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MR. Nate wrote:I apologize for bringing up prophecy, (again) but it is the closest thing
MR. Nate wrote:On the other hand, the historical accuracy is better than anything else from the same period.
MR. Nate wrote: Re-writes are, and were, notoriously frowned upon in light of it's source.
MR. Nate wrote:We can say that we have the complete New Testament with only minor textual variations by 130 AD.
MR. Nate wrote:we have that exactly as it was translated.
MR. Nate wrote:That means that at the very mimum, it is more historically accurate than anything else from the time period.
In the case of the torah you compare it to the oldest ones.Backglass wrote:Again. I say ANY handwritten, transcribed document from ancient times has changed or had pieces added/omitted...especially one that involves a religion, as the bearers always have an axe to grind.
MR. Nate wrote:No, I don't have to guess. The papyrus fragments are at Duke University. Fragments start about AD 85, and are most of Paul's Epistles and all of Hebrews. Complete copies of the NT we have in 300. And everything matches what we have today exactly.
MR. Nate wrote:and 2dimes is right, you made an error, you had to burn the whole copy, that was the rules. The Masoretes made it their life's work to make sure that every copy was accurate.
MR. Nate wrote:I don't know jay
MR. Nate wrote:The only thing more enticing to a seminary student than a discusion on "the Validity of the Bible" is "free books."
Backglass wrote:And of course the ultra religious are never crooked or out for personal gain.
Backglass wrote: A fundamental difference between your college days & mine. "Free Beer" is what got my attention.![]()
Backglass wrote: Regardless....welcome. Even if you dont plan on actually playing any games of Risk.
Socrates wrote:The unexamined life is not worth living.
MR. Nate wrote:There is a difference between those who claim to be religious and those who are religious. James says that true religion is acting lovingly and remaining pure. So, in a real sense, the ultra religious are NOT ever crooked or out for personal gain, only the fakers.
MR. Nate wrote:Never reject anything that's really, truly free. Never.
MR. Nate wrote:What I've noted in this thread, correct me if I'm wrong, is that there are two types of people posting. Type 1 believes:
A: God created the World, and has power over everything.
B: The Bible is God's Word, and is therefore true.
The type 2 believes:
A: The world came into existence on it's own, presumably through evolution.
B. The Bible is NOT God's word, since God doesn't exist.
MR. Nate wrote:IF you accept the existence of God, and that he is Just, Loving, All-Powerful, All knowing, etc. (and I admit that it is a huge if) than you have to assume He would somehow reveal Himself.
MR. Nate wrote:You then examine the claims of the various sacrad texts, the Vedas, the Qu'ran, the Bible etc, and you look and see how well they work in the lives of the people that believe them. Then you make a decision, but you keep examining, poking that decision to make sure it's true, and that it works.
MR. Nate wrote:On the other hand, if you don't believe God, then no forum is going to convince you that the Bible is His word. But then, if you are not constantly examining THAT belief, then you are not thinking critcally.
Agreed...and likewise, no forum will convince the diety-deluded that it's all just fairy tales either. Unlike the ultra-pious among us I DO constantly question and am always open to alternatives. It's just that the more I question, the more like a house of cards religion(s) become. Thus I have chosen not to have one. It's funny, but the religious have a very hard time with absence of religion. It would be easier for them to understand if I said I was a Scientologist then an athiest...even though they are ultra-wacko.
Backglass wrote:I would think so, and by "reveal" I mean something tangible. Not an image of jesus in the oatmeal or a TV evangelist healing. Besides, what is the point in being mysterious and hiding for thousands of years if you are the supreme being of the universe? As I have said many times before, why the "cloak & dagger"? Why the trickery?
heavycola wrote:In nomine patriis, filiis, et spiritus sanctus
MR. Nate wrote:Well, first God told a bunch of guys to write a book, but nobody obeyed the book.
MR. Nate wrote:Then He came down and lived as a person and they killed Him.
MR. Nate wrote:Then He told a bunch more guys to write more in the book, and nobody obeyed it
MR. Nate wrote:and you say it's invalid.
MR. Nate wrote:What trickery were we talking about?
Backglass wrote:IE: Why perform this grand experiment if you already know the outcome.
What secrecy? If you don't have a copy of the book, it's cause you don't want one. It's the most widely distributed and discussed book in history. How is that secrecy?Backglass wrote:Why the secrecy?
If God comes in human form, then you could kill his human body.Backglass wrote:How can you kill a god?
I would argue that when sin entered the world (I'm not going to rehash Adam & Eve) it distorted and destroyed a lot of God's original intent, so natural evil, such as disasters, are not God's fault.Backglass wrote: . . . and throws a few disasters our way from time to time just to make it interesting and confusing.
Never use Internet ExplorerBackglass wrote:IE:
Now you're asking me to understand God's thought process, which I am not qualified to do. Rather, let me say this: God, in His infinite wisdom, saw that He would be more glorified by creating us than not. And that includes, somehow, the fact that horrible things happen, and people reject Him. So He created us.Backglass wrote:Why perform this grand experiment if you already know the outcome.
MR. Nate wrote:What secrecy? If you don't have a copy of the book, it's cause you don't want one. It's the most widely distributed and discussed book in history. How is that secrecy?Backglass wrote:Why the secrecy?If God comes in human form, then you could kill his human body.Backglass wrote:How can you kill a god?I would argue that when sin entered the world (I'm not going to rehash Adam & Eve) it distorted and destroyed a lot of God's original intent, so natural evil, such as disasters, are not God's fault.Backglass wrote: . . . and throws a few disasters our way from time to time just to make it interesting and confusing.Never use Internet ExplorerBackglass wrote:IE:
Now you're asking me to understand God's thought process, which I am not qualified to do. Rather, let me say this: God, in His infinite wisdom, saw that He would be more glorified by creating us than not. And that includes, somehow, the fact that horrible things happen, and people reject Him. So He created us.Backglass wrote:Why perform this grand experiment if you already know the outcome.
MR. Nate wrote:What secrecy? If you don't have a copy of the book, it's cause you don't want one. It's the most widely distributed and discussed book in history. How is that secrecy?
MR. Nate wrote:If God comes in human form, then you could kill his human body.
MR Nate wrote:I would argue that when sin entered the world (I'm not going to rehash Adam & Eve) it distorted and destroyed a lot of God's original intent, so natural evil, such as disasters, are not God's fault.
MR Nate wrote:Never use Internet Explorer
MR Nate wrote:God, in His infinite wisdom, saw that He would be more glorified by creating us than not. And that includes, somehow, the fact that horrible things happen, and people reject Him. So He created us.
Mirak wrote:JAY...JAY...come back...all is forgiven...
MR. Nate wrote:What secrecy?
MR. Nate wrote:I would argue that when sin entered the world (I'm not going to rehash Adam & Eve) it distorted and destroyed a lot of God's original intent, so natural evil, such as disasters, are not God's fault.Backglass wrote: . . . and throws a few disasters our way from time to time just to make it interesting and confusing.
MR. Nate wrote:Now you're asking me to understand God's thought process, which I am not qualified to do. Rather, let me say this: God, in His infinite wisdom, saw that He would be more glorified by creating us than not. And that includes, somehow, the fact that horrible things happen, and people reject Him. So He created us.Backglass wrote:Why perform this grand experiment if you already know the outcome.
You act as if sin were something in and of itself. It's not. If an orange is a good deed, than a bad deed is not an apple, it's a rotten, dried up orange. Sin is a perversion of the good, not an equal alternative. So who created sin? We did. We took good things that God gave us and twisted them.Backglass wrote:IF he didnt create sin...who did? Are their multiple gods?
Well, He told us what He wants from us, but He didn't tell us his motivation in creating us. How is it hypocrasy to say I only know what He told me?MeDeFe wrote:I say that if god exists as the being he's defined as you're damn right about that. But you still claim to know what he wants of us. And that's hypocrisy of the highest degree.
Shouted the insignificant little man, barely bigger than the grains of sand beneath his feet.MeDeFe wrote:And if god created us for no other reason than to glorify himself he can go f*ck himself whether he exists or not.
Backglass wrote:lol..nah, I like this guy better.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Too many of those who claim they don't believe global warming are really "end-timer" Christians.
MR. Nate wrote:God's not hiding. Ever heard the adage "You'll never find what you're not looking for?" However it got here, we certainly have the Bible. If you're not going to begin looking for God in the book He wrote, don't accuse Him of secrecy.
MR. Nate wrote:You demand He meets you on your terms and refuse to meet him on His.
MR. Nate wrote:By way of analogy - If you give me your cell phone number, and I'm trying to find you, but never call, who's fault is it I couldn't find you?
MR. Nate wrote:Sin is a perversion of the good, not an equal alternative. So who created sin? We did. We took good things that God gave us and twisted them.
MR. Nate wrote:Somebody said the religious ones were hostile. They may want to reconsider.
jay_a2j wrote:So do I...
demigod wrote:I read an interesting section of a book not long ago called 'who made God'... it might be relevant to some of this discussion. i've copied an extract below. read it or don't read it... meh:
Christians naturally believe there must be a god because the world had a beginning. And everything that had a beginning had a beginner. But the tough question to answer is how do we know the world had a beginning. Maybe the world always existed.
Famous agnostic Bertrand Russell presented this dilemma: Either the world had a beginning, or it did not. If it did not, it did not need a cause (God). If it did, we can ask “Who caused God?” But if God has a cause, he is not God. In either case, we do not arrive at a first uncaused cause (God).
This asks a meaningless question: Who made God? To put it another way, it wrongly assumes that “everything must have a cause” when what is claimed is that “everything that has a beginning had a cause”. This is quite a different matter. Of course everything that had a beginning had a beginner. Nothing cannot make something…
This being the case, we need only show that the universe had a beginning, to show that there must have been a cause of it (i.e. God). Two arguments are offered: one from science – the second law of thermodynamics. The second is from philosophy, namely, the impossibility of an infinite number of moments.
According to the second law of thermodynamics, the universe is running out of usable energy. But if the universe is running down, it cannot be eternal. Otherwise it would have run down completely by now. While you can never run out of an unlimited amount of energy, it does not take forever to run out of a limited amount of energy. Hence the universe must have had a beginning. To illustrate, every car has a limited amount of energy (gas). That is why we have to refuel from time to time… The fact that we have to refill shows that it was filled up to begin with. In short, the universe had a beginning. And whatever had a beginning must have had a beginner (God)… This would mean that the universe could not have existed forever in the past.
A second argument that the universe had a beginning – and hence a beginner – comes from philosophy. It argues that there could not have been an infinite number of moments before today; otherwise today never would have come (which it has). This is because, by definition, an infinite can never be traversed – that is, we have arrived at today – it follows that there must only have been a finite (limited) number of moments before today. That is, time had a beginning. But if the space-time universe had a beginning, it must have been caused to come into existence. This cause of everything else that exists is called God. God exists.
I'd be interested to hear what people think???
Backglass wrote:WHY doesnt he just show himself and end the debate? What is there to lose?! Why is this such an unreasonable request of an all knowing all powerful supernatural being?
That's my point, actually. You demand proof, God demands faith. It's not that God can't provide you the "proof" that you demand, He just wants you to meet Him halfway.Backglass wrote:No. I demand nothing other than proof, which you have failed to give me.MR. Nate wrote: You demand He meets you on your terms and refuse to meet him on His.
I'm not reading selectivly, I'm answering selectivly. There's 10 questions in every post, and there are more questioners and answerers. If you've got 1 really important question, let me know, don't just chuck 20 at me and expect me to handle them all.MeDeFe wrote: Mr. Nate is doing the same as jay, selective reading. Too bad, I'd almost gotten my hopes up.
Mirak wrote: Why do theists always want it two ways? God is omniscient and omnipotent! But is not responsible for sin, natural disasters, disease..etc
Either he is All or Nothing...you cannot have it both ways..
Backglass wrote: Why didnt he prevent it, if it is so bad? Doesnt he have this power? Why doesnt he just wave his magic wand and stop it now? Is he so weak that he cannot control his own experiment?
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