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06-24-2011, 10:28 AM | #111 | |
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For instance, if you lived in the 5th century BCE and you only had the Torah, you would presume that suffering is solely the result of sin. However, if you only had the Ecclesiastes, you would presume that suffering comes as a result of a lack of wisdom. If, for instance, you only had Job (likely the oldest book in the Bible, predating the Torah), you would assume that God has willed your suffering for his own purposes and has nothing to due with your sinfulness or wisdom.. Then you get to John's gospel, and suffering is explained to be there so that God's glory can be revealed. These are different reasons. Incompatible reasons. Yet you, assuming the Bible to be essentially one work instead of an anthology, smoosh all of these inconsistencies together... <snipped remainder of post> |
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06-24-2011, 10:34 AM | #112 | |||
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06-24-2011, 10:39 AM | #113 | ||
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2nd edit: There are boatloads of texts referred to within the Bible that never made it into the canon. Check it out for yourself. edit: for that matter, since the canon was far from determined and some writings that came after Paul's writings came to be included in the canon, he could have assumed that the Koran or Book of Mormon were God-breathed, as well... <snipped> |
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06-24-2011, 10:52 AM | #114 | ||
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06-24-2011, 11:21 AM | #115 | ||
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If you continue with your somewhat facetious claim that all you are doing is "reporting what the Bible says," then you don't need to answer any more questions. We're all quite literate, we can read the Bible for ourselves and see what it says, and some of us have literally spent decades studying the Bible. We have no need of a reporter, with all the implicit bias that reporting entails. We can read directly from the source. |
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06-24-2011, 11:50 AM | #116 | |
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The interpretation is flawed, and by continually reducing the scope of his 'purview", simon has effectively shut down any actual discussion. If we disagree, we misunderstand. If we rightly argue that the bible says false things, we are taking about this outside of the narrow field he has defined by injecting reality or observable fact. If we point out specific contradictory verses in the bible, they are not actually contradictions because they can be explained away. Tiresome, and utterly predictable. The bible "says" whatever a believer wants it to say, so explaining it to us is entirely unnecessary. We know the script. |
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06-24-2011, 12:06 PM | #117 |
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No, it does not. The Bible does not refer to itself in any way at all. It cannot.
Some of the books included in the Bible present themselves and/or other books in the Bible as true. But the compilation as a whole has nothing to say about the compilation as a whole. It would be irrational to expect that it could. |
06-24-2011, 12:18 PM | #118 |
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No, it does not.
There is no mention of God in the entire Book of Esther. The Book of Ecclesiastes says very clearly that it was not authored by God. Both the Gospel of Luke and the Book of Acts claim human authorship. Even in the Prophetic books, there are clear delineations between "thus saith the Lord" and mere human writings. That Timothy 2 says "all scripture is god breathed" is NOT the same as "the Bible" claiming divine authorship. It is a LETTER, written by a HUMAN, which was added to the Biblical collection by other HUMANS. So what we have is a single letter making a very vague claim (what is meant by "all scripture?") which has been appended to an anthology of Jewish sacred writings. Please stop making absurd claims about what "the Bible" says about itself. It says nothing at all about itself. Your claim is comparable to claiming that because one version of "little red riding hood" claims that the "mother goose stories" were written by mother goose, therefore the mother goose stories claim to be written by mother goose. |
06-24-2011, 12:21 PM | #119 | ||
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06-24-2011, 12:58 PM | #120 | ||||
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Each has to use his own standards to decide whether to accept or reject it. Quote:
In the general account of the whole creation, in Ge 1:24-25 the animals were created before Adam and Eve. In the specific account of the creation of Adam and Eve, Ge 2:19 says, "Now the Lord had formed (completed past action) out of the ground all the beasts of the field. . ." The verse is not stating present action (creation of the animlas) at that point in the narrative. So in the specific account of the creation of Adam and Eve, the animals were created before Adam and Eve. I prefer to address specific textual contradictions on the Bible Contradictions thread, so that is what I will do from here on. |
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