PoeticUniverse         
         sensorily — Maureen
Deleted User         
         It doesn't make it more likely that it exists for you, but it might make it more rational for them to believe. Their beliefs could be based on their experiences and then also on the practices seeming to help or bring them closer to experiences they prefer and were promised or that seem to or actually do solve emotional and spiritual problems for them. Thus making their religious experiences a foundation for their deepening or continued belief.If those who wrote religious texts claimed to have experienced God sensorily, that is no different than them suddenly claiming that there is a being that exists which they decided to call God (or whatever name you want to apply), then writing texts over a period of time about this being and things that He supposedly did. But how does any of this make it any more likely that the being exists? — Maureen
That's really not the case. Much of what we consider real is via inference.In general, to experience something by sight is to prove that it exists, — Maureen
Well, they claim different, and that via long term practices on can experience God, including sensorily.but God cannot be experienced in this manner, or any other manner for that matter. I.E. God cannot be heard, touched, smelled, etc. so by this logic no human could truly have experienced God sensorily in spite of their claims. — Maureen
Deleted User         
         There was certainly theism before Christianity, since Christianity flowed out of Judaism. We know from shamanic and indigenous cultures that people have experiences of beings that seem equivalent to God (along with other entities). I see little reason to believe that belief in God arose in the recent history Christianity began in.I will not argue that there could have been a Christian God even before Christianity came about, but unless humans were aware of His presence before the onset of Christianity (which is impossible to determine, but again very unlikely) — Maureen
BrianW         
         
Fine Doubter         
         
Fine Doubter         
         
3017amen         
         
Fine Doubter         
         
Pattern-chaser         
         Like I said any of these Gods could exist and could have existed without respect to their given religion, but it is impossible to make that argument unless humans were aware of the presence of any of the Gods before their religion came about, which in itself cannot be proven. — Maureen
Teaisnice         
         
Marissa         
         
KrystalZ         
         
Anna Frey         
         
Isaac242         
         the God of any religion only necessarily came to fruition or came to be recognized in conjunction with the onset of that religion. — Maureen
This seems to have a sort of background argument as follows:unless humans were aware of His presence before the onset of Christianity (which is impossible to determine, but again very unlikely), then no one among us can argue that He existed before then. — Maureen
Joel Evans         
         
Book273         
         In general, to experience something by sight is to prove that it exists — Maureen
Book273         
         We cannot argue that there was a Christian God before Christianity started. — Joel Evans
Joel Evans         
         A rose is a flower. It was a flower before it was called a rose, it will remain the same flower even if I decide to call it a Flamingo. The flower does not care what I call it. It simply is — Book273
aRealidealist         
         
EnPassant         
         But how does any of this make it any more likely that the being exists? In general, to experience something by sight is to prove that it exists, but God cannot be experienced in this manner, or any other manner for that matter. I.E. God cannot be heard, touched, smelled, etc. so by this logic no human could truly have experienced God sensorily in spite of their claims. — Maureen
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