Christians, would you switch religions if god appeared and declared another religion was the truth?
Every reasonable person would choose to follow the same god if that god presented an overwhelming amount of evidence that it was true or if that god presented even a single irrefutable piece of evidence that it was indeed God, omnipresent. The trouble is that NONE of the religions or their gods have done so except for atheism. Ignoring the fact that atheism is not a religion at all but is only a loosely gathered collection of subscribers to the obvious truth that there is no God – no all powerful creator / protector / provider being – but that it is only in atheism that real any evidence is readily available on a moment to moment basis. That evidence is observable as absenteeism – it is a true negative. By NOT having ever-present evidence of “a something” expected or assumed, therein and of itself is the evidence of that “something” not being. http://i209.photobucket.com/albums/bb62/…
First off, religion is man made, not god made. God is. There is no “religion”, only GOD. Anything that is not in agreement with the eternity of our Creator, the self evident “be” of his being is nonsense. If you accept that GOD “is”, everything else pales. Once you have accepted that whether or not you believe in him or the dogma about him by man, HE still is, your question will seem ridiculous even to you.
Actually, that day has been here since the New Testament. G-D never said the ways of the church were to worship on Sunday, to celebrate Christmas and Easter. Jesus said clearly that He had come not to abolish, but to fulfill the Law or the Prophets, in other words the Tenakh, the Old Testament. It was never G-D who changed the Book, it was man who, in his anti-semitism, moved the day of worship from the 7th day to the 1st (there is no 8th day in a 7-day week). It was man who moved the Passover to a holiday worshipping a pagan god, who says one covenant replaces another…not G-D, not the Messiah. I am a Messianic Jew, one who believes that the Books are both very clear to those who read with an open mind that the Gentile, the Greek, of Biblical days and the Jews are one…that the Pharisees and Sadducees are two-thirds, but the Prophets, the ones whose words Jesus said He would not abolish, stated clearly in the Old Testament that one third of the chosen people would remain, and the co