Can You Prove God Exists?

PETER KREEFT

Before we answer this question, we must distinguish five questions that are often confused.

I believe we can answer yes to the first four of these questions about the existence of God but not to the fifth. God exists, we can know that, we can give reasons, and those reasons amount to proof, but not scientific proof, except in an unusually broad sense.

There are many arguments for God's existence, but most of them have the same logical structure, which is the basic structure of any deductive argument. First, there is a major premise, or general principle. Then, a minor premise states some particular data in our experience that come under that principle. Finally, the conclusion follows from applying the general principle to the particular case.

In each case the conclusion is that God exists, but the premises of the different arguments are different. The arguments are like roads, from different starting points, all aiming at the same goal of God. In subsequent essays we will explore the arguments from cause and effect, from conscience, from history, and from Pascal's Wager.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

Peter Kreeft. "Can You Prove God Exists?" excerpted from Fundamentals of the Faith.

This article is reprinted with permission from Peter Kreeft.This text is also available as an audio lecture under: Arguments for God's Existence

THE AUTHOR

Peter Kreeft has written extensively (over 43 books) in the areas of Christian apologetics. Link to all of Peter Kreeft's books here.

Peter Kreeft teaches at Boston College in Boston Massachusetts. He is on the Advisory Board of the Catholic Educator's Resource Center.

Copyright © 2005 Peter Kreeft