PLAYER57832 wrote:jimboston wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:jimboston wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:The New Testament was written largely by witnesses. Parts of the Old Testament were as well.
Most Theologians don't believe the Gospels where actually written by Mathew, Mark, Luke or John.
Rather they were verbally handed down, and then later consolidated.
This is partially true, however, much of Paul was apparently written by Paul, etc.jimboston wrote:Furthermore, the Bible we have today is vastly different than the various bibles early Christians used.
The Bible was edited by the Council of Nicea, under the auspices of the Roman Emperor Constantine.
Many parts were edited or completely removed.
Very true. The Gnostic texts, in particular were quite popular. That is part of why the council was set to establish the criteria for what would be considered accepted and what would not. Even then, of course most Protestant Bibles differ from Roman Catholic Bibles.
Anyway, my point was not to debate the Bible... that belongs in another thread. Its just that the claim that all the Bible is just unproven fiction is often made, but not provable.
Just to be clear. You made a statement.
I refuted it.
You agreed... but acted as if your initial statement was still correct.
No. You did not really refute my statement. I said some of the texts were first hand accounts. Your responded that some were not. Both can be true. In this case, I would say they are.
but that's just semantics. No real argument here.
Reread your post.
PLAYER57832 wrote:The New Testament was written largely by witnesses. Parts of the Old Testament were as well.
That statement implies that the vast majority (largely) of the New Testament was written by witnesses.
This is NOT that same as saying "some".
I never said "some" of the BIble was written by witnesses. If anything my comment implies that very little if any was written by witnesses.
We are not in agreement.
Let me be clear on my understanding and position here.
I think very little if any of the Bible (New or Old Testament) was actually written down by witnesses. Furthermore, the Bible has been edited and translated so many times... that even if some small parts were written by witnesses, the end-result of what we have today (in the US; English versions, like the King James version), is substantially different than what was written supposedly 2000 years ago.
If this were not true, why is there more than one version of the Bible?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_E ... anslations
If the book was written by witnesses and handed down without dispute, there should be only one... no?