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03-18-2002, 10:06 AM | #21 | |||||||||||||
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gixxer750
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03-18-2002, 01:00 PM | #22 | |||||
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The biggest problem as I see it is that despite the supposed empowering of the Holy Spirit, Christians cannot even agree with each other let alone perform miracles that cannot be proven to be shams. We have all manner of religious mythologies about the dead rising and healings and such, before and after Jesus,down to modern wonders like Benny Hinn and Peter Popoff, in and out of Christianity, yet none have proven genuine so far. So, I don't discount the dead rising because Christians say it, or even because Canadian Christians say it, but I discount it because it contains supernatural claims of events that in fact do not happen, but are easily faked when the crowd is gullible and suggestible and con artist moderately skilled. Quote:
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03-18-2002, 01:17 PM | #23 |
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gixxer,
I think my rather negative feelings towards the Jesus of the bible are due to : 1. the fact that I have been told/ordered throughout my life to love him, worship him, give him my life, sacrifice my thoughts and hopes for him, etc, etc. It becomes a heavy burden after a while. 2. Eventually I started really reading the bible, and found aspects of the character Jesus that I did not like and could not respect, not to mention contradictions that made me doubt he had actually existed, lived for me, died for me, etc. So not only was I being exhorted to love someone, that "perfect person" turned out to be a myth, and all that was left was a man who had his faults, who might have been a good teacher but who was subsequently airbrushed into unreality. In other words, I don't often think of Jesus any more, and when I do, I have to really suppress my feelings in order to be as complimentary as, say, Koy. |
03-18-2002, 06:28 PM | #24 |
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well, thank you everyone for your replies.
I have to confess that I am out of my league and I really haven't got a reply to most of your comments. I would respond to some of the others, but I think I am going to look around for a more balanced forum. While you have all, for the most part, been very respectful and courteous, I received 20 replies, and they were all from an atheistic veiwpoint! I am a punk 22-year old with one year of post-secondary education. I have read McDowell and Lewis (as some of you guessed already), but have yet to go deeper than that. I am more than comfortable to discuss some things with one or two people at my own level, but I'm not about to try to take on 20 people with doctorate degrees! I hope this is reasonable, and I pray that I am not sacrificing my integrity - I have printed out a number of your comments to consider further. Also, I will check in a number of times again in the next couple of days, and I would be happy to exchange email addresses with anyone who would like to continue this in a different forum. I apologize if I ever came off as arrogant or anything like that - you have helped me to realize that I have a lot of learning to do. If anyone wants to reccomend any good books I would appreciate it. Hmmmm. Since I am going to check in a few more times anyway, I have one more question I would like to post - Suppose for a moment that the stories recorded in the New Testament gospels are in fact true. Suppose (hypothetically, of course)that Jesus truly was the Jewish messiah, that he truly was "God in the flesh", that his death truly brought about means of reconciliation with God, and that he truly did rise form the dead. What written accounts would be necessary to convince you of its truth 2000 years later? If a number of people, 2000 years ago, witnessed a true miracle such as the resurrection, what would it take for them to be able to convince future generations of its truth? I hope you understand the question. What would it take for you to believe today? Thanks again. |
03-18-2002, 06:43 PM | #25 | |
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writings that don't require an apologist (such as McDowell or Lewis) to explain them. B. A weekly status meeting,where Jesus/God appears visible to everyone on earth simultaneously, removing the possibility of any doubt. You know, he could start with something "Hi all, hope everyone had fun with the 3 legged race at the picnic, I know I sure did...". Such a thing would be trivial to the Christian God if he really existed, and it's the least he could do since he wants me to dedicate my LIFE to him.... But neither of those is very likely.... |
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03-18-2002, 06:46 PM | #26 |
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The problem with being a skeptic is that you must question everything.
I believe it would be hard to convince many here with one such document. It would require several histories, all of which coincide within the main points and are written objectively. The Bible could be the focus of these documents as long as there were several recorded histories to point that there were no contradictions within it, and that all that was stated could be believed to be true. Of course, over the span of 2000 years, and countless interpretations and language conversions, one could hardly say that the Bible itself is accurate, or even the histories themselves. But as long as you have several which all seem to follow along the same path of events, then it would at least be much harder for the atheist to disprove. Of course, there would still be many atheists, who would have to experience it firsthand in order to put the kind of faith into it which many Christians today do. Being a skeptic, one might even question the speaking, burning bush: "Maybe something I ate?" |
03-18-2002, 06:54 PM | #27 | ||
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03-18-2002, 07:14 PM | #28 | |
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Oh, an Koy - <img src="graemlins/notworthy.gif" border="0" alt="[Not Worthy]" /> Now, to your question. My answer is in four parts: 1. Jesus as a man: Not a lot of convincing needed; perhaps some contemporary accounts, and by people other than his direct followers / believers would help. 2. Divine nature of Jesus, including supernatural acts: Without wanting to appear closed-minded, I find it difficult to conceive what sort of 2000-year-old written evidence would offer convincing proof of the reality of supernatural events - ie, events and phenomena the sort of which we have no convincing documentation of, since. 3. The next problem is the Old Testament. The NT has its problems, but they are nothing compared to the problems of inaccuracy, inconsistency, credibility etc in the OT. If we assume that a "real" Jesus is working off the back of the OT, as it were, then any documentation of him would need to include a lot of qualification on the OT. If the "real" Jesus just repeated the OT as "gospel", as it were, he's starting right behind the eight-ball credibility-wise. 4. Finally, there's the overall issue of logic. Given that we have some sort of cohesive evidence of Jesus and his divinity, we are still faced with the possibility that that evidence is faulty, either deliberately or otherwise, given that the events described therein are beyond our experience. PLUS - all these events together tell us of a divine being which supposedly created us, loves us, but will condemn us to hell if we don't follow Him - BUT - has, after several thousand years of direct and overt intervention in human affairs, has completely gone missing for the past 2000 years. On that basis, any evidence of the divine nature of Jesus, no matter how well documented, would still leave some major logical and theological gaps. |
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03-19-2002, 05:34 AM | #29 | |
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This is why many fundamentalists home-school, and later send their children to a "Bible College." The more you get exposed to ideas that conflict with your deeply-held beliefs, the more you may start to question those beliefs. |
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03-19-2002, 05:57 AM | #30 | |
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Actually, gixxer, I was going to suggest going to a public library and asking a reference librarian to help you find books about biblical scholarship. Many of them are written by Christian and Jewish scholars, who study who really wrote the Bible and when but still keep their faith. "Isaac Asimov's Guide to the Bible" is a little dated but still a great basic introduction to this field. Most of the things we discussed in this thread would be found in a non-fundamentalist seminary class. |
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