Originally posted by Scottish
Burning bush? Wall of fire? Two huge stone tablets with stuff written on them?
You might not be able to observe them, but someone did. So it fits.
The question there is - did they?
The other question is - what makes these things evidence of God, specifically? Is this an observation - assuming they are - that is actual evidence of a/the 'divine'? If someone hears the voice of God, is it actually the voice of God? How do we know?
Because eventually you get this chain of 'evidence' that leads to the definitively unknown, and moreso which is by nature intended to be known.
It's like... with science, we reach some sort of solidity point, some base level where we can be confident we have actual evidence, and then work forwards from that. With religious 'evidence', we end up supposing meanings and origins that ultimately lead to the intangible.
So the more we move that way, the less certainty we can have that we're moving 'correctly'. When you go from 'bush', to 'bush speaking' to 'god speaking through bush'*, to 'god', you're moving quite far into the abstract, and doing so very quickly.
*no, not
that Bush.......