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04-06-2003, 06:27 PM | #1 |
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"The Case for Faith"
I guess I need to remember not to open my big mouth.
Anyway, I somehow let it slip to a couple of christians/fundies that I was atheist. Now they've given me a copy of this book "A Case for Faith" by Lee Strobel. Has anyone read this book? I'm about half way through it and it already bothers me. It's the same basic argument over and over again for about 300 pages. I was hoping for some original material, but alas there is none |
04-06-2003, 07:04 PM | #2 | |
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"If you can't see it with your own two eyes, it isn't there. Jesus was mean to fig trees and pigs, and we would take personal responsibility for all our sins if we had any." Rad |
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04-06-2003, 07:17 PM | #3 |
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That's a great review of Strobel's book, Radorth. Perhaps you might tell us what you thought of A Brief History of Time based on a literal reading of Genesis?
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04-06-2003, 09:51 PM | #4 | |
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Hmm, I haven't read Faith but I did read The Case For Christ by the same author. Ironically enough, it was part of my conversion from agnosticism to outright atheism. This book was the first I learned about how the early church put together the bible. They had an idea of how they wanted Jesus to look, they left out parts that did not agree, and included parts that agreed.
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I also love how he first uses some parallels amongst the gospels to prove its veracity, then uses the stark contradictions to also prove its veracity! Wow I wish I could have done my thesis research like that. . . but alas I do have morals. Well let us know how the reading goes, scigirl |
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04-06-2003, 10:17 PM | #5 | |
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04-06-2003, 11:18 PM | #6 | |
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I'm glad that playing with your straw men keeps you amused, though. |
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04-07-2003, 05:28 AM | #7 |
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Daggah: The only books I'm familiar with on atheism are George H. Smith's Atheism: the case against God and Critiques of God by Peter Angeles.
Anyway, I find it kind odd that the fourth chapter of this book deals with why God kill innocent people. Yet, the primary argument is that God isn't really killing innocet people, it's just that the KJV doesn't interpret the original language properly and many words come out to be "innocent" where the NIV has a more corrent interpretation. I've heard the argument of KJV vs. NIV many times before, yet I still conclude that no matter who or what translates the original text, they'll never get the meaning right. Not that I'm defending the bible, but Voltaire just isn't the same unless you read it in the original French. |
04-07-2003, 07:29 PM | #8 |
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Try Bertrand Russell's "Why I am Not a Christian" and Mark Twain's "The Mysterious Stranger" and "Letters From the Earth".
And Freud on "Religion as a Psychological Weakness"; Marx, "The Opium of the People"; Emile Durkheim "The Social Foundation of Religion". Classics. |
04-07-2003, 08:43 PM | #9 | |
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04-07-2003, 09:14 PM | #10 | |
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