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Old 02-20-2006, 02:51 PM   #111
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Originally Posted by Sven
(1) All texts from today are know to be written by humans. Humans are known to make errors. So errancy of a text simply has to be the default position.
And if so, that still gives no logical consistency to developing a methodologies which create and enforce errancy, and then using those very methodologies of 'evidence' for errancy.

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Originally Posted by Sven
(2) Even if we knew of no methology to establish the inerrancy of a text: How should this bother an omnipotent being? If there is a god, and if this god "inspired" the bible to be inerrant - the only conclusion we can draw from the fact that it's commonly regarded not to be inerrant is that this god simply did not want us to believe in its inerrancy.
Alternate conclusion: many men would rather serve self than listen to God.
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Old 02-20-2006, 02:53 PM   #112
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Originally Posted by mens_sana
While Jericho was first settled during the Mesolithic period (ca. 12,000 BCE), at the time Joshua and YHWH brought its wall tumbling down, it was largely uninhabited, with no walls, and was not reoccupied until the 11th century BCE. [Information courtesy of the Oxford Encyclopedia of Archaeology in the Near East, V. 3, Oxford University Press, 1997]
This sounds like an agreement that the walls did come down, itself a very nice scriptural confirmation, but a dating concern based on something where you say the timing was different than the scripture ?
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Old 02-20-2006, 08:39 PM   #113
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Originally Posted by praxeus
This sounds like an agreement that the walls did come down, itself a very nice scriptural confirmation, but a dating concern based on something where you say the timing was different than the scripture ?
The walls, quite massive ones, date from the Middle Bronze Age, and at the end of that period the entire city was abandoned. There may have been plague, for entire families were found in some of the tombs. There also may have been an earthquake, some foundations were tilted, and subsequent fire. The walls were destroyed, then eroded. The city was sparsely resettled in the 2nd half of the 15th century, with no walls, and remained that way until well into the Iron Age. The biblical account says the city was reoccupied and fortified by Hiel the Bethelite during the time of Ahab (early 9th century BCE).

Thus, during the period assigned to Joshua, the city had no walls and was inhabited only by a few squatters. The city of Ai had also been long abandoned, which may explain its name, which means "ruin."
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Old 02-21-2006, 02:22 AM   #114
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Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
What does that mean, and does it have any relevance to criteria for deciding whether the authors of the Bible were infallible?
Hi Doug - You mentioned Shakespeare first. His comedies are about as funny as toothache these days, but biblical meanings remain relevant. I would not argue at all that the authors of the Bible were infallible, only the text that they produced through the leading of the Holy Spirit largely is.
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Old 02-21-2006, 08:17 AM   #115
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You mentioned Shakespeare first. His comedies are about as funny as toothache these days, but biblical meanings remain relevant.
I'm not particularly fond of Bill's works but I still recognize and appreciate much of the humor used in them. AFAIC, your claim on that score is without merit. In addition, "biblical meanings" are primarily relevant to believers but, also AFAIC, no more relevant to non-believers than any other ancient text containing "wisdom teachings".
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Old 02-21-2006, 10:42 AM   #116
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Originally Posted by praxeus
And if so, that still gives no logical consistency to developing a methodologies which create and enforce errancy, and then using those very methodologies of 'evidence' for errancy.
Are you kidding me? Which methologies are you talking about? Why are there even methologies necessary - the default position is, as I explained, errancy. So if an apparent discrepancy is discovered, why does one need a methology instead of simply using parsimony and take it as indeed being an error (since errors are expected)?

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Alternate conclusion: many men would rather serve self than listen to God.
Oh, a new variant of the "no-true Scotsman/Christian" fallacy. Why I am not suprised?
If god is omnipotent, why doesn't he simply change or add to the text to explain a problem someone sees in it?
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Old 02-21-2006, 03:25 PM   #117
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Default How do you derive inerrancy from errancy?

If the scriptures are really inerrant, and God has indeed preserved his word pure and unadulterated, then name that inerrant text. What manuscript, what number, what collection or museum is it contained in? Appeals to the "original autographs" won't do, because there are none extant. God didn't preserve them!

If then, as I suspect you will be forced to admit, all of the existing manuscripts are errant how do you derive inerrancy from errancy?

Will you claim, oh they are 99% the same or 99% accurate. But 99% isn't 100% and 100% is required for inerrancy.

Maybe you will retreat form inerrancy to some lesser standard that allows for a few mistakes, a "limited inerrancy" if you will.
You might say, oh, we don't know exactly what was written, but no major doctrines are affected. That the Bible is perfectly free of error only on matters of moral, spiritual and religious truth. But this won't do. A simple reading of Bart Ehrman's "Orthodox Corruption of Scripture" puts the lie to that notion.

So, how do Christians derive inerrancy from errancy? Is the Holy Ghost whispering in the ear???


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Old 02-21-2006, 03:37 PM   #118
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Originally Posted by Sven
Nice smokescreens praxeus is putting up here, to hide two simple facts:
(1) All texts from today are know to be written by humans. Humans are known to make errors. So errancy of a text simply has to be the default position..
This is denied by the Chicago Statement:
Quote:
We deny that human language is so limited by our creatureliness that it is rendered inadequate as a vehicle for divine revelation. We further deny that the corruption of human culture and language through sin has thwarted God's work of inspiration.
They thought of that issue.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sven
(2) Even if we knew of no methology to establish the inerrancy of a text: How should this bother an omnipotent being? If there is a god, and if this god "inspired" the bible to be inerrant - the only conclusion we can draw from the fact that it's commonly regarded not to be inerrant is that this god simply did not want us to believe in its inerrancy.

Two simple facts. Which should end this stupid inerrancy discussion in every rational mind.
I am not sure that it is relevant what is "commonly regarded." It is commonly regarded that Christians are nice people, but as we know, this is often not the case.
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Old 02-21-2006, 03:53 PM   #119
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Originally Posted by jakejonesiv

If then, as I suspect you will be forced to admit, all of the existing manuscripts are errant how do you derive inerrancy from errancy?

Will you claim, oh they are 99% the same or 99% accurate. But 99% isn't 100% and 100% is required for inerrancy.

Jake Jones
I think you are asking how Christians can depend on manuscripts and translations that are less accurate than the original? This is a real problem theoretically but becomes insignificant in the actual world. "Inerrancy" is more a method of biblical interpretation than an apologetic to be defended. Those that defend inerrancy, depend on the specifics of biblical revelation to mold their beliefs and (hopefully) behavior. In the real world, the message of the Bible gets through just as well to Christians who do not ascribe to inerrancy.

Those that believe inerrancy are not concerned with your dilemna. They recognize that the translation they read is not an original autograph but they believe they are able to see through the smokey glass well enough to accurately appreciate the garden beyond.
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Old 02-21-2006, 03:59 PM   #120
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Default A non falsifiable thesis is worthless

Quote:
Originally Posted by mdarus
This is denied by the Chicago Statement:

Quote:
We deny that human language is so limited by our creatureliness that it is rendered inadequate as a vehicle for divine revelation. We further deny that the corruption of human culture and language through sin has thwarted God's work of inspiration.
They thought of that issue.
Thinking of the issue in this case is worth nothing. They didn't address it, just asserted unsupported denials. Did you miss the circular reasoning? God's work is assumed.

And after reading the watered down definitions of inerrancy that you have posted here and here I wonder why even bother?

I have to ask, what would it take to falsify the theory in your eyes? I guess if it is based on faith, then nothing will do it.

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