Category: God

  • “God in the Wasteland” by David Wells

    Table of Contents Introduction Brief summary Critical part Conclusion Bibliography Introduction We live in a time when socio-political influence of Christianity, as the world’s major religion, continues to decline rapidly. And the reason for this is very simple – every religion is nothing but extrapolation of people’s continuous strive towards a higher state of consciousness.…

  • Communicating with God: Revelation and Christology

    The Old Testament promotes revelation as the most important process in religion which helps believers to communicate with God. The attention from the divine to believer through which all of a man is involved is revelation. It is God making Himself known to all people, disclosing Himself so that believers, in turn, must do something…

  • Philosophy of Religion: God, Reason, and Religious Experience

    Most influential topic covered in the course The topic that completely changed my mindset is the arguments of God’s existence. The issue presented in the topic evaluated that every problem requires a complex revision. Considering an argument in seclusion from other views could be irrelevant because discussing such a complicated issue as God’s existence without…

  • Arguments for the Existence of God. The Tree of Life

    The central question that worried the consciousnesses of tens of thousands of human generations throughout their existence is the recognition of whether God exists. There is no doubt that this question will remain unresolved, as it is physically impossible to discover what is felt by the followers of faith spiritually. Uncertainty gives rise to the…

  • The Problem of Evil and Reasoning Against God

    Table of Contents Introduction Defining the Problem of Evil Defining Evil Arguing Against the Problem of Evil Conclusion Introduction The debate on the existence of God remains a perpetual one. Philosophy, philosophy of religion, and theology continue to provide arguments both in favor of the Divine existence and the impossibility of such presence. These assertations…

  • God’s Wrath Against Sinful Humanity

    Table of Contents Introduction God’s Wrath God’s righteous judgment The Jewish Law God of Faith No One Is Righteous Righteousness by Faith Abraham Justified by Faith Conclusion References Introduction The 1: 18-32 section forms much of the material at 1:18-3:20 (see the study outline at the beginning of the book). The function of this research…

  • Clarke’s Cosmological Argument for the Existence of God

    Table of Contents Introduction Thesis Argument Objections Responses Conclusions Works Cited Introduction Cosmological argument alludes to a family of ancient intellectual debates supporting the existence of God as the sole or ideal causality for the presence of the universe, independent of any of its distinguishing characteristics as examined by scientific knowledge. Samuel Clarke developed a…

  • Richard Taylor’s Argument for God’s Existence

    Table of Contents Introduction Discussion Conclusion Reference Introduction Richard Taylor’s cosmological argument for God’s existence is commonly listed among the most convincing justifications of the creationist outlook on the essence/origins of the surrounding physical reality. One of the reasons for this is that the argument’s initial assessment will reveal it being thoroughly exhaustive, in the…

  • Philosophy of Religion: The Topic of the Relationship Between God

    Table of Contents Introduction The Scholars’ Approaches Comparison The Scholars’ Substantive Proposals Comparison Conclusion Bibliography Footnotes Introduction Various scientists, philosophers, and priests interpret the connection between God, science, and naturalism differently as the evolutionary discoveries question the religious statements. Gould and Draper are the scholars who discussed how Christianity correlates with science based on their…

  • The Problem of Evil and the Existence of God

    Philosophical Similarities and Differences from the Readings The three readings address the question about the problem of evil and the existence of God by applying the logical or evidential problem of evil and the philosophy of divine hiddenness. Craig (2008) argues that life would become absurd without the existence of God. Habermas (2008) points out…