Timebuilder
Entrepreneur
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2001
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I find this sentiment among detractors as well as professed believers: it all has to be done on faith alone. Now while Faith is what saves you, and True Faith will have Works to evidence it; I reject that the only way there is to believe is by faith because I came to faith by reason. Like many that run hot and cold, I came to faith in Christ from being an atheist and literally trying to disprove God.TWA Dude said:Sorry, but that's circuitous reasoning...how can you put this off on Jesus when all we know of his teachings is what was written by Christians?
I am also getting tired of the "circular" argument. How hard is it to establish a fact these days? If you don't see it yourself, or feel it, or can't give a web address where you can watch a video, evidently it doesn't exist.Josephus; Jewish Antiquities; Book 18, Chapter 3
(63) Now there was about this time Jesus, a wise man, if it be lawful to call him a man; for he was a doer of wonderful works, a teacher of such men as receive the truth with pleasure. He drew over to him both many of the Jews and many of the Gentiles. He was [the] Christ. (64) And when Pilate, at the suggestion of the principal men among us, had condemned him to the cross, those that loved him at the first did not forsake him; for he appeared to them alive again the third day, as the divine prophets had foretold these and ten thousand other wonderful things concerning him. And the tribe of Christians, so named from him, are not extinct at this day.
Yes, don't you?TWA Dude said:(Only Jesus says it's been done for you.)
And you consider this to be a good thing?
`The stone the builders rejected
has become the capstone;
the Lord has done this,
and it is marvelous in our eyes' ? (PS 118:22-23)
enigma said:In my way of thinking, if the Bible can be verified to be accurate in it's historical and prophetic terms, I am happy to accept that it's other, non-provable contents are also true.
Although this perspective must seem quite clever and self-satisfying to those who hold it, it doesn't conform to the scripture. Inasmuch as the word claims to be inspired (not some cute collection of fables), we much conclude that either the claim comes from a liar - - in which case we should trust none of it - - or from a lunatic - - in which case we should trust none of it - - or from God - - in which case we should trust all of it.TWA Dude said:As far as the non-historical, non-provable contents of the Bible all I can say is that one has to choose to believe it. My very personal opinion is that the Bible has stories to tell, lessons to teach, and commandments to deliver -- yet the depicted conversations need not to have happened verbatim. Poetic license, if you will.
Super 80 said:...I reject that the only way there is to believe is by faith because I came to faith by reason.
You haven't even taken the time to examine the Gospel, so how do you know what His teaching is to criticize it?
Josephus wrote about Christ. The Gospel account is not the only record of Jesus.
I am also getting tired of the "circular" argument. How hard is it to establish a fact these days?
Up until this modern age, you established fact with witness. There were a dozen witnesses to Jesus' entire ministry. There were thousands that saw Him teach. Hundreds saw Him resurrected.
These facts have been established. The only circular argument is to say they made it all up, because if they did, then you don't have to believe.
But how do so many eye-witnesses to the miracles of Jesus are going to die for professing their belief when if, as you say, they're lying, and their faith is worthless and they know it? Well all the Apostles save John were martyred -all without giving up their faith. Now you reason with me, how is it that they were willing to die for nothing?
(Only Jesus says it's been done for you.)And you consider this to be a good thing?
Yes, don't you?
TonyC said:Inasmuch as the word claims to be inspired (not some cute collection of fables), we much conclude that either the claim comes from a liar - - in which case we should trust none of it - - or from a lunatic - - in which case we should trust none of it - - or from God - - in which case we should trust all of it.
Super 80 said:First I note no one was put up a counter-argument to Timebuilder's excellent defense of the Bible in all its versions, and I'd also like to thank Tony C for his contribution. For surplus1 I would add that there are legitimate reasons for differing versions. Because Greek and Hebrew incorporate words that do not have a one-for-one translation, it is not always possible to render the exact verbiage as was written into a meaning that has the same impact in our language. This sets up two different and competing schools of translation, word-for-word and thought-for-thought. While the latter can include some verses that may be over-stretched, those same verses can lose meaning otherwise.
Quite frankly I don't like the idea that one must profess faith in another man for salvation. Furthermore I don't like the idea of a religion that tells other religions they must do the same. Yeah, I know, it's G-d's demand and not yours. Tell it to the Judge.
Candidly, I think that people who did not even exist for 1500 years of Christianity have a he!! of a nerve telling me that "Christianity contradicts Catholicism". I'm old enough to have spent nearly sixty years listening to Reformists, otherwise known as Protestants, telling me that they are Christians and I am not. I'm sick of it and feel no need to be "politically correct" in responding. If Protestants expect me to be tolerant of their beliefs, then they need to be equally tolerant of mine.
That argument misses the point. People will do all kinds of things for what they BELIEVE to be true... martyred Jews, martyred Christians, suicide bombers, kamikazi pilots, you name it. The point is that the ORIGINAL Christian martyrs weren't dying holding on to what they'd been TAUGHT to believe, but based on what they'd SEEN. Now, if they had seen Jesus NOT rise from the dead, then they would have been dying for something they KNEW to be FALSE... a far, far cry from dying for what one believes to be true.> But how do so many eye-witnesses to the miracles of
> Jesus are going to die for professing their belief when if, as you
> say, they're lying, and their faith is worthless and they know it? > Well all the Apostles save John were martyred -all without
> giving up their faith. Now you reason with me, how is it that
> they were willing to die for nothing?
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How is it that Jews during the Inquisition were martyred -all without giving up their faith? At Masada? Arab homocide-bombers in Israel are willing to die just to kill a few civilians. People can be zealous about the strangest things sometimes.
Instead, ALL the apostles willingly accepted death rather than deny what they'd seen. Sorta suggests that they saw what they were teaching they'd seen, don't you think?
Snoopy58 said:The point is that the ORIGINAL Christian martyrs weren't dying holding on to what they'd been TAUGHT to believe, but based on what they'd SEEN.
TWA Dude said:
And what about the Book of Mormon?
Dude
I appreciate your point but I don't see a distinction between one witness and numerous witnesses since there's a sole source of information -- the Christian Bible. Super 80 alluded to the writings of Josephus as a secondary source but as yet he hasn't elaborated as to whether Josephus was a witness to Jesus or merely relating what he'd heard.Snoopy58 said:If it was a single amazing appearance but no more, it would be a stronger argument that "they didn't see what they thought the saw." As is, either lots of people were fooled/deceived/confused/whatever on multiple occassions in multiple places, or the writers of the Gospels saw Him once & embellished that into writing that they saw Him many times in many places, or else they saw the things that they wrote about.
Not proof, but I think it is strongly suggestive.
But the Bible is not a single source book. While it is a matter of theory whether Matthew or Mark came first and served as a basis for the other Synoptic Gospels, Luke as a Greek trained physician has proven to be a first-class historian of that era. He documents that he literally researched the accounts to verify them. In addition, John was written significantly after the Synoptic Gospel accounts.TWA Dude said:I appreciate your point but I don't see a distinction between one witness and numerous witnesses since there's a sole source of information -- the Christian Bible.
Super 80 said:But the Bible is not a single source book.
The aspect of having multiple witnesses shows that Jesus made an impression that was universal. It is not so much a matter of wishing something true, healing a man born blind was never done before -and was able to be backed up as a fact by a lifetime of that man's family, friends and townspeople that knew him first hand.
Their fervent belief was rather shaky at first and they did not become bold ambassadors for the Lord until after the baptism by the Holy Spirit, prophesized by Jesus.
This acceptance of witness to establish fact is just as it is used in the Courts today. Multiple witness establishes the truth to what Jesus said and did as much as what Moses said, or Job, or Noah, or any of the Prophets.
Your complaint about Josephus is specious as well. On the one hand, if he just "hears about" Jesus, his testimony is not valid, and if he witnessed Jesus' words and deeds then we can't rely on it.
TWA Dude mimics the post-modernist that has no firm foundation of absolute. Truth is not truth, but whatever you believe it to be. But the ethical theist says that there is an absolute truth and that it has been revealed to men and women by God.
With as much opposition that existed for the earliest Christians, before those Jews that were Christian were even known as or called Christian, had these witnesses been false, this new faith would have been crushed by exposure. Instead, they were persecuted, which makes sense to me: when you can't fight the common knowledge of the people, attack them outright instead.