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In a Dec. 29 column titled "What if I just can't believe the 'Christmas story'?," Robert Hammer claims that he is "99.9 repetend percent convinced that [God] does not exist." While I won't take any particular side with the Mormons, Catholics, Protestants, Jews, Muslims or any other religious group that acknowledges a Supreme Being, just because it is impossible to empirically prove God's existence does not mean faith in a Higher Being is a losing proposition.

As Norman Geisler and Frank Turek write in their aptly-titled I Don't Have Enough Faith to be an Atheist: "It's virtually impossible to know everything about a particular topic, and it's certainly impossible when that topic is an infinite God. So there has to come a point where you realize you have enough information to come to a conclusion, even if unanswered questions remain."

I believe there are good reasons why God's existence makes more sense than no God at all. For one, Hammer admits that he might be wrong, "but I strongly doubt that, too." By not being so skeptical of his own skepticism, perhaps this mindset deceives him.

He also complains that if he's wrong he will confidently question God in the end with, "O Lord, why hast thou forsaken me?" Yet how did the Almighty forsake him? Psalm 19 proclaims, "The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands." "General revelation" makes God's existence abundantly clear.

Imagine if someone made a claim that a particular ballpoint pen had no designer. Do the insides of the pen — including the spring, the reservoir, and the clicker — just magically appear in exact order to form a functional instrument?

Obviously, somebody designed each intricate piece. In the same way, the universe's cosmological design screams for a Designer.

Another reason for the existence of God is time. Those who claim that time is infinite must consider the "Kalam Cosmological argument," a complex tool constructed by Muslim philosophers in the Middle Ages. How, they asked, could we ever have arrived at "today" if time consists of an infinite past?

If the universe did begin 12 billion years ago from nothing, then how did "something" (the first cell) get created if "out of nothing, nothing comes"? And the idea that things progress rather than digress when left in their natural state defeats the Second Law of Thermodynamics.

I believe the very existence of moral values is one more dilemma for nontheists. After all, from where do morals come?

Do they emanate from Mother Nature (the conscience)? What right does something lesser than I have to bind me absolutely?

Some would argue that others can determine morals through governmental laws, but is society always right? I think not, especially in light of Nazi Germany, the slavery and "back-of-the-bus" South, and Kim Jong-il's North Korea. Maybe I can determine morals. But what if my name is Jeffrey Dahmer or Brian David Mitchell? If moral relativism is correct, then who really has the right to tell these men that they were immoral? Only something above us — a Moral Lawgiver — can determine right from wrong.

Notice that I'm not arguing for a particular God or saying that all theists (representing any number of religions) necessarily know or practice what is moral. I'm merely stating that there must be some set of objective moral laws that exist.

Finally, while Hammer says he has tried but apparently never experienced the Almighty, I have. By itself, I agree that this is not a good reason for him or anyone else to become a believer. Yet this very fact, which is real to me, is just as strong as Hammer's perspective that God doesn't exist because he never experienced Him. One of us is wrong. The consequences could be immense.

Skeptics need to refrain from throwing the baby out with the bath water. You may not have had a good experience with your church, with others who called themselves theistic believers, or with major tragedies that have occurred in your life. Yet God's existence doesn't hinge on your knowledge or experience.

You do not "lack capacity for this kind of faith." It's atheism that requires so much more faith. Therefore, go where the evidence leads.

Eric R. Johnson lives in Sandy and has taught high school and college classes in English and journalism for 18 years.