Religious faith is a concept that has been defined in various ways, from trust to the biblical definition found in Hebrews:

“Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.”

The elusive nature of its definition makes it unclear as to what religious faith truly is. Can anyone shed some light on its true nature? Furthermore, according to the bible, why should it be considered better evidence than things that can be seen?

  • @[email protected]
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    19 months ago

    Young Earth creationism is falsifiable but it isn’t a faith

    I guess we have a different definition of faith. Faith has multiple definitions:

    1 a : allegiance to duty or a person : loyalty
    lost faith in the company’s president
    b (1) : fidelity to one’s promises
    (2) : sincerity of intentions – acted in good faith
    2 a(1) : belief and trust in and loyalty to God
    (2) : belief in the traditional doctrines of a religion
    b (1) : firm belief in something for which there is no proof – clinging to the faith that her missing son would one day return
    (2) : complete trust. 3 : something that is believed especially with strong conviction
    especially : a system of religious beliefs
    – the Protestant faith

    I’m referring mostly to 2a (and to an extent 2b1), not 3. 2b2 is an issue with fanatics, as in the type of people that commit terrorist attacks in the name of religion, even if those attacks by their very nature go against their religion, but justified because the target is threatening their religion.

    where evidence contradicts with biblical faith, faith wins out

    I guess that’s where Mr. Craig and I disagree. If the quality of the evidence is high, then faith should be adjusted to account for the evidence. In almost every case, the religious doctrine could be reinterpreted taking the new evidence into account, such as creation not necessarily being 7 literal days, but 7 creative periods (and other cases where the same term is used should probably also be reinterpreted). Religious doctrine is often vague enough WRT overlap w/ science that it’s rarely an issue (i.e. can’t really disprove the existence of God).

    If you take the position that faith wins out, you’re opening yourself up to brainwashing. If faith and evidence contradicts, that’s a time to carefully look at both.

    What science doesn’t answer is simply unknown (NOT UNKNOWABLE), nothing, not even faith can answer it until science does.

    I disagree with that. For example, is murder okay? Science can’t decide that, because morality is outside its purview, but it is absolutely in the realm of religion and philosophy. In fact, I take religion to be a form of philosophy that appeals to a higher power instead of man’s reason, and a lot of philosophies look a lot like religion.

    Faith, imo, is merely your dedication to whatever philosophy you think explains the world best. Sometimes that’s religious, and sometimes it’s secular, it just depends on the person.

    Yes, you can take a leap of “faith” and guess what the answer may be but you can be wrong as well as you may be right.

    If we go on the assumption that there exists a higher power and that higher power communicates with people in some way, then it’s not just a guess, but an alleged message from the divine. That’s what scripture is, and usually the overlap is limited to where we come from (i.e. creation stories), why we’re here (morality, but sometimes touches on science), and where we’re going (eternal punishment/reward). That’s a pretty limited cross-section, and usually religion and science can peacefully coexist.

    If we reject that assumption, then the whole idea of religion makes no sense and we’re better off sticking to secular philosophies.

    Whether a higher power exists is, AFAICT, unknowable, but the implications of that can be tested. For example, if this religion promises that if I do X I’ll get Y, then I can do X for some period and see if I get Y. Most religions make some kind of promise like that.

    • PhiloOPM
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      18 months ago

      The question is about religious faith and the elusive nature of its definition. As if to prove my point you post a dictionary definition of faith that isn’t limited to religious faith. You claim that non-religious people have faith. That isn’t true. Non-religious people have trust, and if you want to define non-religious faith as trust that is fine but there is already a word that fits perfectly and that is TRUST. so why muddy things up with religious mumbo jumbo?

      Religious doctrine is often vague enough WRT overlap w/ science that it’s rarely an issue (i.e. can’t really disprove the existence of God).

      You Have that backwards. God can’t be 100% disproven but that isn’t the point. god hasn’t been proven to exist and until it has it isn’t reasonable to believe in one. but like you say we go on an assumption and you know what happens when we assume.

      If we reject that assumption, then the whole idea of religion makes no sense and we’re better off sticking to secular philosophies.

      And what is wrong with that?

      Whether a higher power exists is, AFAICT, unknowable, but the implications of that can be tested. For example, if this religion promises that if I do X I’ll get Y, then I can do X for some period and see if I get Y. Most religions make some kind of promise like that.

      And whenever a test was made, they have always failed. For example, look at the double-blind experiment into The Efficacy Of Prayer that was done in 2006.

      • @[email protected]
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        08 months ago

        Faith is trust in something that cannot be seen, and it’s based largely on spiritual experiences, not tangible evidence. It can be tested like trust can, but the proof is often spiritual experiences more than documentable, verifiable evidence.

        But faith shouldn’t be based purely on these spiritual experiences, but also include reason and empirical evidence. So faith fills the gaps in our empirical evidence. If you don’t believe in the divine, that’s replaced by educated guesses and intuition, and the religious person would say that intuition is the guiding force of the divine.

        god hasn’t been proven to exist and until it has it isn’t reasonable to believe in one

        That’s certainly one perspective. I personally think it’s faulty, but I’m not really interested in getting into a debate on the plausibility of the divine, my intention here was to discuss the original topic about what faith is.

        You can absolutely choose to live with the assumption that God doesn’t exist, but you’ll need to fill that void (the things science can’t empirically test) with something else, likely with a healthy dose of “intuition.” Secular humanism is a partial replacement, at least for morality and meaning.

        I think secular humanism, like any secular philosophy or set of philosophies, can and should be used by religious people to help establish the boundaries of their faith and what is and isn’t knowable through science. As a religious person, I believe morality is derived from our divine nature (i.e. we’re all God’s creations and should be treated as equals), and that rules out some secular philosophies (i.e. Objectivism) which I find to be natural conclusions when eliminating the divine from the equation.

        whenever a test was made

        Faith can be tested on an individual level, but that article smacks of testing God, which goes against biblical doctrine (see Matthew 4:7).

        A good scientific study is a double blind study, and the study claims to be testing patients, when they’re actually testing God. If God is all-knowing, God would certainly be aware of the study, thus breaking the double blind nature of the study.

        And that’s the problem with testing God, and why any form of test should be on an individual basis for their own personal relationship with God (that individual test is consistent with the Bible). And that’s also why reason and empirical evidence are so important, to help separate what is likely from God from nonsense.

        • PhiloOPM
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          18 months ago

          Faith is trust in something that cannot be seen, and it’s based largely on spiritual experiences, not tangible evidence. It can be tested like trust can

          Give an example of a test of something intangible,

          god hasn’t been proven to exist and until it has it isn’t reasonable to believe in one That’s certainly one perspective. I personally think it’s faulty,

          No, that is how we believe in anything. To do otherwise is gullibility or put in other words, deluding yourself.

          You can absolutely choose to live with the assumption that God doesn’t exist

          You don’t know what an atheist is do you? Tell me, do you see any difference between the statements I don’t believe in god and I don’t believe god exists? The difference should be obvious. I never said the second, I did say the first.

          but that article smacks of testing God,

          ok, This is your one and only warning as a moderator, put that Christian bullshit aside. That was a double-blind test funded by the Tempelton Foundation to test the efficacy of prayer. It was not a test of god and it is shameful that you would try to make it out to be so.

          • @[email protected]
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            -18 months ago

            Give an example of a test of something intangible

            Whether living by the precepts of your religion helps you feel happier, or at least helps you perceive yourself as happier (see pew research study on this). So you could have faith that living by the precepts of your religion will help you feel happier. But it’s hard to tell if the results are genuine (i.e. does living a religion cause happiness? Or does feeling like you’re living a religion cause happiness? Or are religious people more likely to lie to claim their religion is the cause?).

            As a practical example, look at Buddhism, where many (most? all?) schools encourage meditation as a spiritual exercise with the intended result of achieving inner peace and unification with the universe. Practitioners have faith that meditation will bring them closer to that goal, and that faith is strengthened the more they experience results.

            There are secular reasons to explain these of course (e.g. networking effect of attending religious services, value of rest, etc). The difference is the reason they’re practiced can build faith in the divine instead of just trust in a practice.

            And some external tests:

            • Would attending a Rotary club meetings have a similar effect as attending religious services?
            • Would non-religious meditation result in the same level of satisfaction and calm as religiously-motivated meditation?
            • Are secular people as likely to engage as religious people?

            I imagine these tests would not be definitive though, since it’s hard, if not impossible, to establish causation for subjective things like “happiness” and “satisfaction.”

            No, that is how we believe in anything

            I disagree. If we don’t have much evidence and need to come up with an explanation, we guess. And if our guesses are proven consistent as new evidence becomes available, our confidence in that guess grows.

            I’ll use one of my favorite allegories here, Plato’s allegory of the cave. It’s not a perfect fit here, but I think it’s applicable. There are two perspectives I’d like to look at:

            • religious person - the shadows and the prisoners’ reasoning about them is science, and the prisoner being brought out is like a prophet, who comes back and tries to explain to the “scientists” how the shadows relate to “real” things the prisoners can observe
            • secular person - the roles are flipped; the shadows are religion, and the person brought outside is a scientist, who explains the real causes behind the shadows they see

            Both find it difficult to believe things they haven’t seen, and give a lot of value to things they can see. Both need to make guesses as to what’s going on given the limited facts they have. The difference imo is in the type of evidence they’re willing to accept to change their beliefs.

            It was not a test of god and it is shameful that you would try to make it out to be so.

            The study was to determine whether prayer helps in recovery. There’s two ways (maybe more) this could be interpreted:

            1. Test whether God (or some divine third party) will intervene in helping recovery if someone prays
            2. Test whether the knowledge that someone else is praying helps in recovery, regardless of whether someone is actually praying

            The second is probably the intent here, but it’s easy to see the first get misconstrued (esp. since they had a group that got the placebo), and it seemed from context that’s what you were doing. I apologize if I was putting words in your mouth, but that was my interpretation.

            So, if we assume the second was the intent, all the study proves is that knowing someone is praying for you doesn’t really change recovery outcomes, since the difference was within margin of error (the article’s words, I didn’t look into the methodology). It doesn’t prove prayer to be ineffective in total (again, can’t control for God), just that knowing someone is praying for you doesn’t do anything. And the study also fell short in that it doesn’t examine impact to the people doing the praying, since much of the point of praying for someone is to help the person doing the prayer (it’s a small act of care for someone else).

            • PhiloOPM
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              18 months ago

              All that word salad to say there are no examples of any tests of intangibles. Wouldn’t it have been simpler to just say that?

              I disagree. If we don’t have much evidence and need to come up with an explanation, we guess. And if our guesses are proven consistent as new evidence becomes available, our confidence in that guess grows.

              You can disagree all you like but believing in anything without evidence is nothing short of gullibility. And before you pull out the oft-touted baloney that belief is a choice, go submerge yourself in a bathtub and try to breathe because you choose to believe that you can, then tell me that.

              Once more, the study was a double-blind study on the effects of intercessory prayer and the result was that there was no effect found more than chance. SPEAKING AS A MOD, ONE MORE ATTEMPT TO CLAIM THIS WAS A TEST OF GOD WILL RESULT IN A TEMPORARY BAN.