Mendalla
Happy headbanging ape!!
- Pronouns
- He/Him/His
So, let us say, for the sake of discussion, that I come to believe in an intelligent creative force influencing guiding the universe in diverse ways (but that universe is capable of being studied and described by science even if God is not; I'm not likely to concede on that point). Not necessarily a specific religious understanding of God (ie. I'm not becoming a Christian or Jew or Muslim or some other theistic faith tradition); just a general, personal understanding of God with a somewhat panentheist leaning. So you do not need to convince me that there is a God. Let us assume that I've accepted that to a degree.
Why, then, would I go the next step of accepting the Christian Bible, and specifically the Christian narrative of the New Testament, as a revelation of God's will? What makes Christian ideas about grace, atonement, sin, salvation, incarnation and so on a necessity, or at least a reasonable way of seeing things, in a theistic universe?
Remember, you're convincing someone with a general faith in a God, not someone from a specific other faith, so no criticism (or insulting) of other religions will help here. You need to show a positive reason why I would embrace your religion instead of remaining a kind of non-sectarian, philosophical theist.
And if you're not a Christian but from some other theistic tradition (and I don't think we really have any of those right now), you can convince this hypothetical me of yours, too (but, again, please don't try to do it by criticism or slagging of others faiths).
Why, then, would I go the next step of accepting the Christian Bible, and specifically the Christian narrative of the New Testament, as a revelation of God's will? What makes Christian ideas about grace, atonement, sin, salvation, incarnation and so on a necessity, or at least a reasonable way of seeing things, in a theistic universe?
Remember, you're convincing someone with a general faith in a God, not someone from a specific other faith, so no criticism (or insulting) of other religions will help here. You need to show a positive reason why I would embrace your religion instead of remaining a kind of non-sectarian, philosophical theist.
And if you're not a Christian but from some other theistic tradition (and I don't think we really have any of those right now), you can convince this hypothetical me of yours, too (but, again, please don't try to do it by criticism or slagging of others faiths).