Does God really exist?

All the teachings and spiritual exercises make sense with my understanding. If you apply the same assuming that the Name stands for Toaster, it doesn't make any sense.
You may succeed to understand the Word of the prophets and spiritual exercise without using the Name, but you will surely fail if you redefine the Name inappropriately.
Semantics is what you are talking about. It's simple, until there is actual, objective proof of any god, it remains a big NO.
 
What would you expect to see, if G-d existed?
Something which clearly violated things we know to be true. The moon turning into a disco ball, or something? But that could be explained away by aliens with sufficient technology. Maybe a bit in the Bible describing some scientific knowledge that is cl;ear about what it is talking about, but couldn't have been known by the people living at the time. I saw an example of this somewhere once, using Kepler's laws or something, but I can't remember it off the top of my head.

In any case, God would know what would convince me, even if I don't.
Welcome to the forum, btw. :)
Thank you! :)
 
All the teachings and spiritual exercises make sense with my understanding. If you apply the same assuming that the Name stands for Toaster, it doesn't make any sense.
You may succeed to understand the Word of the prophets and spiritual exercise without using the Name, but you will surely fail if you redefine the Name inappropriately.
But you are redefining the name as well.

You are redefining God to mean "The universe".

We already have a name for the universe. That name is: "The Universe."

Deciding that "God" is a better name for it is not justifiable (at least as far as I can see) for two reasons.

First, you've provided no justification as to why calling it God is better than calling it The Universe.

Secondly, calling it God carries with it a lot of preconceived ideas, and these ideas will be different for different people. This creates a great deal of ambiguity as to what exactly you mean by calling the universe "God."
 
But you are redefining the name as well.

You are redefining God to mean "The universe".

We already have a name for the universe. That name is: "The Universe."

Deciding that "God" is a better name for it is not justifiable (at least as far as I can see) for two reasons.

First, you've provided no justification as to why calling it God is better than calling it The Universe.

Secondly, calling it God carries with it a lot of preconceived ideas, and these ideas will be different for different people. This creates a great deal of ambiguity as to what exactly you mean by calling the universe "God."
I've wondered about this too. I'm thinking that maybe whenever people think of the universe as having some kind of awareness and/or purpose in it or behind it, they call that "God." Or they call the universe "God" as a way of saying that there is some kind of awareness and/or purpose in it. There might be some confusion sometimes about whether they think that's what "God" means in the Abrahamic scriptures.
 
But you are redefining the name as well.

You are redefining God to mean "The universe".

We already have a name for the universe. That name is: "The Universe."

Deciding that "God" is a better name for it is not justifiable (at least as far as I can see) for two reasons.

First, you've provided no justification as to why calling it God is better than calling it The Universe.

Secondly, calling it God carries with it a lot of preconceived ideas, and these ideas will be different for different people. This creates a great deal of ambiguity as to what exactly you mean by calling the universe "God."
I've wondered about this too. I'm thinking that maybe whenever people think of the universe as having some kind of awareness and/or purpose in it or behind it, they call that "God." Or they call the universe "God" as a way of saying that there is some kind of awareness and/or purpose in it. There might be some confusion sometimes about whether they think that's what "God" means in the Abrahamic scriptures.
There are indeed different concepts between and in the Abrahamic religions and over time. The concept that God is universal is more rooted in Islam. The ancient Jews called Him "our God", and Christians pray "our Father". But we also pray to God. God is near, His Spirit is in us, and we link with our environment. The concept of the Universe is different. I associate with this something that is far off, huge indeed but it doesn't need my attention.
 
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