kkawohl said:
IMHO Einstein’s statement “And so it seems to me that science not only purifies the religious impulse of the dross of its anthropomorphism but also contributes to a religious spiritualisation of our understanding of life" refutes a personal God, which logic and rationality supports.
That was Einstein's position. He was a religious person but did not believe in a personal God. More of a pantheist.
Einstein also said that "God" may very well be the "energy" that is in all matter and energy, that cannot be separated from matter/energy. I submit that God is the pure energy and spiritual intellect of the spiritual existence. Physical contact with the spiritual existence is an impossibility.
Sounds to me like you are disagreeing with Einstein on this point. Other scientists with spiritual leanings as well. Those I have read (e.g. Chardin, Capra, Polkinghorne) all seem to connect physical and spiritual as two sides of one coin, with the spiritual immanent in the material and interpenetrating it at all levels.
Christianity, of course, fully affirms the union of material and spiritual being via the doctrine of Incarnation. But there were those who objected in the early days. The force of their argument was the same as yours: that physical contact with spiritual existence is an impossibility. Hence God cannot be incarnate, or if so, there must be a sharp separation between the human and the divine nature. Many so inclined taught adoptionism and/or docetism. (i.e. that Jesus was not born as the incarnate God, but was "adopted" by the Christ spirit at his baptism or that he only appeared to be human.)
Our spirit is the only one capable of interacting with the spiritual realm or dimension.
When you say "our spirit" who are you speaking of? Are you excluding the possibility that some animals, especially those of higher intelligence and emotive capacity can be open to spiritual experience?
What of the traditional indigenous beliefs that ALL things have spirit and can be occasions of spiritual experience?
The physical plane is 3 dimensional. Space and time is often considered the fourth dimension, this IMHO is where the spiritual existence is a reality. To speak of space as containing in itself a quality which we humans cognize as intelligence, consciousness, love, or hate is to speak with accuracy, for all these qualities do exist.
3-dimensional space was the Newtonian conception. And it is still true that we are cognizant of only 3 macro-dimensions. But science is speculating that space may actually have 10 or more dimensions, with those above the three being so small that we do not perceive them with our senses.
If space itself contains the qualities you name (and I agree with that concept) does that not contradict your previous statement that there is no physical/spiritual contact? For space, after all, is physical.
Human fallibility and misconceptions have labeled God for the past several millennia as one who interferes with the natural forces and free will of people by threatening punishment to those who disobey his bidding. The spiritual existence of this deity, if one decides to accept this premise, could not have changed with the times but the perception of who or what this deity is should change as societies eliminate their superstitious beliefs. Logically this God could not possibly be encumbered by human attributes and needs or desires to be worshiped, prayed to, exalted, venerated, deified, or anything else that mankind has to offer. It is also the human characteristics and attributes that exercise upon others: power, control, dominance, destruction, punishment, revenge, and judgment.
Kurt
Yes, we have failed to educate the mass of people in spiritual maturity, so we still have nearly half of the US population envisaging deity in the same was as desert nomads did 4000 years ago. God as monarch commanding the forces of nature made sense when humans had no understanding of the physical laws that ensure the regularity of such events as sunrise, eclipses, climate changes, and every so often earthquakes, volcanoes and such.
But this primitive conception of God is long past its usefulness and only hinders us today. Knowledgeable theologians have been aware of this for millennia, but the Church has signally failed (or deliberately not tried) to communicate more mature understandings to its rank and file membership.