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Old 02-24-2003, 08:21 AM   #91
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Originally posted by Magus55


They can accurately use mathematics to determine the odds of things. The odds of all the protein combinations needed to form life happening randomly ( as in evolution and the big bang) are 1 in 10 to the 40,000th power - need i even elaborate how absolutely huge that number is?
And here's a nice refutation of that BS:

Lies, Damned Lies, and Statistics

Quote:
And it also verifies the point i made about the odds of one man fulfilling 48 prophecies by coincidence. 1 out of 10 to the 157th power - yet Jesus fulfilled almost 300, with a few that have yet to be fulfilled in his second coming..
As I just pointed out to you in my last post, you need to substantiate that the gospel accounts are exact eyewitness accounts. Otherwise, it certainly seems obvious to most bible scholars that they are not eyewitness accounts, and are heavily embroidered accounts that try to 'fit' the Jesus story into dubious OT prophecies.
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Old 02-24-2003, 08:25 AM   #92
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Quote:
Originally posted by Magus55
They can accurately use mathematics to determine the odds of things.
Let me turn this on its head: if the scientists have not waited 10 to the power of 1050 years, how do they know it takes that long for a protein to assemble randomly?

You cannot sneak that crap past us so easily.

Quote:
The odds of all the protein combinations needed to form life happening randomly ( as in evolution and the big bang) are 1 in 10 to the 40,000th power - need i even elaborate how absolutely huge that number is?
Need I remind you that selective pressures tend to eliminate the protein combinations that serve no purpose or that actually harm the cell, and tend to propagate the ones that perform a useful function? This narrows the odds a LOT. Biochemistry is NOT the study of random combinations of organic material.

Quote:
And it also verifies the point i made about the odds of one man fulfilling 48 prophecies by coincidence. 1 out of 10 to the 157th power - yet Jesus fulfilled almost 300, with a few that have yet to be fulfilled in his second coming.
What is the control case? How do you calculate the odds of a successful prophecy without examining at least as many FAILED prophecies? (And if you have only as many failed prophecies as successful ones, that implies the odds of success are 1 in 2, not 1 in 10 to the 57th power). What are the failure cases that were studied to contribute to this conclusion of yours? Your conclusion cannot be accepted until we see your controls: the failed prophecies.
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Old 02-24-2003, 08:52 AM   #93
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Originally posted by Magus55
Um, the Babylons wrote on a tablet describing the flood of Noah. I'm very sure that they could have written down the flood as it was happening up until the writer was killed, and the tablet remains as one of the few relics left over before the flood.
I have this picture of a Babylonian scribe, furiously chiseling into his tablet as the water rises:

*clink* *clank*
...water rising...
*chink* *clunk*
...not much time left...
*dink* *chunk*
...this will be my last chip...
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Old 02-24-2003, 09:21 AM   #94
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Anyway more evidence to Jesus' prophecy and the existance of God - but we'll exame statistics and probability now.

http://theronnows.com/rational.htm

Quite fascinating even for a believer.
Fascinating, yes. That's one way of describing it...

From the article:
Quote:
From the mass of our sun, all the way down to the compatibility of enzymes and amino acids, there are thousands of minute details in all of existence that must fall within precise tolerances in order for any life to exist on earth.
Strange that, with "thousands" of minute details to choose from, the author chooses two that don't cause any problems whatsoever. There are zillions of stars in the Universe, and the compatibility of enzymes and amino acids is the result of evolution.
Quote:
Through the science of mathematics, odds can be accurately calculated concerning the likelihood of any given event taking place. Insurance companies use 'probability tables' every day to determine insurance rates, and they can tell you that your chance of surviving a free fall from 10,000 feet without a parachute, for example, is 1 chance in 107, or one chance in ten-million.

Likewise, the odds of complex life arising out of next to nothing can be calculated. Insulin, for example, is a protein comprised of 30 amino acids, all of which must fall into a precise arrangement. Isaac Asimov estimates that the odds of that happening by chance are 1 in 8,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000.
And Isaac Asimov was an atheist. Looks like an out-of-context quote. The truth of the matter, as Asimov would surely agree, is that insulin is a product of evolution and its configuration is non-random as a result.
Quote:
This is a serious mistake. For the sake of discussion let's assume that a different combination of an insulin-like protein is produced spontaneously (and rejected if unsuitable) every second. In 10 billion years, only 3x1017 (3 followed by 17 zeros) possible combinations would have been produced. That's one ten-billionth of the total production required to exhaust all possibilities. The amount of additional time required would be equal to the age of the universe -- 15 billion years -- multiplied by 10 billion, or 100 quintillion more years.
Once per second? In every single ocean on every single Earthlike planet in the Universe? That is a ludicrously low estimate! And why pick insulin? We have no idea just how many molecules would have sufficed. Experiment has shown that polynucleotides have a natural tendency to catalyze the formation of other polynucleotides. That's what evolution needs: ANY self-replicating polynucleotide.
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One could fill a book with the parameters required in order for life to exist on earth, covering aspects of the physical world from organic molecules all the way up to this planet's proximity to past supernovae eruptions.
Yet again, the two exmples given pose no problem. Organic molecules are common, and MANY stars incorporate supernova-produced material.
Quote:
British astronomer Sir Fred Hoyle and a colleague, Chandra Wickramasinghe, took on the task of calculating the odds of all functional proteins required for life forming by totally random processes. The result was 1 chance in 10^40,000
Hoyle and Wickramasinghe had no idea what the odds were. Biologists are suggesting ONE self-replicating polunucleotide: so how does this magically become a plurality of "functional proteins"?
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Instead of another bizarre creation myth, here was a journal-like record of earth's initial conditions -- correctly described from the standpoint of astrophysics and geophysics -- followed by a summary of the sequence of changes through which Earth came to be inhabited by living things...
Ross was wrong. According to science, the Genesis creation sequence is inaccurate.
Quote:
Applying the same test to the New Testament we find more than 24,000 manuscripts in existence today (5,366 Greek manuscripts, 10,000+ Latin Vulgate manuscripts, 9,300+ earlier versions). It has approximately 20,000 lines of text; 40 lines -- or about 400 words -- are questionable, making it 1/2 of 1 percent textually corrupt.[19] The originals were written between A.D. 40 and 100. Our earliest copy dates back to 125 A.D. -- a time span as short as 25 years.
As previously mentioned, this is a lie.
Quote:
Messianic prophecy accounts for the bulk of predictive prophecy in the Bible, with more than 300 individual prophecies fulfilled by Jesus during His 33 years on Earth. Peter Stoner, Professor Emeritus of Science at Westmont College, calculated the probability of just eight Messianic prophecies being fulfilled in one man by coincidence. Working with 600 students from 12 classes, they examined the following prophecies:
1. Messiah would be born in Bethlehem (Micah 5:2; fulfilled in Matthew 2:1-7; John 7:42; Luke 2:47).
2. Messiah would be preceded by a Messenger (Isaiah 40:3; Malachi 3:1; fulfilled in Matthew 3:1-3; 11:10; John 1:23; Luke 1:17).
3. Messiah is to enter Jerusalem on a donkey (Zechariah 9:9; fulfilled in Luke 35-37; Matthew 21:6-11).
4. Messiah is to be betrayed by a friend (Psalms 41:9; 55:12-14; fulfilled in Matthew 10:4; 26:49-50; John 13:21).
5. Messiah would be sold for 30 pieces of silver (Zechariah 11:12; fulfilled in Matthew 26:15; 27:3).
6. The money for which Messiah is sold would be thrown to the potter in God's house (Zechariah 11:13; fulfilled in Matthew 27:5-7).
7. Messiah would be silent before His accusers (Isaiah 53:7; fulfilled in Matthew 27:12).
8. Messiah would be executed by crucifixion as a thief (Psalms 22:16; Zechariah 12:10; Isaiah 53:5,12; fulfilled in Luke 23:33; John 20:25; Matthew 27:38; Mark 15:27,28).
1 is false, as already mentioned. The reference to John is particularly amusing, because John was arguing that Jesus SHOULD have been born in Bethlehem, but the crowd rejected him because he was NOT born in Bethlehem, but in the Galilee area: John 7:52, "out of Galilee ariseth no prophet". This is typical of the blinkered vision of apologists: they don't bother to read what the author is saying.

2 There is no proof that Jesus WAS preceded by a messenger. That's just what the STORY says.

3 There is no proof that Jesus DID enter Jerusalem on a donkey. That's just what the STORY says.

4 Psalms 41:9 and 55:12-14 are not Messianic prophecies. The AUTHOR is betrayed by a friend.

5 There is no proof of this. Furthermore, Matthew names the wrong prophet!

6 There is no proof of this.

7 There is no proof of this.

8 IIRC, "they pierced my hands and my feet" in Psalms is a mistranslation. Zechariah refers only to "me whom they have pierced" (and the guy he was talking about would strike horses blind), and Isaiah makes no mention of crucifixion either.

In a book the size of the Bible, surely there should be SOME correct prophecies? So why did they pick such poor examples? Because the Bible is notoriously BAD at prophecy.
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The result of the calculations was that the probability of one man fulfilling these eight prophecies by coincidence was 1 in 10^17.
Baloney. For several reasons.

Firstly, as already mentioned, there is no good reason to assume that Jesus DID fulfil those "prophecies". Secondly, the calculation doesn't take into account the failure rate of prophecies: no attempt is made to allow for failed prophecies. Thirdly, even if we assume there was a 50% chance of a prophecy being right or wrong AND all eight were right AND this was a representative sample, the number would be 2 to the eighth power, not ten to the seventeenth power.
Quote:
Stoner and his students then performed the calculations using 48 Messianic prophecies. The results were 1 chance in 10157 that one man could fulfill all 48 purely by coincidence. As mentioned above, the Bible contains more than 300 prophecies concerning Jesus, and with the exception of the few that remain concerning His second coming, all were fulfilled during His 33 years on earth.
This statement is false. There aren't 300 prophecies about Jesus (we have already seen some examples of out-of-context quotes claimed as prophecies), and many Biblical prophecies failed.

The Jews are well aware of this. That's why they aren't Christians.
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Old 02-24-2003, 10:09 AM   #95
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I'm returning to something Magus posted on the first page of this thread:

Well there is plenty of evidence, its just not the kind you want. You rely on faith for everything else you do and take in life. You weren't there during Roman or Greek or Nepoleans days so you take faith the the historical books written by eyewitness accounts or of the person themselves to be factual. Same with religion.

The "rely on faith" argument was thoroughly demolished in the preceeding posts.

I don't "take faith" in any historical book. Typically, I rely on scholarly evaluation of those books (e.g. comparison with archaeological evidence and other historical texts) to determine how much confidence to place in their accuracy. As has been thoroughly described in this thread, the Bible has been examined as or more thoroughly than any other book describing supposedly historical accounts. And has, for many if not most of its more critical historical elements, been found sorely lacking. Its innacuracy starts, interestingly, in its first two chapters. We've known conclusively that the Genesis account of 6-day creation is a myth since at least 1859 (when Darwin published his Origin of Species. We knew the earth was not "young" as is claimed by some people's interpretation of the Bible even longer.

How do you know who discovered America? Columbus because everyone told you he did? How do you know Julius Ceasar ruled Rome? Because people of the time wrote down what he did? Everything we do is based on faith. Christians faith is just more in depth.

The "rely on faith" argument was thoroughly demolished in the posts preceeding yours on the first page, and further addressed after that. You have not overcome the objections to your "faith" claim in any of those posts.

And no im neither Atheist nor Agnostic.

Yes, you are an atheist - you are an atheist about all gods except the one you choose to believe in.

I said im willing to give the benefit of the doubt with some near improbable chance that all Christians are wrong. However its a very very very small chance to me so its almost negligable - but since part of what i believe about God is taken completely on Faith ( the other part being accounts of the Bible that i can't take as anything more than a true account) i don't really worry about that slim chance of being found wrong.

Well, there has been plenty of evidence presented on this thread that the bible is not a "true account", its just not the kind you want. Or rather, your faith prohibits you from facing the implications of that evidence.

God exists based on my own experience with divine intervention, the Bible, and my own feelings of his presence.

Since your Biblical evidence has been shown sorely lacking, I can only assume you'll soon resort to bombarding us with your divine intervention experiences and/or your feelings of his presence.

Note that there are Muslims, Hindus, and people of other religions that would undoubtedly make similar statements. So this is just about useless as evidence that your favored god exists.

I don't believe im wrong just like you don't either. But my faith is completely devoted to God so i don't even consider the possibility in other gods, but thats not to say there isn't a slim slim chance that they do exist since i don't know everything.

And i will never be agnostic/atheist because i didn't know God when i was younger and it was a miserable existance. Once i found God - i felt like i was in a different world.


Bully for you. And the world is full of Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists, etc. who would no doubt share a similar testimony to the personal transformation they've experienced through their particular religion. So obviously it's religion, not any god claimed by the religion, that works to transform some people.

Note that you're atheistic in regards to those other gods. I was a theists when younger until I learned that one must not be afraid to examine every belief, no matter how precious or deeply-felt. Doing so led me to realize that there is scant or no evidence that any gods exist, and in particular that the so-called evidence for the bibllical god I'd been presented with all my life (e.g. the fulfilled prophecies you seem to be so enamored of) is largely if not wholly a construct of apologists interested in justifying and defending their faith. Therefore, I'm now atheistic just like you - exept my atheism extends to one more god than yours does.
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Old 02-24-2003, 10:32 AM   #96
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Originally posted by Magus55
Um, the Babylons wrote on a tablet describing the flood of Noah. I'm very sure that they could have written down the flood as it was happening up until the writer was killed, and the tablet remains as one of the few relics left over before the flood.

This has to be one of the funniest things I've read in a while.

"One of the few relics left over [from] before the flood"? There's massive archaeological evidence from many different civilizations worldwide that predate the supposed time of the supposed worldwide flood.

Here's a description of the Gilgamesh tablets.

Note that the person busy chiselling away while the water was rising had time to concoct pre-flood prophecies, an account of events surrounding and during the flood including the building of an ark, and even a bit of what happened after the flood; indeed, an entire mythology surrounding the flood. Further, IIRC, most scholars agree that this Babylonian account was written prior to the Genesis account.
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Old 02-24-2003, 11:17 AM   #97
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The OP seemed to be about the basic arguments of EoG, but the thread has taken a definite turn. The entire second page, thus far, is about BC&A.

I understand how the thread got here. It is a natural progression of questions. If the thread continues in this vein, I will move it to BC&A.

DISCLAIMER: This is not a punishment, by any means, or a means of washing my hands of a thread. It is in the interest of benefiting from the expertise of those who make discussion of BC&A their specialty.

d
Excellent idea, Diana...if there were a literary analysis forum available, it would also do rather well there...I tend to view the Bible as a form of literature, rather than as a naturalistic representation of 'reality.' I wonder what Magus would make of my definition?

Quote:
Originally posted by Magus55
Well archealogists today even claim the overwhelming amount of evidence they have found that is perfectly recorded in the Bible. Thousands and Thousands, if not millions of people ( scientists, archaeologists, theologists etc.) have tried to find errors in the Bible - they haven't done it yet. There is still alot for them to find.
The discussion has moved along quite a bit since I was participating last night (that bloody time difference dontchaknow), but I see that quite a few people have pointed out some inconsistencies in the biblical text for you, Magus, which is the direction in which the conversation was starting to turn anyway.

However, I just want to point out that when I provided that short article for your perusal, in which the author draws attention to major discrepancies between biblical claims and historical records, I was hoping you would try to respond to this by acknowledging that there are mistakes in the Bible that have less to do with translational accuracy/inaccuracy, and more to do with blatant differences between what the Bible said happened or would happen, and what actually did happen.

For you to state baldly that no one has found any mistakes in the Bible is, um, just plain wrong. What are we supposed to make of this? Stating something - no matter how often - does not make it true.

Evidence will out.

Edited to add:

P.S.

I went to work today, as I predicted yesterday...am I a prophet?
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Old 02-24-2003, 11:20 AM   #98
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Anyway more evidence to Jesus' prophecy and the existance of God - but we'll exame statistics and probability now.

http://theronnows.com/rational.htm

Quite fascinating even for a believer.


From the link:

Rothman's article was on the anthropic principle, which states essentially that human life is possible only because characteristics of the universe are finely tuned to an astonishing degree of precision. Stephen Hawking, one of the leading theoretical physicists in the world today, said this:
"The odds against a universe like ours emerging out of something like the big bang are enormous... I think clearly there are religious implications whenever you start to discuss the origins of the universe. There must be religious overtones. But I think scientists prefer to shy away from the religious side of it."


A rather interesting quote from Hawking, and one I have had difficulty verifying. Many religious sites quote this as something Hawking supposedly once told a reporter, I reckon to use it as evidence that a premier scientists thinks God must be involved. I'm curious as to what Hawking may have said between "enormous" and "I think", as well as before and after this quote.

Anyway, since the site cites Hawking as an expert on the subject, let's see what he has to say about the fine tuning argument. An article of Hawking's posted on his website titled Life in the Universe clarifies Hawking's position:

Quote:
At first sight, it seems remarkable that the universe is so finely tuned. Maybe this is evidence, that the universe was specially designed to produce the human race. However, one has to be careful about such arguments, because of what is known as the Anthropic Principle. This is based on the self-evident truth, that if the universe had not been suitable for life, we wouldn't be asking why it is so finely adjusted. One can apply the Anthropic Principle, in either its Strong, or Weak, versions...I shall adopt what is known as the Weak Anthropic Principle. That is, I shall take the values of the physical constants, as given. But I shall see what conclusions can be drawn, from the fact that life exists on this planet, at this stage in the history of the universe.

We do not know how DNA molecules first appeared. The chances against a DNA molecule arising by random fluctuations are very small...One possibility is that the formation of something like DNA, which could reproduce itself, is extremely unlikely. However, in a universe with a very large, or infinite, number of stars, one would expect it to occur in a few stellar systems, but they would be very widely separated. The fact that life happened to occur on Earth, is not however surprising or unlikely. It is just an application of the Weak Anthropic Principle: if life had appeared instead on another planet, we would be asking why it had occurred there.
...
The early appearance of life on Earth suggests that there's a good chance of the spontaneous generation of life, in suitable conditions.
Obviously, these are selected excerpts. But reading this essay should clarify Hawking's position of the subject. And if that's not enough, here's a couple of more quotes from Hawking:

Quote:
The idea that space and time may form a closed surface without boundary also has profound implications for the role of God in the affairs of the universe. With the success of scientific theories in describing events, most people have come to believe that God allows the universe to evolve according to a set of laws and does not intervene in the universe to break these laws. However, the laws do not tell us what the universe should have looked like when it started -- it would still be up to God to wind up the clockwork and choose how to start it off. So long as the universe had a beginning, we could suppose it had a creator. But if the universe is really completely self-contained, having no boundary or edge, it would have neither beginning nor end: it would simply be. What place, then, for a creator? [Stephen Hawking, A Brief History of Time (New York: Bantam, 1988), p. 140-41.]


What I have done is to show that it is possible for the way the universe began to be determined by the laws of science. In that case, it would not be necessary to appeal to God to decide how the universe began. This doesn't prove that there is no God, only that God is not necessary. [Stephen W. Hawking, Der Spiegel, 1989]
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Old 02-24-2003, 11:31 AM   #99
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Quote:
Originally posted by Magus55
The fact is, there are only three alternatives to explain all this suffering:
1. There is no God, as evidenced by the chaos.
2. God is totally incompetent and can't control His creation (or won't, which makes Him a tyrant).
3. Another explanation exists, one which the Bible gives for the state of the world.
This is a lie unless the guy is so truely innocent and shallow that he never thought of a fourth alternative. He doesn't write like an innocent. I think he is a highly polished liar, a montebank. I am not prepared to believe this guy has never even heard of, say, polytheism, or less-than-omnipotent gods. He's lying.



Quote:

Let's take a rational, logical look at the first of these three possibilities. It is the basis of a philosophy commonly called "atheism."
Why would he use this, "rational, logical," language if he's not going to follow thru?



Quote:


Faith Is for Wimps
From my own experience and from listening to many objections to Christianity, I have found that the subject of faith is often offensive to the nonbeliever. My own thinking was that faith was for the weak-minded, for little old ladies, and for those near death. Yet every belief you and I have about history, other countries, science, biology, etc., exists because of faith. You only believe what you believe because you believed the person who told you the information you believe. You don't know who discovered America. You simply have faith that what was told to you is indeed true. Neither do you know if General Custer died at the hands of Indians, or if Napoleon really existed.
This is the not-drawing-the-line fallacy. He argues that if it is okay to believe something on less than 100% proof, then it must be okay to believe something on 0% proof. Nonsense.



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We can't live without faith.
Still the not-drawing-the-line fallacy. If it's okay to believe some things on faith, then it's okay to believe anything on faith. But he wouldn't extend that to devil worship, would he?



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If, then, faith so evidently surrounds us, why should it be so offensive? It is simply because faith is as essential to the spiritual realm as oxygen is to the natural realm. The professing atheist thinks that if he can get rid of any thought of faith, he can get rid of Christianity.
That's like saying the rich think if they can quit thinking about poverty they will have gotten rid of the poor. It's stupid. He knows it's wrong, but he says it anyway. He knows atheists won't believe this nonsense, so who's he talking to? He thinks Christians are stupid.





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In trying to do so, he saws through the branch he is sitting on. His own faith in the erroneous information he has, makes him think he is atheistic in his beliefs.
Here he's trying word magic. If god exists, that means I'm wrong; it doesn't mean I'm not an atheist.

Taste the converse of his argument: "You only think you're a
Christian. God doesn't really exist, so you're really an atheist and you just don't know it." Stupid, right? Stupid and wrong.



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He gambles his very soul on the belief that there is no higher card--that it cannot be answered.
Most atheists don't believe in souls. He knows that.



Quote:

Actually, the explanation is very simple.
If it's so simple, why doesn't he get cogent?



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space will never end. It just goes on and on and on--forever. It has no beginning or end. It hurts the brain to think about such a state, but we have no choice but to accept that fact by faith.
Absurd falsehood. Is he pretending he never heard of quantum mechanics, never talked to a physicist? I don't think so. I think he is directing his talk specifically at Christians, whom he believes to be gullible and uneducated. He's not arguing from personal incredulity; he's arguing from audience incredulity.


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God also has no beginning and no end.
This from the same guy who says we can't really know whether general Custer existed. Right.



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But with God, we have a little more information than we have with space. Time is a dimension that God has created
Bald assertion. No reason to believe it.



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God is not subject to the dimension of time. He dwells in eternity.
Pick one only.



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The Bible tells us that
The bible tells us lots of contradictory stuff. Therefore it cannot be true or reliable.



Quote:

The Christian is told that he understands "by faith." This happens if I have major surgery.
Not drawing the line. "If I can believe in reasonable stuff, then isn't it okay to believe in unreasonable stuff?

You know he doesn't have a good argument. People with good arguments don't use bad arguments. If he had a good argument, he'd be telling us how good it was rather than analogising it other unsubstantiated beliefs that one holds in desperate need.



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no one perishes in the hands of God.
Bald assertion. Contrary to lots of bible stories. (Noah's flood, for instance.)



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God's ability is boundless and His promises are "both sure and steadfast, an anchor of the soul"
You aren't going to make me go look up a conflicting bible text are you? You know they exist.



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(Hebrews 6:19).
I don't believe in atheists.
This makes no more sense that me saying I don't believe in Christians. You would recognize that as absurd, wouldn't you?



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This isn't because I haven't met people who claim the title, but because such a person cannot be.
By his standards, then, Christians cannot exist either. We are all agnostics.



Quote:
To say categorically, "There is no God," is to make an absolute statement. For the statement to be true, I must know for certain that there is no God in the entire universe.
Wrong. For the statement to be true, there must be no god. This guy cannot do (or isn't interested in doing) simple logic.

If I said, "I am certain that there is no god in the entire universe," then for that to be true I would have to be certain that there was no god in the entire universe. But for, "There is no god," to be true, there only needs to be no god. Does this author really not understand this, or does he just think Christians don't understand it?



Quote:
No human being has all knowledge. Therefore, none of us is able to truthfully make this assertion.
An atheist is one who believes there is no god. Atheists exist.

Christians don't know everything, do they? And yet Chrstians exist, right? So this guys argument is transparently stupid, right?



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If you insist upon disbelief in God, what you must say is, "Having the limited knowledge I have at present, I believe that there is no God."
That's fair. That's what atheism is.



Quote:
Owing to a lack of knowledge on your part, you don't know if God exists.
That's right, just like you can't be perfectly sure there is no tooth fairy.



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So, in the strict sense of the word, you cannot be an atheist.
Wrong. Words mean what words mean. He has invented a new meaning, a worthless meaning (because if it really was the meaning of the word "atheist" then there would be no atheists, and we would need a new word to describe all the people who disbelieve in god). Since his meaning is never called for, the word is available for use as meaning what people really mean when they say it.



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The professing atheist is what is commonly known as an "agnostic"
There's plenty of overlap in the words, but he's still lying.



Quote:
--one who claims he "doesn't know" if God exists. It is interesting to note that the Latin equivalent for the Greek word is "ignoramus."
Well oh yeah! If I said, "Christians are assholes," I would be arguing on his level. I hope this isn't the part you found persuasive.



Quote:
The Bible tells us that this ignorance is "willful" (Psalm 10:4). It's not that a person can't find God, but that he won't.
This is a claim that there are good reasons to believe. Note, however, that he has not come foreward with these good reasons. If they really existed, wouldn't he tell us what they are?
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Old 02-24-2003, 11:35 AM   #100
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Vorko, the NT was no written based on prophecy. Sorry but you can't plan Jesus' birth, death, and ressurection prophecies ahead of time.

The point is, the NT writers had access to the OT texts. Decades after Jesus (may have) lived, the NT writers easily could have, and in my opinion did, write fictional events into the accounts of Jesus' birth, life, and death to make Jesus' life seem to fulfill supposed OT prophecies. There are many flaws and contradictions in their accounts that indicate this is indeed the case. The two different lineages of Jesus and the misinterpretation of "young girl" as "virgin" are just two of them.

The statistics are right in front of you - Sorry its still a mathematical impossibility for God not to exist and Jesus not to be God. You just live in denial.

And the so-called statistics are seriosly flawed, as has been pointed out to you over and over. And your conclusion here contradicts your earlier statements such as "...but since part of what i believe about God is taken completely on Faith ( the other part being accounts of the Bible that i can't take as anything more than a true account) i don't really worry about that slim chance of being found wrong." If it was true that it is a "mathematical impossibility for God not to exist and Jesus not to be God", or even if you merely believe it to be true, then "faith" would have nothing to do with your belief.
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