Percepi, what is what. Can we make certain of anything. Can we say that ebola will be eradicated? what can we do? if eradicated what else will come. Something more deadly, I meant what if the flu meet up with ebola both have killed millions. In the 60's the swine flu killed thousands. Is this evolution at work? if so who is behind it and decides who will die. Maybe your next, Have you been to an airport or train terminal in the past 30 days. Has some one sneezed on you.
Is this a response to something I said or are you simply trying to inform me? Regardless, I'll bite.
Can we be certain of anything? Yes, we can, but only relatively. In one sense, we can't truly know anything for sure - but we can make reasonable conclusions based off of our senses. More importantly,we have developed tools that can measure our environment without bias or with less bias so that we can correct areas where our senses might fail. There's always room for error, but that doesn't mean we can't rely on our senses at all.
The only hope a person can have is faith in the cross and not science.
We rely on science every day. Do you mean we can't rely on science at all or that we can't rely on science as much as faith in God? If the prior, I'd have to strongly disagree. If the latter, I'd still have to disagree.
Science does what, it says your dead and there is no hope.
No hope? No hope for what? Hope must accompany a want. Hope for everlasting life? Hope for riches? Hope you'll fall in love? I know you're referring to hope for everlasting life, but you can't act like that's the only kind of hope anyone can have.
I've given up hope that there's an afterlife. So what? Does this mean I can't enjoy my life today as I live? Does that mean I can't hope for future generations to enjoy their lives? That I can't hope to be successful? That I can't hope to love? And more importantly, instead of hope, make those things actually happen?
Do you know how many people with brain cancer have heard those terms, yet they are alive today because of their faith in the cross. Thousands and my mother in law was given 6 months 20 years ago by the best cancer doctor in Atlanta GA. He still is overwhelmed and is now a christian.
Whenever something seemingly miraculous happens to a Christian, Christians claim it's because they had faith in God. When something seemingly miraculous happens to a non-Christian, Christians claim God is trying to make himself known or that he has a plan involving the non-Christian to live. The problem here is that if you claim God helps those who believe in him, then what about the people who are apparently helped despite not believing in him? Obviously, faith in God isn't required to have miraculous things happen to you and therefore you don't need faith to heal from wounds or illnesses or to survive cancer.
But, what about those who have faith and do suffer and die? If you point to someone who praised God and got better, then I can immediately point towards someone who praised God and died. How come it works as proof for you that God exists, but my argument doesn't prove God doesn't exist? Realistically, neither one of us would be right to conclude the existence of God on whether or not a person lives or die, but why is it that you look at one's survival as proof of God and one's failure to survive as proof of God as well? If something isn't falsifiable, then it isn't provable.