Is There a God?

Is There a God?

The existence - or lack of - a God is one of humanity's fundamental questions. Since the first birth, the first sunrise, the first death, humans have sought to explain the world around them. The whole of human existence, in the end, comes down to this: Is there a God?

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  • “No”
  • “Objection”
Rabbi Jeret

Absolutely Clear?

Rabbi Jeret

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In an otherwise rational and cogent argument, the author representing the position that there is no God expresses, with no evidence or rationale whatsoever, the sentiment at the conclusion of the paragraph above it is absolutely clear that the God defined earlier in the paragraph does not exist. This begs the question: Is the author open at all to the possibility that God might exist?

Any honest person of faith has doubts, or, at least, moments of doubt. Can't one who doesn't generally believe in God have doubts, too? Can the conclusion of the argument precede the argument if room for such doubt is left at all?

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