ran·dom
ˈrandəm/Submit
adjective
1.
made, done, happening, or chosen without method or conscious decision.
"a random sample of 100 households"
synonyms: unsystematic, unmethodical, arbitrary, unplanned, undirected, casual, indiscriminate, nonspecific, haphazard, stray, erratic; More
antonyms: systematic
STATISTICS
governed by or involving equal chances for each item.
(of masonry) with stones of irregular size and shape.
2.
informal
odd, unusual, or unexpected.
"I find it impossible to not laugh at such a random guy"
>causality is a stupid idea
uhhh lol
Also, the big bang couldn't have been accidental if there isn't a god, because accidents are unexpected or unintentional events and there would have to be a cognitive being with the ability to expect or have the intent for something else in order for an event to be an accident. As for whether or not it was random, it's impossible to know so I don't know why it would be stupid to believe either way. It's not like random events are particularly remarkable, especially since the big bang theoretically had an unlimited amount of time to occur at random - which makes its occurrence given a long enough timespan a near certainty.
Since NOTHING, not even time, existed before the Big Bang, other than God, there was NO TIME in which something could have occurred randomly.
You would have to find a very good explanation to prove to me that the creation of the Universe was non-random, and yet non-intelligent. That is one of the dumbest things I think I've ever had the misfortune of every hearing. Not that you are dumb, which you are clearly not, but that the statement you uttered was.
The creation of snowflakes is non-random and non-intelligent. Just saying.
God COULD appear as a human, or anything else for that matter. However, that would NOT be in line with how God has chosen to reveal himself to the Jewish People for 4500 years. So I suspect that doing so would be very unlikely. Praying to a human or animal is directly forbidden in Judaism. I don't think that God would appear as something to which Jews are forbidden to pray.
Jews can pray to burning bushes?
Foreskin was ordered to be removed as a sign of being part of the Covenant. Why that and not something else, I am uncertain. I don't particularly care, however. It is what it is. The benefits to it outweigh the negatives.
So did Abraham remove his own foreskin?
Also, isn't that kind of Gay? I mean, how do jewish men identify other jewish men? Why they have to look at each other's penises right?
And what about women? Not allowed to be in a Covenant?
And did God confirm this with anyone else other than Abraham? If someone came upp to you and said "God came to me as a tree shaking without wind and told me to cut my arm to show servitude." Would you?
God was not an accident, since he has ALWAYS existed, without beginning, and without end.
Replace God with Universe. Just because the earliest we have is a big bang, doesn't mean that was the start nor does it mean that this is the only universe to have ever existed.
As for determining that something was God if I saw it, I have no frame of reference for doing that, as I have never had the experience. I recommend you read Torah. That might give you some ideas as to how certain people handled the issue.
So basically you believe God exists but God himself couldn't prove it to you. No wonder he doesn't talk to you.
Also: Every way in the Torah can be faked using modern technology. Not sure it applies.
Snowflakes are created by God, each one of them, and are NOT random in any way. There IS an intelligence behind them.
No, Jews cannot pray to burning bushes. Your point is well made. But, it is far more likely that someone would worship a person as a saint or something if they thought it was God, as the Christians do with Jesus. Besides that, we do not believe that the bush was God. We believe that God was in the bush, if you will. But your point is well taken. Suffice it to say that we do not worship any kind of image. Our God is utterly incorporeal.
Abraham actually did circumcise himself. Women are part of the Covenant, but there is no physical indicator of that.
Modern technology did not exist 4500 years ago. Your point?