Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
07-12-2004, 10:24 AM | #21 | |
Banned
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Alberta
Posts: 11,885
|
Quote:
Notice how the genealogy in Matt was recorded and in Luke it was perceived after the descend of the HS. How the birth of Jesus came to Joseph in a dream which clearly identifies his conscious mind while in Luke it was a revealed subconscious mind event that came across as a dream in Matthew. So the very Annunciation in Luke was the actual dream in Matthew. Same event different perspective. Yes, this makes Mary the personified celestial sea of Joseph out of which Jesus was born to make Jesus the reborn Joseph who was pregnant with despair and therefore was forced to give an account of himself. |
|
07-12-2004, 12:21 PM | #22 | |||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: ON, Canada
Posts: 1,011
|
Quote:
Quote:
This question of inerrancy only becomes an issue if one understands the scriptures as a telegraph written by God giving a perfect record of human and extrahuman events and realities. However that really has not been the Christian perspective, at least not for the majority of Christian history. Generally speaking scripture is imagined as a product of the dialogic (and at times conflictual) relationship between human, human and God. Quote:
I would point out that prior to the Reformation there were at least three broad understandings of the ultimate source of Christian authority: The episcopal (from the bishops and, in the Western church, ultimately the Pope); the conciliar (authority coming from councils of the church); and the scriptures. During the Reformation the Catholic church developed a strong emphasis upon the episcopal and the Reformers on the scriptures; the conciliar was generally subordinated to the episcopal or the scriptural, depending upon which side of the fence you happened to be on. This, I think, was unfortunate. The conciliar perspective saw the church as a place in which power was decentred - it was not centred in an all-powerful Pope or an all-powerful book but rather in a community of church leaders. This was not, a course, ideal or free from politicking; however, I think that there was a much better model here - a model which can be adapted for the contemporary context in a democratic fashion in which we locate authority primarily in the mutual dialogue within and between local assemblies (ekklesiav of Christians. The authority of scripture, the bishop, the priest, the pastor, etc. would have to be located in and subordinate to the authority of such local and translocal dialogues. |
|||
07-12-2004, 01:00 PM | #23 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Philadelphia, PA
Posts: 6,290
|
Quote:
Remember, at least a plurality of Christians, both in America and worldwide, are Catholics, and there are very few inerrantist Catholics. Most mainstream Protestant sects, and most sects which are established state churches in Europe (i.e., Lutheranism and Anglicanism/Episcopalianism) are also not inerrantist. It's really mostly the Pentecostals, the Mormons, and the Baptists making up the literalist camp. This is one reason why the fundamentalist attack on church/state separation is so ironic. The fundamentalists see that most people are "Christian" and think they'll be in the majority. They don't realize that other people use the word "Christian" differently than they do. |
|
07-12-2004, 01:25 PM | #24 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: michigan
Posts: 513
|
Quote:
Politicking is an art form of the highest magnitude. Seriously, jbernier, in reviewing the history of the councils, and being aware of human nature, is this not man creating god? Each community would have a different standard, different god, why, we would look like the various denominations we have today! Only more bifurcated. Why is it we have a more concise picture and tradition of Santa Clause than we do of god? |
|
07-12-2004, 01:25 PM | #25 |
Banned
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Alberta
Posts: 11,885
|
Catholics may not be inerrantists but they do believe that the bible is inspired and therefore true but probably beyond their understanding if it does not make sense to them. A good reason for Catholics to take this position is that they have been warned about interpreting the bible wrong and we have the protestant churches to prove the final result of this.
Inspired does not exactly mean that God was 'pushing the pen' but it does mean that the presentation is without error. All that is required from us is to read it from the same point of view that the writer had in mind and then it becomes "as easy as eating and drinking" (William Golding). I might add here that the mythmakers were gnostics and as such were they resident of heaven. |
07-13-2004, 11:55 PM | #26 | ||||
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Indiana
Posts: 533
|
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Also, the use of the word "truth" in referring to allegory and history is a bit equivocal. Of course, just because a creative author illustrates an axiom through myth (less likely, in the case of myth, as these usually reference origins, and are mere retrojections about how things came to be) or allegory does not mean that the particular myth or allegory is "true" in any honest sense of the word. Do we believe the factuality of the Boy Who Cried Wolf? No. Does it illustrate a lesson for life? Sure! Is it authoritative? No! Anyone could make up a story that teaches the same lesson. Quote:
If the question is "Can the Bible be authoritative - in that it is claimed to be The Word of God - yet be errant?" NO However, if one asks, "Can the Bible be useful, and inspiring, yet errant?� The answer would be YES. This holds true for much poetry and prose. I see no need to distinguish the Bible based upon its allegorical truths. It also possesses many asinine inanities. |
||||
07-14-2004, 12:13 AM | #27 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Indiana
Posts: 533
|
Quote:
The "inerrantist" position simply ignores empirical evidence, and textual criticism. This may be a bit deluded, but it is a straight forward epistemology - "I stand alone on the Word of God - The B-I-B-L-E" The "inerrantist/yet authoritative" tolerates an incredible cognitive dissonance, which necessitates rather acrobatic equivocations. This is the more educated/ intelligent Christian who acknowledges "inaccuracies/ contradictions" yet needs to retain some spiritual nourishment from the Bible. How one reconciles error and authority within an intellectually honest mind, I do not know. When I refer to "intellectual honesty" I am not attacking the character of such a person. I am merely offering that such a one is befuddled with cognitive blind spots, which prevent the person from clearly reasoning on certain issues that have emotive force. |
|
07-14-2004, 07:20 AM | #28 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Philadelphia, PA
Posts: 6,290
|
Quote:
Also, I don't see the problem with privileging the moral precepts of the Bible over those of Aesop, or Homer, or any other moral text. Look at Jesus and look at Odysseus, for example. They teach us different lessons about how to behave. Neither is perfectly consistent, but if you want to you can pull a rough code of conduct out of either one. Homer clearly values loyalty to family, strength in battle, wit, and bravery; Jesus doesn't put much stock in any of these, but pushes charity, forgiveness, asceticism, and sacrifice. If you believe that one writer was inspired by god or by the gods (filtered through however much error) and the other wasn't, you aren't going to consider both equally useful, and if you're faced with a choice between showing bravery and strength in battle or showing charity and forgiveness, that's certainly going to influence your choice. I also strongly disagree that the fundamentalist position is somehow "straight forward epistemology." The fact is, the fundamentalist position, the idea that any text can have a single, objective, culturally-independent meaning, conflicts with everything we know about epistemology. It makes much more sense to try to get a broad meaning out of the text than it does to deconstruct every word and phrase in search of objectivity. And there's no reason a flawed text can't be privileged for extratextual reasons--look at the Magna Charta, or the Constitution, for an example. |
|
07-15-2004, 12:05 AM | #29 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Indiana
Posts: 533
|
I somewhat agree chapka. Still how can one attribute divine authority simply because of the presence of allegorical truths? As I stated, such "truths" need not be divinely inspired.
Your choice between Jesus and Odysseus is more one of aesthetics and personal values than any indication of moral superiority. You may choose Jesus because he epitomizes your concept of beauty and the moral paragon; yet you have not demonstrated why I should attribute heavenly authority to the imperfect, skewed, contradictory, and often ludicrous writings of men, however wise. What truths are found in the Bible, are not true because they are found in the Bible. Rather, they are found in the Bible because a wise man observed them to be truths. This insight is not unique to biblical authors. Consider the writings of sages throughout the ages and throughout the world. Are they all inspired of God. If so, then whence comes this privileged status of the most tenacious sacred cow - The Bible? |
07-15-2004, 12:16 AM | #30 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Indiana
Posts: 533
|
Quote:
If you wish to treat the Bible as a human document created by men in order to preserve a culture, "history", and order, then I will accept your comparison with the secular texts to which you referred. |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|