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Old 06-20-2004, 05:09 PM   #11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Vinnie
Are you willing to justify//explain what the Christian worldview is?
Absolutely. Can't get into detail right now because I am getting ready to go on a business trip and will not be back until Friday. But I will answer the best I can upon my return.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Vinnie
I thought it was based upon the Bible?
It is. (Mine is anyway)



Quote:
Originally Posted by Vinnie
How is this not going to end up being circular?
It will end up being circular but I do not view it as a problem. Since the Bible (the true word of God) is my ultimate standard of truth (ultimate authority), it must be self-authenticating. Everyone's ultimate standard of truth must be self-authenticating. Example, if your ultimate standard of truth is empirical data, you must use empirical data to justify it. If it is reason, you must use reason to justify it. This is because it is the very top level, you cannot go any further and it must be self-authenticating. If you have an ultimate standard of truth that does not end up being circular I would be more than happy to entertain it.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Vinnie
So what is the xian worldview and how do you arrive at it?

Vinnie

I will answer this best I can upon my return from my business trip, if you still have this question. Let me know.

Robert
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Old 06-20-2004, 06:00 PM   #12
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Originally Posted by blt to go
RobertLW, I thought when I stated that christians do not question inerrancy, it was obvious that I was talking from personal, not global, experience. Apparently not.
I re-read what you wrote, it is fairly obvious you were talking from personal experience. I apparently had some kind of brain lock preventing me from properly comprehending what you wrote. My mistake, please accept my apologies.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
Having been an inerrantist and converted to errantist, it is interesting talking to an errantist converted to an inerrantist.

1) What errors does the bible today have?
Scribal/copy errors.



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
2) What were your arguments for errancy?

Many. Most are the same as you will find on this site. Examples: Harmonization, morality of God, lack of clarity in the Bible, special pleading, blind faith....etc....



Quote:
Originally Posted by blt to go
3) Was the sole source of your change, the change in your worldview?

I think you are asking "Is the change in my worldview the sole source of my change of beliefs on inerrancy ?" Let me know if I do not answer the question you asked. I would have to say no. I changed worldviews twice prior to believing the Bible to be inerrant. Several things had to happen. I had to change my worldview, I had to fully believe my worldview and then I had to read the Bible with my worldview fully developed.

I will be back on Friday from my business trip and if I have time I will answer what I can. I am also going on Vacation next week and will be back next Thursday. I think that after that, I can spend more time answering questions and will do so, time permitting.

Thanks

Robert
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Old 06-20-2004, 09:08 PM   #13
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"""""It will end up being circular but I do not view it as a problem. """"""""

I really don't know what to write in response to this that won't get me in trouble with the mods. I'll just stop here.....Down boy...down!

""""""Since the Bible (the true word of God) is my ultimate standard of truth (ultimate authority), it must be self-authenticating.""""""

Why is it your ultimate standard of truth? The money question. Why/how is it more self authenticating then a pile of dog crap or Marcus Borg's The God We Never Knew?

""""""Everyone's ultimate standard of truth must be self-authenticating. Example, if your ultimate standard of truth is empirical data, you must use empirical data to justify it."""""

Actually, I use "reason" because I am stuck with it. Any attempt to counter reason assumes reason by "reasoning" against it. The Babble hardly is analogous to "reason" in this sense.

""""If it is reason, you must use reason to justify it. """"

Reason just is. Any attempt to justify it would require reasoning. AKA using reason to justify itself which is circular. Any attempt to defeat it also is a problem. We are just stuck with it. End of story. I make no further statements or require anything else.

"""""""""This is because it is the very top level, you cannot go any further and it must be self-authenticating.""""""

Why is the Bible at the top level? Did you "reason" to this position? Why?

""""If you have an ultimate standard of truth that does not end up being circular I would be more than happy to entertain it. """"

Yes but we happen to be stuck with reason. We have a bunch of holy books to choose from, however. We could also choose none of them.

At least you admit your entire faith is bult upon a glaring logical fallacy. Couldn't yuo have noted this before our debate?

Vinnie
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Old 06-21-2004, 04:36 AM   #14
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First, let me thank you for your long, elaborate answer.

Quote:
Originally Posted by RobertLW
I did not come to the conclusion that the Bible is inerrant right away, I held more of a mostly inerrant point of view until about a year ago. (I am 34)
May I ask how did you come to this conclusion? Did you read many books on the subject, studied the bible yourself, or what?

Quote:
In order to answer your question, I must first define what I mean by the term "inerrancy". In other words, what question are we trying to answer? Is the question, does the Bible we have today contain any errors of any kind? Clearly it does, the answer to that question is yes. The more relevant question that is being answered by the modern day term "inerrancy" is; Is the Bible true?
Sorry, I was indeed asking for the former version of "inerrancy". But perhaps you nevertheless have some interesting answers.

Quote:
I maintain that the Bible is totally inerrant in its truth and message.
As an aside (only a thought, not an argument): Even if it were indeed inerrant in this respect, then it obviously does a very poor job in communicating its message. Just observe the thousands of denominations of Christianity which disagree on so many details.

Quote:
1. Why do I presume this?
I believe the Christian worldview to be the only worldview to justify all we have and use in this world. Including, reason, morality, love etc.... (all the non-material things) as well as empirical data. I do not believe that any other worldview can justify the non-material things that we all agree exist. For me, I came to this conclusion after evaluating all the relevant data at my disposal and concluding that God does exist and he has given us his word.
Which data, please? These ominous data are so far your only real answer to my "Why" question.

Quote:
Either you presume the verity of the authors, or you do not. For me, the important question is who can better justify their presumption?
So far, you have not justified your presumption. And I don't think that this is a dichotomy.

Quote:
2. Why this should be "enough" for the bible to be inerrant?
It is "enough" for me, personally, because I believe any other option than inerrancy would contradict my worldview.
You misunderstood my question. The point is, the "verity of the authors" simply is not enough to conclude that any book is inerrant. One counter example is sufficient: honest errors.
In the meantime, you "clarified" your argument, from verity -> inerrant to inerrant -> verity.

Quote:
3. If you came to this conclusion while/after reading the bible, and in both cases: Why?
It is important to note that I read the Bible, cover to cover, twice (once as an atheist) prior to concluding that it is indeed inerrant. I believed the Bible to be inerrant only after I radically changed my worldview to one that is justified and read it a third time, cover to cover. Why? Because I read it with a whole different set of "glasses" on. I could see what I could not see before.
That is, you harmonized every error you found earlier, regardless if the harmonization was plausible or not. And the "why" is answered by the above: You had to do this to retain your belief, arrived at by so far unexplained data.
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Old 06-21-2004, 04:47 PM   #15
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To paraphrase an inerrantist on another board, the argument goes along the lines that if the Bible is literally God's word, then God will have been able to ensure that substantive errors aren't included. The argument is also that if the Bible isn't inerrant even after all the years of Bible scholarship and correction of grammatical and translation errors, then why believe any of it?
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Old 06-22-2004, 09:31 AM   #16
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GermanHeretic
Isn't that obvious?

1) If the bible/koran was not infallible, then perhaps some essentials "truths" in it are not really truths. Like Jesus' resurrection for example. If that story is only a metaphor, the whole christian belief can be thrown away.
Not really. I can believe in some thing even though it's not errored.

Quote:
2) If the bible/koran contained errors, it'd probably be a book like any other.
Really? Maybe the Koran, but the Bible is unique in many ways that have nothing to do with inerrancy.
Quote:

3) Divinely inspired writers would be poorly inspired or God would have told rubbish, when that results in errors.

4) Bible/koran is the only (original) source for their belief. It if contains errors, their belief may contain errors :eek. Well, catholics don't rely on the bible solely, but anyway their other sources (popes e.g.) are supposedly infallibe too.

Your assumption is that God inerrantists believe that the Bible is the only source for God's inspiration. But this is not true of MOST Christians.


"infallible" is not the same as inerrant BTW.

cogito cogito,

Mike
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Old 06-22-2004, 10:46 AM   #17
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Default A verifiable experiment

As I understand it, language is something that continually changes and evolves as we try to relate to others. Writing is an extremely formal means of communicating humans invented at some point. How and what we write changes, languages become extinct. The punctuation I am using is an invention that has changed and evolved!

If someone posits that an external being has left us an inerant or infallible book, surely the first question to ask is is there something special about the language itself? I understand the Koran does claim this.

If there are any errors or logical mistakes or anything doubtful, doesn't that mean the whole house of cards collapses?

Inerranists must prove their hypothesis of perfection, that their work is better than Mozart or Da Vinci or who ever.

Didn't an early Xian bemoan Paul's poor use of Greek? Any example like that is enough to disprove innerrancy.
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Old 06-22-2004, 12:21 PM   #18
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Originally Posted by Clivedurdle
Didn't an early Xian bemoan Paul's poor use of Greek?
i'm still trying to figure out how it is a second-temple era Jewish rabbi was never heard speaking hebrew. or even aramaic...
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Old 06-22-2004, 09:27 PM   #19
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Quote:
Originally Posted by RobertLW
Because I read it with a whole different set of "glasses" on. I could see what I could not see before.
So in other words, you're reading a different Bible than the one I have.

Well, that would explain a lot.
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Old 06-22-2004, 10:28 PM   #20
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Hi all, it's been a while (that Peanut Gallery thread is still going?)
Quote:
Originally Posted by RobertLW
It will end up being circular but I do not view it as a problem.
Quote:
Originally Posted by George Orwell, 1984
O'Brien held up the fingers of his left hand, with the thumb concealed.
'There are five fingers there. Do you see five fingers?'
'Yes.'
And he did see them, for a fleeting instant, before the scenery of his mind changed. He saw five fingers, and there was no deformity. Then everything was normal again, and the old fear, the hatred and the bewilderment came crowding back again.
What is there to differentiate a circular belief in Christianity from a circular belief in Islam, or any other belief system? In other words, if all such belief systems are fundamentally based on a totally subjective circular system (as you seem to be saying) then how can you differentiate between them, especially since once you accept circularity as a fundamental basis for a worldview as okay then you can use that to convince yourself of anything - including 2 + 2 = 5.


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