Patrick Madrid explains the idea of infinite regression: basically, the concept of an endless chain of causes, and how it points to the existence of God.
๐The Train Analogy:
Imagine you’re sitting at a train crossing, waiting for the world’s longest train to pass. Car after car zooms by. Each train car is being pulled by the one in front of it, but NONE of these cars are moving under their own power. What gives? โ
Somewhere way up front, there HAS to be a locomotive: the unmoved mover… pulling the whole train. Without it, the entire line of train cars would be stuck. The same principle applies to the universe: you canโt have an endless line of โmoversโ (or causes) without something at the very beginning giving everything its first push. And that is God. โ๏ธ
Infinite regression (the idea of โit just goes back forever, no big dealโ) is, as Patrick puts it, a logical impossibility. Itโs like claiming the train just goes on forever without an engine. Nope. Not happening.
๐จ The Paintbrush Analogy:
This oneโs for the art fans! ๐๏ธ Imagine a paintbrush painting a canvas. The brush creates beautiful strokes, but itโs only moving because someone: a painter… is guiding it. Now, what if the brush is part of a longer stick? Letโs say itโs a foot longโฆ or 20 feetโฆ or as long as a football field. ๐ What if the stick just keeps going forever without a painter? Thatโs absurd.
The same goes for creation: if thereโs no โpainterโ (God) behind the brush (creation), then the painting (the universe) canโt exist. God is the ultimate painter, the one who gives creation its existence and beauty.
๐ What About Infinite Regression?
Patrick explains that atheists, like Richard Dawkins, often try to argue for some other explanation: like โdark matterโ or even, hilariously, aliens seeding life on Earth. ๐ฝ But hereโs the problem: all of these โanswersโ just kick the can down the road. Where did the dark matter come from? Who created the aliens? Itโs begging the question, a fancy philosophical term that means dodging the real issue by postponing it. ๐
If you keep asking โwhat caused THAT?โ at some point, you must land on an uncaused cause: something (or someone) that exists without needing a cause. Thatโs God. Simple as that. ๐
๐ The Five Ways to Prove God Exists:
Patrick gives a shoutout to Aristotle and St. Thomas Aquinas, who developed five logical ways to explain Godโs existence. Theyโre not โscientific proofโ like youโd see in a lab, but theyโre rock-solid philosophical arguments. These โFive Waysโ look at things like cause and effect, motion, contingency, and design in the universe: all of which point to a necessary first cause: God. ๐
He recommends Peter Kreeftโs “Handbook of Catholic Apologetics” (co-authored with Fr. Ron Tacelli) as a go-to resource. If you want to strengthen your faith, itโs must-read. ๐โจ
๐ Final Thoughts:
Whether itโs the train, the paintbrush, or Aquinasโ Five Ways, these are tools to help us understand why belief in God isnโt just reasonable: itโs the only explanation that makes sense. ๐ก
So, the next time someone says, โBut what caused God?โ just smile and remind them: God is the engine, not another train car. ๐โจ
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