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10-15-2001, 01:27 PM | #11 |
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bd-from-kg
A very persuasive commentary. Not only is the trilemma argument formally unsound, it appears that the preferred horn is not what one would expect christians to desire. |
10-15-2001, 01:56 PM | #12 | |
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Of course, none of this exegesis matters much for Lewis' Trilemma. Its target audience are those who assume, without knowing any better, that Jesus was a great teacher. With that as a given, it attempts to prove that Jesus was also divine. You reach a different conclusion if you actually read the "great teachings" attributed to Jesus. |
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10-17-2001, 08:18 AM | #13 |
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There is an interesting allusion to the trilemma in "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe," one of CS Lewis' "Chronicles of Narnia" series.
In the story, Lucy discovers the magical world of Narnia through a wardrobe, and when she comes back she tells her brothers and sisters about it. Skeptical, they consult the wise old Professor about it. He gives the standard trilemma argument. There are only three possibilities: Either Lucy is telling lies, or she is mad, or she is telling the truth. Since they know Lucy does not tell lies and one need only look at her to see she is not mad, the only remaining option is to presume that she is telling the truth. It's funny that Lewis would choose to illustrate his trilemma argument in this children's fantasy book of all places because it illustrates just how ludicrous the whole argument is. If a small child tells me that he went into a wardrobe and entered a magical world full of talking fauns and white witches, I should conclude that since the child is not a known habitual liar and does not appear to be stark raving mad, the most likely explanation is that he did in fact enter a magical world of talking fauns and white witches?? Egads! |
10-18-2001, 10:31 PM | #14 | ||||||||||
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It is of course not appropriate for use on someone who doesn't hold that view of Jesus, and arguing that Jesus wasn't a good teacher and therefore the trilemma is useless only betrays and misunderstanding of what the argument is useful for. Just out of curiousity is there anyone who actually favours the liar or lunatic options, even after BD's defense of them? It's just that all the atheists I've talked to have always favoured the "myth" option - that Jesus didn't really claim divine status. So I'm curious... As far as BD's actual argument goes, I'm not particularly interested to waste my time refuting it any more than I'd be interested in refuting someone who told me the earth was flat or that Jesus never existed. (Especially as it seems to involve misinterpreting Jesus teachings for the most part) He's welcome to believe anything he wants as far as I'm concerned. But a few of his points caught my eye: Quote:
There seems to have been a very wide gap between rich and poor at the time. The rich, using political and religious means - most of the Pharisees and Scribes seem to have been very rich - did everything they could to make that gap wider and avoided association with the average poor. Things like Jesus' story of the Good Samaritan reflects that: The priest and the levite both avoid the beaten man where even the Samaritan (who were historical enemies of the Jews) helps him. In the temple Jesus "saw rich men dropping their gifts in the temple treasury, and he also saw a very poor widow dropping in two little copper coins" and he points out the widow really gave the more of the two because she gave all she had where as the rich men gave a tiny bit out of plenty. The temple priests further extorted the people by forcing them to buy pure lambs for sacrifice from them with "pure" temple money which had, of course, to be exchanged through the temple money changers. Jesus drove these people out of the temple and said "It is written in the Scriptures that God said, 'My temple will be called a house of prayer.' But you have turned it into a hideout for thieves!" The priests even had a bridge across from their luxury houses to the temple for exclusively their own use so that they didn't have to associate with the common people. Jesus' complaining about rich people and priests and Pharisees is not just a random subject he choose to rant on, but rather a very serious issue of social injustice at the time which needed dealing with. Quote:
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If anything the passage shows Jesus' ability as a teacher to be able to give deep messages on the fly. Quote:
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More systematic misinterpretation occurs in 10 btw. Quote:
And I disagree with you and agree with Jesus: Whoever can be trusted with very little can also be trusted with much, and whoever is dishonest with very little will also be dishonest with much. It proves itself true in my experience often. Quote:
You don't comment much on 15 but from the way you've divided the text it seems you've missed the point of that one as well. Quote:
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Or we could simply interpret them sensibly and realise that Jesus was actually a sensible teacher who knew what he was taking about. Tercel |
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10-19-2001, 02:57 AM | #15 | |
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I think it's likely that Jesus was real and not entirely sane, but probably not so far gone as to believe he was the "Son of God" (this was probably a later embellishment of the myth, like the virgin birth). But other myths have been heaped upon him. The obvious parallel is Merlin, a real man (Myrrdin the Bard) later regarded as a wizard. Merlin became part of the Arthur myth, which also absorbed other myths and made them "Arthurian" (e.g. Gawain and the Green Knight: the unkillable, eternally-regenerating Green Man is an old Celtic myth). So, metaphorically, the Legend horn is linked by a bony ridge to each of the other horns. Even if Jesus was a liar, or a lunatic, or a genuine agent of God, he was also part legend. |
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10-19-2001, 01:55 PM | #16 | ||||||||||||||||
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Tercel:
Sorry to hear that you’re not interested in wasting your time refuting my arguments. However, some of your comments (and you’re right – they’re certainly not refutations) seem worth responding to. Quote:
Also, the passages that I cited from the Gospels are pretty good evidence of a man who was seriously disturbed at best. I note that you chose not to deal with any of them. Quote:
Second, the term “myth” in this context usually refers to the idea that Jesus didn’t exist at all. This is hardly a majority opinion among non-Christians, Doherty notwithstanding. But if you mean only that most non-Christians consider it a “myth” – i.e., a falsehood – that Jesus claimed to be God, you’re probably right. (But if that’s what you mean, Metacrock may have a few words to say about your equating “myth” with “falsehood”.) Now as to your specific rebuttals, the most striking thing about them is that about half of my points, including several of the most significant ones, are ignored entirely: (2) Loving one’s enemies (5) Wisdom and learning (6) The sins of the fathers (8) The peacemaker (10) How to deal with irresponsible behavior (12) Divorce and adultery (14) The squeaky wheel gets the grease I can only assume that you have no answer to these. So let’s proceed to the ones that you did attempt to answer. (1) The “Beatitudes” Quote:
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In particular, in view of the obvious correspondences between the “blessed are” verses and the “woe to” verses, this interpretation of the latter reduces the Beatitudes themselves to the level of a social commentary on that particular society. (3) Insight into human nature Quote:
(4) Family values Quote:
If your interpretation were correct, all that Jesus would have had to do to avoid being misunderstood was to say the same thing at a time when His family was not seeking to visit with Him. Far from showing Jesus’ ability to give deep messages on the fly, this story (on your interpretation) shows his total inability to choose appropriate circumstances for giving a particular lesson. Also, there is no evidence whatsoever that Jesus went to see his mother and brothers after making these remarks. You’re just making this up. This story is repeated in all three of the synoptics, and not one of them records that He later went to meet His family or had them ushered in to Him. Some further evidence of Jesus’ disdain for His mother: Luke 16:27-28 As Jesus was saying these things, a woman in the crowd called out, "Blessed is the mother who gave you birth and nursed you." He replied, "Blessed rather are those who hear the word of God and obey it." Note the wording. He did not say, for example, “Yes, as is anyone who hears the word of God and obeys it”, or “Yes, but not because she bore me; rather, because she hears the word of God and obeys it”. No, He said “Blessed rather are those...” The clear meaning is that He is denying or disagreeing with what the woman in the crowd said. He is saying that His mother is not blessed, but that those who hear the word of God and obey it are blessed. By the way, while looking for this passage I found another that I had forgotten. Jesus cites the OT approvingly as follows: Mark 7:10 For Moses said ... ‘Anyone who curses his father or mother must be put to death.' It seems to me that Jesus is agreeing here that anyone who curses his father or mother must be put to death, but no doubt I’m deliberately distorting the meaning of this passage too. Perhaps you would like to explain the “correct” interpretation. (7) Responsibility and foresight Quote:
(9) Loyalty to friend and family Quote:
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(11) Use wealth to gain friends?! Quote:
Matthew 16:3-4 The manager said to himself, `...I know what I'll do so that, when I lose my job here, people will welcome me into their houses.' The manager then allows some of those who owe his master money to settle their debts at a discount, presumably on the theory that these people (and those who hear about it, perhaps) will later welcome him into their houses. The master then praises the manager for his shrewdness. There follows the passage I quoted earlier. the “moral” of the story is made very clear at the end: Matthew 16:10-11 Whoever can be trusted with very little can also be trusted with much, and whoever is dishonest with very little will also be dishonest with much. So if you have not been trustworthy in handling worldly wealth, who will trust you with true riches? Thus Jesus seems to be saying that you should use worldly wealth to gain friends for yourself, because this will show that you can be trusted to handle “very little” here on earth, and so can be trusted to handle “much” in Heaven. On this basis God will trust you with “true riches” by welcoming you into “eternal dwellings”. Is there really another plausible interpretation? As for “Whoever can be trusted with very little can also be trusted with much”, I’m not surprised that it has often proven true in your experience. For one thing, there really are people who can be trusted with any amount. Also, I have no way of knowing what you consider “much”; it’s possible that it just happened to be below the threshold where the benefits of stealing it would have seemed to be worth the costs for the people in question. At any rate, we all know that there are lots of people who can be “trusted” not to steal “very little” but will find the temptation to steal “much” difficult to resist. Why are you disputing something so obvious? (13) On slavery Quote:
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But since you’re accusing me in effect of taking things out of context, here’s the entire text of Luke 19:12-27 . Quote:
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10-19-2001, 05:13 PM | #17 | |
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Those who wield the Trilemma assume that "great teacher" believers are simply overlooking (or under-appreciating) the Bible verses which proclaim Jesus' divinity. But they (Christians and mere Jesus fans) are both overlooking other verses (see above) which indict Jesus' sanity and character. Both, in a sense, are guilty of selective quotation. |
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10-19-2001, 08:41 PM | #18 | ||||||||||||
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I certainly have to wonder that if "no one knows what He really taught" how you can think it clear that he preached "that the end of the world was imminent"!!! Faced with this sort of thing, I really am going to have to accuse you of making up your beliefs based on no reasonable criteria other than what you would like to be true. Even if you could be sure that Jesus taught the end of the world was coming I have to wonder how you knew that he meant to be taken literally. After all, in Jewish Apolcalyptic literature "the end" coming is often meant metaphorically as the end of an age or the end of a reign of a king. The again one of the things the Gospels say Jesus taught was the coming of the spiritual Kingdom of God. The Kingdom of the World (controlled by the devil) is the antithesis of the Kingdom of God so perhaps he connected the coming of God's kingdom with the passing of the world's kingdom and his teachings were changed by his ignorant followers into the World would end. etc etc. There are all sorts of such metaphorical alternatives that can be reasonably held, if you believe Jesus taught the end of the world was imminent there is no powerful reason to take him literally other than want to make him look stupid. I don't think there's any doubt that the Christian Church has changed the world so much that it's an not exaggeration to say it's coming ended the world as it was known. Quote:
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I haven't talked to anyone of another religion on the subject, hence my use of "atheists" as opposed to "non-Christians". Happy? Quote:
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The circumstances are entirely appropriate as someone has just mentioned his physical family. Quote:
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Your interpretation can be seen for the joke that it is: "Thus one should reward irresponsible, dissolute behavior by rewarding it far above the boring, pedestrian virtues of discipline, industry, and loyalty to family." Tercel [ October 20, 2001: Message edited by: Tercel ] |
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10-23-2001, 09:32 PM | #19 | |||||||||||||||||
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Tercel:
Before responding to your latest comments I want to clarify the logical structure of the argument that I’ve been making. The “trilemma” argument only makes sense on the assumption that the Gospels give a reasonably accurate portrayal of Jesus – what He did, what He said, what He thought. Accordingly, I have been assuming for the sake of argument that they do. That doesn’t mean that I believe it. In fact, a perfectly sound refutation of the “trilemma” is that the Gospels are not reliable sources, and that in reality we know very little about the real, historical Jesus. Moreover, since the people who make this argument are invariably Christians, it is legitimate to assume for the sake of argument at times that Jesus really was God, in order to show how this assumption leads to apparent contradictions or absurdities. The fact that I make such an assumption for the sake of a reductio ad absurdum argument should not be interpreted as meaning that I believe it. Now to your comments. Quote:
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Once again, to be sure that I’m not misunderstood I want to say that back in the real world it’s not at all clear that Jesus believed in an imminent apocalypse. These teachings might have been imputed to Jesus later by early Christians. But the meaning of the Gospels (especially the synoptics) on this point is not really open to serious dispute. Quote:
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Besides, surely you are aware that the Church has always regarded Jesus’ teachings on this matter as having been meant literally. (It disputes only that He meant that the Second Coming was imminent.) And the early Church surely knew what Jesus’ early followers believed. (After all, it declared many of these beliefs heretical.) If the early Christians had not believed in a literal, imminent Second Coming, the Church would have known. Quote:
By contrast, there are also lots of interpretations of what Jesus said that do not entail that He claimed to be God. Indeed, this supposed claim has to be teased out of various passages that are all capable of completely plausible alternative interpretations. Moreover, there is no evidence that the surviving disciples regarded Jesus as God for a considerable time after He died. Quote:
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By the way, do you have any idea what “self-refuting” means? Quote:
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Now let’s turn to your latest comments on my examples. (4) Family values Quote:
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As to your suggestion that only skeptics interpret this passage this way, let’s look at some classic Bible commentaries. First, Matthew Henry: Quote:
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At any rate, it is clear that many knowledgeable, intelligent, pious Christians have interpreted these passages as meaning what they appear to mean on their face; that Jesus refused to meet with His mother and brothers when they came to Him and expressed a desire to visit with Him. Quote:
Of course, you may say that Mary was not blessed by virtue of having borne Him, but that she was blessed with the honor of bearing Him because she was virtuous. But the “woman in the crowd” did not indicate what the connection was between Mary’s being blessed and being Jesus’ mother (or even that there was any). At the very least, the “rather” in His statement indicates that Jesus was denying that there was any connection at all between the two. Regarding Mark 7:10, in which Jesus quotes Moses approvingly as saying “‘Anyone who curses his father or mother must be put to death.’, your only comment is Quote:
(9) Loyalty to friend and family Quote:
(10) How to deal with irresponsible behavior [quote]Jesus has the father saying "everything I have is yours" to the older brother only. The younger brother has no inheritance at all left. The older brother's "discipline, industry, and loyalty to family" has earned him everything his father has...” This is nonsense. The older son did not “earn” his portion any more than the younger son earned his. The law stipulated how the father must divide his property between his two sons. Moreover, as we see in verse 12: “The younger one said to his father, `Father, give me my share of the estate.' So he divided his property between them.” Thus the younger son had already received his share of the inheritance, and the father was legally obligated to leave the remainder to the older son. But with respect to what was in the father’s gift, the younger, prodigal son received far more than the older, responsible one. Moreover, as the story ends the younger son is not relying on “generosity”, at least in a sense that can be considered humiliating or degrading; he is relying on his family’s love. This is all in accordance with the point of the story. If Jesus thought that there was something wrong with relying on God’s love, he certainly didn’t let on. As I said earlier, the interpretations I gave for these passages are not the only possible ones; they are just the most natural, straightforward ones. (Many of them also exemplify what many reputable Biblical scholars believe to be Jesus’ actual moral philosophy, though all opinions on this subject are just educated guesses.) In any case, if you are to have any hope of understanding even the “Gospel Jesus” (much less the real, historical Jesus, who is a figure of mystery) what you must not do is assume that His teachings must agree with your own moral intuitions. If you insist on filtering all of His teachings through your own pre-existing moral understanding you will simply see your own reflection. [ October 23, 2001: Message edited by: bd-from-kg ] |
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10-24-2001, 04:46 PM | #20 |
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Nice work, BD.
Michael |
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