TWWK wrote:But why do you believe that our God IS God.
Because that's how I was raised.
That's all it boils down to. If I was raised Muslim, I'd probably believe that Allah is God. Okay sure, the relationship is there, and that works for me, but it isn't compelling as a testimony. I mean, Muslims believe in Allah, if they didn't have their prayers answered then they probably wouldn't be Muslim. Lots of people who are atheist/agnostic have good things happen to them without attributing it to God.
Someone could argue that the things that happened in my life would have happened the same way even if I was atheist and never prayed once in my life. That's difficult to argue against because maybe they're right. Maybe they're not. It's impossible to say without being able to see alternate timelines.
And that's part of my point. It's not a satisfying answer. I was "brainwashed," that's what they can say. I don't feel like I am, especially since I've fallen away from a lot of the beliefs my parents and church have about religion, but part of me always does wonder.
I don't feel I can turn away from God, but is that because I'm devoted to God, or is it because I'm conditioned to feel that it's bad? If I do feel bad, is it because of God, or is it my own mind causing me to feel bad because it's so firmly implanted into my thoughts?
It's kind of like phobias. If you were to give someone with a fear of snakes a rubber snake, they would probably freak out. Now it's a toy, it's not real, it can't hurt them, but their mind works in such a way that even though it is completely and totally harmless, they're frightened of it. And in fact, giving someone with a phobia of snakes a rubber snake is part of the steps a psychologist would take to help someone get rid of that fear. Someone might say if I turn from God, I'd feel bad at first, but eventually get over it as I came to realize God doesn't exist and can make it on my own. That it's part of the process of being "freed" from the conditioning my parents imposed on me.
Isn't there a time when one has to take a belief for their own as truth, rather than as something forced upon us?
I've never had a real crisis of faith. Not entirely. I've had the same doubts about God and life as every other Christian has, but there's never been a point in my life where I suddenly came to a revelation that "I think God is real outside of how I was raised!" It's always been for me "It makes more sense that what I've been told my whole life is correct than the alternative." Which again...not really logically consistent. A person who was raised in a racist household would think "It makes more sense that whites are superior to blacks, looking at society it's clearly more correct than everyone being equal."
And we can look at that person and say they're absolutely wrong. Just because something "makes more sense" doesn't make it correct, and it even hinges on what you define as sense. Whose sense after all? The sense of most people in the 1800s would be of that person, most people in the modern day have a different sense.
As far as "does the person you're talking to believe what their parents did," I'd be willing to bet most people as they get older realize their parents aren't blameless and perfect, and can form their own opinions outside of what their parents think...which of course would be even further argument against my experiences of being raised Christian. Now that I'm older and more educated, shouldn't I make my own choices instead of how I was raised?
It's definitely not really that good of a testimony is all I'm saying.