Does God Exist?: An Answer for TodayDoes God exist? The question implies another: Who is God? This book is meant to give an answer to both questions and to give reasons for this answer. Does God exist? Yes or no? Many are at a loss between belief and unbelief; they are undecided, skeptical. They are doubtful about their belief, but they are also doubtful about their doubting. There are still others who are proud of their doubting. Yet there remains a longing for certainty. Certainty? Whether Christians or Jews, believers in God or atheists, the discussion today runs right across old denominations and new ideologies - but the longing for certainty is unquenched. Does God exist? We are putting all our cards on the table here. The answer will be "Yes, God exists", As human beings in the twentieth century, we certainly can reasonably believe in God - even more so in the Christian God - and perhaps even more easily today than a few decades or centuries ago. For, after so many crises, it is surprising how much has been clarified and how many difficulties in regard to belief in God have melted into the Light that no darkness has overcome. |
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Page 469
... ethical norms , inten- sively discussed by moral philosophers : norms , that is , understood as uni- versally binding rules of human behavior and living together and thus of being authentically human . But - recapitulating what was said ...
... ethical norms , inten- sively discussed by moral philosophers : norms , that is , understood as uni- versally binding rules of human behavior and living together and thus of being authentically human . But - recapitulating what was said ...
Page 470
... ethical norms ( for instance with ref- erence to economic or political power , sexuality , aggressiveness ) . This is something to which we continually drew attention in connection with Marx and Freud . There can be no ethics as a ...
... ethical norms ( for instance with ref- erence to economic or political power , sexuality , aggressiveness ) . This is something to which we continually drew attention in connection with Marx and Freud . There can be no ethics as a ...
Page 472
... ethical ex- pression of fundamental trust in the identity , significance and especially the value of the uncertain reality of world and man . Without this fun- damental trust , autonomous ethical norms cannot be accepted as mean- ingful ...
... ethical ex- pression of fundamental trust in the identity , significance and especially the value of the uncertain reality of world and man . Without this fun- damental trust , autonomous ethical norms cannot be accepted as mean- ingful ...
Contents
The ideal of mathematical certainty | 3 |
The fundamental certainty of reason | 11 |
Neither freethinking nor Augustinism | 19 |
Copyright | |
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absolute atheism attitude Augustine Barth basic become belief biblical Buddhism Catholic certainty Christian Church concept concrete consciousness criticism critique death decision Descartes Descartes's dialectical divine doubt Enlightenment eternal ethical existence experience fact father Feuerbach Fichte finite Frankfurt freedom Freud Friedrich Nietzsche fundamental trust G. W. F. Hegel God's Hegel Heidegger human Ibid idea individual infinite Jansenists Kant Karl Karl Barth knowledge later Leibniz light logical Ludwig Feuerbach man's Marx Marxist mathematics means merely metaphysics modern moral natural science natural theology Nietzsche Nietzsche's nihilism norms object pantheism paradigm Paris particular Pascal Pensées person philosophy political Popper possible practice primal principle problems psychoanalysis psychological pure question rational regard religion religious revolution scholasticism scientific sense simply social society spirit Teilhard theologians theology theory things thinking Thomist thought tion tradition true truth Tübingen ultimate understanding understood universal Werke whole world picture Yahweh