Mutcer wrote:What real thing in this world do Christians believe "God" is?
Christians speak as if God is some real thing in this world. But when confronted about what God really is, Christians are often fairly ambiguous or evasive. Thus, it is difficult to get a clear understanding of what real thing in this world Christians purport God to be. Or could it be that God isn't real?
What a question, indeed! I find myself, when asked "who am I
essentially", answering this question in elusive terms, which may well be empty illusions! If there is a God, the same problems, of proving ourselves, is then projecting on proving what is real about God. Fortunately, we can always recline on commonsense as one of our cords of last recall-- when attempting to proving ourselves. Nevertheless, when attempting to prove what is real about a God, It's far more difficult to discern what is real or essential, I think.
What
may be "real" about God is what is essentially to it. The spirit, the zeitgeist, or sometimes called the "mind" are all one way of putting it. We might see evident instances of this mind in work through the design and patterns of plants, and through the prudent evolutionary pruning in nature. Sure, evolution may just play out as empty functions, like how a computers processes information; however, those functions were put there for a reason by programmers. A piece of wood might not turn into a ship overnight, but over a long period of time, with just the right conditions, with just the right materials, people may start to build ships, and colonies, and governments, and cars, and computers. Until, through the wisdom of nature, by way of the spirit or "mind" of God, we find ourselves here, in front of a computer, reading these very words. (Socratic irony; a serious joke)
Is there a God? I certainly haven't proved anything. I believe, one method a person can use is to point, empirically, to patterns and designs, in history and Nature, which might point to some rational entity beyond the world of mere physical existence. Just like a person claiming what is real about himself or herself is one's mind; a christian, similarly, might claim that was is essential or real about God is "the" mind. Proving God may be so difficult that it may once again call upon the cord of last recall, calling upon a pragmatic decision. When a problem can't be answered indefinitely, and it could go either way, what is in our highest interest to believe? As we weigh the consequences of this decisiion, what of Truth, Beauty, and Justice?
