Thanks everyone,
To be honest, I gave a presentation about the Transcendental Argument for the existence of the Christian God of the Bible that time, and one of the audience decided to have a debate with me right there and then. I still am not sure how to respond to certain arguments, especially the one where he said "let's say I believe in a god that can account for logic like yours...."(you can see the argument in the first post so I won't waste your time) Well he might still believe that an atheistic worldview can be true and maybe that faith is different from confidence in the element that faith is blind....all of it thanks to a "great education system" called the International Baccalaureate which if i'm not wrong teaches relativism.
Well, so to convert someone to Christ, I first ought to give the person the ten commandments.
So I can ask things like is it wrong to murder that person across the room? If I'm not wrong, most people will say no. Then I can mention, why it is wrong, and say that we all ought to love the Lord God by keeping his commandments and that we ought to treat others as we want to be treated ourselves. But as a matter of fact, all of us have broken it and have forfeited our right to live, therefore we can either go to Hell for all eternity or repent[have Godly sorrow] and be saved.
So about people who say I don't know whether it's right or wrong, I can say "on what basis do you affirm that? Something is either right or wrong to do after all." Am I right?
-> Relativists: "What is true for you is not true for me."" There is no absolute truth."
----> Reply:If you say that it is true only for me that relativism is false, then
1.I am believing something other than relativism; namely, that relativism is false. If that is true, then how can relativism be true?
2.Am I believing a premise that is true or false or neither?
If it is true for me that relativism is false, then relativism (within me) holds the position that relativism is false.
If it is false for me that relativism is false, then relativism isn't true because what is true for me is not said to be true for me.
If you say it is neither true or false, then relativism isn't true since it states that all views are equally valid; and by not being at least true, relativism is shown to be wrong.
But what about:
Person X: I honestly haven't thought of such an issue before. Please justify God's law for me. Prove to me that the Christian God of the Bible exists.
Then what about those who say "no" to everything I throw at them?
What about this:
Person Y: Everything is permitted, including murder, because it's my choice. It's up to me.
Anyway, if posts like this aren't welcome, it's fine by me, I can stop.