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02-28-2005, 02:45 PM | #301 | |
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02-28-2005, 03:28 PM | #302 | |||||||||||||||
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why do you ask for proof or evidence of a miracle? what form would that proof come in? Quote:
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02-28-2005, 04:05 PM | #303 | ||||||||||||
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i'm not sure 50 years is accurate. even so, why is that a problem for you? i take it you have proof that matthew didn't have first hand knowledge of the account. Quote:
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1. require proof of miracles 2. claim the bible is false but then say you're not making a claim 3. misinterpret the bible and then claim it contradicts itself 4. claim that because you perceive errors and contradictions exist, they can never be clarified by apologists 5. assume that what other first century authors wrote is reasonably true but what the authors in the bible wrote is false Quote:
besides, what is considered proof? how true is true? i have seen several people use "reasonably" as a qualifier. how is that not subjective? Quote:
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2. How do we know it is trustworthy? 3. How do we know it wasn't doctored? 4. If it corroborates the claim, it wouldn't be independent. how would that not constitute an appeal to numbers? Quote:
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02-28-2005, 05:18 PM | #304 | ||||||||||||||
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Ok, I'll start a new thread later tonight examining the case for eyewitness testomony and historical credibility in the NT.
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By the way, some independant corroboration for things like the zombie assault on Jerusalem would help the credibility of those claims. Kind of funny that nobody ever noticed that at the time. Quote:
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02-28-2005, 06:27 PM | #305 | |||||||||||||||||||
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However, as it happens, there is some pretty strong evidence that Matthew was not an eyewitness and none whatsoever that he was. He doesn;'t even make that claim for himself. More on this in the new thread later. Quote:
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Haven't I already explained this? Quote:
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02-28-2005, 09:11 PM | #306 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Why is it that you say Christians can’t use historical analysis to prove a biblical claim, but skeptics can use historical analysis to refute it? Skeptics point to lack of extrabiblical corroboration but Christians can’t point to lack of equal but opposite refutation. Quote:
1. how can we be sure they even wrote what is attributed to them? 2. how can we be sure their works weren’t altered? 3. how can we be sure they weren’t mistaken? 4. in the case of identifying one particular event, if they both agree on that specific event, they aren’t opponents and therefore aren’t “independent�. Quote:
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02-28-2005, 09:16 PM | #307 | |||
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is there a reason you come to a debate and don't debate, just insult? |
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02-28-2005, 10:18 PM | #308 |
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bfniii,
Just a word to let you know that my Gospel critique thread is in the workshop and will be finished sometime tomorrow. |
02-28-2005, 11:43 PM | #309 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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And, yes, I do have reason to believe that the gospel writers lied, though they wouldn't have seen it that way. They reported events that no one could have possibly witnessed. Consider the birth narratives: anyone who witnessed that would have been dead a long time by the time the gospels were written. And there is clear evidence of embellishments: stars hanging out over mangers (that no one else in the world seemed to have noticed), the wise men themselves, Herod's slaughter of innocents (again, not noticed by anyone else), strange and unnecessary movements to other cities for tax collection purposes, not to mention virgin births, all of which suggest embellishment. And this is just one example. Oh, yes, there are many sound reasons to distrust the gospel narratives. Quote:
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But let's clear one point up. Historians don't doubt everything that written. They combine the standards I described with what is written to come up with a judgement on the accuracy of the work. In other words, they wouldn't doubt that Caesar wrote his Histories unless they have a good reason to doubt that he didn't -- i.e. some of the standards I mentioned were regularly violated. Some benefit of the doubt is usually given, just not to the demand that Christians want. I suspect an overwhelming majority of historians would agree that Jesus was crucified, even though the evidence is poor. However, the resurrection would not be considered to be historical. Claims have to be judged on an individual basis. But, in fact, historians can and do answer your questions. I'm not an expert on this, but I think the answer would be these: 1. Caesar and Cicero were very famous men who were commented and quoted by many other people. That their works reflect what we know of them for other sources is enough to establish their authorship. 2. Textual analysis reveals this. That's how we know that Josephus was altered. 3. They were all mistaken? Now you're getting silly. 4. Would not even be a consideration. A democrat and a republican agreeing that George Bush was elected president in 2004 hardly makes them allies. Quote:
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03-03-2005, 09:03 AM | #310 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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1. since miracles are not scientific, they are excluded from indicting the bible as erroneous. 2. apart from the miracles, how is the bible less credible than any first century work when standard historical analyses are applied? 3. if the gospels are untrue, how do we know any first century work is true? Quote:
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I can see where you derive so much confusion over biblical prophecies. You seem to be looking for whatever semantic derivation shows the prophecy didn’t happen. Quote:
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