in a philosophical realm of good and evil and we mediate it’s existence with linear language.
What is the difference between something existing "from itself" and something existing from nothing at all? I assume "from" here has the sense of "originating from", or "caused by". It seems easier to get one's head around the idea of something existing uncaused, or for no reason at all, than of something caused by itself: for to say that A is the cause of B purports to give a (partial) explanation of B, while to say that B is its own cause explains nothing at all but simply mystifies. Better, surely, to say that there is no explanation for B's existence than to speak in terms of B's causing itself, explaining itself, or existing "from itself".
Better to avoid all that nonsense by just realizing that time space and matter are eternal. no god needed.
Not sure about time and space, but matter is created and destroyed all the time, so that at any rate is not eternal. Actually I don't really know what it might mean to say that space and time is eternal, if eternal means, as it seems to, existing outside space and time. We go about expecting to be able, at least in principle, to find our experience intelligible; that is, that it be explicable. Are we to suppose that each part of it can be explained by something else, but the whole shebang just hangs there, in Craig's terms, 'self-existent', with no rhyme nor reason to it. That seems, if not a logical contradiction, then at least a pragmatic, performative, epistemological one, given our inquiring natures and the principle of sufficient reason whose deployment has been so astonishing fruitful. On the other hand, asserting the explicability of the whole shebang by reference to some other self-existent thing seems equally hopeless. We have probably gone beyond the powers of human reason at this point. It would actually be strange if human reason were up to comprehending such matters, at least on the naturalistic hypothesis, for there is no reason apparent why we might have evolved the capacity to answer all the questions which we have evolved the capacity to pose, specifically to ask, of any particular phenomenon, "Why?".
@@russellsharpe288 "matter is created and destroyed all the time" nope. see the 1st law of thermodynamics. matter only changes form.
If by 'matter' you include energy, then yes, though there seems to be some controversy about whether conservation of energy is compatible with GR in an expanding universe. But we agree that the form of energy is constantly changing. Perhaps eventually the universe will settle down into a stable heat-death in which nothing ever happens again, and then it will be eternal in the sense of continuing indefinitely. But will there be any sense in asserting a flow or arrow of time in such an unchanging landscape? It's not so clear. Maybe it would be simpler just to say that time comes to a halt then. All this is highly speculative and not really relevant to the question of how to conceive a chain of explanations (either ending arbitrarily in an unmoved mover, or affording an infinite regress) if there are not to be exceptions to the principle of sufficient reason which we assume pragmatically all the time in our every attempt to understand anything. My original remark was just to the effect that there seems little difference between adding a reflexive arrow from an explanatory unmoved mover looping back to itself in order to claim that it explains itself (which seems to be the sense of a God being 'self-existent') and simply asserting that explanations come to an end in that mover. The latter option finally gives up on the principle of sufficient reason, while the former seems a formal device to allow us to pretend that the principle is universally valid while depriving it in this one instance of any possible use, application or even comprehensibility. For how does it aid our understanding to say that something explains itself? It seems no different to saying that nothing explains it. (And an infinite regress obviously doesn't provide an explanation either, for then the entire chain of explanations lacks one)
🔥Mathematical truth exists. Timeless, spaceless, and immaterial. Objective. Logical. Infinitely beautiful. Moral truth exists. Timeless, spaceless, and immaterial. Objective. Logical. Infinitely beautiful. Athiesm is immoral. Jesus came to bring light to this dark world. Amen. 🔥🔥✝✝👼🏼👼🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼😇😇🙏🏼🙏🏼✝✝🔥🔥
Yep, all man made, just like every god you care to mention.
@@horridhenry9920 You're uneducated about the ontology of mathematics to suggest that it's man-made. Mathematics wasn't invented; it was discovered. It's an intrinsic part of nature; that's to say even if humanity didn't exist then the underlying principals of mathematics would still exist.
Saying something is timeless spaces in a immaterial, is the definition of nonexistence, if you’re saying God lives outside of time and space, God would have to live in another universe or Multiverse, otherwise you’re saying God exists nowhere.
@@Obeytheroadrules did you not read the original message?
@@ryngrd1
message ?
An incoherent rant ,
AGAIN !
if you think a God you can’t prove exists , is self existent then so can the universe be ?
What you are saying is the equivalent to saying “existence exists” which is self-evident (you used the term self-existing).
God exists is a fallacious term because either existence or God has to be more powerful. If God exists, then existence is more powerful than God. That’s because without existing, God can’t be. You’ve also characterized God as a male, which confines existence on one side of the scale, whereas it evidently is a balance between two differing things (male and female).
It’s likely that God or other religious characters are a fictional representation of existence and the nature of humans/the universe.
Why are you treating "existence" like an object? - RF Admin
@ Existence is objective reality, hence why it is treated like an object. However, it is also subject to many things (subjective). Objective and subjective are intertwined. That’s why math is a subject that is also objective in nature.
If i’m not mistaken, you have assumed that it is “bad” to treat something like an object. Many of us, including myself - treat objects such as food, electronics, and cars with utmost care to ensure they support our lives. I suggest that in our language, we simply not treat things “badly”.
My question to you is;
What is wrong with treating things like things (objects)?
Am I nothing (no-thing)? I consider myself to be something. I consider you something as well.
Thank you, Dr. Craig, for explaining some deep concepts in a way that makes ghem easy to understand!
Wow! What do you know!
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This video used the correct Sherlock Holmes, Basil Rathbone.
jeremy brett
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toxic comment section alert. Remember trolling is not cool.
trying to silence opposition is not cool
"God Is Self-Existent"
The Pure Definition of Begging the Question and Circular Argument.
It is a logical certainty that there must exist an uncaused first cause which is self-existent. Even philosophers from thousands of years ago realized this. Your attitude is thousands of years behind the times.
Keep defending that your intelligence ultimately comes from nonintelligence.
@@LawlessNate On the contrary, it is thousands of years ahead of the gullible minds.
@@LawlessNateso then I can offer an alternative option for this uncaused first cause other than this god right?
@@therick363 There are things that can be known about this uncaused first cause via deductive logic. As one example, the uncaused first cause must be some kind of personal agent rather than some kind of unguided force. The uncaused first cause must have many of the properties that monotheists mean by the concept of "god", so you denying that it's God you'd simply be calling a rose by any other name.
I don't think platonism downplays God. Even necessary things can still be contingent. Numbers must exist but they are contingent on existence itself. If God is a actual actualizer he is the not the only nessessary things but the only thing that is non contingent as all other nessessary things are contingent on him even if they can't not exist. The same way God can't not exist.
The idea that there are necessary-but-contingent things (necessity ad extra) is inconsistent with Scripture, which teaches that all things other than God were created. Since Scripture is true in all that it teaches, it is false that there are uncreated necessary-but-contingent things.
What is your argument for the claim that "numbers must exist"? - RF Admin
@drcraigvideos it could be that those things are just byproducts of God. Not created but eternally existing. The same way the person's of the trinity are uncreated but separate from the father. The same way we can derive the non person's that are also part of God omnipotence omniscience and Omni benevolence from a purely actual actualizer. If there is a purely actual actualizer that implies there is a quantity. That being that there is one as it would be impossible to have two.
Another great video! Very nice animations and of course excellent teaching content
This has to be the dumbest Low Bar Bill video. And he has a LOT of dumb videos.
Our being here was contingent on biology. God’s existence is contingent on man’s imagination.
Uhhh, no. "Biology" is descriptive. That's like claiming a picture was painted "because of art" or that gravity exists "because of physics".
Physics, art, biology or whatever describe occurrences, something that happens.
It's literally meaningless to say we're here "because of biology", as biology has no teleology. Your comment is no more useful than saying "we're here, just cuz".
And what is "man's imagination"? A bunch of molecular interactions that can "think"? Molecules that "think" about non molecular objects that don't exist , or at least may not exist (like unicorns), but can accurately define proofs of other objects that don't exist, like triangles (as even the straightest lines like gamna rays or X rays have wave lengths). How is it that my molecules can understand perfectly all of the attributes of a thing that doesn't exist? The "imagination" is called "lconcept, and it can literally prove how a triangle must be if one were to exist, that no square-circles can exist in reality and innumerable other things.
Why don't you just say that you don't remotely understand the subject, is it really that hard?
I thought my statement was clearer. We are here because of the results of evolutionary biology. And we, as well as every other living thing on earth, are still evolving. God only exists as a result of humans using their imagination to dream him up.
@davidskolik5303 Nope, not "as a result of". Evolutionary biology is a description of what has happened. It's not even theoretically possible for evolutionary biology to address Final Causation.
And God isn't a product of "human imagination", but God is inferred by "human reasoning". Those are vastly different.
@@godfreydebouillon8807 biology is real, gods are imaginary
We KNOW that humans invented gods because it's in the historical record. Your jesus gods (there are many of them) evolved from the gods of the hebrew bible (there are many of them), which evolved from Canaanite and Babylonian gods. It's funny how you lot pretend to believe the bible but know nothing about how it was created.
"God" is a meaningless word. Everyone invents their own meaning of the word, including Dr. Craig. Saying that "God is self existent" is not saying anything. Quoting the Gospel of John does not give meaning to "God". Saying "In the beginning was God" makes as much sense as saying, "In the beginning was the Easter Bunny" Both God and the Easter Bunny are not defined and are not real, and Dr. Craig's talking about them as if they were real does not make them real. But most importantly, the connection between "God" and Christianity is so far-fetched as to be ludicrous.
It's really saying that you are God, and you self created yourself and all things. But that's another rabbit hole for later.
Not really. God has a basic meaning that logic can refine; of authority. The word in Hebrew it's used to translate, and in Greek, as well as early English that it comes from, all meant authority, especially top authority. The rest is clarifications of what it would really mean to be the ultimate entity, that are logically grounded. And no, the Easter Bunny would be described as a thing with limits, or else you're just putting another label on God, so that attempted counter isn't really doing anything. And Christianity has sound support and uniquely happens to pass all sound tests to have the right definition of God that thorough, proper logic also confirms - so it's the opposite of that.
@@Logician-Bones What a splendid way to make people do what you want! Get them to believe in a being that you invent, that has "authority". Of course, they don't know what the being commands, but you do!
@@thegreatgazoo7579 Sound deduction from a fair test is the opposite of inventing like that. It's the solution to the very problem you're talking about!
@@thegreatgazoo7579 Getting people to reject even logic is the way you make them manipulable to do what YOU want.
If a bachelor existed, he would be unmarried. But that does not prove that any bachelors actually exist. The same is true for God. If the God you speak of existed, he would be maximally great. But that doesn't prove that he exists (see Kant's objection).
Nine minutes of psychotic word salad.
> claims content is “word salad”
> can’t even use the word “psychotic” correctly
@@rosamorales729 psychotic = delusional he used it correctly
So which category would "abstract objects are merely attributes of God's mind/nature" be in?
Conceptualism www.reasonablefaith.org/images/uploads/GodAndPlatonicHost2018.png
First, this wouldn't make sense of putative abstract objects which are not part of God's attributes. For example, Satan has the attribute of being evil. But this is certainly not an attribute of God.
Second, it also depends on whether one is taking "attributes" to be existing things. If they are not existing things, then one can affirm the anti-realist, neutralist position that Dr. Craig describes in the video.
There is a realist position that posits that putative abstract objects are concepts in the mind of God. This is called "conceptualism." Dr. Craig has written on some issues with the view, but considers it a fall-back position if all anti-realist options fail. - RF Admin
@@drcraigvideos What do you make of this: God consists of three persons by His very nature, yes? But that would imply that God is contingent upon the integers-a mathematical concept. The alternative is to say that God is three persons from our perspective, but then the Trinity would not be part of God’s inherent nature. A similar argument applies for God’s oneness.
@@seanpierce9386 Except being omniscient is part of the definition of God, so there's no problem there, since his being three persons is a matter of self-identity (falls within knowledge). His needing to have his definition doesn't mean he's "contingent" - that's not what contingent means.
@@seanpierce9386 Being omniscient is part of the definition of God, and being a Trinity is a matter of self-identity, so falls without knowledge. His needing to fit his definition doesn't make him contingent; that's not what the word means. He has these things intrinsically in himself.
Nothing but endless assertions without evidence or reason.
BUT! It does eatablish that theists believe something can exist without a creator, which means one can just as easily assert the entire universe has always existed and doesn't require a creator.
And the difference there is the universe is observable and has continously testable existence amd properties. No god needed.
That would just redefine the universe as God (or as including God), so does nothing. To exist without a creator, it needs to have no limits at all, but the universe does. Believe it not, we thought of that objection long ago LOL.
@@logicianboneswhat are the limits of the universe?
@@therick363 Do you think the universe is omniscient and entirely alive in an indivisible way? If not, you think it has a limit (or at least you don't know).
@ before asking me a question please answer mine first then ask yours.
@@therick363 ... That is the answer. Can you read?
La hoja de papel es blancA.
"...you might not have existed."
False. If we are supposing that circumstances were different than what they actually were, then we are talking about fiction not fact.
You're having to presume the truth of determinism to suggest such a thing. If libertarian free will is a real thing then we actively make real choices in real-time that shape what happens next, and if that's the case then if our past-decisions were different it follows rationally that the present would have been different as well.
@LawlessNate I presume that things are as they are rather than not. If libertarian free will is a thing that exists, then it is not possible for it not to exist.
good answer.
This coming from the same secularists who posit the existence of a multiverse to rationalize the fine tuning of the universe LOL 😂
@@Hola-ro6yvthe multiverse comes from mathematics and deep physics concepts
Remember when sean carroll destroyed this guy? And he is still spouting the same BS.
“God is self existent’, and you know this how? Aseity is nothing but philosophical jargon.
The “word”was made up by man. Yep, theism is an adult game of make believe.
Even philosophers from thousands of years ago realized the logical necessity of an uncaused first cause. It's a 100% true fact of reality which you'd have to deny the validity of logic itself to suggest otherwise. You're simply ignorant of the topic and your attitude is thousands of years behind the times.
@@LawlessNate No basis for that answer at all.
@@ji8044 No basis for your objection at all.
You do know "jargon" doesn't mean "nonsense" right?
@@LawlessNate While I don’t fully agree with the OP, what you’re saying is a common misconception. It’s possible to get around the first cause argument by positing that time extends infinitely far into the past. And no, entropy is not a problem since an infinite sum can be finite. (Plus, it’s a statistical “law” anyway.) Even if the first cause was necessary, it isn’t necessarily God, let alone the Christian one. That’s why I don’t find the Kalam convincing at all. You have to make assumptions to force it to work the way you need it to.
Since definitions are imaginary ideas that we make up, you can define god as self-existent, or loving, or purple or aardvark-shaped or anything you like.
At this point, you have an idea you imagine, in your head. If you want to justify a belief that this idea is true, you need to actually point to something in objective reality that matches up with your idea. And this is something theists never do. So, no one should believe you. You shouldn’t believe yourself.
That worked up to where you claim we never do, when we have more sound support for it than virtually anybody has for anything, so much we can't begin to count it. Also it's possible to logically show that alternatives would have to be self-contradictory too.
@@logicianbones I disagree with everything you said. I have never seen an argument for god with sound premises and a valid structure, and I've been looking and listening for roughly 15 years.
There is also no contradiction in the fundamental nature of reality being not a god. Anything a god can achieve, some unknown natural process or non-god supernatural alternative could also hypothetically achieve, with no contradictions entailed. If I simply claimed one of these alternatives is true, and take it on faith, then I'd be on exactly the same footing as theists.
@@weirdwilliam8500 So you haven't done your homework, so what? "I have never seen" is only the fallacy of argument from personal ignorance. The rest of us have. To your last, if that were true, that other thing would simply be God. Clearly you don't know, or you would have known that already.
@@logicianbones Oh? I notice you aren’t offering such an argument or piece of evidence.
At what point during a thorough search for something does it become reasonable to conclude that the thing simply isn’t there? If I’ve spent decades listening to thousands of apologists, believers, academics philosophers, and other religious thought leaders, and none of them can offer anything more than presupposition, provably false statements, fallacious reasoning, and emotional appeals, then I think that is probably enough to justify reasonable disbelief. I’m still open to hearing good evidence, and I wouldn’t mind if a god existed, but I’m not holding my breath.
Your last point is strange, in light of your accusation of my personal ignorance. Have you not thought of any alternatives to your particular god? If a past-eternal god existed as all of reality, and chose to rupture its own being, destroying itself in the process of converting its mindless remnants into our universe, then there could be no god now. If a supernatural being analogous to a mindless fruiting plant is the fundamental bedrock of reality, and it eternally grows and periodically buds off universes containing random combinations of physical constants, that would fully account for the reality we see but would entail no conscious god. Or a council of 17 eternal necessary trickster pixies could have created our universe using their combined skills, then moved on to other pursuits without a care, interest, or thought for our existence.
I could list off an infinite number of different ontologies that, if in fact true, would fully explain and account for our reality and would entail no conscious or supervening god. And they all would have exactly as much good evidence or likelihood as your religious beliefs, which appears to be none. Since I value being rational, I ought not believe such things without good reason and evidence.
@@logicianbones we KNOW that humans invented gods because it's in the historical record. Your jesus gods (there are many of them) evolved from the gods of the hebrew bible (there are many of them), which evolved from Canaanite and Babylonian gods. It's funny how you lot pretend to believe the bible but know nothing about how it was created.
Saying God is self existing, but the universe can’t be self existing, is double standards
The universe had a beginning though
@
we don’t know that for sure , we know this current expansion possibility had a beginning doesn’t mean the universe had a beginning, we can only see far back as 13. 8 billion years.
All the scientific evidence we have is that it began to exist
@@Obeytheroadrules
There two problems with your argument
1st: Heat Death: If the universe didn’t have a beginning, it would have always existed, right?. But according to the 2nd law of thermodynamics, entropy increases over time, meaning all usable energy in the universe would have been used up by now. Stars and galaxies would have burned out leading to "heat death." This means the universe must have had a starting point. Without a beginning, the universe would contradict the observable order we see today.
2nd: Today: If the universe didn’t have a beginning, that would imply it’s infinite, right? If time stretches endlessly backward without a starting point, how could we pinpoint 'now,' this exact moment? The very concept of 'today' relies on a specific starting point from which it emerged. If the universe has existed infinitely, it would be impossible for the present moment to exist, as there would be no defined starting point to lead us to it.
@
No, it doesn’t , the BGV , theorem, says that this current expansion possibly had a beginning. Allan Guth , co-author of the BGV theorem and pioneer of cosmic inflation says ……quote :
The Big Bang was most likely not the first expansion our universe has experienced, the cosmos most likely goes through an ever expansion and contraction, and we are simply living in one of those phases.
.
Allan Guth : phD, professor of physics and Astro physics, Massachusetts Institute of technology .
Utter sophistry.
Any actual objection? - RF Admin
@@drcraigvideos
Yes! Why must you give a lying snake oil salesman (WLC) a forum?
@@drcraigvideos If you understand the word sophistry you will realise that is my objection
@@GuyBaker555 So, no real objection. Got it. - RF Admin
These videos are just so ridiculous.
God exists. Why? Because I say he HAS to exist.
Slice up that strawman. Hack away at it. Good job! (Pats on head.)
@@logicianbones: "It belongs to the very concept of 'God' to exist." (8:08)
This is the only argument for the existence of a god that I noticed in the video. But concepts are the kind of thing that it was pointed out, elsewhere in the video, don't actually exist:
"We are merely pretending, or imagining, that mathematical objects like numbers exist..." (5:49)
Concepts, like numbers, are merely the product of our imagination. So, yes, the argument of the video is that a god exists because he is imagined to exist.
@@jamesc3505 You think this one video is all Craig's said on it??
@@jamesc3505 And that's saying the thing the concept describes is what exists, not the abstract description of the thing. You're missing the point.
@@jamesc3505 He has longer vids on this; please watch them before leaping to assumptions.
Technically God does not exist... God subsists
if you are happy to accept that self-existent things can exist, why posit a god that we have no evidence for, instead of pointing to the universe, which as far as we can tell cant be created or destroyed?
Because we do have good evidence of Him =)
I see the existence of a higher creation power through all the things that surround me in life/nature, including my own consciousness and the consciousness of others. And greater evidence I have for God is a personal relationship that is every bit as real as my relationship with any other human on this planet, except deeper and more meaningful.
I, like others, have seen/heard things that are not of this world in pursuit of my relationship with God over 47+ years. Things I never imagined were possible, when I grew up as an agnostic.
But I like everyone else can't give evidence of personal experiences, except for my totally changed life, desire and direction.
The universe is one of those platonic concepts and not really a "thing". The things in the universe are contingent and temporary.
@tritt78 Please provide one _evidentiary fact_ that goes toward demonstrating this 'God' is a reality.
@@SpaceCadet4JesusAnd I don't see such.
My personal relationships 1) involve REAL entities (persons); 2) occur at a REAL and particular location and time; 3) with REAL interactions that are observable; 4) are experienced within a REAL medium of communication (voice, body language, gesture, touch, affection); with a REAL initiation (phone call, invitation, visitation); 5) and REAL response (affirmation, disagreement, correction, encouragement).
Does a Christian's personal relationship with this Christ exhibit ANY of these characteristic features? Yes or no.
I love these!!! Great job!
Well produce this Self-Existent guy then. Have him on national television.!
Hi Larry,
God is constantly making himself known - and to ALL people.
You have more than your intellect by which to receive knowledge. I presume that you believe that there is a thing called love - and that you and others exist. You did not reach these conclusions with your mind - your mind cannot prove either of these things. Instead you reached these conclusions using your relational channel. They are relational knowledge.
The bible says that God - who is Spirit - relates with our spirit - the Spirit TESTIFIES to us (Romans 8:16) - a word which implies both truth and relational experience at the same time. We can relate with God as we can relate with people - via our spirit.
A person who says that they don't believe in God is not dishonest if by that statement they mean that their mind has not concluded that there is a God. But we are more than our minds. It is because we are more than our minds that the bible says that every person is without excuse when it comes to awareness of God (note in the verse below that God's divine qualities are PERCEIVED - which is a different thing to deduced - our minds can only think - they aren't capable of RELATING with God):
Romans 1:21 ESV
For his invisible attributes, namely, his eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly perceived, ever since the creation of the world, in the things that have been made. So they are without excuse.
Spiritual truth is the consequence of relationship - relationship is not the consequence of intellectual conclusions.
@larrycarter3765 He did make an appearance on earth, His name is Jesus, there's a book about him. You should give it a read. It'll change your life.
He did make an appearance on earth, His name is Jesus, there's a book about him. You should give it a read. It'll change your life.
@@iankerlin He also happened to appear to Paul as a special occasion, according to the Bible. But for whatever reason, He’s never bothered to do so again, even for those who are actively searching. As someone who fits that description, I have to conclude that if God does exist, then He doesn’t care enough to prove it.
I know your rebuttal will be about free will. But God showing Himself will only enlighten those searching and expose those too stubborn to listen. Ultimately, it’s God’s call, so He’ll know if people are faking it.
@@seanpierce9386 Non sequitur; he's already proven it. Why need to keep on doing so over and over, when sufficient proof exists of types that stand for all time?
What I want to know is: How long DID God wait before creating the universe?
That's not how it works; he created time in the first place. (Alternatively you can describe it as eternity past.)
Wow. Another baseless claim that can't be falsified. Color me surprised!
You can falsify his argument through logic. If you think his premises are logically faulty, point it out. Not every truth is through the senses
@@jonathanteoh5759 An argument is a set of true premises leading to one and only inevitable conclusion based on the laws of logic and the rules of proper inference.
Do you agree? Yes or no.
@@Theo_Skeptomai Yes, I agree
@@jonathanteoh5759 The verity of any premise can be established to be true if and only if one of following is demonstrated: the premise is 1) axiomatic; 2) deduced logically from two other and independent veritable statements presented within the same argument (prior premises) by means of the rules proper inference; 3) can be _demonstrated_ to be true (eg, water begins to boil as its temperature reaches 100⁰ C; 4) are generally accepted to be true by the vast majority of accredited experts (eg, Scientific Theories), or 5) can be considered factual by other verified means ensuring validity, authenticity, and accuracy.
Do you agree?
@@Theo_Skeptomai You offered no counter and threw up smoke and mirrors because you have nothing. well done. Happy to see you are tuning desperate to TRY and HOPE that the videos coming out from here don't shatter your view any further. You are grasping at straws and need to humble yourself. Or continue to honor yourself and worship your own intellect, because that is your god.
So what you are suggesting is that God, before creating his very first creation existed for an eternity past being the only thing in existence. That seems very strange to me. It must have been that he, God, really got board after eons and eons of time being all by himself with absolutely nothing else in existence to finally decide to pop something else into existence out of nothing. I don't see how the words, "In the beginning" actually suggest this concept. Also the words, "3 All things were made by him; and without him was not any thing made that was made." seems to say that only the things that were made were made by him. This leads me to ask if there are other things that weren't made that are also self-existent. Thus he might have made things from things that are self-existent like unorganized matter maybe. What evidence is there that nothing else existed?
Your first arguments there are close to the Loneliness Problem with Unipersonal ideas of God, so actually argues for the Trinity. But boredom isn't really a problem, since God isn't subject to emotions. In the (absolute) beginning, God did something, means God pre-existed it. Pretty simple. To the last bit, see Colossians 1, especially verse 16. Jesus wasn't made, and made all things, and all other things than God have been made, basically. (Also if there were two such things, one or the other isn't ultimate, so is contingent on the other, so doesn't really solve the problem. See other threads for more details.)
There was no "before" God created the universe
@@logicianbones So are you suggesting that God was not all alone because he had Jesus as part of his same being and the Holy Ghost? But being the same being although separate persons (very incomprehensible) wouldn't they all have the same thoughts and ideas being they are the same being? The three in one being the only thing that existed for an eternity past still seems quite lonely or boring or without much purpose for an eternity past. We are talking about an unlimited never ending past with nothing else in existence until that first creation came about. Seems very, very strange concept to me. How is God not subject to emotions and is considered a God of love? Isn't love an emotion? I understand that Jesus was the same being as the Father but a separate person (very incomprehensible) and that he created all things, but my issue is that before the very first creation they existed for an eternity past with nothing else existing. Isn't that a very strange concept? Seems like a long, long, time to not have much purpose.
@PinkKeeby So are you suggesting that the universe is as self-existent as God himself?
@JohnDoe-po8ei No. I'm just saying that time came to exist along with the universe, it is a property of it. So that scenario of God sitting there for eons and eons until he decided to create the universe isn't accurate. God doesn't experience the flow of time as we do, He is timeless
Fatal flaw: the speaker assumes the existence of God, which assumption is wholly unjustified.
No. Craig's talking about sound deduction of God's existence, not assumption.
@@logicianbones "No. Craig's talking " Nobody has ever produced any sound deduction for the existence claim of any god.
@@philhart4849 Then show an actual reason why it isn't sound. Bald assertion isn't an argument.
@@philhart4849 Yes we have.
@@logicianbones "Yes we have." When and where have you produced any sound deduction for the existence claim of any god?
Some people just dont listen to themselves. Total nonsense brought as intelligent talk.
What a load of bullshit!
Why think that? - RF Admin
@@drcraigvideos As usual Christians have a lot of claims but they never present any kind of evidence!
@@drcraigvideos because it is self-evident ROFL!!!!!!!
Ah. Come on Low Bar Bill!
Pretense Theory is not just the answer to Platonism but also to theism.
It is also the answer to the question _"Who created God?"._
- *_"Imagine_*_ that there is a God. So there is a God."_
Not _"who"_ but *"what"* created God?
*Humans* like you and theists did and are doing that in their imaginations as that God of yours and theirs doesn't exist concretely but only imaginarily.
What exactly do you think Pretense Theory is or implies? Because your comment here seems to be based on a drastic misunderstanding. - RF Admin
@drcraigvideos Well, I know exactly as much of Pretense Theory as that is there in this video. If I know nothing about Pretense Theory apparently, then that's because there is nothing about it here in this video despite it being mentioned here - at least then there isn't a significant amount of it here.
Oh, and where exactly is the extraordinary concrete evidence for the supposedly extraordinary concrete existence of that non-concretely but only imaginarily existing extraordinary God of yours?
This video of yours also lacks that crucial information.
Sounds great, and may well be very true, we still have a very flawed creation with so much unnecessary suffering, not caused by sin, just there for no reason, and he watches as untold atrocities, cancer and disease for humans and animals, despicable acts of humans on other humans and does nothing, 2billion people will not think of him once their whole life, not what you would think 2000 years after his final plan to save his " in his image" creation
Natural evil is caused by sin. See Genesis 3. Also Romans.
I have an alternative to platonism... common sense...
Oh dear
I think Rainn Wilson had it right when he said "God is an experience, not a dude". For those already committed to the aseity of God Dr. Craig's comments make perfect sense.
Why think that Rainn is correct? - RF Admin
@@drcraigvideos By "dude" I mean a being, one substantially like us since we are reported made in His image. While seen as omnipotent, omniscient and omnipresent, He has thoughts, feelings, emotions, desires as we do. He desires relationships and can forgive us when we stray. While not an old man with a long beard, this makes Him a "dude". However the omni-business is inconsistent with this "dudeness". He has to be outside of time to have created time, but he has to be within time to have this "like us-ness". Postulating some sort of "cosmic time" to resolve this paradox is a slight-of-hand trick. A more honest conception of Him is that he is not really like us at all (what "made in His image" means is a mystery). Without being like us, the only way we can be known to us is indirectly -- by experience. So, it is not rational to see God as any sort of person, superior or not. Doing so just doesn't work. On the other hand, I have experiences that have had some sort of divine nature. I can't explain them, they just happened. Thus I think Mr. Wilson is on to something.
Christianity or our Lord Jesus Christ is not about materialism or things of the flesh. He is all about the divine moral intelligence and truth of God, as he tells us in his gospels: "God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth" John 4:24
There is more to this life than just the materialistic world, there is the spiritual/emotional world of morality, and what we consider to be sacred and divine.
What do we perceive as sacred? Ourselves? Our family? Other people?
Do we consider the moral actions of particular individuals as divine or mundane?
Only our Lord Jesus Christ can answer these questions ✝️
God is self existent.
Why?
Because we don't have any OTHER way to prove his existence.
God is merely the essence of sophistry.
Hello, that whose essence - what it is - is identical to its existence - that it is - is necessary to concurrently impart existence for everything whose essence is distinct from its existence. This has nothing to do with the past or whether or not the universe has a beginning, but with the here and now. The requirement of that whose essence is not distinct from its existence follows logically from the distinction between them in other things. There are 3 main arguments for the reality of this distinction which I could describe in another comment if wanted. As those things in which they are distinct require a concurrent cause for their continual existence as obviously they cannot impart their own existence to themselves as that would require them to be logically prior to themselves in existence which is utterly nonsensical; in other words they would have to exist to cause themselves before -- either temporally or logically -- they actually exist which is logically impossible. Therefore, it requires a concurrent cause either by something where there is, again, such a distinction or in the unique thing -- there could only possibly be one as for there to be multiple would require a distinguishing feature, but then the essence would not be identical to its existence, but be existence plus whatever the distinguishing feature-- in which there is no such distinction.
Could there be an infinite regress of things with such a distinction? No. That is because this is a hierarchical causal series in which concurrently powerless-by-themselves effects must terminate in a first member -- not temporally -- who is the power source. As it is obvious that at least one thing exists with such a distinction it necessitates this first member in which the essence is identical to its existence otherwise none of the effects, namely everything with such a distinction, would exist, e.g, you, a dog, or a tree. Upon fleshing out all the details of the subsistent existence one arrives at that who is perfect, omnipotent, omniscient and much else that could not be predicated of the universe. However, this is what we mean by God. And it should be noted that these attributes are analogous and that God is identical to them. His existence equals His omnipotence and so forth. Therefore, God exists. Jesus loves you. God bless
Special pleading fallacy. Try again
It does not follow that god must exist because we are able to concieve of a god......
We cant imagine things into existence like that...
God.
Bro you are hopelessly confused
Precisly, that was my point too. These religious charlatans use philosophy to make stuff up and put a bow on top to make it look intelligent.
That's not the argument. Strawman fallacy. Our ability to conceive of this maximally great being is PART of the argument. Don't conflate one part with the whole argument. (That's also composition fallacy.)
@@logicianbones
Where is the part of the argument that shows this being actually exists?
Well done!
Is belief in Christ used to justify political beliefs or does belief in Christ actually change your politics?
For example when Christian's vote for never ending gun violence or tax breaks for billionaires...or unsustainable health care costs or inaction on climate change do they use theirr belief in Christ to justify this support?
Or when the words of the bible don't align with their political ideology do they just throw those words away?
1 Peter 3:10 NLT
If you want to enjoy life and see many happy days, keep your tongue from speaking evil and your lips from telling lies.
James 3:3-6 NLT
"The tongue is a small thing that makes grand speeches. But a tiny spark can set a great forest on fire. And among all the parts of the body, the tongue is a flame of fire. It is a whole world of wickedness, corrupting your entire body. It can set your whole life on fire, for it is set on fire by hell itself."
Most Christian leaders in Germany welcomed the rise of Nazism in 1933. They did not speak out against hateful speech or violence. After 1933, most did not speak out against legal measures that progressively stripped Jews of their rights.
Do you think the Christians who lived in Germany and who voted for and supported Hitler used their belief in Christ to justify this support? Do you think the words of Hitler mattered to them or did they love his words? Do you think they ever regretted their actions or just regretted that Hitler lost? Do you think the priests that preached from the pulpits that Hilter was chosen by God for Germany are burning in hell now?
Hitler - "The ultimate goal must definitely be the removal of the foreigners altogether."
Trump -"You wouldn’t believe how bad these foreigners are. These aren’t people. These are animals."
Trump -" If I don’t get elected, it’s going to be a bloodbath for the whole. That’s going to be the least of it. It’s going to be a bloodbath for the country."
Hitler -" We must care for the purity of [our] own blood by eliminating foreigners."
Trump-" Foreigners are poisoning the blood of our country."
Trump - "I don’t know if you call foreigners people… In some cases they’re not people."
Hitler -" I am acting in accordance with the will of the Almighty Creator: By defending myself against the foreigner, I am fighting for the work of the Lord."
HItler - "With satanic joy in his face, the black-haired foreigner lurks in wait for the unsuspecting girl whom he defiles with his blood, thus stealing her from her people."
Trump -"These foreigners are rapists and criminals."
Hitler -"Humanitarianism is the expression of stupidity and cowardice."
Perfect! Thank you again. Bring more video's please.
Oh, you were brave for leaving the comments open, but I suspect that won't last long.
"The only reason that any of us exists is that we were caused to exist. We're dependent on something other than ourselves. Our existence is contingent"
-And you determined this, how?
"But that's not the case with god. He exists independently of anything else."
-Unless you're going to demonstrate that a god exists and is not contingent, this is just one big special pleading cake with the icing of an assertion on top.
"God exists from himself"
-This makes absolutely no sense.
"God is the sole ultimate reality"
-What? This makes absolutely no sense.
"God is not just self-existent but is necessarily existent"
-And you determined this, how?
"Necessary existence is greater than contingent existence"
-'Greater' meaning what? More impressive? Bigger? Higher in number? And 'contingent existence' would have to be demonstrated in the first place, and at this point, nobody has demonstrated that anything that exists, did not exist at some point.
"If god is the greatest possible being... he exists in every possible world"
-And you determined this, how? You can't just define things into existence to try and get away with a narrative. You would have to demonstrate knowledge of 'every possible world', and then demonstrate that god would necessarily be present in all of them, without simply restating the claim that he is.
"It's meaningless to ask, 'who made god?'"
-No it isn't. It's a reasonable reply to the assertion that god does not need a creator, or that god created everything. I'm sure it's a frustrating question to believers because you don't have a legitimate answer to it, but can only restate that that's how you simply define what a god is, but it is a reasonable response. Just like it isn't 'meaningless' to ask why all bachelors are unmarried. Though the context of these two questions is fantastically different, as someone may just... not know what a bachelor is when they are described.
"It belongs to the very concept of god, to exist. He cannot, not exist"
-Thaaaaaaat's not how this works. Nice try, though.
I think this presentation would have been more convincing if it were from the big man himself, though.
"nobody has demonstrated that anything that exists, did not exist at some point" Is this a typo? Did you always exist?
The rest is answered in more detailed videos. I keep getting the impression a lot of you think a good argument is to just object that this one video doesn't answer all questions... All this really does it tell us you're, well, new to this, to put it politely. (Some of it answers itself. You need it explained to you why a being that exists in all possible worlds is greater than one who doesn't, for example?? Also, is it meaningful to ask "What caused all existence?"?)
Sure. Let's take it from the top.
//Our existence is contingent"
-And you determined this, how?//
Unless you have a very strange and implausible concept of yourself, you will admit that you haven't always existed. You came into existence a finite time ago as a result of prior causal factors. This makes you contingent. So it is with all humans. Human beings as a species have not always existed, so there's another point of contingency.
//Unless you're going to demonstrate that a god exists and is not contingent, this is just one big special pleading cake with the icing of an assertion on top.//
This channel and the Reasonable Faith ministry as a whole has provided mountains of evidence that God exists and is not contingent. Two such arguments are the Leibnizian argument and the Ontological argument. Here are the links to those:
Leibnizian argument: th-cam.com/video/FPCzEP0oD7I/w-d-xo.htmlsi=GN0LxBYDX3GddJ0Q
Ontological argument: th-cam.com/video/xBmAKCvWl74/w-d-xo.htmlsi=oP6EKRdOhKWZpj6E
//"God exists from himself"... "God is the sole ultimate reality"
-This makes absolutely no sense... What? This makes absolutely no sense.//
What about these statements doesn't make sense to you?
//"God is not just self-existent but is necessarily existent"
-And you determined this, how?//
Again, see the arguments linked above.
//"Necessary existence is greater than contingent existence"
-'Greater' meaning what? More impressive? Bigger? Higher in number? And 'contingent existence' would have to be demonstrated in the first place, and at this point, nobody has demonstrated that anything that exists, did not exist at some point.//
Greater is meant here in a qualitative sense. A maximally great being would have all and only the attributes of a qualitatively perfect being. Granted, there's subjectivity involved in our *discerning* what those great making properties are and whether there's a being that has them, but this is very different from whether such a being possibly exists. Unless you can show some type of internal incoherence, it seems clear to Dr. Craig and other philosophers (even many atheist philosophers) that the concept is coherent.
//"If god is the greatest possible being... he exists in every possible world"
-And you determined this, how? You can't just define things into existence to try and get away with a narrative. You would have to demonstrate knowledge of 'every possible world', and then demonstrate that god would necessarily be present in all of them, without simply restating the claim that he is.//
This is not defining things into existence. Note the conditional "if" at the beginning. Again, even atheist philosophers admit that if God exists, then he exists in every possible world. The idea of God is one of a being which is self-existent and cannot not exist. So, if such a being exists, then it exists in every possible world.
//"It's meaningless to ask, 'who made god?'"
-No it isn't. It's a reasonable reply to the assertion that god does not need a creator, or that god created everything. I'm sure it's a frustrating question to believers because you don't have a legitimate answer to it, but can only restate that that's how you simply define what a god is, but it is a reasonable response. Just like it isn't 'meaningless' to ask why all bachelors are unmarried. Though the context of these two questions is fantastically different, as someone may just... not know what a bachelor is when they are described.//
The concept of God is that of an uncreated being. So, by asking who created God, one is essentially asking who created an uncreated being, which is logically incoherent. Such a being may not exist, but that doesn't mean the question itself is meaningful.
And, yes, it's meaningless to ask why all bachelors are unmarried if you're looking for more than a definitional reply. Likewise, it's meaningless to ask who created God if you're looking for more than a definitional reply.
- RF Admin
@@Logician-Bones "Did you always exist?" That is what all the evidence points to, whereas zero evidence points to a creator or creation event of any sort, but unlike some demographics of people, I don't make baseless assertions.
As for the question about being "greater", you just... restated my question and asked me if I needed to ask it. Not sure what to do with that.
@@rampagingswine9475 You're seriously arguing that the evidence says that you always existed? That's pretty bold, I'll give you that! But I think virtually everybody else will leave you there as lacking any credibility... And such an argument would only argue for God in another way anyway. Next: The old "zero evidence". Way off, my friend.
@@rampagingswine9475 A few more points, so switching back to this account for them (we'll see how this goes; YT is autoghosting a lot lately). Can you answer the question about if something caused "all existence"? Also did something cause "all causes"? (Something outside of them?) Are those coherent questions? Also, are you omniscient? If not, you have distinct limits. Even if you had always existed, having a beginning is only ONE type of distinct limit. You aren't infinitely sized, you have a weight limit, etc. Even a beginningless yet contingent you would have external causes to your current nature. Even I have now become one, since I caused you to reply to me.
But honestly this is a great video, Your just missing some key points.
Yall keep calling God Male bothers me so much. Like women didnt exist in the beginning.
And then you say God is in all worlds, then turn around and say God is outside of its creation, huh ?
I conclude nothing = something
( 0 = 1 )
LOL. Seems you don't even understand the video. And no! Calling God "him" doesn't mean anything. He was a man in the person of Christ, but no Christian believes that God has an assigned gender
@@raphaelfeneje486 Your Father who art in Heaven? Xtianity explicitly genders its gods.
He's following the Bible in the use of the male. God evidently wants us to do that. From the NT, it seems implies with the bride of Christ that far from devaluing women actually it's a metaphor God has been using for union similar to marriage, actually would suggest that by calling humanity as a whole the bride that it raises us up to some kind of equality (see Genesis 3 which predicts male domineering as a bad thing, and some passages in the NT which confirm this, despite some popular misunderstandings of others). Basically, humans are two, and God becomes a human in Christ, always foreknew he would, for among other reasons to help us related to him better since he made us as social beings among ourselves. So he had to pick one for himself in this metaphor. It does use the female in the case of the hen/Jerusalem metaphor by Jesus, and Wisdom in Proverbs (who the NT says is the pre-incarnate Jesus), though.
To the other, it's more like God is no limited thing, by being all possible things in one thing without limits, like, as mentioned in another comment, when the crest and trough of two waves meet, or in this case, when that situation is the original. Similar to the "everything on a bagel" concept in Everything Everywhere All at Once. (Which probably got the idea from classical theism.)
About worlds versus creation, in other videos he clarifies that in the terminology of "worlds" he doesn't mean just a universe, but an entirety of how all reality is or could be, including God. So a "Possible World" means everything that does or could exist, including both God and whatever he creates/actualizes.
@Logician-Bones can't say father with no mother, that's simple logic.
Great, now try and use that same logic and apply it to the eternal infinite universe.
We already did; it would have distinct limits like not being omniscient so doesn't qualify as the ultimate cause.
@@Logician-Boneswhy wouldn't it be omniscient and your god would? It's just your projection because you believe that we as humans are the highest for of existence in the universe, which is infinite with infinite number of galaxies, and you think that god therefore has to be similar to us, so you invited a god in our image and said that he made us in his image. That's just so silly and childish.
@@VeljaPopov It's not that the universe wouldn't be omniscient and God would, but that if the universe was omniscient, it simply would BE God. You would just be redefining "universe" to have the same definition as what we label "God." The rest of your comment seems to be imagining something about me I never said or implied, and isn't true. I'm not projecting anything about human nature onto God.
@@Logician-Bones sorry then if I misinterpreted your statement. I'm just saying that religions view of some personal god being somewhere that somehow created the universe is irrelevant. We have what we have that is our reality and it's governed by the natural laws. What is that we can't ever know, we can just use common sense, critical thinking, logic and science to make sense of the world around us, so that we can adapt better, for the purpose of our survival. I don't know about you personally and your ide of god, but religions ideas of god and literal interpretations of the Bible are pure nonsense and totally irrelevant.
@@VeljaPopov Why would they be irrelevant? And how are they nonsense? Every actual attempted argument to those ends that I've seen - having been looking in-depth and in conversations like this with skeptics, for over 20 years now, has been logically debunked where testable. So with respect, I don't think so.
the greater mind generated the stories, Jesus was part of the giant hoodwink, I know this as I told God I want the truth
God bless you
Since we know the universe is somewhere over 13 billion years old, that means God just hung around for 99.99997% of that time bored until he decided to create humans for the sole purpose of worshipping him. It's an idiotic assertion that God always existed.
I think it's a very narrow and unenlightened viewpoint you present that God created such a huge Universe with such large distances between stars, planets and galaxies only so he can sit around bored until he creates a single very small Earth with teeny tiny people on it for the sole purpose of worshiping him.
Although I cannot give you direct evidence, I think God created a huge variety of civilizations throughout the Universe, and I take the example of extreme variety of all the living species that lives on Earth as a tip off of his desire for variety elsewhere and his desire for creation of life through the Universe that can enjoy consciousness, progress and independent growth, besides worshipping him.
Wait, so your comeback is "God couldn't have always existed because he would've been bored"? C'mon, you can do better.
Who are you to say what God was or wasn’t doing during the time prior to humans? What evidence do you have that He was bored and actionless?
A being that is called God cannot be contingent. By definition, God is the greatest conceivable being.
Observational science is contrary to long ages for the universe. At any rate, it doesn't matter. Even if the universe were a trillion trillion years old, God would still be waiting around for an eternity to create (according to your view). Actually, God wasn't "waiting" if time hadn't been created yet.
@@ji8044 I think it's a very narrow and unenlightened viewpoint that God created such a huge Universe with such large distances between stars, planets and galaxies only so he can sit around bored until he creates a single very small Earth with teeny tiny people on it for the sole purpose of worshiping him.
Although I cannot give you direct evidence, I think God created a huge variety of civilizations throughout the Universe, and I take the example of extreme variety of all the living species that lives on Earth as a tip off of his desire for variety elsewhere and his desire for creation of life through the Universe that can enjoy consciousness, progress and independent growth, besides worshipping him.
Lest anyone think that the word is Jesus and not the Almighty’s powerful speech which creates and it is also personified as a he, the word is what the Almighty used to create in Genesis 1 as we read “And God said:” it is not a person as many think of the word, as I said it is personified in John just as wisdom is personified as a woman in the Proverbs.
Jesus never said he was God and in every gospel portrays himself as subordinate to gospel, as does Paul in all his epistles.
It's Jesus. Jesus is the Word literally personified. See JP Holding on this. These aren't opposing ideas LOL.
@@ji8044 /Jhn 8:28 - So Jesus said, “When you lift up the Son of Man, then you will know that [fn Lit I AM]I am [He], and I do nothing from Myself, but I speak these things as the Father taught Me./ Jesus claimed to be the I AM of Exodus and Isaiah, the divine name, and to be the same entity as the Father, as if he was a separate entity, he would necessarily do things from himself.
@@ji8044 /Jhn 8:28 - So Jesus said, “When you lift up the Son of Man, then you will know that [fn Lit I AM]I am [He], and I do nothing from Myself, but I speak these things as the Father taught Me./
@@ji8044 /Jhn 8:28 - So Jesus said, “When you lift up the Son of Man, then you will know that [fn Lit I AM]I am [He], and I do nothing from Myself, but I speak these things as the Father taught Me./
And apparently so are we. Creation out of nothing is non biblical. 😊
Why do you think it's non-biblical? - RF Admin
Thanks for responding! I love your apologetics! this world needs more faith! As to creatio ex nilhilo - It became a dominant theological concept in the 2nd and 3rd century, primarily as a response to Hellenistic philosophical influences and the theological challenges posed by Gnosticism and other dualistic worldviews.
It reflects later philosophical concerns rather than the worldview of the biblical authors or the understanding of the people of the Bible. Ancient Near Eastern cosmology assumed preexistent chaotic matter.
Scripture portrays creation as God’s ordering and shaping of the cosmos, bringing functionality and purpose to preexistent matter Genesis 1:2 describes the earth as “formless and void” (tohu va-bohu) before God begins the act of creation, suggesting preexisting chaos.
Psalm 104:30 celebrates God’s creative spirit renewing the earth, implying ongoing divine ordering, not an absolute beginning from nothing.
See Scholars:
Jon Levenson (“Creation and the Persistence of Evil”) emphasizes that the Bible portrays creation as God’s victory over chaos, not the production of matter out of nothing.
James Barr argues that the Hebrew bara (Creation) focuses on functional creation, not material origin.
Gerhard von Rad notes that Genesis 1 reflects God’s sovereignty in ordering the cosmos, not metaphysical speculation about origins.
I agree the doctrine serves a theological purpose but is not rooted in the linguistic, cultural, or conceptual framework of the biblical text.
Would love to hear your point of view. One reason there are 47000 christian groups and denominations is there are a lot of opinions!
Then why do yall mention something that's not created ? That means God doesn't exist. Nothingness ( void ) is the definition yall should study more.
Because he's always been (ie never created). Got it?
@ronaldmorgan7632 he ? A man always been here ? But then your going say God was never created. Something that's never been created never been here then right ? Make it make sense all the way. Are you saying that nothingness is God ? The no thing that isn't ?
@@skurbanvintr0 You are obviously thinking in a naturalistic way because you know no other. God is often called 'he'. Maybe he isn't a gender. All we know is that 'he' is a spirit. Just think of God as a thinking software that has been around forever. He hasn't been created--he just is. The universe is just one of his many thought experiments.
@@skurbanvintr0 Only if you beg the question that all things require being created, which we don't argue and makes no sense. Does "all existence" need created by something having existence outside it? Incoherent. Same with "all causes" - do they need caused by a cause that's outside of "all causes"? Things without distinct limits like that don't need created. Beginnings and other limited things do. Simple.
@@skurbanvintr0 Only if you beg the question that all things require being created, which we don't argue and makes no sense. Does "all existence" need created by something having existence outside it? Same with "all causes" - do they need caused by a cause that's outside of "all causes"? Things without distinct limits like that don't need created. Beginnings and other limited things do. Simple.
why god exist
is he obligated by existence
if yes then its tragedic for us and him
because he will create universe infinite times
our soul will get exhausted by creating again and again 😢 we are trápped and god himself trápped in existence
Yes he's "obligated" to exist (necessary), and no, he need not make infinite universes. Even if he did, why is that itself tragic? Tragedies do happen in our universe, though. But God outsmarts evil in the end.
@logicianbones oh ok what will actually change after that isnt one life is and 1 time universe is enough to entertain and satisfy and wipe out gods aloneness
@@WaveFunctionCollapsed No, because a limited life doesn't fulfill the need for one unlimited pattern of all patterns to exist (having unlimited life in every self-consistent sense).
@@logicianbones ok next question can i go outside of god i just hate him i know he exist but i dont want to be part of him i wanna break my soul from him exist seperately forever in non existence
Y'all think god is real but think this whole thing being a simulation is unreal 😂 its the dame crap
Just a way to control and exploit gullible people, with no basis in fact.
What's your objection? - RF Admin
For criticizing people for not having any facts you didn't give any: not even a simple argument. Typical dogmatic atheism
This guy would have been selling used cars if he were not selling religion