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08-20-2001, 01:51 PM | #71 |
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Nomad, if you wish to be taken seriously, I suggest you refrain from attempts to associate James Still and me with silly arguments of the "but Adam didn't die" variety. I think I am a fairly sensitive reader of the Hebrew Bible. I read in the original Hebrew, I have a fairly broad familiarity with the apocryphal and pseudepigraphal literature, as well as some experience with the vast rabbinic literature (not to mention history and archaeology).
You were caught with your fingers in the cookie jar making a statement about the accuracy of the English translation of Ezek 20:25, even though you don't read Hebrew. When I corrected you, providing a literal translation of the Hebrew which refuted your position, your first line of defense was to claim that I had somehow ripped the verse out of context. But indeed as I argued the notion that YHWH intentionally misleads the sinful simply adds power to the denoument of the historical summary in Ezek 20. Furthermore, I adduced several other passages in the Hebrew Bible, such as Ezek 14:9, which convey the same disturbing idea. I appropriately remarked how the "softer" view also is articulated in the Hebrew Bible and how this is the reading the turgeman of T. Yonatan imposed on Ezek 20:25. You then hastily and erroneously implied that the Targumim might provide more authentic readings than the Masoretic Text on the basis that the earliest complete MT codex we have is from the 11th century, while the date I offered for the creation of the Targumim was older. (This argument inappropriately compares the date of the composition of one text with the earliest extant witness of another.) Admonished, you then tried to deflect my criticism by focusing instead on the possibility that the MT might nonetheless present a theological point of view - a possibility you claimed I was naively ignoring. However, this argument seems spurious since there's no identifiable theology which would support such a contention. My interpretation is then further supported as a theological lector dificilior. Furthermore, it is supported by the LXX and Vulgate. Denied again, you have adopted a variant approach. This time it is to argue that the plain sense of the text is in fact not reflected by its literal translation. As I said above, this is sometimes indeed the case. One must allow for the possibility of idiomatic constructions. (E.g. a hendiadys such as "I am good and angry" would not be rendered in biblical Hebrew as "ani tov vekoeis".) But this is simply a shot in the dark for you, since you don't know the language and you haven't cited any scholarly analyses which would support your argument. On the other hand, Moshe Greenberg, author of the Anchor Bible commentaries on Ezekiel, is fully aware of such linguistic subtleties, and he does not support your view. (Indeed, he is emphatically opposed to it on textual grounds.) You've also introduced another complicating issue into the discussion, which is the canard of "naturalistic presuppositionalism". Again, I am but a simple pashtan. My interest lies in the plain sense of the text, though I am of course sympathetic to the idea that the Bible means different things to different people. I will admit to presupposing that there is no magic in the Bible, even though I acknowledge that many of its readers and writers believed otherwise. On the other hand, I am not singling out the Bible for this treatment. I also deny any divine character to the Iliad, the Mahabharata, the New Testament, the Qur'an, the Bundahisn, and even to Tom Wolfe's Bonfire of the Vanities. [ August 20, 2001: Message edited by: Apikorus ] |
08-20-2001, 03:05 PM | #72 | ||||||||
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What does interst me is why you believe as you do, and in order to prove that the Hebrew Scriptures are problematic for the Christians (that is, after all, the original subject of the thread), then it would be a big step to show how Christian exegesis of the text differs from Jewish understandings. As of right now, it appears that you cannot do that. Quote:
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As an aside, a bias does not make one wrong, but when it is denied, or not laid out in the open, it can present a misleading picture of what one is saying. Personally, I have no problem stating my prejudices up front. My hope is that you will do the same. Quote:
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Now, if I may make a request, you were insulted by the implication that I was equating your beliefs with that of the simpleton sceptic. I was not, and I apologize for the misunderstanding. By the same token, I would appreciate it if you did not place the Bible on the same level as a work of popular fiction like "The Bonfire of the Vanities". Such simple minded tactics may play well, but hardly do justice to the historical, theological and ideological power and force of a book like the Bible. One does not have to treat the Bible as a Holy Book in order to appreciate this fact, and attempts to trivialize it in this manner are not helpful in a discussion with either Christians or Jews. Nomad [ August 20, 2001: Message edited by: Nomad ] |
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08-20-2001, 03:08 PM | #73 | |||||
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08-20-2001, 04:06 PM | #74 |
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Nomad, my arguments for why the Hebrew Bible and New Testament are not divine are likely to be received by you as my arguments against the divine perfection of the Qur'an are by my very clever Muslim friend Ahmad. There are some rather educated faculty at BYU who will tenaciously defend the authenticity of the Book of Mormon as well. Arguments for and against divine inspiration of the Bible are medieval and don't interest me terribly.
I am interested, on the other hand, in the plain sense of the Hebrew Bible, which I assert is best approached critically, with an eye toward philological, historical, literary, and, yes, theological issues. Your claim, as I understand it, is that the notion that God would intentionally mislead anyone runs contrary to the most fundamental theological tenets of the Hebrew Bible. Furthermore, you seem to say, that the earliest recorded interpretations (as opposed to static translations) from Jewish and Christian sources deny that God could mislead casts doubt on the literal translation of Ezek 20:25. (Please correct me if I have misstated your position. Also, as I have not yet researched the rabbinic literature, I am not prepared to concede the claim that Jewish sources unanimously reject the notion of God misleading the sinful.) I find this argument quite uncompelling for the following reasons:
[ August 21, 2001: Message edited by: Apikorus ] |
08-20-2001, 04:13 PM | #75 | |||||||||||
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The alternative, that God does, in fact, exist, and that He will play an active, rather than passive role in revealing Himself to us, makes such a view nonsensical. Quote:
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I understand your rejection of Christian teachings James. At the same time, it is my hope that you will understand why we believe that if He exists, He will be the one contacting us, not the other way around. He is not found so much as He reveals Himself to us. It is at that point that we begin our real journey of understanding. But to believe that we can achieve that on our own is like the blind man that leads another blind man into the ditch. Depending on one another without turning first to God is a dead end street. Given His existence, this is (and should be) self evidentially true. Nomad |
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08-20-2001, 04:17 PM | #76 |
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If one accepts the argument that God's very existence mitigates against his remaining a dispassionate observer, then it seems one should be open to the possibility that God revealed himself to the Sumerians and the Hittites and the Egyptians and the Chinese and the aboriginal Australians long before he started dictating Hebrew prose.
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08-20-2001, 05:25 PM | #77 | ||||||
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It seems absurd to me that God has reached out and provided a clear (or even semi-coherent) revelation of his wishes and desires. It is not an issue of sin or rebellion either. It is not as if God has been revealed through these texts but everyone chooses to do evil out of sin despite that clear revelation. The fact is no one can even agree on the basic interpretations of the texts. It does no good to say that one must first understand God and then correct understanding will follow -- the Southern ministers understood God perfectly well when they used his word to condone slavery. And this is just one example out of many. Do you want to say that they are like your seven year old and you know the correct interpretation? Or should we hand the matter over to Rome and cede to their interpretation? If so, on what basis? How do we know? I am not as confident as you that all of these questions can be so easily answered by an appeal to God. [ August 20, 2001: Message edited by: James Still ] |
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08-20-2001, 10:31 PM | #78 | ||||
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If I do not get out of this thread I will never have time to get to my promised response on the Luke/Josephus question, therefore it is my hope that this will be my last post on this particular topic, and with luck I will cover off each of the relevant issues satisfactorily, then, if Apikorus or James has any final comments to make, they can do so. Barring questions, I will be content to allow James and Apikorus to have the last word here.
First, James has made the valid point that scholarship can and does teach us much about what the Bible says, as well as what the people were probably like at the time that the Bible was written (among other things). What he has missed in this discussion is that some things in the Bible are, indeed, subject to historical critical methodology, for example, and textual criticism, archaeology, and possibly even anthropology and psychology and other sciences. At the same time, other questions are not subject to such neat categorization, and falls exclusively within the realm of metaphysics and theology. It is in these areas that I do not see any significant advantage for moderns over the ancients, and therefore reject any notion that post modernism can help us to better understand the nature of truth as it relates to God. Quite frankly, post modernism, taken to its logical conclusion literally saws off the branch it is sitting on, since the argument that something was only true for a certain time and place can just as easily be turned on its head, and we can say that this statement is also only potentially true in this time and place. Very quickly we end up in utter nonsense. The second point I would like to quote directly from James: Quote:
For example, of course we can agree on what Ezekiel 20 says. But why must we bracket God out of the equation? We are talking about God’s word to us. To remove Him from the equation (working on the assumption that He exists) makes the entire exercise meaningless, regardless of what we come up with. Asking questions about God is to ask the central questions about our existence, and IF He exists, then as His creatures we have a responsibility to understand what He wants from us. But how can we do this if God is, as James believes, unfathomable? After all, how can the finite know the infinite? This is where theology steps in. Can we know all about God in this life? No. I am not aware of a single religion that worships an infinite and omnipotent Creator God that believes that we can achieve this. At the same time, Christians in particular (and possibly Islam and Judaism as well) accept that God Himself will help us to understand Him each according to our ability and willingness to learn. For Christians, we call this being filled with the Holy Spirit. At the same time, we understand that God does not give each person the same gifts, so while one person can interpret, another may be able to prophecy, or to heal, or whatever. Through it all, the central command remains, to love God, and to love one another. Now, James asks if I believe that the text is a priori inspired. The answer is, of course I do. But only in matters that relate to knowledge of God, His nature, and what He wants from us. Thus, it is not a history book, or a science text. It is about morality, and how we are to treat one another, and through that, to serve God. What it does not tell us, and I do not believe Ezekiel can be made out to say, is that God abandons anyone until they have first abandoned Him. And even then, He is patient, and He waits. Apikorus’ idea that God uses the unjust laws to punish the wicked is interesting, and to be honest, I think he is probably right. At the same time, we must remember the purpose of God’s punishment in this instance, and it is not just to punish, but more importantly, to produce repentance. Ezekiel 20:25-26, 39-44 Moreover I gave them statutes that were not good and ordinances by which they could not have life; and I defiled them through their very gifts in making them offer by fire all their first-born, that I might horrify them; I did it that they might know that I am the LORD. "As for you, O house of Israel, thus says the Lord GOD: Go serve every one of you his idols, now and hereafter, if you will not listen to me; but my holy name you shall no more profane with your gifts and your idols. "For on my holy mountain, the mountain height of Israel, says the Lord GOD, there all the house of Israel, all of them, shall serve me in the land; there I will accept them, and there I will require your contributions and the choicest of your gifts, with all your sacred offerings. As a pleasing odor I will accept you, when I bring you out from the peoples, and gather you out of the countries where you have been scattered; and I will manifest my holiness among you in the sight of the nations. And you shall know that I am the LORD, when I bring you into the land of Israel, the country which I swore to give to your fathers. And there you shall remember your ways and all the doings with which you have polluted yourselves; and you shall loathe yourselves for all the evils that you have committed. And you shall know that I am the LORD, when I deal with you for my name's sake, not according to your evil ways, nor according to your corrupt doings, O house of Israel, says the Lord GOD." As we can see, God is telling the people that they are to serve their false gods and idols if (they) will not listen to (God). Then, after they repent for the horrors of what they have done, God will manifest His glory among them. Once again God brings good from evil, and glorifies Himself, in spite of the efforts of His own chosen people to defile Him and His name. There is no mystery to the interpretation, but to understand it, we must understand the nature of God, and why He acts as He does. His purposes remain unchanged, and He is not thwarted, even though we may do all that we can to thwart Him. On the third point, I must divide the next part into two parts: Quote:
Matthew 23:1-3 Then Jesus said to the crowds and to his disciples: "The teachers of the law and the Pharisees sit in Moses' seat. So you must obey them and do everything they tell you. But do not do what they do, for they do not practice what they preach. Jesus Himself understood human frailty and weakness and hypocrisy (He should, since who could know us better than God Himself?), yet He also understood that certain humans could have God’s authority to interpret the laws, and that the people should obey them. He also extended this teaching and instructional authority into the Church that He was forming out of Judaism: Matthew 18:15-18 "If your brother sins against you, go and tell him his fault, between you and him alone. If he listens to you, you have gained your brother. But if he does not listen, take one or two others along with you, that every word may be confirmed by the evidence of two or three witnesses. If he refuses to listen to them, tell it to the church; and if he refuses to listen even to the church, let him be to you as a Gentile and a tax collector. Truly, I say to you, whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven. If the Bible is not directly sanctioning the teaching authority of the Church here, then I would like to know what others think it is doing (again, assuming that the God of the Bible exists). And if there is any doubt as to the extent of this authority still remaining: John 20:22-23 And with that he breathed on them and said, "Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive anyone his sins, they are forgiven; if you do not forgive them, they are not forgiven." One can hardly expect that Jesus or the authors of the Bible thought that this authority extended only to the Apostles. After all, almost everyone agrees that the Gospels were written after all of these men were dead. Clearly the teaching extends as far back as written records allow us to go. In a previous post I offered 1 Corinthians 5:4-5 and 1 Timothy 1:20 demonstrating this clerical power in action. For those that accept that the Bible is the Word of God, I would ask them to tell us what these passages mean, if not that God is telling us that the Church holds a special place in Biblical and moral understanding. Quote:
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So, where I will take issue with you here is in your characterization of the question of being what Ezekiel meant when He wrote his words. I would argue that we must try to discern what God meant when He inspired Ezekiel to write His words. And in this latter case, the question is very obviously an objective one. As a final point, and to simply restate a point I made previously, the argument that human beings have an imperfect understanding of God’s will is not relevant here. Christians take our imperfection not only as a given, but as the starting point of understanding all of God’s actions towards this fallen earth. We do err, more often than not. And each time that we err, it is because we separate ourselves from Him and His will. Even the Church can do this from time to time, but He always corrects us, and in the central matters of our faith, He is unwavering. We are to love Him, and one another. We are to serve others. We do not belong to ourselves, but to God. And we are fallen and sinful beings, destined to fall short of the glory of God. Fortunately, He judges not only with perfect justice, but through His wisdom, mercy and love, He forgives us for His name’s sake, as He has told us in both the Old (Hebrew) Testament, and the New (Christian) one. All we need do is repent. Peace, Nomad [ August 20, 2001: Message edited by: Nomad ] |
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08-21-2001, 10:21 AM | #79 |
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Let me go out on a limb here and call Paul to my aid in amplifying my point to Nomad. Romans 9:14-24 says:
What shall we say then? Is there injustice on God's part? By no means! For he says to Moses, "I will have mercy on whom I have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I have compassion." So it depends not upon man's will or exertion, but upon God's mercy. For the scripture says to Pharaoh, "I have raised you up for the very purpose of showing my power in you, so that my name may be proclaimed in all the earth." So then he has mercy upon whomever he wills, and he hardens the heart of whomever he wills. You will say to me then, "Why does he still find fault? For who can resist his will?" But who are you, a man, to answer back to God? Will what is molded say to its molder, "Why have you made me thus?" Has the potter no right over the clay, to make out of the same lump one vessel for beauty and another for menial use? What if God, desiring to show his wrath and to make known his power, has endured with much patience the vessels of wrath made for destruction, in order to make known the riches of his glory for the vessels of mercy, which he has prepared beforehand for glory, even us whom he has called, not from the Jews only but also from the Gentiles? I think Paul's view can be succinctly stated as follows: God is just, but not fair. Clearly Paul viewed the hardening of Pharaoh's heard as an action by God to hasten Pharaoh's demise. His response to this acute theodical problem is to say basically that God does whatever he wills, and who are we to question him? God has preordained that there be "vessels of wrath made for destruction" which are to serve as an object lesson for the "vessels of mercy". He then conveniently adduces this principle in proffering a divine purpose to the Jewish denial of Jesus. He asserts that the salvation of the gentiles lies in their faith - a faith which the Israelites lacked due to their divine programming. Israelite history was, to Paul, an exercise in proving the folly of works. But the Israelites did not merely stumble - they were pushed! Finally, Nomad's analysis of the remaining verses in Ezekiel 20 suffers from the usual stultifying "OT Theology" hermeneutic. In fact, it is perhaps not his fault since most English translations are rather inadequate in the problematic critical verse 20:39: v'atem beit-yisrael ko-amar adonai YHWH ish gillulav lekhu avodu v'aHar im-einkhem shomim eilai v'et-shem kadshi lo teHallelu-od bematnoteikhem uvegilluleikhem. The English here is best rendered as: And you, House of Israel, thus says YHWH your lord: every man go serve his idols. And afterward if you will not listen to me... And my holy name you will no more pollute with your gifts and idols. The key phrase here, rendered in boldface, is a bare protasis; the apodosis is lacking. Moshe Greenberg trenchantly identifies this as a threat whose consequences are left unsaid. But the consequences are clear nonetheless, from the material in 20:1-26. There, Israel continued to sin until YHWH lost patience and finally hastened their demise by giving them bad laws and desolating them. [ August 21, 2001: Message edited by: Apikorus ] |
08-21-2001, 10:53 AM | #80 |
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It is common courtesy not to introduce new arguments after a discussion is finished Apikorus. If you wish to argue about predestination and the nature of free will, then please start a new thread. As for this one, I am only interested in covering off the original point, and this was whether or not Hebrew Scriptures prove problematic for Christians. Clearly they do not, for the reasons I have given in my posts above.
Interestingly, what you have started in your last post is a defense for a type of Christian theology called Calvinism. So even if you were correct in your post (and you are not, but the reasons are too complex to go into here), your point could still fail. The question would then become "Is Calvinism True?", and that is a separate topic to this thread. Now, if you wish to start a debate on predestination and Calvinism, I would appreciate it if you familiarized yourself with my arguments from previous posts on this subject. If you do wish to "go there" as they say, then I will find the appropriate threads. If not, so be it. I leave the choice to you. Nomad |
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