I'm looking forward to reading all parts of David Baggett's series. The 'Moral Argument' kept me emotionally and intellectually engaged as an atheist as I searched for the truth about God's existence. I didn't believe in God, but realized my 'moral ethics' were borrowed from the Bible. Even the response of morality being a 'social construct' rang hollow as I was honest with my own atheistic worldview. You might say that the 'Moral Argument' was the big 'stone in the shoe' that continued to bother me until I 'believed' on the risen Son of God. Once I experienced God's forgiveness through Christ, the 'stone' was removed.
I'm looking forward to reading all parts of David Baggett's series. The 'Moral Argument' kept me emotionally and intellectually engaged as an atheist as I searched for the truth about God's existence. I didn't believe in God, but realized my 'moral ethics' were borrowed from the Bible. Even the response of morality being a 'social construct' rang hollow as I was honest with my own atheistic worldview. You might say that the 'Moral Argument' was the big 'stone in the shoe' that continued to bother me until I 'believed' on the risen Son of God. Once I experienced God's forgiveness through Christ, the 'stone' was removed.