4 Things No One Can Deny

 

The Four Things that No One Can Deny


  1. 1.Existence:  I exist.  (We exist.  Creation exists.  The Universe exists.)


  1. 2.Supernatural Things Exist:  Good exists and evil exists.


  1. 3.I am affected by Supernatural Existence:  Although I would like to always do good and be seen as a good person, there are times when I participate with evil.


  1. 4.I am Frail:  We might seem strong at times, but really we are frail people…we all die.


Biblical Reasoning


1.Physical Heritage:  No one can deny that each person has a physical great, great, great, great grandfather or grandmother, though no one has ever seen him or her.  The person’s present physical existence supersedes any argument that could be perpetrated to the contrary regarding the existence of his or her forefather or foremother’s existence.


Life is more than Physical.


Each person is unique.  We each have individualized fingerprints, individual specific eyes, and a personalized voice pattern.  We are unique.  Although our physical heritage can be traced through DNA patterns, we all have been also individually created spiritually.  Our Creator has uniquely created the spirit of each life, which dwells in every living being’s physical body.  Our soul (mind, emotions and will) and spirit are supernatural to our body.  We think, reason, plan, communicate, remember, worship, love and hate, etc., in wavelengths well beyond the “hardware” of our physical brain and confinements of our tangible body.  We know our Creator exists because that which makes us alive - our supernatural self exists.  The physical body can only be sustained in a living form without decay, if it is indwelt by this supernatural life/spirit.


This logic is carried to all of creation’s physical and spiritually empowered existence of that which makes a physical being alive.


2.In addition to life existing both physically and supernaturally, no one can deny that good and evil exists.  Good and evil are supernatural because they exist dynamically beyond the physical realm.   We comprehend and understand what is inherently good and evil by what we call our conscience.  A fundamental understanding of good and evil is consistent throughout the world.  This fact alone is a substantial reason for the existence of an absolute and personal Creator.


Good and evil exists.  And…we can spiritually and mentally comprehend that both exists.


3.The appalling fact to human beings who know good and evil exists and that we want to be seen as good, is that everyone also participates from time to time with evil; this is not a shock to our Creator, it is a fact.


The Bible says, “All have sinned and fall short of the Kingdom of God.”


Our Creator formed us originally good, but we fall into evil and therefore separate ourselves from our Creator.


Our Creator God has provided a way whereby fallen men and women can be cleansed from the guilt of their conscience.  This is through the blood sacrifice of the undefiled Son of God, Jesus Christ, at the Cross, on which He was crucified.


He bore the guilt of our sin in His Body on the cross.  Those who, by faith, accept His Sacrifice as the covering for their own sin, are declared righteous from the guilt of their sin.  This is where the Grace of God has been offered to us, who have been created in His own Image, to once again be reconciled to our Creator, without the guilt of relationship-damaging sin.  We communicate this desire to be reconciled with God and wish to accept His provision of the Sacrifice of His Son, for the forgiveness of our sin, through prayer to God.  Those who find their relationship with God renewed instead of broken, through acceptance of Christ as their Savior and Redeemer, have hope of an eternal life with God, following physical death.


4.Though we seem strong, we are still frail.  We all die.  When the spirit and soul of those who have renewed their relationship with their Creator during their lifetime on earth (by God’s Grace, through faith in Christ’s Sacrifice), will live with their Creator-God for eternity, where there is no more death, or sorrow.