But the answer of “we don’t really know” to me is a much more honest answer.
Call it God if you want, but that it doesn’t tell us anything about “god”.
Still begs the question, what created “god”. It’s an unanswerable question. Everything needs a beginning except for something we say doesn’t because again “magic” of some sort. I can come up with a different theory about how the universe expands and contracts and upon contracting that resets the universe and it’s been doing this “forever”. It doesn’t mean that this is at all true or accurate and that’s why I like the answer of “we don’t know”.
But the answer of “we don’t really know” to me is a much more honest answer.
Call it God if you want, but that it doesn’t tell us anything about “god”.
Still begs the question, what created “god”. It’s an unanswerable question. Everything needs a beginning except for something we say doesn’t because again “magic” of some sort. I can come up with a different theory about how the universe expands and contracts and upon contracting that resets the universe and it’s been doing this “forever”. It doesn’t mean that this is at all true or accurate and that’s why I like the answer of “we don’t know”.
It's confirmation bias and religion is full of it. They can't explain something so it must be their deity is an argument of convenience.