NorthOfNorth wrote on Apr 21
st, 2014 at 10:43am:
longweekend58 wrote on Apr 21
st, 2014 at 10:20am:
and if that is to be your position then discussion or debate of any kind is pointless, isn't it? I have no reasons to lie and I have been telling this story on forums for over 10 years and consistently so. Naturally I have no interestino of any kind of publish private medical records and one would hope that the reson why would be rather obvious. But it would be pointless anyhow. you would still say it either didn't happen or there was some other reason. You decline to declare a standard of proof because you realise miracles (and there are quire a number) would frequently exceed it. So your only option is to either increase the standard of proof to the literally unattainable or decline to engage the debate.
Choosing the latter does not make you much of a debater. I say 'coward' and you provide the proof.
Debate requires openness to scrutiny. You cannot provide any material for scrutiny and I accept that you will not and should not publish private material for the obvious reasons.
However, that puts your story in the category of a matter of faith. You intend to offer the reader nothing else but your story.
But to react with contempt when you are doubted is dishonest and arrogant.
What is it to insist that I and others accept that it must be true because you have been saying it for 10 years?
How do you rationalise that your readers must necessarily assume you have no reason to lie? I don't know you. I don't know whether or not you have a daughter. I can't know whether or not she even had spina bifida...
This form of testifying is common in many Christian sects... Where the testifier is not expected to provide proof... The congregation is feeding off the same hyperbolic emotions that you are... A spurious need to prove that Jesus saved your daughter via a miracle...
To call me a coward is a modern day version of the 16th century condemnation of apostates for failing to take as a matter of faith, god's existence or presence in the world... It is a ridiculous anachronism, similar to a modern Catholic condemning Galileo .
This is neo-Christianity's greatest flaw... Its insistence that its adherents' return to the 16th century in their crude and belligerent religious chauvinism.
It is a nice argument and all but all it does is reduce the debate to nothing. Any debate on miracles starts (and ends) with this argument which is ultimately 'prove it'. I can but clearly that is not possible here and even if I did, you would reject it anyhow.
Miracles are a difficult thing to debate because they are in essence 'impossibilities' which by their very occurrence are therefore not impossible and not a miracle.
But when you have a daughter destined to a life in a wheelchair from an incurable illness and then prayer causes a 100% recovery, you might however find your arguments to be found wanting.
You say this is a debate on faith when it is in fact nothing of the kind. It is all quite factual, but behind the facts is something or rather
Someone you cannot, will not and refuse to acknowledge and so the debate is stymied in all this faux argument.