Father Barron, I am an atheist, but I love your videos. You explain Catholicism with such logic and clarity that it allows me to understand why someone believes and to be more accepting of them. Thank you.
@frisco617 жыл бұрын
I'm wondering if after an entire year you're still an atheist?
@elspethsilverstar61366 жыл бұрын
Awesome! Convert to Catholicism! We'd love to have you on our side! :D
@blesspascal60166 жыл бұрын
@@elspethsilverstar6136 sides? .....
@wickedhenderson44975 жыл бұрын
Bless Pascal theists atheists
@edlabonte77735 жыл бұрын
I'm a former atheist myself, and I've ended up a Catholic. I understand that you can't just begin to believe without any reason. If you don't want to believe, then all these respondents encouraging you to believe are wasting their time. I came to believe by going to mass with my wife who was a Catholic convert. I fell in love with the mass and was moved by what I feel is the Holy Spirit. I then read a lot of material by authors like David Bentley Hart, who wrote another book called Atheist Delusions. That book exorcised me of my atheism. I sometimes have doubts about the Catholic Church, but never about the existence of God any more. I won't encourage you to believe, because you can only believe what you find plausible. But I do encourage you to read the works of intelligent theists like Hart and Bishop Barron. Also Kenneth Miller, a biology professor and expert on evolution who is also a devout Catholic.
@mattsigl14266 жыл бұрын
“God is not a Being” is perhaps the most profound understanding of God ignored by believers and non-believers alike. God is not A Being! He is Being. Itself.
@TheGuiltsOfUs4 жыл бұрын
The last, thinnest, emptiest - Nietzsche
@baguette78514 жыл бұрын
@@TheGuiltsOfUs NEETsche was a loser
@jeffreyheil95424 жыл бұрын
OminousImpression Nietzsche is dead. God is eternal.
@demetriusmiddleton12464 жыл бұрын
"God is not A Being! He is Being." What are the implications of this. What does this imply / mean?
@JeevanMathew924 жыл бұрын
Then who hears our prayers? If God is not a being, then how can he love us, judge us, etc.
@davy1972 Жыл бұрын
I come back to this video every so often to listen again to a very well thought out explanation of who God is (and is not). "We know that there is some reality who's very nature is to be." I sit and just ponder that comment. There is so much there.
@Irished5810 жыл бұрын
Father Barron again offers us the real insight of a questioning or critical thinking viewpoint on God and the challenges that flow from this analysis. When my brother went to Jesuit high school and I to Christian Brothers high school, the sin was not asking the necessary questions to make for a lively discussion. Actually, even from grade school to the sisters, "Can God make a rock so heavy he can't lift it?" "Yes He can." "Then He can't do everything." While that question usually got you an appointment in the principal's office, the questioning of Baltimore Catechism and all of its Q&A is what Father Barron does here on a larger scale. Father, you have my vote for making things clear and avoiding no question!!!
@faithmaier11 жыл бұрын
As a new Catholic, I only say that your intellectual integrity and respectful, witty responses only help me fall deeper in love with the Church and the wisdom of the Magisterium.
@kokorojournal7 жыл бұрын
I didn't realize how philosophical being catholic could be...for a while I saw it as an institution that controlled people's thoughts and limiting the scope of their wonders...Thank you for your videos they're really enlightening.
@thecarlitosshow76874 жыл бұрын
Many great thinkers were very religious and back then The Roman Catholic Church ran all universities (science, art, philosophy you name it) in the Western World. Many modern people don’t know that. Why do you think Universities like Harvard, Oxford etc look like religious churches or castles.
@mikeleo82092 жыл бұрын
Knowledge is precious, offered only to the needy. this is why we pay school fees to get it.
@bobexler90417 жыл бұрын
Very good lectures should be shared in every school in the USA. Using the internet to the max like this is helping us all and lifting us up from this consumer society run by large corporations.
@lscottb111 жыл бұрын
Fr. Barron I find your videos so instructive and constructive. You have such a gift for synthesizing theological information, from so many resources, and presenting it in such a way that I can walk out tomorrow, have a conversation with someone on the subjects that you cover and sound like I have studied it for years. BTW, we use a number of your materials in our faith sharing group that meets weekly in our home. Thanks so much.
@BishopBarron11 жыл бұрын
Hey Scott, thanks!
@circulationsolutions91493 жыл бұрын
You ask the right questions but you assert an extraordinary answer without tangible justification.
@christophereasley73366 жыл бұрын
Easily one of the best explanations of God I have heard. I see God in everything and everything in God. I believe that is what you said. Great video!
Thank you Fr. Barron. As always, you've given me something more to think about as I continue to seek out fuller understanding of the Catholic Faith. I will defiantly be buying this book and you're new series as well. God Bless you in all that you continue to do for The Church.
@YOUMATTER211 жыл бұрын
Thanks Fr. Barron for your explanation.
@AG-kr1my3 жыл бұрын
I watched this video many years ago and I remember having a deep sense of.....oh, God is real. For real.
@peaceturtleinfinity3 жыл бұрын
Bishop Barron, your words always quiet my soul. Whenever I find myself in a unpleasant place I come to your videos. Thanks, man!
@swennykins Жыл бұрын
This is the most fundamental concept in religion and it’s explained beautifully here. Thank you Bishop for showing how faith and reason work to strengthen each other!
@curious1curious5 жыл бұрын
Dear Bishop Barron, We need priests and teachers who are not afraid to broach the tough questions, who are not afraid of being labeled this or that by those in disagreement, for we are headed in a catastrophic direction in this country and the world. We are censoring thought and denying possibilities of advancing our knowledge by following corrupt ideas and people. We are being asked to accept that which goes contrary to our religious beliefs and sense of moral correctness. We must educate ourselves, but true education does not come easy. Bishop Barron has put his time in and still does. He's always reading his Bible and other works "out there" in the world. He has his finger on the pulse of humanity...always trying to learn more. We all need to do the same, for we are in danger of losing our freedom precisely to those who pretend to want justice and equity for all. They are deceivers and materialists. Let us focus on reading God's Word and sharing that Word (Christ) with others, humbly. Let us prepare a place for the Spirit of God to live within us. Let us fight the good fight! Thank you Bishop Barron. You are an inspiration to us all!
@alexsolis318811 жыл бұрын
esse ipsum subsistens! This goes hard in the paint, SON!!! God's blessings To all who view this and God be with you, Father Barron!
@nextchannelnext88905 жыл бұрын
I Love The Eternal Father of Fr. Bishop Robert Barron ... He's My Eternal Father Too Whom Christ Our Lord Adores and Directs all ... so should all do as Christ Does. Eternal
@marcihf97636 жыл бұрын
I learn so much listening to Father Barron. Thank you for these videos.
@patrickheneghan27946 жыл бұрын
Thank You Bishop Barron...helping greatly listening to the eloquent way you have addressed the great question.
@c.tylercohen76337 жыл бұрын
Great book. It changed the direction I was heading in life.
@BishopBarron11 жыл бұрын
As I'm using the term, "contingency" means ontological dependency. To say that God is the non-contingent (or unconditioned) ground of contingency is to say that he is that reality upon which everything else depends, even as he himself depends on nothing. How this is in any sense "self-negating" you'll have to explain to me. In answer to your colleague's question: Yes, I listen to myself; she might benefit from listening to me a bit more carefully.
@Odinsyasa4 жыл бұрын
cool.
@praxidescenteno32334 жыл бұрын
He is faithful ever! 😇😇😇And beloved!
@SamuelCyrus11 жыл бұрын
Thank you more than I can express Fr. Barron.
@ritabiro51052 жыл бұрын
Thenks Bishop god blesse all of you peace with Jezus the creature of the world
@AmhranaiAlainn6 жыл бұрын
Fr. Barron is a wise man.
@BishopBarron11 жыл бұрын
Oy vey... I'm not "calling the universe god." Just the contrary. "The universe" is a catch-all term for the sum total of contingent things. I'm arguing that a radically contingent universe requires, finally, a non-contingent explanation.
@themitchellbrothers3 жыл бұрын
Do you still believe we were created in his image then?
@riyascorner91983 жыл бұрын
lol yeah we were made in his image becuase we live within him.
@keriford546 жыл бұрын
Glad to see Bishop Barron mention Hart's book. This is such a fundamental distinction.
@mountaintop59228 жыл бұрын
I love Father Barron!!
@JoeyC09147 жыл бұрын
Saint Bishop Barron: Patron saint of Apologetics to Catholics
@oambitiousone71005 жыл бұрын
First multi- media apologist?
@JoeyC09147 жыл бұрын
Bishop Barron, I really appreciate your videos. I recently had a friend of mine tell me she didn’t believe in the Existence of God. Through her I learned that God works in mysterious ways. I, with my 14 years of Catholic and Dominican education, couldn’t give her intelligent apologetic responses. This drive me to tears but also drove me to a deeper appreciation of my own Catholic Faith and Education. It made me want to go to a Catholic College. I currently now attend Christendom College in Front Royal, Virginia. If you could keep my friend Julia and I in your Prayers, I’d much appreciate it. God Bless and Many thanks, Joseph Costello
@BobHamiltonnewradio Жыл бұрын
The Kingdom of God is within you. What matters is that God is in my heart, that, in time of trouble and need, there is no doubt that my Father is with me here, now. Science wants to measure something outside of space/time.
@sergioalvarado87794 жыл бұрын
Gracias por sus didácticas explicaciones a cuestiones difíciles de entender. Siempre que le escucho, salgo más edificado en el Señor. Que Dios le bendiga.
@oldfashioned941310 жыл бұрын
This is a great explanation about who God is. Our world today thinks God should be explained and proven by using the scientific method, but He cannot. God, although we can envision Him to some extent using our imaginations, cannot be fully captured in our minds or words. Fr. Barron is great at explaining this, and I hope many viewers can deepen their understandings of what the Catholic Church defines as God.
@joelciaccio6211 жыл бұрын
I love it! My favorite part is how you nearly come out of your seat exclaiming: "And I'm getting accused of magical thinking?!?!"
@helendicarlo16111 жыл бұрын
Compelling reasoning--but more compelling, Father is the sub text of your wanting others to understand God because that is the beginning then of true wisdom and knowledge, life and love. God Bless you and your work.
@JarenJade11 жыл бұрын
Greatest line: "...and I'm getting accused of irrational thinking?!?" Love it Father!
@stressbelden44784 жыл бұрын
Agree! Agree!! The non-believers have no logical argument, whatsoever, for their non-belief in the existence of God. I have nothing but pity for them.
@SevenDeMagnus5 жыл бұрын
Thank you Bishop Barron.
@dynamic9016 Жыл бұрын
Really appreciate this video.
@spilkafurtseva19183 жыл бұрын
Great book! I’m glad we are continuing to heal the wound between our two churches.
@CentreLine211 жыл бұрын
Wonderful as ever, thanks once again!
@robertlaporte29983 жыл бұрын
I cannot grasp the things which I cannot understand ,And I except God is.I hope someday that he helps me to be all that he hopes me to be.I am grateful for the little bit of awareness of his Love for me and my ability to receive his Mercy and grace. For that alone I am filled.
@danserrano1004 жыл бұрын
God is beyond any human finite comprehension. Not even a supreme being, but beyond any being that exist even in imagination. Yet men's finite mind inescapably pursue the infinite God, that ultimately ends in Faith....
@nathanbogart319110 жыл бұрын
Also, I was just reading comments that people have left on here. None of them possess the great rhetoric or logical tact that the great atheist philosophers of the past have possessed. They call you out on logical fallacies while making fallacious arguments themselves. The fact that you respond to such comments means you must possess a great deal of patience. KZbin is not the place for serious philosophical discussion--whether atheist or theist--and yet you respond to them as best as you can. That is wonderful. God bless you, father--and may He continue to give you patience in face of such absurdities.
@Imdisappointed9 жыл бұрын
***** he put away Adam&Eve from the earthly paradise in respect of their belief to be independent, knowing that we would have the possibility to sin, and gave us rules for not get engaged from sin in itself and proceed to our santifications, such as instruments to be closer to this path: prayer, the mass, the Church...the problem is not the sin in itself but the lack of repentance about the sin and the firm conclusion not to sin anymore, that's why confession exists...actually you aren't punished until you die and even souls in hell can be recieved by God if just they would ask to, they don't want to ask it and that is what continues their damnation. All what I said is better comprehensible if you put at the basis the statement that life is in itself suffering and what you can do is just alleviate the sufferings...."in hac lacrimarum valle..." In this valley of tears..."
i love your video Bishop. praying that God will continue to strengthen u
@Scott33W8 жыл бұрын
Fr Barron, your lectures & sermons are so uplifting! Whenever I get discouraged about anything, I find my heart forever-lifted out of itself w/ all things true & beautiful & good. You have spoken many times (often implicitly) on how we internalize knowledge as truth within a scientific framework. But I don’t think I have ever heard you lecture on how we knows things to be true that are not necessarily reducible to scientific methods. I am thinking of the field of phenomenology. Would you please teach us? :)
@ryanfernandez70404 жыл бұрын
The highest way to speak about God is simply removing all the idea about Him, removing any inadequate concept about God as you can never perceive who really God is, it exceeds man's perception.
@ndomemercyАй бұрын
Fr continue to tech us the Words of God
@BishopBarron11 жыл бұрын
They're all equivocating on the word "nothing." They mean the fluctuating quantum vacuum, which is certainly not "nothing" in the philosophical sense of the term.
@bobbydification8 ай бұрын
The volition for being is love. It is the "why" for all being. This is what everyone misses and is the final dot you all need to connect, and it's time. If the Prince of Peace isn't you ,who is it? The "how" is easy and there are a million big answers. Love is the VOLITION.
@dwmiller6311 жыл бұрын
"'It popped out of nothing!' And I'm the one being accused of magical thinking." Perfect.
@chosenskeptic53194 жыл бұрын
Straw man, lol. Why is there something than nothing, because there’s matter.
@chosenskeptic53194 жыл бұрын
Matt Blaise 🤔 there has never been, according to the Big Bang model that there was never no matter. The singularity was all the matter in the universe as a singularity, a giant fusion ball of energy, aka a super sun so dense that there is no external space, external time or external gravitational systems of accretion. The cosmos seems eternal, since there was no known time that that all the matter in the universe did not exist. Matter cannot be destroyed and is constantly changing form and density. Therefore, the Big Bang was an event in the cosmos. Is there Big Bang repeatable? Yes. The singularity is nothing more than a star 🌟 exploding, of countless other stars that have exploded in history of the cosmos, that will eventually form other fusion stars aka suns that will explode.
@tryhardf8444 жыл бұрын
@Matt Blaise You suddenly went blank with skeptoid here.
@chosenskeptic53194 жыл бұрын
GeorgeBecky Dragan 🤔 energy aka matter cannot be destroyed or created, first law of thermodynamics. Just because matter is contingent does not mean it is not necessary. The cosmos is necessary for matter to have an origin point, and the big bang is just an event of matter changing into something else. Matter is not dependent on the fallacy of ex-nihilo 😮. Ex-nihilo is a biased personal incredulity assertion.
@lukeabbott35913 жыл бұрын
@@chosenskeptic5319 Good point, although the eternal existence of matter doesn't invalidate the argument from contingency. In declaring matter eternal, you've only explained how the building material exists without referring to a prior/external agent. You must also explain what caused things to exist in their particular configurations and forms. Matter is only the "material cause" but is not the "efficient cause" as Aristotle would have said. The existence of inert "matter-as-such" doesn't explain the universe and all the distinct beings within it in the same way that the existence of inert "sand-as-such" doesn't explain a sand-castle-a prior/external agent is necessary for explaining how it came to be in that particular form. Also, this discovery wouldn't have tripped Aquinas up either. Aquinas didn't consider "matter-as-such" (prime matter) to exist in itself, but only to exist virtually within things as their constituent building-material. That's how he (sort of) reconciled creation "ex-nihilo" with reason.
@justalessi11 жыл бұрын
this video made my day: your words are inspiring and are a deep relief, Prof Barron, especially now that I feel my faith so weak in light of the disruptive words of certain scientists and opinionist against the religious sensibility
@4455matthew9 жыл бұрын
'the non-contingent ground of contingency', that is excellent, thank you, Bishop Barron, once again, and a Happy New Year!!
@joshazprozaz47338 жыл бұрын
+Matthew D I loved this video, but my head is spinning from that line. Could you translate for me, please? :-)
@4455matthew8 жыл бұрын
Greetings from Canada, sure, all things in existence depend on other things to function, all things change and pass away, but God is the foundation of all of these things, the ground upon which all of these things occur, from which all things gain their existence, power, etc. He is unchanging source of all things.
@joshazprozaz47338 жыл бұрын
Matthew D, thanks again. Yes, my understanding from the Old Testament as well as the writing of St Thomas Acquinas is that God IS. In other words, he is not some higher being above us, but the act of existence in itself. God is eternal, and IS. God has brought everything else into existence for no need of his own, but for the purpose of sharing his love. For God is IS; God is Love; God is faithfulness; God is Mercy; God is righteousness.
@BishopBarron11 жыл бұрын
I actually have answered this question many times. The unconditioned ground of existence is that whose very nature is to be. This implies that its existence is properly unlimited, for any limit would constitute a condition. Therefore, the unconditioned ground of contingency must possess any and all ontological perfection.
@guiguistyle215 жыл бұрын
Yes! Why is the question of God the most beguiling question on the table? It's their own need and yearn of that which is greater than us that drives them to ask these questions. In the end we are all born with a sense of a higher being.
@AJMacDonaldJr11 жыл бұрын
Well said Father Barron!!
@nathanbogart319110 жыл бұрын
David Bentley Hart is brilliant. As an Orthodox, I love having him as a face of the faith--so to speak. I was hoping to find a video of you speaking on the Orthodox Church or Orthodox-Catholic dialogue. I can't find anything. Would you consider doing a video on such a topic? I would love to hear what you have to say, and I have a few close Catholic friends who would love it as well. Hopefully not a discussion of why you're a Catholic and not an Orthodox, but what we can learn from one another. Etc. Just a thought! In Christ, Nathan
@TheProdigalMeowMeowMeowReturns4 жыл бұрын
🤜 🦛
@BishopBarron11 жыл бұрын
Hey Mark, thanks for that even-handed and reasonable reply!
@moursundjames6 жыл бұрын
Bishop Barron with another Grand Slam! Love the baseball analogies too, by the way.
@edgarm.rodriguez22466 жыл бұрын
Lol, Father Barron you are so funny towards the end of this video! I love your work Father!
@thomasjohnboyd72533 жыл бұрын
God is Jesus. He is the being Jesus and Jesus is the Alpha and Omega.
@nevermind288611 жыл бұрын
Fantastic. Thank you.
@High_Goblin_King3 жыл бұрын
I wish I could like this video multiple times.
@AzulLavoe7 жыл бұрын
Bishop, you are such an inspiration... If only I can attend one of the classes that you teach at Seminary school. That would be great.
@MrKentrob6110 жыл бұрын
We cannot measure what God is. With the finite we try to understand the infinite. Supernatural cannot be limited, nor ever completely understood by natural. I guess, that's where Faith comes in. Yet, our faith is not unfounded. That's the whole essence and fire why we seek to understand!
@JeffersonDinedAlone10 жыл бұрын
Faith is not a pathway to truth. Faith provides no evidence. Faith is gullibility.
@MrKentrob6110 жыл бұрын
We all have faith in something. Even you have faith in what you said...or, you would not have stated it in the way you did.
@BishopBarron10 жыл бұрын
JeffersonDinedAlone No. What you're describing is superstition. Authentic faith is never in opposition to reason or the canons of reasonableness.
@flyingbeagles83289 жыл бұрын
Faith is never in opposition to truth either. Correspondence is asserted when one argues for ultimate truth or even argues against ultimate truth. If ultimate truth is unassailable, then it stands as one of our most solid evidences of a disembodied reality. If the disembodied reality of truth cannot be disproven without asserting it, then we have a powerful basis to assert other disembodied realities. One of these is God. This does not mean we equivocate God as truth itself, but rather we accept that realities without material body or substance can exist. To argue against this is difficult unless you deny correspondence. Then we start over again.
@flyingbeagles83289 жыл бұрын
One more point - if truth exists as a disembodied reality, believing in truth or having faith in truth is not contrary to reason. It is an example of faith and reason in harmony.
@JuanRPF5 жыл бұрын
Excellent explanation.
@poetmaggie14 жыл бұрын
God Is who Is.
@LorrainaNinaiava7 жыл бұрын
663 comments... I wonder if you'll even notice mine... I was shown this video in a college philosophy course two years or so ago, and I fell in love with your description and definition of God. Nothing else I know of actually addresses this question in an easy to understand, coherent manner; and the whole world argues about theories of what God is, but your explanation here, I feel, knocks many of the arguments out of the water. I have referenced this video many times in discussions with atheists and agnostics across the internet. I know this is you describing the meaning of a book, but even so, your description of who/what God is and isn't can stand alone; and, more importantly, it really gets people thinking about the nature of God. This argument has become a tool in the arsenal of people who go around inspiring belief in God in people. I remember when I first saw this, and was amazed that a bishop would be taking a view that seems to deviate from the common Christian view of God being a "male being" watching over us (the all-powerful "He"), and, instead, delves into an awe-inspiring concept of God's "being" as "to be," instead of as a solid entity. I wonder if I'm being (ha ha) too narrow in my thinking, and if God is both this non-conditional source of all conditional things, AND this entity of goodwill and care for what has been created? Biblically, it seems so, but I still struggle with finding truth. Many of us are. I try to make sense of this in the relation to Christ. How can God be a supernatural force on which all of reality exists as contingent things, and Christ still be the son of God? I do wish we could actually have a conversation, because I'd love to ask you about 200 questions, ha ha... Anyhow, I just wanted to say thank you for making this video and inspiring a level of contemplation of God that I believe is deeper than many people go on their own, and which is eye-opening and thought-provoking.
@arielwertlen67096 жыл бұрын
Lorraina Art If you are still searching for the answer to the concept of an embodies God in Jesus, and the metaphysical God of Aquinas, I would recommend looking into how early Catholicism incorporated stoic metaphysics. The Creative Fire, or Logos, and culmination of this in the Christ figure. Think of the event acting as a resolution between metaphysical and physical forms. Fascinating.
@ryanwiacek90210 жыл бұрын
Woah that question at the end blew my mind.
@dragonofthewest91868 жыл бұрын
greatest explanation of God ever i need to read more on St Thomas grate philosopher.
@TheSkepticalHumanist11 жыл бұрын
David Bentley Hart is one of the most important theologians writing in English today. His book "Atheist Delusions: The Christian Revolution and Its Fashionable Enemies" is a must read for anyone who's followed the rise of the new atheists. Even more worthwhile, though, is his "The Beauty of the Infinite: the Aesthetics of Christian Truth." As for the atheists typical reply to the question, "Why is there something rather than nothing?" -- they often appeal to Bertrand Russell. Russell was a clever man and a brilliant analytic philosopher and mathematician, but his brute assertion that "the universe is just there, and that is all," is rather embarrassingly uncurious and evasive. It's a refusal to even entertain the question since the obvious logical answer point to the transcendent. Modern atheists have inherited this lack of curiosity and evasiveness, or been reduced to even baser irrationalities -- like asserting the universe created itself out of nothing, as does Lawrence Krauss.
@OniLeafNin9 жыл бұрын
420bluntsmokerxXx That's not how the universe has always been defined. There's always been two schools, one of panentheism and the other of theism.
@Killjoyed959 жыл бұрын
I don't give a fuck how it has "always" been defined, moran. I care about the intelligent, well-reasoned definition. And nobody who gives two fucks about "panentheism" and "theism" has any access to anything well reasoned or intelligent, precisely because they are still under-evolved enough to care about crap like that.
@OniLeafNin9 жыл бұрын
You're the first troll I've fed in a long time.
@Killjoyed959 жыл бұрын
I'm not a troll dipshit. I'm above each and every person here who does not understand the things I've posted about -- including the evolutionary throwback in this video. People like this belong in zoos and asylums, bottom line.
@OniLeafNin9 жыл бұрын
Very well, :) I'll bite. Only an eternal unchanging standard of perfection can be that from which a person may correctly judge. That standard must be good, it must be whole, it must be true, it must not be lacking in anything to be a proper standard of goodness. In other words that standard must not be physical and not just another part of the universe which changes, or else it is a changing, fallible, and utterly meaningless standard. If the standard is the laws which govern nature, then why is one thing better than another thing? There is no difference in goodness between a fish and a sun from a law's perspective. A law isn't a judging thing, a law isn't a thinking thing. Gravity doesn't care, nor is evolution a means to know a monkey is better than a tortoise. Only a mind can do that. In what way is a mind physical? Synapses firing doesn't explain emotions, they react to sensory experience but can't tell us why such emotions exist in the first place. The relationship between the experience I have of myself, and synapses firing doesn't make sense of why I am either good or bad, above or below. For you sir, being a material reductionist is silly because you lack any power to explain you're own position, the belief that you're better than everyone here. If that statement has any weight at all, it must come from an objective standard, but neither evolution, the laws of physics, nor the universe are that means of knowing that's true. Therefore sir, in order for you to be right an objective standard must exist outside of this universe by which you attempt to judge creatures in it. But that contradicts your earlier statement that the universe is all in all. So you're wrong either way, mostly likely on both accounts because you failed to spell moron properly.
@ndomemercyАй бұрын
Is food for our souls
@angelapreuss120911 жыл бұрын
It's good that you say the question of God is a zero sum game. I meet so many people that say or come across as saying, "It is either me or God" and then they chose themselves, Zero Sum!
@havabighed11 жыл бұрын
Fantastic.
@chris-solmon40176 жыл бұрын
Simply put - we exist in the MIND of the Creator. There you go.
@toni8349710 жыл бұрын
Very well spoken thank you for buy
@margarethhuapcent12704 жыл бұрын
Absolutly. God in him self containt us all Universe exist cause He is. Without existence of God. Can't be an Universe.😇😇😇👼☄️🕊️💗💐
@lysanderofsparta370811 жыл бұрын
David Bentley Hart is a great writer. His book "Atheist Delusions: The Christian Revolution and Its Fashionable Enemies" is also fantastic.
@slowep611 жыл бұрын
great video as always
@BeeFC2711 жыл бұрын
Fr Barron, I love your commentaries. Thank you so much for producing then continuously and excellently. I know you love to read, I do so as well, and feel safe reading books you recommend or comment on. I wonder if you could comment on a book which I found at first interesting, but after finding out the author is an atheist, I wondered if it would be beneficial to actually read it or would I be at risk of being confused? The book is called Lying by Sam Harris. Would you mind commenting on it if you've read it, or commenting on reading books by atheists or Protestants? Would it be a threat to my understanding of our Catholic faith? God bless you Sir.
@davidhawley11326 жыл бұрын
We would know almost nothing about God if it was not for special revelation, and the God who reveals himself is the one who engages with us, and makes demands on us.
@tjlaviolette10 жыл бұрын
Great video Father, loved it...
@BishopBarron11 жыл бұрын
The sneering doesn't help, friend. Whatever the fluctuating quantum vacuum is, it is not absolute non-being. And precisely as fluctuating and determined by quantum laws, it is contingent. Therefore, it requires an explanation. No infinite regress of contingent causes is possible. Thus...
@johnnyM8099 жыл бұрын
Brilliant analysis there from Father Barron
@ivancis661410 жыл бұрын
OMG, epic! God bless!
@research19828 жыл бұрын
I love this!
@TheAlphaAussie10 жыл бұрын
Hi, The one issue I have is that you say Atheists drop the question of why there is something rather than nothing if I understood correctly. It is a good question that is being answered by physicists and astronomers, it is not a question for theologians or philosophers at the moment, logic can only go so far in some of our great questions for which we seek answers. When I looked into this question that all the debate was about I stumbled upon Lawrence Krauss and his book "A Universe From Nothing". He also has a lecture he delivered which is on the same things in his book, this lecture is here on KZbin on his channel. It is very insightful, for a philosopher (in the making) and an ex-christian this is very important information to hear and it is on a topic we all seek answers for, whether we be atheist, theist, theologian or philosopher. Even if you do not accept Krauss' work as truth it brings some more information to the table in regards to this big debate on why there is something rather than nothing. It is a contradiction that something can come from nothing or that something can exist outside of existence however our notion of nothing is being challenged according to Krauss. The nothing we once imagined to be before the big bang, creation, whatever you want to believe actually isn't just nothing. The nothing has properties that can lead to things to be created putting it simply, so nothing is not how many people have imagined it in the past and thus this brings new challenges in this heated debate over the question of why there is something rather than nothing. I don't do Krauss' work justice in this comment, I highly recommend you have a look at his lecture here on KZbin and read his book if you can. All the best
@2012aquinas11 жыл бұрын
Father, I love seeing the Jewish Roots of the Catholic faith. Especially in your posts.
@rosarycompanion11 жыл бұрын
8:45 - Awesome!
@ericemerson34134 жыл бұрын
I love this video, you explain it so well brother. .
@humanistfox491011 жыл бұрын
The quote was perfectly within context. You can go back and re-watch the video to be sure. I grow extremely wearisome of honest people like me being accused of being liars by liars. I'm reminded of RatinoalWarrior's lyrics in "Beyond Reason": "I know, we taking it out of context. That's what you would say next like it's so complex." It's worth a listen.
@johnthomason310910 жыл бұрын
Again, Fr. Barron continues to astound me with his clear and simple thinking. Could you possibly comment on Magic? Like just pretending to cast spells. My Dad disproves of it, but my friends think its fine. Just want a third opinion. Thanks! :D
@iEatCheese337 жыл бұрын
great great video
@linasmarcinkevicius5 жыл бұрын
Amen. 😇 🌟
@edwardflores84426 жыл бұрын
Love it , thanks.
@WrongTimeline11 жыл бұрын
Philosophies (EG defining god into existence) are a fundamental property of one's own being - and society.
@6quilter411 жыл бұрын
Love this priest - go get 'em Father Barron - Engaging and brilliant - ridiculous? I think not!!!
@bitphr3ak11 жыл бұрын
...teaching people to be empathetic, with the same vigor that we teach them to be competitive might also be a useful way to help foster "goodness" between people.
@keepmarchingforward12693 ай бұрын
This is a great explanation
@sergeauclair91759 жыл бұрын
Bonjour father Barron and thank you for your ministry. It helps me a great deal to deepen my understanding of catholicism and my relationship with Him and with my fellow human beings. God isn't a being or someone? Then how can we talk about one God in three Persons? This is a genuine question. I get the part that HE IS and that everything stems from that ultimate reality. The part I don't get is that he isn't someone because to me Jesus-Christ is someone, He is my Lord and my God as Thomas said. I am catholic and sincerly trying to understand. Have a nice day!