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Old 01-04-2007, 01:20 PM   #91
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hatsoff,
So your entire defense is "all those who wrote the Bible were liars and God doesn't exist anyway." Does that summarize it? Not only that, but you also must deny the captivity of Israel by Babylon, the reign of the Medes and Persians and etc.

That defense seems to be par for the course here.
This attitude by inerrantists is something that I have encountered time and time again, and it always baffles me.

For some reason, many inerrantists give the impression that they can only imagine two alternate attitudes to the Bible:

1) It is 100% true and inspired by God.

2) It is 100% false and every writer was deliberately lying.

Therefore we see statements like the above - where hatsoff's scepticism about a particular claim is misrepresented as an absurd "all those who wrote the Bible were liars" stance.

Similarly, mdd344 seems to think that if one does not believe particular claims in the book of Daniel, then one must therefore not believe anything written in the Bible and one must "deny the captivity of Israel by Babylon, the reign of the Medes and Persians and etc."

mdd344 - do you accept (and I am not asking you to agree with this view - just to accept that it is our view) the viewpoint that some things in the Bible are true, some are mostly true but exaggerated, and some are false (and some bits are inspirational poetry or parable and were never meant to be taken as "historically accurate")?

As I said, I'm not asking you to support that viewpoint. I'm merely asking you to acknowledge that you understand that the viewpoint exists and is held by most of us on this board (Christian and atheist alike).

Because otherwise you will keep arguing against a false dichotomy (100% true or 100% false) and you will keep erroneously attributing a "100% false" viewpoint to us - which does no-one any good, since you end up arguing against a position which no-one is in fact taking and ignoring the position that we actually are taking.
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Old 01-04-2007, 02:58 PM   #92
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While I largely agree with what you say, I'm interested in your take on the infamous verse in Romans 1:
[...]19 since what may be known about God is plain to them, because God has made it plain to them. 20 For since the creation of the world God's invisible qualities—his eternal power and divine nature—have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made, so that men are without excuse.
Doesn't this claim that the world itself proves god's existence?
Paul felt no urge to prove the existence of God, since virtually everybody in the classical world believed in gods. The issue was which god for Paul, not theism per se. So Paul is making an arguing his audience understood, i.e., you guys all believe in the gods, so going from that assumption let's talk about what the world tells us about divinity.

In short this is not an argument to prove the existence of God - Paul already assumes that his audience believes in God (a good assumption for the time), so he's arguing about God's attributes.
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Old 01-04-2007, 05:54 PM   #93
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David B,
I am aware of the quibbles, yes. The book's date is very firmly fixed by history, the book itself, the Bible writers.
I'm late to the game, but in case anyone else has failed to tell you -- your statement above is 100% wrong.

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People asked for proof. There it is above. In detail.
No.

What you provided was a re-hash of what other bible writers have claimed.

That isn't proof.
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Old 01-04-2007, 06:02 PM   #94
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Amaleq13,
So your entire foundation is that the miracles, prophecy, etc., given in the Bible does not exist. Well, little good it will do to even discuss books of the Bible, right? I mean after all, the men who wrote them were not only liars but intentional ones at that.
In a discussion on evidence, it shouldn't matter what Amaleq13 believes.

You should be able to demonstrate, using evidence, that your position is right and that Amaleq13 is misguided.

Using *evidence*.

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I believe both my posts demonstrate what I said it did. You don't have to believe it. But arguing from the foundation that such is not possible because prophecy etc doesn't exist doesn't make much logical sense to me.
Your basis for the argument won't work here, because you are the only one who accepts it. You'll have to use *evidence* - not the quotations from other like-minded believers, but actual *evidence* - to persuade Amaleq13 or anybody else on this forum.

Does that make it any clearer?
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Old 01-04-2007, 06:12 PM   #95
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hatsoff,
So your entire defense is "all those who wrote the Bible were liars and God doesn't exist anyway." Does that summarize it? Not only that, but you also must deny the captivity of Israel by Babylon,
You are aware that there was no such widespread captivity, right? The upper class, some artisans and the priestly class were taken to Babylon. But the vast majority of the Hebrews stayed right where they were - in Israel and Judah.

Moreover, the prophesied captivity in Babylon (of 70 years duration) was not, in fact, 70 years long.

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the reign of the Medes and Persians and etc.
1. Except that Babylon was not destroyed - contrary to the claims of Ezekiel, Isaiah, and Daniel - it was a peaceful transition and the city remained a functioning metropolis;

2. It was the reign of the Persians, actually. Ezekiel, Daniel and Isaiah all jumped the gun and picked the wrong kingdom to spearhead the invasion of Babylon - by the time of Cyrus II, the Medes had been subjugated and lost any claim to co-ruling status in the empire;

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That defense seems to be par for the course here.
Because the people you are addressing here do not share your common ground of faith. Because of that, any attempts to base your apologetics in that ground of faith are doomed to failure.

You'll have to deal with the concrete evidence, if you want to persuade anyone.
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Old 01-04-2007, 06:35 PM   #96
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Amaleg13,
You have made my point when you say, .

The 'recognition' is the assumption people take, then they set out about to destroy any evidence to the contrary (i.e. destructive critics, late dating, etc) in order to prove their assumption.

Unfortunately, this forum is filled with both baseless assumptions and speculations, mdd344. I suppose that best suits the purpose here. :huh:
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Old 01-04-2007, 06:38 PM   #97
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In a discussion on evidence, it shouldn't matter what Amaleq13 believes.

You should be able to demonstrate, using evidence, that your position is right and that Amaleq13 is misguided.

Using *evidence*.



Your basis for the argument won't work here, because you are the only one who accepts it. You'll have to use *evidence* - not the quotations from other like-minded believers, but actual *evidence* - to persuade Amaleq13 or anybody else on this forum.

Does that make it any clearer?

100% proof would not do much good here, Sauron, for it (proof of that which you do not want to believe) would require a change in some ways of life... which some would not have regardless of what the evidence may or may not show.
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Old 01-04-2007, 06:47 PM   #98
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100% proof would not do much good here, Sauron, for it (proof of that which you do not want to believe)
I find that people without any proof often try to toss dark hints and assertions instead. It's their substitute for evidence.

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want would require a change in some ways of life... which some would not have regardless of what the evidence may or may not show.
My willingness to believe is not the problem. It's the weakness of the bible literalist position that is the problem here. And your wishful thinking won't change that fact, poptart.
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Old 01-04-2007, 06:55 PM   #99
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100% proof would not do much good here, Sauron, for it (proof of that which you do not want to believe) would require a change in some ways of life... which some would not have regardless of what the evidence may or may not show.
Some people go for evidence. It's no skin off one's nose if Daniel were written in the sixth century. It's no problem if the text is filled with mysteries that christian fundamentalists seem to need to have to elucidate. (Non-fundamentalists have a much more laid-back approach to the text.) It is skin off the literalist's nose. The situation can only be one way for them. The scholarly approach requires one to abandon positions that cannot be maintained and not to take on any position without sufficient evidence.


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Old 01-04-2007, 08:23 PM   #100
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Spin,
Let me ask you a question. What is the real situation between those who claim the Book of Daniel was written in the 2nd century, and those who claim it was written in the 6th, on this site?

By that I mean, does the issue come down simply to a source vs. source approach? If not, why not? If so, exactly what is proved by such a situation, if anything, or if nothing?

Think about it.
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