The real and true answer to your question is that faith is something you believe and understand ... or you don't.
Trying to logic into faith or "explain" it to someone who doesn't wish to believe is about like trying to convince someone to love another person. You may well think your two best friends are "prefectly matched" and should get together, but guess what? Your friend (sister/brother, etc.) may well fall in love with that woman/man you think is "scum of the earth".
BUT, since you asked for answers:
CoffeeCream wrote: I should define what I believe so we're all clear here. First of all I think the idea of evolution to be silly. Nature just magically selected certain species to survive and thrive? No way! There's too many holes in the theories and nobody's been able to prove it.
Which might be why that ISN'T the theory of evolution. Natural selection is only a part of evolution and it certainly isn't "magic". If you have 2 bucks, they will fight and the winner gets to impregnate the does ... with a few exceptions, like sometimes while the "big guys" are fighting, a little guy can "sneak in" and "do his thing" ... or maybe the biggest, baddes buck of all gets hit by a car before he has a chance to bread ... or... . THAT is how natural selection REALLY works.
CoffeeCream wrote: The people who believe in it are welcome to it, but they've been given enough time to produce the evidence and they never are able to.
visit Widowmaker's Creationist thread, beginning around page 89 or so. You will see plenty of presented real evidence.
BUT in one way you are correct, no one is absolutely sure
exactly how it occured and, certainly people of faith will put God in there somewhere. HOWEVER, the general idea--
that things change over time (through various means
including natural selection), that mutations occur, that natural selection occurs ... all of those ARE proven. As is the fact that different Geological layers represent different methods of formation and differant times, etc.
To say scientist cannot produce evidence means you haven't talked to many in the field or read much written by paleontologist, evolutionary biologists.
CoffeeCream wrote: ]1. God is omniscient. Ok if that's true then why did he create Satan knowing that he would one day rebel? Doesn't that mean that God indirectly created evil?
Yes
Then how could He be considered a good God. Also why did he allow for man to eat the apple? .
The ultimate answer is God knows, even if we don't.
That seems a little cruel to me - sort of like teasing a child into doing something that's bad for them
No, its more like raising a child, knowing full well they may choose to "do wrong" when they get older, may get hit by a car, etc.
Would we all perhaps have been happier without knowledge, without knowing that there was sin? Without chance for evil? Maybe so. BUT, we would not have been fully human. It is our struggles that define who we are.
What is it to just survive? Without pain, we don't really know what joy is. Also, though people suffer, other people achieve their greatest heights, the epitomy of humanity (Mother Teresa, etc.) by helping others. It is like the story of the mishapen angle. Sometimes God's grace, God's magesty is shown not in what happens, but in other people's responses.
CoffeeCream"2. ]If God is all powerful then why doesn't he just show himself to everyone? Either that or perform some miracle which would prove to everyone once and for all that he is actually interested in us. [/quote]
Christians and Jews believe he has and does ... they are called "miracles". For Christians, there is Christ himself.
Some things passed off as miracles certainly are not. Some things .. might be.
And, for some people NO proof is possible. Some people still believe the earth is flat ... despite pictures, despite many eyewitness accounts ... despite any form of evidence. "None is so blind as he who does not wish to see"
[quote="CoffeeCream wrote:I think he exists by the way, but Christians tell us that he loves us. Why doesn't he get involved in all the wars here and put an end to them all?
I don't think anyone can prove that this supreme being is really directly interested in our affairs.
These go together with your earlier question. The ultimate answer is that God made us who we are. Part of what makes us human is experiencing pain and suffering. Is that what God "wants", no. We have choices. Choice means sometimes we do good things, sometimes we don't. Everything anyone does has ramifications far beyond just the immediate. Maybe it takes one child dying to alert the nation to the dangers of improper quality control in medicine ... or to the fact that AIDS is a disease and not a "sin". Science Fiction time travel scenarios are full of taking this question to extremes ... and philosophy & religious books answer it in much more detailed, but far less absolute answers.
As for the last ... yes and no. God is interested in humanity. He made us. But, he gives us free will. Sometimes he does intervene. He answers prayer. Sometimes he answers "yes" sometimes it is hard to tell, sometimes there are outright miracles. Soemtimes he answers "no". Individually, this isn't "fair". I don't think we are puppets on strings or game pieces that God watches and decides "oh, he is going to live .. that one is going to die
quote="CoffeeCream[/quote]"
CoffeeCream wrote: 3. Since Christians believe in free will, then why do they constantly want to legislate morality? Shouldn't people be free to do pretty much what they want as long as it conforms to the law or aren't killing anyone?
A lot of Christians ask the same question. The short answer is being a Christian doesn't make one perfect.
The longer answer is that Christians don't even agree completely on what that "morality" is. Some people feel they need to ensure that everyone else follows the "rules" (as
they perceive them or it puts them at risk. Others just feel the need to dictate behavior of those around them ... sometimes feeling that if people are asked to behave outwardly, they will come to see the reasoning from within, sometimes they just feel offended when others do things they dislike ... the answers are as numerous as the people putting forward the ideas.
The bottom line answer to what is correct is the Bible and Christ. Interestingly, the people Christ truly condemned were not those "woeful sinners", but the church (synogogue) hierarchy. Interesting, isn't it?
CoffeeCream wrote:4. From what I'm reading on here it sounds like that someone can live the absolute worst life but then 'accept' Jesus (whatever that means) and still go to heaven (wherever that is). On the flip side, someone can live the absolute best life but not 'accept' Jesus and still go to hell. Huh!!! Oh yeah, and how can a loving God send someone to hell in the first place?
God doesn't "send" people there. People choose to not follow God ... and Hell is the result. By-the-way, to many Christians, Hell is the complete absense of God. Other pictures are disputed, though popular.
CoffeeCream wrote:My position is that there is some type of God or supreme being but it's impossible to personally know him as he stopped caring about us or is apathetic. I await any of you
Again, this is something you have to decide and feel for yourself. Even the most devout has periods where they feel God is not there. Perhaps you are in one of those. Or, perhaps you have so convinced yourself he does not exist that you cannot see. It is an entirely personal thing.