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Old 02-24-2012, 06:15 AM   #11
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Surely one has to have been present at the events described in order to make that allegation.
One can see that the gospel writers were not being impartial in their writings. The gospels were written to convert believers, not to serve as matter of fact reports. Two good peices of evidence for this are how Isaiah 7:14 was taken out of context to become a prophecy of Jesus
Did any contemporaries mention this supposed error?

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Meaning impossible events? One must prove that the miraculous is impossible before making that statement. The point of a miracle would be that it is 'impossible'.
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a.k.a out of the ordinary
So the records of miracles were records of events merely out of the ordinary. Like many occurrences regarded as actuality. Nothing to justify lack of belief there.

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have Jesus predicting that the world will end within forty to fifty years after his death.Reference, please?
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mathew 24:34. "Verily I say unto you, This generation shall not pass, till all these things be fulfilled."
"Truly, this age will not pass before all these things are fulfilled." Iow, Jesus will return to judge the world before it ends.

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and tell conflicting tales of Jesus' early childhood.
Reference, please?
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This should cover it.
I take this as refusal to support the allegation, and unacceptable posting practice, too.
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Old 02-24-2012, 08:59 AM   #12
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Did any contemporaries mention this supposed error?
Why does that matter?



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So the records of miracles were records of events merely out of the ordinary. Like many occurrences regarded as actuality. Nothing to justify lack of belief there.
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a.k.a. out of the ordinary
I didn't simply say they were out of the ordinary. First you strawman me by having me say that miracles are impossible. Now you strawman me by misquoting me as saying that miracles are merely out of the ordinary.

Just so you understand me I am saying that miracles are out of the ordinary, and unlikely, and unbelievable. They have all of those qualities to the extreme.

Would you believe something if it contained a report that godzilla attacked new york? Of course not. So why believe the gospels?



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"Truly, this age will not pass before all these things are fulfilled." Iow, Jesus will return to judge the world before it ends.
Actually the word being translated as age here is genea. It doesn't mean age. It means generation. The proper translation is the one I gave earlier.



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I take this as refusal to support the allegation, and unacceptable posting practice, too.
I supported the allegation with a link to a video, because I don't feel like typing a twelve paragragh book just for you. How is this unacceptable posting practice? Who gets to define what is acceptable posting practice in the first place?
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Old 02-24-2012, 09:09 AM   #13
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Did any contemporaries mention this supposed error?
Why does that matter?
If no contemporaries mentioned an error, why did they not mention it?

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So the records of miracles were records of events merely out of the ordinary. Like many occurrences regarded as actuality. Nothing to justify lack of belief there.
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Now you strawman me by misquoting me as saying that miracles are merely out of the ordinary.
That's what you wrote, in effect. So, by this criterion, the miraculous can be no bar to faith.

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"Truly, this age will not pass before all these things are fulfilled." Iow, Jesus will return to judge the world before it ends.
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Actually the word being translated as age here is genea. It doesn't mean age. It means generation. The proper translation is the one I gave earlier.
The translation you used uses the same word for 'age'.
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Old 02-24-2012, 10:06 AM   #14
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If no contemporaries mentioned an error, why did they not mention it?
Fallacy one, argument from silence. Fallacy two, appeal to best made up explaination in opposition of simply saying I don't know.

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That's what you wrote, in effect. So, by this criterion, the miraculous can be no bar to faith.
That's not what I wrote. You either misunderstood me, or strawmaned me on purpose.

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The translation you used uses the same word for 'age'.
http://www.blueletterbible.org/lang/...gs=G1074&t=KJV

1) fathered, birth, nativity

2) that which has been begotten, men of the same stock, a family

a) the several ranks of natural descent, the successive members of a genealogy

b) metaph. a group of men very like each other in endowments, pursuits, character

1) esp. in a bad sense, a perverse nation

3) the whole multitude of men living at the same time

4) an age (i.e. the time ordinarily occupied be each successive generation), a space of 30 - 33 years

http://biblelexicon.org/matthew/24-34.htm

generation γενεὰ genea 1074 race, family, generation from ginomai
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Old 02-24-2012, 10:34 AM   #15
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If no contemporaries mentioned an error, why did they not mention it?
Fallacy one, argument from silence.
Phoney nonsense, as any policeman will confirm.

Give it any name you like, contemporaries, who wanted the church exterminated, did not object; or if they did, they did it very quietly.

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Fallacy two, appeal to best made up explaination in opposition of simply saying I don't know.
Does that make sense?

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That's what you wrote, in effect. So, by this criterion, the miraculous can be no bar to faith.
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That's not what I wrote. You either misunderstood me, or strawmaned me on purpose.
I did neither.

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1) esp. in a bad sense, a perverse nation
That'll do.
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Old 02-25-2012, 03:52 PM   #16
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1) esp. in a bad sense, a perverse nation
That'll do.
No, it won't. This is not a choice of what will suit your desires best.

The definition includes the fundamental notion, "fathered" (or "sired"). From this there are two basic derivatives given--derivative because the base is a verb form, while these are used as nouns--, one literal ("(that which is) fathered"), and the other figurative ("(the current living bunch, ie all who have been) fathered (and are alive)"). One opts for the figurative only after considering the literal and finding sufficient contextual grounds for doubting the literal use. Regardless, once you come to grips with the Greek term, you should realize that you are working from an ambiguity that only exists in English. Fudging about the English translation doesn't help you understand the text, which apparently you still don't.

Translating the word as "age" then using a different meaning of the term than is found in Greek is deceitful and merely helps obfuscate the original Greek. This is apparently done not to clarify but to suit the apologetic tendencies of the translators.
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Old 03-01-2012, 11:42 AM   #17
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Phoney nonsense, as any policeman will confirm.


Give it any name you like, contemporaries, who wanted the church exterminated, did not object; or if they did, they did it very quietly.
Or they did object, and no record of their objections survived the nearly two thousand year span from them to us. This is the problem with trying to use an argument from silence in history. There is no way to tell silence apart from muffled cries for help.


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Does that make sense?
Does what make sense? Are you talking about your appeal to the best made up explaination, my explaination of the fallacy you are commiting, or choosing to say I don't know?




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I did neither.
If you are not going to engage what I actually say, and simply attempt to read between the lines adding your own interpretation to my posts then there is nothing to discuss on the point of whether miracles are believable.

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That'll do.
For the sake of argument let's say Jesus means nation in this particular verse. I'll pretend not to know that the greek word for nation is ethnesin. What perverse nation would that be? Well it would be the Roman Empire.

Roman Empire is not still around. Check.

Jesus not returned yet. Check.

I could go into an explaination of how Daniel 7 ties into all of this, and I could quote the epistles to show that Jesus' early followers were already making excuses for why he hadn't returned yet, but I'll let you respond to what I've already written first.
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Old 03-01-2012, 02:02 PM   #18
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There is no way to tell silence apart from muffled cries for help.
So the Sanhedrin, populated by wealthy Herodians and Sadducees, backed by the mighty Roman Empire, was suffocated by a few fishermen? I like that. Monty Python missed a trick, there.

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What perverse nation would that be?
The majority of people from the time of speaking to the Second Coming.
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Old 03-01-2012, 02:19 PM   #19
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So the Sanhedrin, populated by wealthy Herodians and Sadducees, backed by the mighty Roman Empire, was suffocated by a few fishermen? I like that. Monty Python missed a trick, there.
*sigh* Suffocated by the passage of time, not suffocated by their contemporary opponents. Are you capable of responding to what someone actually says within context?

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The majority of people from the time of speaking to the Second Coming.
Nation does not mean a group of people spanning thousands of years, who speak different langauges, live in seperate territories, and operate under hundreds of different governments. In fact I can't think of a more opposite definition of nation than the one you are using. You might as well claim that a circle is a square.

http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/nation

na·tion   /ˈneɪʃən/ Show Spelled[ney-shuhn] Show IPA
noun
1. a large body of people, associated with a particular territory, that is sufficiently conscious of its unity to seek or to possess a government peculiarly its own: The president spoke to the nation about the new tax.
2. the territory or country itself: the nations of Central America.
3. a member tribe of an American Indian confederation.
4. an aggregation of persons of the same ethnic family, often speaking the same language or cognate languages.
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Old 03-01-2012, 02:28 PM   #20
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So the Sanhedrin, populated by wealthy Herodians and Sadducees, backed by the mighty Roman Empire, was suffocated by a few fishermen? I like that. Monty Python missed a trick, there.
*sigh* Suffocated by the passage of time, not suffocated by their contemporary opponents. Are you capable of responding to what someone actually says within context?
'muffled cries for help'??????

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The majority of people from the time of speaking to the Second Coming.
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Nation does not mean a group of people spanning thousands of years
'But you are a chosen people, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people belonging to God, that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light.' 1 Pe 2:9 NIV
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