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Old 05-05-2006, 10:18 AM   #341
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Originally Posted by Sven
Well, if you can only think in black and white categories, "just black" certainly sounds good, don't you think?
Yeah I guess. That grey is "just a shading," so it's worthless.
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Old 05-05-2006, 11:00 AM   #342
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Originally Posted by Llyricist
I might have thought about it had I not witnessed you doing the exact same thing in other threads, namely in E/C. e.g.:
The effect may be similar but the intention is no where near accurate.
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Not only did you shift the argument from the original discussion, you are even using the same lack of 100% certainty argument, which unless you admit to being a global agnostic, is not a particularly consistent argument to make.
I objected to the use of consensus. I also object to the absolute language used in this forum on the subject. We can all have our beliefs and base them upon whatever we want. There are shades of gray. I am not saying that the consensus opinion is wrong just putting it into perspective. Through all of this I am not even sure what consensus we are talking about. It is irrelevant to my points.
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Old 05-05-2006, 11:03 AM   #343
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Do not say "the gospels were NOT written by eyewitnesses".
Say "the gospels were probably NOT written by eyewitnesses".
Fine, but from now on, never make a definitive statement. For example, when you say "Please pass the milk" you need to say "please pass me what MAY be milk based on what I know about the container and where it was bought from." or "The sky MIGHT be above the ground, but that's not an absolute, it is only the consensus view right now."

When something has no support, you don't need to pretend it's worth giving validity. Until any kind of reasonable argument is made that they were written by who they're named after, there's absolutely no intelligent reason to pretend they were.
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Old 05-05-2006, 11:04 AM   #344
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I objected to the use of consensus. I also object to the absolute language used in this forum on the subject. We can all have our beliefs and base them upon whatever we want. There are shades of gray. I am not saying that the consensus opinion is wrong just putting it into perspective. Through all of this I am not even sure what consensus we are talking about. It is irrelevant to my points.
Objecting to the consensus is nonsensical.
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Old 05-05-2006, 11:18 AM   #345
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Originally Posted by buckshot23
The effect may be similar but the intention is no where near accurate.
So why do you seem to have a habit of jumping into discussions with points that are not relevant to the pont of contention in the discussion?

Quote:
I objected to the use of consensus.
Why? This isn't a concensus of Tom Dick and Harrys of the street, it's a concensus of scholars in the relevant field.
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I also object to the absolute language used in this forum on the subject.
In the discussion you jumped into, the particular dating and non-authorship of the Gospels either is or is not what the concensus of Biblical scholars says it is.

ETA: as a clarification I meant that the concensus of scholars' position either is or is not "X"

There is no level of uncertainty about what their position is, it either is or is not X. And that was the point of contention before you entered the thread.

Quote:
We can all have our beliefs and base them upon whatever we want. There are shades of gray. I am not saying that the consensus opinion is wrong just putting it into perspective.
There was nothing to put into perspective yet, the point of contention was what the concensus is, not whether it has merit.
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Through all of this I am not even sure what consensus we are talking about.
After several people pointed out that it was the concensus of scholars specializing in Biblical studies? Read the posts

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It is irrelevant to my points.
No, your points were irrelevant to the discussion, plus, they are wrong, they apply well to Tom, Dick and Harrys, but not as well to scholars in the relevant field.

And btw, the evidence against traditional authorship is very strong, just because they don't know who DID write them does not prevent them from being able to discern who did not.
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Old 05-05-2006, 12:00 PM   #346
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Originally Posted by buckshot23
So you are saying consensus proves something. Ok fine.
How about the years of research done to reach that consensus?
Does that mean anything to you?

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Old 05-05-2006, 12:16 PM   #347
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A scientific consensus based on evidence and the most parsinomous interpretation thereof is different from a democratic consensus.

It's really not that difficult to understand. :huh:
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Old 05-06-2006, 08:35 AM   #348
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Originally Posted by buckshot23
One can have an opinion upon the subject but please do not try and suggest that it is an objective fact. We just do not have enough evidence.
When we're talking about authorship of the gospels, do you have any idea on what specific factual evidence the scholarly community (excluding fundamentalists) bases its opinion that the gospels were not written by Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John? Do you have a cogent argument proving the inadequacy of that evidence to support that opinion?

I agree that it is not correct to say, "It is certain that M, M, L, and J did not write the gospels." But when the evidence supports, to a certain high level of confidence, the belief that they did not, it becomes pedantic to insist that people always say "It is my opinion that they did not" rather than "They did not." This is particularly so when the evidence that they did is so weak as to be practically indistinguishable from no evidence at all.
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Old 05-06-2006, 11:29 AM   #349
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Back on topic, please!

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Originally Posted by Richbee
The Easter season is nearly here, and what would Spring be without a really rousing, red hot debate about the resurrection of Jesus Christ with some fundamentalist "skeptics'?

The apostle Paul once asked King Agrippa, “Why should any of you consider it incredible that God raises the dead?” - Acts 26:8

Now, consider, the New Testament critic, D.H. van Daalen, who points out,
“It is extremely difficult to object to the empty tomb on historical grounds; those who deny it do so on the basis of theological or philosophical assumptions.”
In summary, the general consensus of modern scholarship accepts the following ten details as established historical facts:

1. Jesus died by crucifixion 2,000 years ago.

2. Jesus was then placed in a tomb.

3. A few days later, the tomb was found empty.

4. Soon after, the Apostles began testifying that Jesus had risen from the dead.

5. The Apostles really believed they had seen Jesus alive again.

6. Even opponents and skeptics of Christianity at the time claimed to have seen Jesus alive again, and their lives were transformed as a consequence.

7. Almost all of the Apostles eventually died for their testimony that they had seen the resurrected Jesus.

8. In the face of brutal persecution, the movement of Christianity grew beyond all reasonable expectation.

9. The belief that Jesus was physically raised from the dead was central and foundational to Christianity from the very beginning.

10. The corpse of Jesus has never been produced.


Resurrection Reasoning refutes Circular Bias from Unbelief a priori! - Click Here

Judah Etinger: Throughout the early decades of Christianity, it seems the physical vacancy of the tomb was not in doubt by anyone.
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Old 05-06-2006, 12:04 PM   #350
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Richbee
Back on topic, please!
OK, no problem. You can start to get back on topic by conceeding that your statement:
In summary, the general consensus of modern scholarship accepts the following ten details as established historical facts:
is horribly wrong (OK, apart from point 10, but for different reasons than you imply).

After this, we can go on and discuss why the consensus is different than you claim.
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