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Old 11-17-2005, 08:21 AM   #21
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Originally Posted by JPD
rhutchin, what is your take on Jonah 3, verses 9 & 10, if one wishes to consider the trustworthiness of God (in terms of believing in the steadfastness of).

Jonah 3:9 "Who knows? God may relent and change his mind; he may turn from his fierce anger, so that we do not perish."

Jonah 3:10 "When God saw what they did, how they turned from their evil ways, God changed his mind"
For context, let's look at more of the passage you cite--

Quote:
Jonah 3
4 And Jonah began to enter into the city a day’s journey, and he cried, and said, Yet forty days, and Nineveh shall be overthrown.
5 So the people of Nineveh believed God, and proclaimed a fast, and put on sackcloth, from the greatest of them even to the least of them.
6 For word came unto the king of Nineveh, and he arose from his throne, and he laid his robe from him, and covered him with sackcloth, and sat in ashes.
7 And he caused it to be proclaimed and published through Nineveh by the decree of the king and his nobles, saying, Let neither man nor beast, herd nor flock, taste any thing: let them not feed, nor drink water:
8 But let man and beast be covered with sackcloth, and cry mightily unto God: yea, let them turn every one from his evil way, and from the violence that is in their hands.
9 Who can tell if God will turn and repent, and turn away from his fierce anger, that we perish not?
10 And God saw their works, that they turned from their evil way; and God repented of the evil, that he had said that he would do unto them; and he did it not.
In the account, v9 is part of the decree issued by the king of Ninevah and merely states that which the king said. I see no reason to think that the king could not say something like this.

In v10, we have Jonah's statement to the effect that the destruction foretold in v3 had been reversed and Ninevah was no longer to be destroyed. This is consistent with that which we are told God will do in response to repentance.

I am not sure what point you are making. Can you go into more detail on your thinking here?
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Old 11-17-2005, 08:27 AM   #22
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Originally Posted by Julian
rhutchin, you should know that Paul didn't write the pastoral epistles (1st and 2nd Timothy and Titus) so those words came from some later writer.

You also cannot make the assumption that every line that starts with "Thus saith the lord..." means anything other than someone wrote those words.

For example:

"Thus saith the lord, rhutchin is mistaken in his assertions."

There, now that god has revealed to me that you are mistaken which you, by your own admission, must take as a revelation from god, I can assume that you will abandon your viewpoint. I mean, if a guy could write that 2000 years ago and you believe it surely the same rules hold true now, right?

Julian
I guess we use different sources regarding the author of the Timothy and Titus letters. So, we disagree.

The intended context for "Thus saith the Lord.." is the Bible. Since we seemed to be discussing the application of 2 Timothy to the Bible, it did not seem necesary to me to explain that context. Nonetheless, my earlier comment was restricted to those instances in the Bible where we find the phrase, "Thus saith the Lord..." and would not apply to similar statements that might appear elsewhere.
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Old 11-17-2005, 08:31 AM   #23
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Originally Posted by rhutchin
When I say that nothing in the Bible is meaningless or jibberish, it is a conclusion that begins with consideration of those pasages that say something in the order of-- "Thus saith the Lord..."
That's exactly my criticism. You're concluding that nothing in the Bible is meaningless or gibberish, because you found a verse - in the Bible - that you seem to interpret as claiming that nothing in the Bible is meaningless or gibberish. That's textbook circular reasoning.

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My conclusion is that nothing attributed to God (and by extension to Christ) is meaningless or gibberish.
You're basing that on verses which start "Thus saith the Lord..." which is merely a special pleading logical fallacy: God is given the extreme benefit of the doubt that God would never inspire anything meaningless or gibberish, because... well, because God is God, and gets a special exemption.

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Paul (in his letter to Timothy) takes this one step further and says that everything God says is profitable in some manner.
Paul identifies the source of the Scripture, presumably the Hebrew scripture, although it is not identified, and much of the Gospels had not yet been written. He also says it is useful for teaching and rebuking and other actions. He does not specify that the Scripture he was referring to was necessarily clear, and Jesus is attributed to have been proud of the fact that His parables were unintelligible even to His own disciples.

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Your objection here, I think, is <braaaap>
You really have to stop paraphrasing other people's arguments. You have a frequent habit of adding your own details and omitting key elements to suit your agenda. For example...

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that we have men like Moses, Solomon, Isaiah, Matthew, etc. attributing that which they wrote to God and why should we believe them. No one has to believe them (unless these men are telling the truth).
There's a general consensus among sacred and secular scholars that the various Scriptures were only attributed to those men, and not actually written by them. The actual authors are anonymous, and in the case of Isaiah (if I remember correctly) there are two distinct anonymous authors involved. There's a Jewish and Christian tradition that Moses wrote the first five books of the Bible, which cannot be true, because the final book includes details of Moses's death, burial, and uncertain grave location, which would be a curious subject for Moses himself to have written.

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Beyond those passages that explicitly state, "Thus saith the Lord..." there are passages that implicitely imply
I think all implications are implicit. Slow down and re-read what you're writing.

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that the writer is relaying that which God has given to him.
The question is not whether God is inspiring the material written. The actual question is whether anything which is included in the Bible is meaningless or gibberish. If you're claiming it can't be because God inspired it, you're using a special pleading logical fallacy.

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For example, Paul says, "Whereunto I am ordained a preacher, and an apostle, (I speak the truth in Christ, and lie not) a teacher of the Gentiles in faith and verity." (1 Timothy 2:7)
So what? Here we have a fallible human man who happens to be a little overenthusiastic with his religion claiming he isn't lying. Obviously, that happens in other religions, too. But this has nothing to do with whether something is meaningless or gibberish.

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Beyond that we have the historical documents--Genesis, Samuel, Kings, etc.
Some passages in those are easily considered meaningless and gibberish, particularly the point of the Creation and Flood myths.

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We can include these among those Scriptures to which Paul refers as being given by inspiration of God.
We could, but that would be pointless, since the question is whether material in the Bible is meaningless or gibberish, rather than whether the material is inspired by God. The only possible line of reasoning you can establish heavily depends on the special pleading logical fallacy - asserting it's not meaningless or gibberish because God inspired it. Giving God a free pass just because He's God is a textbook use of special pleading.

Quote:
Your objection here seems to be that the inclusion of Paul's letter in the Bible creates a situation where you have circular logic or some other problem.
The contradiction (and subsequent amusement) arises from you using a verse in the Bible to back up the claim that nothing in the Bible is meaningless or gibberish. Paul's letter makes an essential claim that everything in the Bible is God-inspired, which does not address the comprehensibility of the Bible unless you're shooting for a whopper of a special pleading logical fallacy.

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Any problem exists only if that which Paul wrote in his letter to Timothy is not true. If it is true, then there is no problem. I guess one's presupposition of the truth of that which Paul wrote dictates whether one believes that there is a problem.
And there you have it - you've presupposed the truth of what you have presented as support for your claim to others who do not share the same presuppositions. Essentially, you've assumed your conclusion, and you can't understand why those who do not assume your conclusion are laughing at you. I hope this helps to explain why that is happening.

WMD
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Old 11-17-2005, 08:31 AM   #24
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rhutchin
I guess we use different sources regarding the author of the Timothy and Titus letters. So, we disagree.
Yes, we disagree. You also disagree with any scholar I can think of. What reputable scholars can you mention who believe that the pastorals were written by Paul?
Quote:
The intended context for "Thus saith the Lord.." is the Bible. Since we seemed to be discussing the application of 2 Timothy to the Bible, it did not seem necesary to me to explain that context. Nonetheless, my earlier comment was restricted to those instances in the Bible where we find the phrase, "Thus saith the Lord..." and would not apply to similar statements that might appear elsewhere.
And therein lies my problem. Why the distinction? What would the distinction have been before the formation of the canon, where you would have had to deal with 20 or so gospels? How do you know what is revelation by god and what isn't? When you answer this bear in mind that the bible didn't look the same back then as it does today, as specified in the previous sentence.

Julian
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Old 11-17-2005, 08:53 AM   #25
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rhutchin
I guess we use different sources regarding the author of the Timothy and Titus letters. So, we disagree.
Can you show your "different sources" which assert that Paul is the actual author of the pastoral letters to Timothy and Titus? I am aware that the consensus is that Paul didn't write those two epistles, and that your "different source" could be a fundy website which claims and insists that all books of the Bible are written by the attributed authors, period, no reasoning other than blind dogma.

Quote:
The intended context for "Thus saith the Lord.." is the Bible.
Thus, it would be extremely embarrassing if your reference to a statement, included in the Bible, that the Bible is God-inspired and necessarily true and profitable for whatever, turns out to be written by somebody other than Paul.

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Since we seemed to be discussing the application of 2 Timothy to the Bible, it did not seem necesary to me to explain that context.
You're completely missing the point. You brought up 2 Timothy as support for your claim that nothing in the Bible is meaningless or gibberish. Since 2 Timothy is included in the Bible, that resulted in a very amusing example of circular reasoning and special pleading.

Here's an example of why it doesn't work: Consider "Wayne's Bible," which consists of one book, one chapter, and three verses.

Book 1.
Chapter 1.
Verse 1. God inspired every verse in this book.
Verse 2. All of this Scripture is true, meaningful, and non-gibberish.
Verse 3. Blah blah blah blah garblefrazzle snockerwiggle blah blah blah.

Would you agree, then, based on your own line of reasoning, that Verse 3 makes sense, and that nothing in "Wayne's Bible" is meaningless or gibberish? I'd really be interested in your answer.

Quote:
Nonetheless, my earlier comment was restricted to those instances in the Bible where we find the phrase, "Thus saith the Lord..." and would not apply to similar statements that might appear elsewhere.
And "Thus saith the Lord..." adds what kind of authority to any particular statement? Remember, few if any of the people you are discussing this with share your presuppositions that 1) the Lord never lies, 2) the attributed authors actually wrote the Scriptures, 3) the anonymous authors were actually telling the truth.

WMD
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Old 11-17-2005, 08:54 AM   #26
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rhutchin
When I say that nothing in the Bible is meaningless or jibberish, it is a conclusion that begins with consideration of those pasages that say something in the order of-- "Thus saith the Lord..."
How do you know these passages are not just meaningless gibberish?

I'm looking forward to your explanation.

Thank you.
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Old 11-17-2005, 09:31 AM   #27
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rhutchin
The rule of thumb is this: Nothing in the Bible is meaningless or gibberish.
In as much as the most arcane Scriptural writings are effective in provoking discussions, disputations, and in polarizing the opinions of the believers and the non believers, whether being regarded as meaningless gibberish, or as the inspired Word of Life, these sayings effectively.... 'cause to be'... that division that has from the beginning divided mankind.
Many things remain unknown and yet undiscovered, what today may be judged in ignorance as being meaningless gibberish, may tomorrow be revealed to be an important clue integral to perfect understanding.
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Old 11-17-2005, 09:52 AM   #28
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Originally Posted by Julian
Yes, we disagree. You also disagree with any scholar I can think of. What reputable scholars can you mention who believe that the pastorals were written by Paul?
1. Eusebius Tertullian, and the early church fathers
Charles Ryrie
John A.T. Robinson


Quote:
rhutchin
The intended context for "Thus saith the Lord.." is the Bible. Since we seemed to be discussing the application of 2 Timothy to the Bible, it did not seem necesary to me to explain that context. Nonetheless, my earlier comment was restricted to those instances in the Bible where we find the phrase, "Thus saith the Lord..." and would not apply to similar statements that might appear elsewhere.

Julian
And therein lies my problem. Why the distinction? What would the distinction have been before the formation of the canon, where you would have had to deal with 20 or so gospels? How do you know what is revelation by god and what isn't? When you answer this bear in mind that the bible didn't look the same back then as it does today, as specified in the previous sentence.
Prior to the formation of the cannon, I suspect that it may have been difficult for those outside the church to identify that which was inspired (i.e., authored by the apostles or Paul (or by those closely associated with them)). I suspect that those within the church were careful to distinguish those works that were inspired, to preserve them, and to use them to instruct the church. From what little I have read from, and of, the early church fathers, certain writings were held in esteem over others. This influenced the formation of the canon. So, I will go with tradition on this issue.
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Old 11-17-2005, 10:19 AM   #29
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Quote:
Originally Posted by John A. Broussard
How do you know these passages are not just meaningless gibberish?

I'm looking forward to your explanation.

Thank you.
May I try to answer with yet another Bible quote: "Taste and see that the Lord is good" [Psalms 34:8:] It has to be 'tasted and seen' that God and His word is good.
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Old 11-17-2005, 10:27 AM   #30
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Originally Posted by Helpmabob
May I try to answer with yet another Bible quote: "Taste and see that the Lord is good" [Psalms 34:8:] It has to be 'tasted and seen' that God and His word is good.
:rolling: Too funny!

Julian
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