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Old 07-10-2009, 11:36 AM   #41
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The New Testament writings are evidently not intended to be fictional literature......
Well, if that is the case Jesus was the offspring of the Holy Ghost as found in gMatthew 1.18.

Your claim that Jesus was just a man must then be false.

According to New Testament writings, evidently not intended to be fiction, as you have claimed, Jesus transfigured, resurrected and ascended through the clouds.

You evidently wrote fiction when you claimed Jesus was just a man. Jesus was God and man conceived by the Holy Ghost of God according to New Testament writings.
Lies are not the same as fiction, and the difference is the intended interpretation. Lies are intended to be interpreted as true, and fiction is intended to be interpreted as false. The gospels were intended to be interpreted as true. Does that seem sensible to you?
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Old 07-10-2009, 12:06 PM   #42
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It follows that the idea that there were Christians living in Philippi is a historical fact.

...
I would prefer to reserve the term "fact" for something that can be verified, and that can be taken as true with something like 95% certainty.

What you have here is a data point. All you know is that someone composed a letter which claims to be written to Christians in Philippi. You don't know if this was an actual letter, or a literary composition in the form of an epistle. You don't know if any actually received or read this letter in Philippi. You can't be sure if this apparent letter was not a part of some wishful thinking on the part of an evangelist, or an outright fabrication, with Philippi standing in for some other location.

In this case, you don't know when this purported letter was written or who exactly wrote it. None of Paul's letter have been discovered as letters, or as anything other than as part of a collection, and we know that at least two factions of early Christians disputed their meaning, and probably edited them or subtracted from them.

This letter is generally accepted as authentic, although probably cobbled together from different fragments, but that is not the universal opinion. See The Epistle to the Philippians by F. Baur
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This more or less obvious reflection of passages from the older Epistles, together with the intentional leading of the discourse to the apostle's own person, his earlier and his present life, must certainly awake strong suspicion against our Epistle, especially since, for all of this, we can discern no clear reason which motivated the apostle to write this Epistle. . .
Baur gives more reasons for seeing this epistle as containing much later material, in its references to Clement.

In short, things are much more complicated than you want to believe.
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Old 07-10-2009, 12:11 PM   #43
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Well, if that is the case Jesus was the offspring of the Holy Ghost as found in gMatthew 1.18.

Your claim that Jesus was just a man must then be false.

According to New Testament writings, evidently not intended to be fiction, as you have claimed, Jesus transfigured, resurrected and ascended through the clouds.

You evidently wrote fiction when you claimed Jesus was just a man. Jesus was God and man conceived by the Holy Ghost of God according to New Testament writings.
Lies are not the same as fiction, and the difference is the intended interpretation. Lies are intended to be interpreted as true, and fiction is intended to be interpreted as false. The gospels were intended to be interpreted as true. Does that seem sensible to you?
Lies are intended to be interpreted as true.

Does that seem sensible to you?
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Old 07-10-2009, 12:27 PM   #44
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It follows that the idea that there were Christians living in Philippi is a historical fact.

...
I would prefer to reserve the term "fact" for something that can be verified, and that can be taken as true with something like 95% certainty.

What you have here is a data point. All you know is that someone composed a letter which claims to be written to Christians in Philippi. You don't know if this was an actual letter, or a literary composition in the form of an epistle. You don't know if any actually received or read this letter in Philippi. You can't be sure if this apparent letter was not a part of some wishful thinking on the part of an evangelist, or an outright fabrication, with Philippi standing in for some other location.

In this case, you don't know when this purported letter was written or who exactly wrote it. None of Paul's letter have been discovered as letters, or as anything other than as part of a collection, and we know that at least two factions of early Christians disputed their meaning, and probably edited them or subtracted from them.

This letter is generally accepted as authentic, although probably cobbled together from different fragments, but that is not the universal opinion. See The Epistle to the Philippians by F. Baur
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This more or less obvious reflection of passages from the older Epistles, together with the intentional leading of the discourse to the apostle's own person, his earlier and his present life, must certainly awake strong suspicion against our Epistle, especially since, for all of this, we can discern no clear reason which motivated the apostle to write this Epistle. . .
Baur gives more reasons for seeing this epistle as containing much later material, in its references to Clement.

In short, things are much more complicated than you want to believe.
Toto, since I am not formally educated in New Testament scholarship, I really do have to rely largely on expert authorities in New Testament scholarship as a foundation for the facts I accept. If the authorities believe that the Epistle to the Philippians is authentically Pauline for whatever reason, then I likewise accept it as authentically Pauline, and I hope you will make that same assumption for the sake of argument unless you have very good reasons to doubt it. The contrary opinion of a scholar from the 19th century is right next to irrelevant to me. Given that the Epistle to the Philippians was written by Paul, then there were Christians living in Philippi using the method of neutral bias or whatever you want to call it. Is that an acceptable argument? If we, as amateur scholar hobbyists, can not accept the opinions of experts, then we have to start over from where critical scholarship first started, from the 17th century and onward, and that is a process I am not prepared to go through.
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Old 07-10-2009, 12:27 PM   #45
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Lies are not the same as fiction, and the difference is the intended interpretation. Lies are intended to be interpreted as true, and fiction is intended to be interpreted as false. The gospels were intended to be interpreted as true. Does that seem sensible to you?
Lies are intended to be interpreted as true.

Does that seem sensible to you?
Yes.
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Old 07-10-2009, 02:09 PM   #46
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Lies are intended to be interpreted as true.

Does that seem sensible to you?
Yes.
So, if lies are intended to be interpreted as true and the gospels were also intended to be interpreted as true, then the gospels may indeed be lies.

Now, look at the preface of De Principiis. The author made statements that were intended to be interpreted as true, but they appear to be lies.


Preface to De Principiis by Origen.
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4. The particular points clearly delivered in the teaching of the apostles are as follow:—

First, That there is one God, who created and arranged all things, and who, when nothing existed, called all things into being— God from the first creation and foundation of the world— the God of all just men, of Adam, Abel, Seth, Enos, Enoch, Noe, Sere, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, the twelve patriarchs, Moses, and the prophets; and that this God in the last days, as He had announced beforehand by His prophets, sent our Lord Jesus Christ to call in the first place Israel to Himself, and in the second place the Gentiles, after the unfaithfulness of the people of Israel. This just and good God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, Himself gave the law and the prophets, and the Gospels, being also the God of the apostles and of the Old and New Testaments.

Secondly, That Jesus Christ Himself, who came (into the world), was born of the Father before all creatures; that, after He had been the servant of the Father in the creation of all things— “For by Him were all things made” — He in the last times, divesting Himself (of His glory), became a man, and was incarnate although God, and while made a man remained the God which He was; that He assumed a body like to our own, differing in this respect only, that it was born of a virgin and of the Holy Spirit:

that this Jesus Christ was truly born, and did truly suffer, and did not endure this death common (to man) in appearance only, but did truly die; that He did truly rise from the dead; and that after His resurrection He conversed with His disciples, and was taken up (into heaven).
Now does it seem sensible that the Jesus story were lies intended to be interpreted as true?

Yes!

See www.newadvent.org
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Old 07-10-2009, 02:23 PM   #47
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Toto, since I am not formally educated in New Testament scholarship, I really do have to rely largely on expert authorities in New Testament scholarship as a foundation for the facts I accept. If the authorities believe that the Epistle to the Philippians is authentically Pauline for whatever reason, then I likewise accept it as authentically Pauline, and I hope you will make that same assumption for the sake of argument unless you have very good reasons to doubt it.
I am not formally educated in NT scholarship, but I do know how to read and spot bad arguments and underlying religious assumptions. I would accept the expert opinion on Koine Greek translations, but I see no reason to accept the opinions on interpretation of these documents from a group that is largely dominated by religionists.

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The contrary opinion of a scholar from the 19th century is right next to irrelevant to me. Given that the Epistle to the Philippians was written by Paul, then there were Christians living in Philippi using the method of neutral bias or whatever you want to call it. Is that an acceptable argument? If we, as amateur scholar hobbyists, can not accept the opinions of experts, then we have to start over from where critical scholarship first started, from the 17th century and onward, and that is a process I am not prepared to go through.
If you are not prepared to go through that process, at least recognize that others are. And You should qualify your arguments as being at most probably true, or possibly true, rather than indisputable fact.
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Old 07-10-2009, 02:33 PM   #48
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...
Toto, since I am not formally educated in New Testament scholarship, I really do have to rely largely on expert authorities in New Testament scholarship as a foundation for the facts I accept. If the authorities believe that the Epistle to the Philippians is authentically Pauline for whatever reason, then I likewise accept it as authentically Pauline, and I hope you will make that same assumption for the sake of argument unless you have very good reasons to doubt it.
I am not formally educated in NT scholarship, but I do know how to read and spot bad arguments and underlying religious assumptions. I would accept the expert opinion on Koine Greek translations, but I see no reason to accept the opinions on interpretation of these documents from a group that is largely dominated by religionists.

Quote:
The contrary opinion of a scholar from the 19th century is right next to irrelevant to me. Given that the Epistle to the Philippians was written by Paul, then there were Christians living in Philippi using the method of neutral bias or whatever you want to call it. Is that an acceptable argument? If we, as amateur scholar hobbyists, can not accept the opinions of experts, then we have to start over from where critical scholarship first started, from the 17th century and onward, and that is a process I am not prepared to go through.
If you are not prepared to go through that process, at least recognize that others are. And You should qualify your arguments as being at most probably true, or possibly true, rather than indisputable fact.
OK, let that be the last word here.
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