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Old 04-23-2004, 11:02 PM   #141
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Originally Posted by Madkins007
I AM interested in the phenomena that the Bible draws such great black or white ultimatums by most people- all perfect or all trash. This is not a standard we apply to any other document that I can see- even if similar claims are made by followers.
Actually, I disagree. We do apply the same standard to many popular pieces of works. For example, I think "Kill Bill vol 1" and "Pulp Fiction" were utter cr*p, others think they are masterpieces. I can't say enough bad things about Freke and Gandy's "Jesus Mysteries", while others think it is an important piece of scholarship.

With the Bible, the extreme positions seem to be taken by the people who know least about the Bible. The key to understanding the Bible is to understand the culture and trying to determine the meanings the authors themselves wanted to convey. For me, the more I learn, the more I appreciate it. I doubt that I would ever call it perfect, though.
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Old 04-24-2004, 04:45 AM   #142
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""""""""""""OK, I AM tired, and I am reacting to what feels like pressure to abandon the bible totally, based in part on the findings of some historians and experts. If these guys cannot agree on a premise as simple as 'did Jesus really live', why should I listen to any of them that the bible is pretty much trashed? (After all, in earlier postings somewhere on this database, there was a review of a book insisting that Jesus lived in India, while other threads from the same period insisted there was no such person.)""""""""""""

Diversity drives debate. It is not grounds for dismissal of a debate. Jesus most certainly existed and there is most certainly no compellign evidence he lived in India or that Mary Magdalen fled to France with his baby. There is a VAST scholarly consensus on these claims if that "calms" you.

Some guys claim we never went to the moon either. Others evolution is false. Lots of claims are made. Ultimately it depends on the evidence and expert testimony.

Re: models of inspiration. I used to subscribe to qualitative inspiration:

Quote:
A number of interpreters take an intermediate position. 20 They accept inspiration, deeming it important for the interpretation of scripture; but they do not think that God's role as an author removed human limitations. In this approach, God who providentially provided for Israel a record of salvific history involving Moses and the Prophets also provided for Christians a basic record of the salvific role and message of Jesus. Yet those who wrote down the Christian record were time-conditioned people of the 1st and early 2d century, addressing audiences of their era in the worldview of that period. They did not know the distant future. Although what they wrote is relevant to future Christian existence, their writing does not necessarily provide ready-made answers for unforeseeable theological and moral issues that would arise in subsequent centuries. God chose to deal with such subsequent problems not by overriding all the human limitations of the Biblical writers but by supplying a Spirit that is a living aid in ongoing interpretation.

Within positions (4) there are different attitudes on inerrancy. Some would dispense altogether with inerrancy as a wrong deduction from the valid thesis that God inspired the scriptures. Others would contend that inspiration did produce an inerrancy affecting religious issues (but not science or history), so that all theological stances in the scriptures would be inerrant. Still others, recognizing diversity within the Scriptures even on religious issues, would maintain only a limited theological inerrancy. Finally, another solution does not posit a quantitative limitation of inerrancy confining it to certain passages or certain issues, 21 but a qualitative one whereby all Scripture is inerrant to the extent that it serves the purpose for which God intended it. Recognition of this type of limitation is implicit in the statement made at Vatican Council II: "The books of scripture must be acknowledged as teaching firmly, faithfully, and without error that truth which God wanted put into the sacred writings for the sake of our salvation." 22 Yet even this response runs up against the problem of finding a criterion: How exactly does one know what God wanted put into the Scriptures for the sake of our salvation?"""

Notes from the excerpt

20 Sometimes designated "centirst," these may well constitute the majority of teachers and writers in the NT area.

21 Any effort to maintain that only certain passages in the NT are inerrant is problematic if inerrancy flows from inspiration that covers all the scriptures. For a general treatment, see N. Lohfink, The Inerrancy of Scripture (Berkeley: Bibal, 1992).

22 Dei Verbum (Nov 18, 1965) 3.11.

Raymond Brown’s An Introduction to the New Testament (ABRL, DoubleDay, 1997) pp. 31-31
Its much better than verbal plenary inspiration but ultimately failed. Natural inspiration if the only feasible model but that unfortunately applies to any religious writing--good or bad.
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Old 04-24-2004, 06:26 AM   #143
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Madkins007
This assumes that there is no revelation apart from the Bible AND that the entire Bible is equally trustworthy or untrustworthy to the same degree (when it probably should be looked at as a collection of books to be analyzed seperately).
My assumption is that the bible does not deserve any “get out of critical thinking free� card. Any claim made by the bible must be verified with external sources. The more extraordinary the claim, the more verification must be done.

When the bible makes a claim that animals talk, I look around and see that animals don’t talk, and are biologically incapable of talking. Therefore, I have every reason to reject that claim.

When the bible makes a claim about faith healing, I look around and see that modern faith healers all appear to be frauds, milking millions of dollars from gullible followers. Therefore, I reject that claim.

When the bible makes a claim about mass population movements in the ancient world, I look for archeologists to find evidence of such movements. When those archeologists tell me that evidence is lacking, I reject that claim.

When the bible makes a claim that God did this and God said that, I look around for evidence, and find none. I also look at the context: a book written by people who believed such things were common, and didn’t have the tools to fully understand their world. I also find motivation to write such things as fiction, and plenty of evidence that man has written similar fictions. Therefore, I reject such claims.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Madkins007
A related phenomena is that a contemproary book can be considered mostly trash, yet still considered to have a degree of validity (thinking here of 90% of the political commentary, histories, and biographies written in recent years). Events that happened in current times are hotly debated, difficult to prove one way or the other, difficult to pin down- yet we know enough about the ancient Middle East to state with certainty what did or did not happen?
Modern books, the ones that are intended to be historically accurate, generally agree on what actually happened. They tend to diverge wildly when they talk about motivations, reasons, and justifications, since those are extremely subjective. They also tend to diverge when talking about details that are not critical to the story, small items that may be misremembered. But the core facts of modern life are generally recorded quite well, and those records have not been destroyed by time.

However, there is no reason to assume that the books of the bible are supposed to be in any way similar to modern historically accurate books. They are part of a whole different genre. They are myths, religious myths. When written, the gospels were considered to be true, but not because the events actually happened here on earth. They were supposed to reveal a religious truth, revealed by scripture, even as the author was fabricating the details and writing them down.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Madkins007
If these guys cannot agree on a premise as simple as 'did Jesus really live', why should I listen to any of them that the bible is pretty much trashed?
If you don’t give the gospels that “get out of critical thinking free� card I mentioned earlier, the historians all agree that the external evidence for Jesus living is virtually non-existent. They all agree that there is no evidence that the life of Jesus is not mostly fiction. The only disagreement is down at the lowest levels of detail. Once you have stripped all the fiction away, is there anything left?

People such as Vinnie clearly believe that the story needed to originate with a historical event, and that echoes (but nothing more) of that event are still present in the book. Other people, including myself, can see an alternate origin for the story, one that comes from a different direction entirely, and no longer needs a historical person at the very beginning. But we are working at a level where certainty is not even remotely possible, all that is left is a case of “best explanation� and subtle shades of probability.
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Old 04-24-2004, 09:35 PM   #144
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Vinnie, G.Don, Asha'man- I am more awake now, if not necessarily more clear thinking! Please forgive the outburst from last night, and thank you for taking time to respond!

About the only major point I made last night that I still wish to lay a significant claim to is the idea that each of the books of the Bible needs to be dealt with seperately. Genesis is obviously a different thing than Psalms, which is different than the Song of Soloman, etc., etc., etc.

Vinnie- that was an interesting extract on qualified inspiration. Is there a place that discusses various options in layman's terms?
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Old 04-25-2004, 06:33 AM   #145
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I am new and I reviewed the thread, but it is long heavy. I had several questions about the contradictions in the geneology of Jesus. They seemed to be touched on, but not answered.

(1) Is it Kosher for Mary' lineage to fulfill the prophecy for Jesus's geneology to be legitimate?

(2) I believe all the other persons referred to are men. Is that true?

(3) There appears to a problem in the order of the people being switched chronologically or out of place from one geneology to another. Is this true?
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Old 04-25-2004, 08:02 AM   #146
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Quote:
Originally Posted by shunyadragon
I am new and I reviewed the thread, but it is long heavy. I had several questions about the contradictions in the geneology of Jesus. They seemed to be touched on, but not answered.
Hi shunyadragon! Welcome to II. You might want to drop by the Lounge and introduce yourself.

Quote:
Originally Posted by shunyadragon
(1) Is it Kosher for Mary' lineage to fulfill the prophecy for Jesus's geneology to be legitimate?
No. Ancient Jewish society, like all the rest of the middle east cultures, was exclusively patriarchal. The male lineage was the only one that counted. As a side note, remember that the human egg was not discovered until after the invention of the microscope, in much more recent times. The ancient Jews considered women to be nothing more than an incubator, a place for the ‘seed’ of the man to be planted.

Quote:
Originally Posted by shunyadragon
(2) I believe all the other persons referred to are men. Is that true?
The genealogies all trace the lineage through the male line, as was required.

However, there are four women mentioned in passing in the genealogy given in Matthew, all women of ill repute. Tamar was “with child by whoredom� (Gen 38:24), Rahab was a harlot (Joshua 2:1), Ruth seduced a drunk Boaz (Ruth 3:7-14), and Bathsheba who committed adultery with King David (2 Samuel 11:2-5).

It has been suggested that the author of Matthew paid a Jewish scholar to fabricate a genealogy, and the scholar screwed Matthew by giving him one full of cursed lines and women of ill repute. Luke had no choice but to find a more cooperative scholar and pay for another fabrication.

Quote:
Originally Posted by shunyadragon
(3) There appears to a problem in the order of the people being switched chronologically or out of place from one geneology to another. Is this true?
It’s easiest to look at in a table, try this one and this one. The problem is far larger than just out-of-order names. Some names are skipped, others are listed earlier as having no children at all, or having his line ‘cursed’ so his descendants were no longer of the line of David. Matthew lists 28 ancestors between Jesus and David, Luke lists 43. The genealogies appear to intersect in the middle, at Salathiel and Zorobabel, but then diverge wildly again. Matthew tries to count things in sets of 14 generations, but he can only do so by miscounting and dropping names.
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