I've been thinking about the nature and existence of God recently (ie arguing with my uber Christian friend), and came up with a cool little thought experiment.
God is essentially bigger than the universe. I think no religious person could argue against that statement. He created it. He's got to be bigger. Period.
http://htwins.net/scale2/
Check out the scale of the universe. To God we are essentially at the Plank length level. I asked my friend if he thinks about the particles at the quantum scale. Pretend they have personalities. Pretend a string has a string family. Are you overly concerned about the fate of that string? Or the entire population of strings that exists in a square millimeter of your pinky nail (hundreds of billions of strings)?
My question to him was whether or not God gave two craps about humanity on a remote planet the size of a neutrino relative to God? Moreover, would he really care enough to damn people who didn't believe in him to an eternity of suffering for finite sins? I don't think so. I think we're so insignificant to the grand scheme of things that our individual deaths have no consequence to worry about.
Of course my friend had circle logic, canned answers to come back with, but the epiphany I had with my analogy made my own stance the more clearer to myself. Why would God give a crap about his insignificant creation?
I thought I'd share that.
God is essentially bigger than the universe. I think no religious person could argue against that statement. He created it. He's got to be bigger. Period.
http://htwins.net/scale2/
Check out the scale of the universe. To God we are essentially at the Plank length level. I asked my friend if he thinks about the particles at the quantum scale. Pretend they have personalities. Pretend a string has a string family. Are you overly concerned about the fate of that string? Or the entire population of strings that exists in a square millimeter of your pinky nail (hundreds of billions of strings)?
My question to him was whether or not God gave two craps about humanity on a remote planet the size of a neutrino relative to God? Moreover, would he really care enough to damn people who didn't believe in him to an eternity of suffering for finite sins? I don't think so. I think we're so insignificant to the grand scheme of things that our individual deaths have no consequence to worry about.
Of course my friend had circle logic, canned answers to come back with, but the epiphany I had with my analogy made my own stance the more clearer to myself. Why would God give a crap about his insignificant creation?
I thought I'd share that.