Look at the galaxies, look at the universe, vast, mostly empty, deadly voids filled with radiation, black holes that devour everything, exploding stars, colliding galaxies, and cosmic events that would instantly sterilize any life nearby.
I mean, look at the galaxies, look at the universe, look at plants, flowers, birds, the fishes, other animals, look at babies, the conception, the development, the birth, their growth, and to you it's not orderly arranged?
Look at the human brain, the human anatomy, look at the human eyes, and many other marvelous things around.
and then conclude there is no God, and you're an atheist??
i am sorry but you're obviously not alright.
@SamuelAyodele_T It reads like people reshaping ancient texts around unexpected events, not some flawless divine blueprint unfolding exactly as planned.
@SamuelAyodele_T The old agreement in Deuteronomy promises it lasts forever, yet Hebrews calls it obsolete. Dozens of writers over time didn't produce a tidy arc. Church fathers later picked which books fit their story and sidelined the rest.
And then you look at all that and conclude there must be a God? A loving, all-powerful, all-knowing designer?
I'm sorry but you're obviously not alright.
The "marvellous" parts are survivorship bias: we notice the beautiful survivors and ignore the mountains of failure and suffering that came before and continue around us.
@SamuelAyodele_T It looks less like divine orchestration and more like humans weaving a theology around events that didn't quite go as the original texts suggested.
@SamuelAyodele_T Dozens of authors over centuries producing a unified narrative sounds impressive until you notice how much selective reading it takes to make the pieces line up.