Originally Posted by
Whifflingpin
Weepingforloman: "First off, you cannot prove that God is fancy. Secondly, even the idea is far more beautiful than a bird, and I would love it even if I no longer believed in the Being. Not that I will stop believing."
Kiobe: "If I may barge in here. It's not the bird that is beautiful to me, although goldfinches are rather beautiful, it's the idea that it has evolved to become such a thing. That is what is beautiful to be."
Apologies to you both. To W for my flippancy & K for the misrepresentation.
But, Weepingforloman, proof is entirely beside the point. I, for instance, believe in God, but I consider that reckoning any human to be divine is a mistake. So there would be no point in using arguments based on the Incarnation or the Crucifixion if you wanted to convince me of God's goodness and love. To me, if not to you, such arguments would be founded in moonshine. Given that I do believe in God the Creator, you might use the goldfinch as evidence that God is a person of goodness and love. Then, perhaps, you might use the image of a goldfinch impaled on a thorn to convince me, if I needed convincing, that there is also a malevolent force at work in the universe. And then you might lead me to consider the origins and workings of that force and so on to God's response and plan for overcoming it, and, eventually you might bring me to accept your belief in God's self-sacrifice and man's redemption, and the necessity of the Incarnation in that process.
But you will definately not convince me of anything by starting at the conclusion, and wielding your belief like a cudgel. Apart from the fact that that is a bad way to try and convince someone (coerce, yes; convince, no) it is, as a method, exactly the opposite to the truth that you are trying to teach.