The first and most fundamental law of logic says that A can not be A and non-A at the same time and in the same way.
It is logical and reasonable to believe in but one, true, and living God.
Christians are theistic in their worldview. The reason Christians do not believe in other gods is more the result of an understanding of the law of non-contradiction.
Of course Christians are theistic in their worldview. But it is also true they are atheistic in regard to 99.999...% of all the gods that people have worshipped through the years. I think if they were to truly understand why they reject all the thousands of gods that they do as being superstitious nonsense they would understand better why atheists reject their god.
I would suggest Christians don’t believe in other gods for the same reason Mormons and Muslims don’t—they have been taught to believe that way. Has nothing to do with the law of non-contradiction.
Well, I can't speak for others as you seem pretty comfortable to doing.
However, I can speak for me. I am a Christian and the reason I am not anything other than a Christian has to do with reason and logic.
I still contend that, "The reason Christians do not believe in other gods is more the result of an understanding of the law of non-contradiction." At least that would be true of the majority of Christians I know and am around on a regular basis.
To believe in Zeus, the God of the Bible and, Mohammed would be to hold views that are mutually exclusive. For me that would be a HUGE violation of the most fundamental law of logic . . . the law of non-contradiction.
So, for me it's pretty simple . . . I don't believe in other gods because to do so would be logically inconsistent both theologically and philosophically. It would be intellectually absurd.
I agree that it would make no sense to believe in Jesus and Zeus at the same time. That would indeed be a contradiction. But my point was that you believe in Jesus instead of Zeus only because of the time in history you were born and the particular part of the world you were born in along with the particular set of beliefs held by your parents/friends/authority figures.
1. Christianity is INHERENTLY DIVISIVE as believers are promised eternal bliss and nonbelievers eternal torture.
2. Christianity INDUCES UNWARRANTED GUILT AND FEAR by asserting that a Cosmic Judge watches one’s every move and knows one’s every thought.
3. Christianity OBSCURES TRUTH AND PROMOTES FALSEHOODS by diverting focus from the natural (real) to the supernatural (unreal).
4. Christianity DEBASES HUMANITY by condemning us as sinners worthy of eternal damnation.
5. Christianity BREEDS A FALSE SENSE OF IMPORTANCE by asserting that The King of the Universe knew each of us intimately before we were born, knows the numbers of hairs on our head, has a special plan for us, loves us, watches us, listens to our every word, desperately wants a personal relationship with us and even promises to give us anything we ask for (Mt 21.22).
6. Christianity’s assertion that the Devil is real ALLOWS FOR THE LITERAL DEMONIZING of others.
7. Christianity PROVIDES THE ULTIMATE JUSTIFICATION FOR EVILS of all kinds (such as the vilifying of homosexuals and the subjection of women).
8. Christianity’s THREAT OF HELL HARDENS HEARTS and causes others mental anguish.
9. Christianity PROVIDES COVER FOR ABUSES OF ALL KINDS as evidenced by thousands of sexual abuse cases in the last few years alone.
10. Christianity LEGITIMIZES FRAUD as evidenced by countless insincere televangelists and church leaders.
4 comments:
The first and most fundamental law of logic says that A can not be A and non-A at the same time and in the same way.
It is logical and reasonable to believe in but one, true, and living God.
Christians are theistic in their worldview. The reason Christians do not believe in other gods is more the result of an understanding of the law of non-contradiction.
Of course Christians are theistic in their worldview. But it is also true they are atheistic in regard to 99.999...% of all the gods that people have worshipped through the years. I think if they were to truly understand why they reject all the thousands of gods that they do as being superstitious nonsense they would understand better why atheists reject their god.
I would suggest Christians don’t believe in other gods for the same reason Mormons and Muslims don’t—they have been taught to believe that way. Has nothing to do with the law of non-contradiction.
Well, I can't speak for others as you seem pretty comfortable to doing.
However, I can speak for me. I am a Christian and the reason I am not anything other than a Christian has to do with reason and logic.
I still contend that, "The reason Christians do not believe in other gods is more the result of an understanding of the law of non-contradiction." At least that would be true of the majority of Christians I know and am around on a regular basis.
To believe in Zeus, the God of the Bible and, Mohammed would be to hold views that are mutually exclusive. For me that would be a HUGE violation of the most fundamental law of logic . . . the law of non-contradiction.
So, for me it's pretty simple . . . I don't believe in other gods because to do so would be logically inconsistent both theologically and philosophically. It would be intellectually absurd.
I agree that it would make no sense to believe in Jesus and Zeus at the same time. That would indeed be a contradiction. But my point was that you believe in Jesus instead of Zeus only because of the time in history you were born and the particular part of the world you were born in along with the particular set of beliefs held by your parents/friends/authority figures.
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