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Why or why not? Good reasons please.

2007-12-28 09:26:30 · 49 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

49 answers

No. There is absolutely no evidence for the existence of any god.

2007-12-28 11:06:25 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 3 1

Proof for existence of Allah ( God).

I would like to greet u from an Islamic greeting Asslamoalikum warahmatullahi wabarakatuh ( May Allah peace, mercy and blessings upon u).

Allah is an arabic word, in english we say God and God is not the word of Quran because it can be Gods, Goddess, God mother, God father etc but with Allah their is no mach, u cannot say Allahs, Allah mother so Allah is the name that Muslims should call.

Today i will give u few examples to understand the existence of Allah.

There is a shop and anybody say u that this shop is made automatically and the things are sold automatically. Soo what will u say him? Of course u will say him a mad person like this Allah has made this world and the non living and living things in this world and the whole universe without any doubt.

2007-12-29 04:09:03 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

I do not disavow the possibility of "some sort of creator-thing," and obviously a creative force of some kind must have come into play.

I have, as yet, seen absolutely no evidence whatsoever that any of the popular religions have anything going for them beyond wishful thinking.

So as to whether or not I "believe in god" would depend on how one defines the term "god".

2007-12-28 09:34:00 · answer #3 · answered by Morbid One 6 · 2 0

slave of 12 gods is that really you? If so you look like a princess!

I do not believe in god but I can not completely rule it out. I am labeled an atheist but I suppose if one needs to use a broad brush to paint with I am an agnostic. Our understanding of ourselves and our universe is ever changing and we should base our spiritual understanding on that rather than fairytales and outdated books. I find it hard to believe that a book inspired by the creator of all would be so full of holes and incomplete.

2007-12-28 09:39:10 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

I do not believe in the popular perception of an anthropomorphic deity. Why - because it just doesn't work for me. I seriously doubt that an all powerful deity would need humans to worship it. I highly doubt it has a gender. I highly doubt it has petty human insecurities and jealousies. I don't believe there is some sort of cosmic war between an all powerful deity and his nemesis using us puny humans as pawns in that war. I highly doubt that the universe revolves around whether or not someone is one religion over another. I seriously doubt a deity would care about who sleeps with who, when, why, etc... I could go on and on.

2007-12-28 09:34:53 · answer #5 · answered by swordarkeereon 6 · 1 0

Yes i believe in God, and one reason i believe is, when i look at a sunset, watch thunder and lightning, see beautiful flowers growing wild, look up at the stars at night. I know that these things did not happen by themselves or by coincidence.God is the reason for all the great and marvelous wonders of the world.

2007-12-28 09:34:02 · answer #6 · answered by Sha T 6 · 0 2

No. Belief is confidence in the truth or existence of something not immediately susceptible to rigorous proof. A BELIEF in God does not allow for the possibility that God doesn't exist, it is simply accepted as truth. I don't spend my time believing in things that can't be proven or disproven. Rather, I search for real knowledge.

2007-12-28 09:31:16 · answer #7 · answered by mcq316 7 · 3 1

Hi Allison,
I do believe in GOD and Have been a Christian for over twenty years. I had a near-death experience while in High School, got married, began searching for what I believed to be GOD and studied the Bible after many years of searching. The Bible Study ended and my wife and I became Faithful Christians. We have been faithful for over twenty years and have two faithful children. Have a wonderful week and a great New Years!
Thanks,
Eds


.

2007-12-28 09:31:48 · answer #8 · answered by Eds 7 · 0 3

A higher force of some sort yes. Certainly not a personal deity that checks in and interferes with our lives or judges us for using the processes of human psychology in which it itself created.. My views on divinity lie closely to those of Einstein and most of the great scientists to come around of late.

I certainly don't put any creedance in organized religion. Reasons? Well, we can trace of evolution of religion back to its early polytheistic and pantheistic days. There is not even a monotheistic religion that comes close to the age of these early civilized belief systems. As I assume your talking about the deity most commonly associated with our cultures, Judaism is not even the oldest monotheistic religion we know of, that belongs to Zorastrianism.

As thus, not conincidentaly, religions have borrowed archetypes from their early days on down the line. Jesus for example, whether or not he was a historical person or not, in a theological sense borrowed heavily from Osiris and Krishna.

2007-12-28 09:31:46 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 3 1

Which god?

Doesn't really matter...I don't believe in any of them. I tried, believe me...it was a very long, very painful journey from being a Christian to being an atheist. I wanted to believe. I wanted to believe so bad I could taste it. So why don't I? Because I can't. I can't convince myself that any god exists.

2007-12-28 09:30:47 · answer #10 · answered by War Games AM 5 · 5 1

um...agnostic.

I feel there is no way to truly tell whether or not a creator actually exists. Either possibility is astonishing. However, after reviewing my 14 year life experience (LOL) I'm sort of leaning towards the atheistic side.....

2007-12-28 09:42:19 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

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