- Joined
- Jun 12, 2015
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- Lutheran
- Political Affiliation
- Conservative
- Marital Status
- Married
- Acceptance of the Trinity & Nicene Creed
- Yes
A higher power that is inherently supernatural is, pretty much by definition, outside the natural realm. So on that basis I wouldn't expect to be able to see it or measure it.
I know it's a hideously crude analogy but it's a bit like the old children's cartoons about flatlanders and how they couldn't comprehend anything that happened in the third dimension.
I agree. By definition, the supernatural would be.... well..... super natural and thus outside the realm of the natural to prove or disprove. I realize... for those pretty much locked into a materialistic/physical concept of reality (as modern folks tend to be), this automatically creates a problem. PERHAPS my theoretical physics classes drilled into me that even in the physical realm, well.... WEIRD is common, and there may WELL be "reality" that doesn't "fit" our usual, modern, materialistic, human sensibilities? My wife tells of when she was a girl and the family had this pug dog. He liked to watch TV and would be pretty passive about that until some dog came on - then he would run to the back of the TV and hunt for that dog. The kids laughed - even though they didn't have a CLUE how that TV worked, what the real "reality" was - only that there wasn't an actual dog inside the TV. It's hard for some modernists to realize that humans are not all-knowing, that "reality" doesn't necessarily submit to our experiences, concepts, philosophies. I realize that works EQUALLY to the advantage of the one who affirms God as to the one who denies such.... but maybe it just means that some things won't NECESSARILY be "proven" OR "disproven" by OUR materialistic concepts or "reality."
I think, too, there is a tendency in very modern, secular, materialic thought, to confuse faith with certainty. They actually aren't related, they are two quite different things. I think of this whenever I board a plane. I know enough physics to have a loose idea of why planes can fly (although it's a MUCH more mysterious thing that most think). But I wonder..... just wonder..... how many of those boarding the plane and finding their seat know how planes fly..... or even care if they do. And do they KNOW the maintainence of the plane? The pilot? The weather? They DO realize these planes sometimes made an abrupt and unscheduled "landing" resulting in everyone's premature death - but they board the plane. They LACK knowledge, certainty - but they have faith (pistos - to trust, to rely). Heck (since my wife doesn't come to this site)... on my wedding day some 11 months ago, I PLEDGED myself to her.... do I KNOW the future, do I KNOW she's the one to spend the rest of my life with? CAN I KNOW? Well.... I make that "leap of FAITH" as Soren Kierkegaard called it. A reasonalbe lead I agree, but a LEAP nonetheless. We do this all the time (to not is a psychological disorder - to be paranoid). I realize we could simply change the discussion to what is or is not a reasonable leap, but the point I'm making here is that we're embracing a reality that we either don't or can't "prove".... even a reality that may not "fit" a material, physical limit to reality.
But again, I have more "issues" with the Atheist (is no God) than I do with the Agnostic (I conclude I have insufficent cause for certainty). I can understand the patient praying before he signs that consent form for surgery...... but signing the form. I can even appreicate the one whose inability to know leads to them NOT praying and NOT signing the form.
Pax CHRISTI (It means "peace that comes in Christ")
- Josiah