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10-11-2002, 11:57 AM | #21 | |
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Here is the full text of Matthew 19:3-9:
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10-11-2002, 12:22 PM | #22 | |
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Also, we must ask: To which of "OT laws" are you referring, the commandments, the Mosaic, or the Levitical? Do you know the difference? Vanderzyden |
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10-11-2002, 12:51 PM | #23 |
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Leonarde
You said “. I agree that if we had ONLY that statement by Jesus we might think that he was an Orthodox Jew, but an orthodox Jew only.” I assume by Orthodox Jew you mean a traditional follower of Jewish law. If so I agree with the first part of this statement. I’m not sure what you mean by “…only an Orthodox Jew” (I think that you should find a new term because this name refers to a particular modern Jewish sect). I assume that this is a super secessionist reference to the Jewish Jesus vs. the Jesus of the New Israel. You are saying that you can reinterpret this statement in the light of other statements. You even go as far as to reinterpret this statement in light of Peter’s Dream which you claim might have been inspired by the post crucifixion Jesus. I would say that the statement stands on its’ own and it stands in direct contradiction to the other statements. The strange thing is that you agree with me, as your statement on top reveals. You say “Ergo another, looser interpretation seems in order. For those who are not absolutists....” This idea of loose interpretation is a quite pragmatic way of dealing with contradictions within a religion, but I am not one of your coreligionists and this is a discussion about what constitutes a Biblical contradiction. I believe that this is one with major theological and historic implications. |
10-11-2002, 04:00 PM | #24 | |
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What skeptics need to find are instances of the Bible saying A and not-A. There are few, if any. OTTOMH, I can think of Jesus' advice on doing good deeds: publicly (Matthew 5:16) vs. secretly (Matthew 6:1). But this isn't a statement of categorical fact that entails a logical contradiction. Even if it did, I don't see how that would make a difference. I mean, is Jesus God or man? Both simultaneously? Whatever. |
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10-12-2002, 07:02 PM | #25 | |
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How do you know whether lots and lots and lots of translation and interpretation errors did not occur. Obviously there must be a bunch because of the thousands of sects that CAN'T EVEN AGREE ON WHAT IT SAYS/REALLY MEANS. To me, this is why there is obviously a lack of something divine here: That is, people don't generally quibble over obeying or not obeying God's rules! What they fight over is discerning what the heck are the RULES!#@ Sojourner |
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10-12-2002, 07:43 PM | #26 | |
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Allow me to post the contents of the Book of RRH. It is a short book, but it holds great wisdom. And it contains no contradictions.
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For example, verse 1:2 says not all horses are black, while verse 1:3 says some horses are brown. In light of these other verses, verse 1:1 could not possibly mean that all horses are black. Therefore, there are no contradictions in the Book of RRH. |
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10-13-2002, 04:57 AM | #27 |
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RRH
Therefore if : J says X and J says not-X and J says not-X and J says not-X then the first statement X no longer means X Now I understand. So rather then call this a contradiction we should look at X and not-X in proportion and simply average them into mostly not-X Thank you for clarifying this for me. |
10-13-2002, 07:32 AM | #28 |
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And what if a given horse is of intermediate color: ie neither EXACTLY brown NOR exactly black?
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10-13-2002, 08:16 AM | #29 |
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If it is an intermediate color then it is not Black "1:2 Not all horses are black." but there is no need to play with semantics here. The statement is unambiguous. It is a black horse and not an intermediate one.
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10-13-2002, 08:18 AM | #30 |
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Obviously verse 1:1 simply means that all horses, at one time, in some instance, are black in some way. This no doubt means all horses have spot on them which is black, and if they don't, then they're probably evil horses. It is the stupid skeptic that assumes verse 1:1 necessarily means that all horses are completely and always black in color.
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