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I AM Showing that God s exists and is knowable Rolan Monje, BD, DMin – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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1
I AM
  • Showing that Gods exists and is knowable
  • Rolan Monje, BD, DMin

2
Outline
  • 1. PROVING GOD
  • 2. KNOWING GOD

Some slides following taken from Anne Jeffers
(UOL) John Oakes (ARS)
3
  • Part I
  • PROVING GOD

4
  • There will always be questions about God
  • We must meet people where theyre at and move
    from there. (Thats what Jesus did in the
    gospels.)
  • When people say, Prove to me that God exists,
    the first thing to say is What kind of proof do
    you expect?

5
Accepted approaches to proof
  • Tautological proof something is necessarily
    true, i.e. mathematical certainty (e.g. sum of
    the angles of a triangle 180 deg)
  • Empirical proof something is seen to be true by
    observation involves scientific method
  • Inferential proof something is inferred to be
    true because of the existence of other factors
    relates to scientific theory (in contrast to
    scientific method) used to prove the existence
    of God

6
Bible passages?
  • The Bible presents no argument for the existence
    of God
  • His existence is assumed
  • Certain aspects of the Biblical text (e.g.
    prophecy, claims of Jesus) can be used to show
    the divine nature of the Bible.

7
Basic Arguments for the Existence of God
  • 1. The Cosmological Argument (also known as the
    argument from cause touched upon in Gen 1)
  • 2. The Teleological Argument (more commonly known
    as the design argument touched upon in Rom 1)
  • 3. The Ethical Argument (also known as the moral
    argument touched upon in Rom1,2)

8
Sidenote Influence of culture
  • Culture is inescapable
  • Men try to convey feelings and convictions
  • Expression in God in art
  • e.g. Michelangelo
  • Male figure
  • Muscular
  • Long white beard

9
  • We have to filter out the influence of culture.
  • Most people will not buy into the idea of an old,
    bearded guy in the clouds!

10
1 Cosmological Argument
  • Is there a universe?
  • Can it be empirically proven?
  • What are the origins of the cosmos?
  • Why does the universe exist, instead of not
    exist?

11
Facts - cosmology
  • Our galaxy, the Milky Way has about 400 billion
    stars
  • There are about 100 billion stars in the universe
  • Every star is separated by vast amounts of empty
    space

12
Some proponents of the cosmological argument
  • Ancient Greek philosophers (e.g. Aristotle and
    Plato)
  • Christian theologians (e.g. Thomas Aquinas,
    Frederick Copleston)
  • Jewish theologians (e.g. Maimonides)
  • Islamic theologians (e.g. the Kalam argument
    presented by, among others, al-Ghazali).

13
Aquinas Argument Uncaused Cause
  • The argument from the Uncaused Cause
  • Everything has a cause.
  • Every cause has a cause.
  • This cannot go back forever.
  • Therefore there must be an uncaused cause that
    isnt caused.
  • The uncaused cause is what people understand
    by God.

14
Pertinent discussions
  • David Hume
  • Frederick Copleston
  • Bertrand Russell
  • In the end, if given a choice between believing
    that a physical thing (the universe) has always
    existed, or believing that a spiritual thing
    (God) has always existed, many will go with God.

15
Cause theory Statue of Liberty causes
  • The material cause Without the existence of
    marble we could never have a marble statue.
  • The efficient cause The marble itself is
    obviously not the marble statue. For the statue
    to come into being it needs to have been carved
    out of a block of marble by a person using a
    hammer and chisel, and a substantial measure of
    skill and artistry.
  • The formal cause Random hacking at a piece of
    marble will not make a statue therefore we need
    a further cause. To be the thing that it is, the
    statue needs to take the shape that it does, that
    of a horse or a man or whatever.
  • The final cause The only reason that all the
    other causes take place is because a sculptor has
    set out to make a statue in the first place. All
    three of the other causes have been called into
    operation in order to realize an intention the
    overall reason for the statues existence is that
    it is the fulfillment of a sculptors purposes.

16
2 Teleological argument
  • Teleios end, fulfillment
  • Mankind tends to think of an end to everything
  • The world everywhere reveals intelligence, order,
    harmony, and purpose
  • This implies the existence of an intelligent and
    purposeful being, adequate to the design of such
    a world

17
William Paley (1700s)
  • Imagine that you are walking down a beach and
    that you stumble upon a wrist watch. Even if you
    had never seen a wrist watch before, it is likely
    that you would be struck by the fact that it
    differs from the other objects in the vicinity a
    watch is obviously a collection of parts that
    have been cleverly combined in such a way as to
    fulfill a particular function, namely, to
    indicate the time. You would assume that the
    watch is not a natural object, but an artifact,
    i.e. something made on purpose by some
    intelligent agent. Indeed, you are likely to
    assume that the watch is the handiwork of a
    watchmaker who knew what he was doing when he
    made the watch. The assumption at work here is
    that the order found in the watch (and other
    artifacts) does not occur as a result of blind,
    accidental forces. On the contrary, it is assumed
    that order is always the result of an intelligent
    designer.

18
  • Paley said that if we all agree that a watch must
    have been designed by a watchmaker then surely an
    eye (that is complex beyond our imagination) must
    also have been designed.

19
  • An argument from analogy uses inductive logic.
    Based on what we observe we can induce a
    conclusion. This type of logic can only ever
    provide us with evidence that creates a high
    likelihood of the conclusion being true. Paley is
    really saying that given the complexity of the
    natural world it is highly likely that it came
    into being because of the intention of a designer
    (God).

20
Pertinent discussions
  • David Hume
  • Charles Darwin
  • Richard Dawkins
  • F.R. Tennant
  • David Hume also said that at best the argument
    shows that the universe must have been designed.
    It doesnt, though, guarantee that the designer
    was God.
  • Charles Darwins theory of evolution appears to
    have shown that the complexity of life can be
    explained without the need of a designer.

21
3 Ethical argument
  • One cannot deny the development of ethical
    thinking Sumer, Egypt, China, Palestine, Greece,
    etc.
  • Mankinds recognition of a highest good and the
    quest for a moral ideal, demand an necessitate
    the existence of a God to give reality to that
    ideal.

22
The problem of evil suffering
  • If belief that God exists is based on our
    observations of the world, we must be willing to
    look at everything. We have seen clearly that the
    world is incredibly complex. If we keep looking
    we will also see without much effort that it is
    often incredibly cruel.
  • Some of historys most influential philosophers,
    for example David Hume, John Stuart Mill and
    Bertrand Russell, challenged the traditional idea
    of an all-powerful,all-knowing and loving God
    because of the problem of evil.

23
  • A theodicy is an attempt to explain why the
    existence of evil and suffering doesnt
    necessarily show that God doesnt exist.

24
Two types of evil or misfortune
  • Philosophers of religion talk about two
    particular types of evil
  • Moral evil caused by human beings themselves
  • Natural evil caused by the way things happen
    in our world.

25
Discussion points
  • Atheists often assume that the reality of moral
    and natural evil is one of the most important
    pieces of evidence against belief in God.
  • But then, how they can assume that there is no
    explanation for such a state of being in this
    world? Could the existence of God answer to
    those same questions?

26
Theodicy argument against God
  • If God is omnipotent (all-powerful) why doesnt
    he crush evil and stop suffering?
  • If God is omniscient (all-knowing) why did he
    create a world which he knew would result in such
    pain and suffering?
  • If God is all-loving why does he allow innocent
    children to suffer?
  • Many people assume that if these questions cant
    be answered adequately then the only reasonable
    view to hold is that God simply doesnt exist.

27
Discussion points
  • Free-will concept in Genesis
  • Crucifixion in Gospels, Romans
  • After-life concept in Corinthians, Revelation
  • Sovereignty argument in Isaiah, Job

28
Focus of existence
  • Probably the central idea in Christianity is that
    humans find meaning and purpose in a love
    relationship with God and each other
  • Love the Lord your God with all your heart and
    with all your soul and with all your strength and
    with all your mind, and love your neighbor as
    yourself.

29
  • The faith position is an altogether more
    positive and optimistic one than the assertion of
    meaninglessness. It maintains that although evil
    is a terrible reality it can beovercome and one
    of our main tasks as human individuals is to
    fight against it. -- P Vardy
  • Were there no other evidence at all, the thumb
    alone would convince me of Gods existence.
    --Sir Isaac Newton

30
  • PART II
  • KNOWING GOD

31
God is knowable
  • This is something very distinct (and encouraging)
    about the Christian Worldview
  • The God of Buddhism, Hinduism, and Islam are
    very nebulous or distant gods
  • The God of the Bible is not only knowable, but
    also wants to be known

32
God is about relationships
  • Gen 126-27 shows from the beginning that God is
    about community
  • He is a God of fellowship this nature of God is
    intimately connected with the fact that he is
    knowable
  • God wants to be known ? He makes himself knowable

33
We can come to know God
  • Realizing human frailty and weakness, God, in his
    compassion, reaches out to us as humans
  • He reaches out to us in many ways, mainly
    through
  • Creation
  • The Bible
  • His Son

34
  • Jesus is the supreme revelation of the father (1
    John 520).
  • Although it is not possible to know God
    completely, the Bible affords us a practical
    knowledge of Him that is sufficient for fallen
    humanity to have a relationship with Him.

35
God revealed in Scripture
  • The Bible reveals Gods essential qualities
    through
  • Appellations
  • Activities
  • Attributes

36
1. Appellations (names)
  • In certain cultures, names carried special
    importance. In many Asian societies, a name is
    considered to reveal the character of the bearer,
    his true nature and identity.
  • This concept is well understood in the Ancient
    Near East.

37
  • Note how Gods name is to be hallowed in the Ten
    Commandments (third commandment, Ex 207).
  • David sang praise to the name of the Lord (Ps
    717).
  • For further study Ps 1119, Ps 14813.

38
Important Divine Names used in the Old Testament
  • Ex 314 (interlinear) YHWH
  • Original Hebrew text reads right to left all
    consonants
  • ????said ?????And God ?? unto ????
    Moses, ???? I AM ????THAT ???? I AM

39
  • , ???? ???? ????
  • Transliteration xhyh xsr xhyh
  • With vowels ehyeh asher ehyeh
  • Translation I am who I am or I will be what I
    will be, indicating Gods steadfast nature in
    relationships

40
  • Yhwh appears more than 6,000 times in the Old
    Testament. Jesus alluded to this name of God in
    John 858.
  • Note The true pronunciation of the
    tetragrammaton (yhwh) is unknown. The vocalized
    Yahweh is conjectural. The Masoretic Jews
    simply added the vowels of adonai (Heb meaning
    Lord) to the four consonants.
  • Some translations use Jehovah, but this is
    simply an Americanized rendition.

41
  • Gen 11, Ex 202 EL/ELOHIM
  • These highlight Gods power
  • These depict God as the strong and mighty One
    (see also Dan 94).
  • Other Near Eastern Cultures also called their
    local gods El.

42
  • Ps 14814, 1506 YAH
  • An abbreviated form of YHWH
  • Contained in the word hallelujah, which means
    Praise the Lord.

43
2. Activities
  • One can learn a lot about a person by looking at
    his/her schedule
  • What you do tells a lot about who you are
  • Bible writers spent considerable amounts of ink
    on Gods activities

44
  • God creates (Gen 1, Ps 24)
  • God saves and redeems (Deut 5, 2 Cor 5)
  • God plans (Isa 46)
  • God promises (Dt 15, 2 Pet 3)
  • God forgives (Ex 34)

45
3. Attributes
  • The Bible writers use a number of devices to
    present Gods attributes
  • These attributes are basically personal traits
    that God allows us to appreciate
  • Examples omniscient (Job 3716, Ps 1391-18),
    living (Jn 526), independent in will (Eph 15),
    eternal (Ps 902, Rev 18)

46
  • Gods attributes are not isolated traits. They
    stem for his relational nature. E.g. love (Rom
    58), compassion (Deut 3327), holiness (Ps 999).

47
Closing
  • Let us take time to study the arguments involved
  • Let us keep in mind that there is a purpose for
    our existence
  • Let us praise God for his uniqueness and his
    character!
  • Let us be excited that we can know our great and
    awesome God!
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