(Original Source: http://www.fethullahgulen.org/questions-and-answers-1/173-god/1114-does-god-exist.html)
The existence of God is too evident to need any arguments. Some saintly scholars have stated that God Himself is more manifest than any other being, but those who lack insight cannot see Him. Others have said that He is concealed from direct perception because of His Self-manifestation's intensity.
The existence of God is too evident to need any arguments. Some saintly scholars have stated that God Himself is more manifest than any other being, but those who lack insight cannot see Him. Others have said that He is concealed from direct perception because of His Self-manifestation's intensity.
However, the great influence of
positivism and materialim on science humanity makes it necessary to
discuss such arguments. This way of thinking reduces existence to what
can be directly perceived and thereby blinds itself to the invisible
dimensions of existence, which are far more vast than the visible. Since
we must strive to remove the veil drawn by materialism and positivism,
we will review briefly some of the traditional demonstrations for God's
necessary existence.
Before doing so, it is worth
reflecting upon the historical fact that, since the very beginning of
human life, the overwhelming majority of humanity has believed in God's
existence. This alone is enough to establish God's existence.
Unbelievers cannot claim intellectual superiority over believers, for
the latter contain many innovative scientists, scholars, researchers
and, most importantly, saints and Prophets (the experts in this field).
Also, people usually confuse the non-acceptance of something's existence
with the acceptance of its non-existence. While the former is only a
negation or a rejection, the latter is a judgment needing proof. No one
has ever proven, and cannot prove, God's non-existence. In contrast,
countless arguments prove His existence.
This point may be clarified through
the following analogy: Imagine a large palace with 1,000 entrances, 999
of which are open and one of which appears to be closed. How can you
claim that the palace cannot be entered? This is what unbelievers do by
confining their (and others') attention only to the door which appears
to be closed. The doors to God's existence are open to everybody,
provided that they sincerely intend to enter through them.
Some of those doors—the demonstrations for God's existence—are as follows:
• Creation is contingent. In other
words, it is equally possible for something to exist or not to exist.
Also, it is possible for something to come into existence at any time,
place, and form, and with any character. No thing or person has any role
in determining how, when, or where it comes into existence, or what
character and features it will have. Some power has to choose. This
power must be infinite, and have absolute will and all-comprehensive
knowledge. Necessarily, this power is God.
• Things are finite. Everything is
changeable. Given this, everything is contained by time and space and
therefore must have a beginning and an end. That which has a beginning
needs a beginningless one to bring it into existence. As an unending
regress through the originator of each originator is unacceptable,
reason demands the existence of one who is infinitely self-existent and
self-subsistent, who does not change. This one is God.
• Life. Life is a riddle but
transparent. It is a riddle that scientists cannot explain with material
causes, and transparent because it shows or reflects a creative power.
Through both of these characteristics, life declares: "God created me."
• Orderliness in creation. Everything
in the universe, and the universe as a whole, displays a magnificent
harmony and order. This is seen in every item and in their harmonious
interrelationships. This is true to such an extent that one part's
existence necessitates the whole's existence, just as the whole's
existence requires all its parts' existence. A single deformed cell may
lead to the whole body's death. Similarly a single pomegranate requires
for its existence the collaborative and cooperative existence of air,
water, soil, and the sun, as well as their well-balanced mutual
cooperation. Such harmony and cooperativeness point to a creator of
order, one who knows everything in all its relations and
characteristics, one who can put everything in order. The creator of
that order is God.
• Artistry in creation. All creation
exhibits an overwhelming artistry of dazzling worth. Yet it is created,
as we see it, easily and quickly. Furthermore, creation is divided into
countless families, genera, species, and even smaller groups, each of
which has so many members. Despite this variety and abundance, we see
only orderliness, art, and ease. This shows the existence of one with an
absolute power and knowledge: God.
• Finality in creation. Nothing in the
universe is pointless. As ecology shows in particular, everything in
creation, no matter how apparently insignificant, has a significant role
in existence and serves a certain purpose. The chain of creation up to
humanity, the last link in creation, is evidently directed toward a
final purpose. Since this requires a wise one who pursues certain
purposes in creation, and since only humanity has the consciousness to
pursue those purposes, the wisdom and purposiveness in creation
necessarily point to God.
• Mercy and providence. All living and
non-living beings are in continuous need of many things, even a small
portion of which they cannot supply by themselves. For example, the
universe's operation and maintenance demand the existence of such
universal laws as growth, reproduction, gravitation, and repulsion.
However, these "natural" laws have no external, visible, or material
existence; their existence is completely nominal. How can something that
exists only nominally, which has no knowledge and consciousness, be
responsible for a miraculous creation requiring absolute knowledge and
wisdom? How can it have the power of choice and preference? So, one who
has all these attributes has established these natural laws and uses
them to veil His operations for a certain purpose.
Plants require air, water, heat, and
light. But they can obtain none of these on their own. Our needs are
infinite. Fortunately, all of our essential needs, from the very
beginning of our earthly existence to our death, are met by someone
beyond our own capacity and intervention. We enter this world and find
everything prepared to meet our all sense, intellectual, and spiritual
needs. This clearly shows that one who is infinitely merciful and
knowledgeable provides for all created beings in the most extraordinary
way, and causes all things to collaborate to that end.
• Mutual helping. As mentioned above,
everything in the universe helps everything else. This mutual helping is
so comprehensive that, for example, just as almost all things
(including air, water, fire, soil, the sun and sky) help us in the most
extraordinarily prearranged manner, so do bodily cells, members, and
systems cooperate to keep us alive. Soil, air, water, heat, and bacteria
cooperate to keep plants alive. This cooperation and mutual helping,
observed among unconscious beings but requiring knowledge and deliberate
purpose, show the existence of one who arranges them in that miraculous
way.
• Cleanliness. Until we began
over-polluting our air, water, and land, the natural world was cleansed
and purified continually. Even now, it preserves its original purity in
many regions where the ways of modern civilization have not yet taken
hold. Have you ever wondered why nature is so clean, why forests are so
clean although many animals die there every day? Have you ever
considered that if all flies born in a single summer were to survive,
our planet would be covered with layers of fly bodies? Have you ever
noticed that nothing is wasted in nature? Every death is the beginning
of a new birth. For example, a dead body decomposes and is integrated
into the ground. Elements die and are revived in plants; plants die in
animal and human stomachs and are promoted to the higher rank of life.
This cycle of death and revival is one
reason for the universe's continual cleanliness and purity. As well as
bacteria and insects, winds and rain, black holes, and oxygen all serve
to sustain the universe's purity. This purity points to one who is
all-holy, whose attributes include cleanliness and purity.
• Countenances. Countless human beings
have lived since Adam's creation. Despite their common origin—a sperm
and ovum, which are formed from the same sort of foods consumed by one's
parents—and although they are composed of the same structures,
elements, organisms, every person has a unique countenance. This shows
one with an absolutely free choice and all-encompassing knowledge, and
He is God.
• Divine teaching and directing. To
direct our lives and learn what is good or bad for us takes at least 15
years. However, many animals acquire this knowledge soon after their
birth. A duckling can swim as soon as it hatches. Ants start to dig
nests in the ground when they leave their cocoons. Bees and spiders
quickly learn how to make their honeycombs and webs, respectively, that
are such marvels that we cannot produce them. Who teaches young eels
born in the Atlantic Ocean to find their way to their ancestral home in
the Pacific Ocean? The birds' migration is still a mystery. How can you
explain such astounding facts other than by attributing them to the
teaching or directing of one who knows everything and has arranged the
universe and its inhabitants in such a way that they can direct their
lives?
• The spirit and the conscience.
Despite enormous scientific advances, we cannot explain life. Life is
the gift of the Ever-Living One, Who "breathes" a spirit into each
embryo. Our ignorance of the spirit's nature and its relation with the
body does not negate its existance. The spirit is sent to the world to
be perfected and acquire a state appropriate for the other life. Our
conscience is the center of our inclinations toward right and wrong.
Everybody feels this conscience on some occasions. So, the spirit and
conscience are strong arguments for the existence of One God.
• Our innate dispositions and history.
We are innately disposed to good and beauty, and adverse to evil and
ugliness. We also are inclined to virtues and moral values. Unless
corrupted by external factors and conditions, we seek the good and moral
values, which are universal. The values we seek naturally are the same
virtues and morality promulgated by all Divine inspired religions. As
history witnesses, humanity has never lived without a religion. Just as
no system has superseded religion in human life, the Prophets and
religious people always have been most influential people and left
indelible marks on human history. This is another irrefutable proof for
the existence of the One God.
• Human intuition. We feel many
intuitions and emotions, which are a sort of message from immaterial
realms. Among them, the intuition of eternity arouses in us a desire for
eternity, which we seek to fulfill in many ways. However, it can be
realized only through belief in and worship of the Eternal One Who
inspired this intuition and desire in us. True human happiness lies in
satisfying this desire for eternity.
• Consensus. If a few people who never
tell the truth come and tell us at various times the same thing, we may
believe them in the absence of any alternative. But when thousands of
Prophets who never lied, and countless saints and believers who adopted
truthfulness as a most essential pillar of belief, all agree that God
exists, how can we reject their testimony for that of a few liars?
• The Qur'an and other Scriptures.
Proofs for the Qur'an's Divine origin are also proofs for God's
existence. The Qur'an teaches with great emphasis and force, as does the
Bible in its uncorrupted parts, the existence of One God.
• The Prophets. Thousands of
Prophets came and guided humanity to truth. All of them were justly
renowned for their truthfulness and other praiseworthy virtues. All gave
priority to preaching the existence and Oneness of God.
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