Free said:It can say many things about mankind--one being that they recognize the work of the divine in the created order; another being that they have seen the evil in world and realize the need for a savior outside of humanity.AAA said:Free said:Here is the gist of the problem:
The majority of religions, including all the major ones, contradict each other at the core and are irreconcilable. By use of reason they cannot all be true; that is a logical impossibility. It is therefore possible that either all are false or one is true.
We agree on the above.
Mankind has worshipped literally thousands of false gods.
What does that say about mankind?
How did those people who believed in and worshipped these thousands of false gods come to believe in and worship those gods? Do Christians come to believe in and worship the Christian god in some meaningfully different way that points to the truth of Christianity?
If you are correct, and mankind does mysteriously recognize a divine savior, since mankind has gotten the theistic details about that divine savior wrong thousands and thousands of times, mustn't you also conclude that the odds of mankind ever getting those theistic details right are extremely low, so that the most reasonable path (by far) is to just be a deist?
Another possibility of what that says about mankind is that mankind just loves or needs to create theisms (and we can all think of numerous reasons why that may be so).