Kwayera
Passive-aggressive Mod
"CMIL is not entitled to pronounce a cure "miraculous"; this can only be done by the Church. The bureau may only pronounce that a cure is "medically inexplicable". A full investigation takes a minimum of five years (in order to ensure that the cure is permanent), and may take as long as ten or twelve years. It is recognised that, in rare cases, even advanced malignant disease or severe infection may spontaneously resolve."Ever heard of Lourdes? Lourdes Medical Bureau - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is just one of many. I can list billions off to you.
That's a nice get out of jail free card. Lol. Next.
Itself? Who knows. We don't know - yet. Why is this such a problem for you? We didn't used to know that stars were stars and that the Earth isn't the centre of the universe. Who are you to say that in, say, 20 years we won't know what caused (if anything; current ideas of physics don't require a cause for the singularity) the big bang?I'd also be interested to see what atheists believe initiated the creation of the universe. I know they'll rattle off something about the bing bang theory, but it's funny how they never consider what initiated the whole thing.
Actually, yes, it can. See: quantum physics.So you've admitted science is limited?
Wouldn't it be logical to assume that something supernatural initiated the creation of the universe? Using the laws of the universe "Matter can neither be created nor destroyed". Take, for example, a book lying on a table. The book is not going to move without some force beyond itself. How, then, can the universe initiate its own creation? Of course it can't! Energy cannot just appear out of nowhere. Using a similar principle, a force beyond itself had to initiate the universe, i.e. the supernatural had to create the natural. This makes the concept of a supreme being (God) perfectly logical.
There is no requirement anywhere for "the supernatural to create the natural". Your supposition, then, that a "supreme being" (the apparently obvious outcome of supernaturality; what happened to the ideas of beingless magic? ) is logical is therefore itself illogical.
An explanation that involves supernaturalism is, by definition, illogical.So, as you can see, your analogy is completely irrelevant. I'm using logic to arrive at my conclusion. Not just shouting out a random answer.
The fact of the matter is that scientific reasoning actually complements religion quite nicely when science is not an entity in itself.
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