5/10/2010 7:22:26 AM
Examples of New Testament Bigotry/Intolerance (not all inclusive):Jesus
5/10/2010 9:19:06 AM
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/john-shore/10-ways-christians-tend-t_b_562583.htmlTen Ways Christians Tend to Fail at Being Christiani don’t think all 10 make sense, but 2 3 and 9 are apt.
5/10/2010 9:28:06 AM
this got ignored:
5/10/2010 10:46:11 AM
The problem with an argument about omnipotence is the fact that omnipotence is the power to defy human logic. An omnipotent being can be both up and down, yes and no, here and there; in this case omnibenevolent in the midst of suffering.
5/10/2010 10:51:44 AM
^ it's true in general that an omnipotent being can defy logic like that.But the problem for religions, including Christianity, is that people impose and order and logic onto their God that helps to differentiate the religions. the christian god for example is known to have a will and an order that he is supposed to be pushing humanity towards. If this is true, then you can weigh human actions against the will of god.If you believe that we don't know the will of god, then you're throwing out large, very important portions of the bible.
5/10/2010 11:17:43 AM
5/10/2010 11:51:17 AM
5/10/2010 9:58:50 PM
5/10/2010 10:16:14 PM
5/10/2010 10:18:44 PM
5/10/2010 10:24:44 PM
:ahem:Quote :"If that is what you meant by passing, I guess I need clarification. Do you think more is necessary to include it?"no, what i am saying is that paul mentions homosexuality right beside heterosexual acts he finds sinful; he is talking about promiscuity of all kinds. are you saying that your reading of the bible says that promiscuous people are worthy of death? because if you are claiming a literal, infallible reading of paul that is what you are saying.and again, how does any of this exclude anyone from the church?
5/10/2010 10:57:20 PM
^sorry about missing that.It is not me that is saying that. I am saying that the Bible says that (to avoid confusion, yes I agree with the Bible on this). See Romans 6:23, for the wages of sin is death. However, i don't think the death that paul is referring to here is physical. He is referring to spiritual death. Read Romans chapter 6-8 (specifically 8:1-15ish) for more on this.As for literal/infallible reading point. I think its obvious when we look at the context here, that paul was literally talking about spiritual death.as for excluding anyone from the church. I am not sure i understand exactly what you mean so please clarify if this doesn't answer your ?.I believe that people who continue to go against what God has said and have no problem whatsoever with it don't really have a place in the church. Again, church being here followers of Jesus. Because in all reality, is someone who adamantly goes against the teachings of the Bible a true follower of Jesus? I say no, but I guess one could argue that point, but I don't think they can argue it using the Bible as a source which is my entire point since this singer calls herself a Christian and therefore should be able to argue it using the Bible.
5/11/2010 6:01:49 AM
5/11/2010 8:53:30 AM
King James' English adaptation of thousand-year-old Roman apologues is taken too literally ITT
5/11/2010 9:11:45 AM
And there it is! The moment you try to reference the source material for the goofy religion, you get called out for it. It's like I'm a prophet:
5/11/2010 9:31:11 AM
You're a prophet because you correctly predicted that someone would call you out for totally ignoring context?
5/11/2010 9:44:53 AM
I'd prefer an illustration on how I ignored context or how the original manuscript Hebrew (or Aramaic) differs the meaning significantly.Or why it's only relevant when citing passages that show that Jesus is not God, but Lutz gets a pass to throw out passages left and right to prove his points about Christianity.It's a crutch, and it's weak.
5/11/2010 9:55:01 AM
I'm not giving Lutz a pass. You guys are treating the Bible like a textbook, but it's a tome of arcane lore from the dark ages. It's meant to be interpreted by the Church; degree-holding ministers and ordained clergymen, who treat the vast majority of it as figurative. I'm not about to deny that it's full of bigotry and contradictions, if taken by itself, literally. You're far from the only ones doing it, but I still think its pointless.
5/11/2010 10:37:44 AM
Is there a guide to know which parts are figurative and which parts aren't? How could anyone possibly know that an individual passage or fable is metaphorical? Does this fact not make the Bible as useful ideologically as the Iliad?
5/11/2010 11:10:07 AM
Disco-stu! i think you might just know more about Christianity than a lot of so-called Christians...unfortunately I am serious on this...Anyway with that said you again make some great points.I probably can't get all of them this point but I'll hit on two (then I gotta cram for a grad final...haha good times...)1. The trinity. Thats a tough one but I want to present you with an interesting perspective that I believe old CS Lewis had some to do with (could be wrong on this, I heard it from Ravi Zacharias and dont remember the exact source). He postulated that without the trinity God needed people in order to love. Obviously the Bible says that God is love. But, if God was just God the father, there would be nothing to love. But in "God the trinity" there is the possibility of community and love in the first Cause (IE God, the great "I AM"). Now how exactly God is one and three persons is a bit fuzzy because we don't have an exact description of how this can be. But I think this goes beyond accounting. Obviously 1+1+1 is not equal to 1 mathematically but I am not convinced that that is God's intent in saying that God is one. 2. I think parts of the Bible that are to be interpreted figuratively vs. literally can follow these rules of thumb. Now to be honest I just thought of this on the fly and haven't thought it thru too many examples so please let me know if you disagree because I could use some feedback on it. But with that said here we go:-If the story loses power because it isn't true, then it most likely literally happened. Example: While in undergrad I had a prof who said that Noah's ark could be interpreted figuratively and still hold the same meaning and purpose. I say that is a fallacy because if such a story is made up then it serves no purpose. If God didn't bring judgement on the earth then, what point does a story serve about that? Another example would be Jesus saying that he is the bread of life and that you must "eat his flesh". Now I think its obvious that this is figurative for many reasons. The number one reason is that Jesus gave them real bread as a symbol of this while saying this. The other reason is that it doesn't take any power away from the story for that to be figurative.-I think you have to look at the full context of not only the passage but also the whole Bible before determining figurative vs. literal. Example: ""If anyone comes to me and does not hate his father and mother, his wife and children, his brothers and sisters--yes, even his own life--he cannot be my disciple." ~Jesus. Now this taken literally sounds pretty bad. But jesus is clear that we are to love people in so many other places that he is driving a different point home here. That point being that we must put Him first. All else is 2nd to that.Good discussion and good points. Can I ask what everyone's worldview here is?
5/11/2010 7:51:47 PM
5/11/2010 8:12:32 PM
[Edited on May 11, 2010 at 8:27 PM. Reason : ]
5/11/2010 8:20:43 PM
5/11/2010 8:39:28 PM
5/11/2010 8:50:50 PM
^Disco-stu claimed Christians disregard evidence against the flood.I don't think I alleged disco-stu of disregarding evidence unless my assumption is correct. That assumption being that he subscribes to naturalism or something along those lines. Then the evidence I would be alleging that he is disregarding is the overwhelming evidence against evolution as a start.Now again, I don't want to make that assumption without first stating it as I did in my original post. If my assumption is wrong my apologies. If not then I think the logic he used to prove me wrong could be applied to his own beliefs. But again, please poke holes in my logic if you see them, I am not trying to be a douche bag here...haha
5/11/2010 8:58:47 PM
So you'd accept that the flood couldn't have ever happened as the Bible literally describes because practically all the evidence is against that, if disco_stu accepts that live couldn't have ever come about by natural processes?
5/11/2010 9:28:32 PM
^nope. And lets take disco-stu out of this because I don't want to misrepresent him. What I was saying is that someone cannot logically say that A isn't true because of a lack of evidence. Meanwhile they believe in B but have a lack of evidence to support it.
5/11/2010 9:34:16 PM
^ but doesn't that cut both ways?You're saying that B isn't true because of lack of evidence, while believing that A is true, despite lack of evidence.
5/11/2010 9:35:22 PM
^I see your point but thats not exactly what I am saying. I never said B was false due to a lack of evidence. If I did claim that it, then I couldnt by the same logic claim A was true. However, I can still claim A is true despite a lack of complete evidence so long as my reasoning for ruling out B is not due to a lack of evidence.Example:Person A believes the BiblePerson B Believes naturalism is truePerson A cannot claim that naturalism isn't true solely because they lack some evidence. However, Person A can claim that naturalism isn't true because they believe the Bible to be correct even though they may lack some evidence for it. Thus Person A's reasoning for not believing person B is not related to a lack of evidence, it is related to the evidence that they believe about the Bible to be true.
5/11/2010 9:43:41 PM
^ so you believe that the flood story is literal truth, not because any evidence indicates that it was real, but because you believe the Bible is true, therefore the flood story must be true. and any evidence to the contrary is simply wrong?
5/11/2010 9:48:12 PM
Yes I believe the flood is literal truth. And i believe there is evidence for it. I am ignorant of any evidence against it. I am not saying there isn't any, but i don't know of any because I haven't researched that. I would be glad to look at some if you have a link or know of any.And I think evidence to the contrary should be looked at. If I deem is simply wrong because of a belief, I would become an ideologue. Ideologues don't necessarily seek after truth, they seek after something they believe to be truth. Evidence can confirm or disprove those such beliefs. That does not take away from my confidence that the Bible is true, so if you have evidence to the contrary I wouldn't mind taking a look at it.Also, Moron, can I ask what your worldview might be?
5/11/2010 9:56:03 PM
there is evidence of a flood in that region, not one that covered the entire world. is that what you mean? and are you suggesting a literal translation of the creation story, a story that predates christianity? i think that is pretty clearly figurative. [Edited on May 11, 2010 at 10:27 PM. Reason : .]
5/11/2010 10:24:31 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_flood
5/11/2010 10:31:26 PM
5/11/2010 10:43:18 PM
a[Edited on May 11, 2010 at 10:44 PM. Reason : def. posted same thing twice...woops]
5/11/2010 10:43:45 PM
are you suggesting the creation story is literal?
5/11/2010 10:45:57 PM
^yes
5/11/2010 10:47:05 PM
I am an atheist and a naturalist. It's important to note that Atheism is not a world view. It is a simple refutation of the existence of gods due to lack of evidence.
5/11/2010 10:49:09 PM
5/11/2010 10:52:46 PM
5/11/2010 10:52:47 PM
the creation story, and the flood, are pretty clearly figurative. [Edited on May 11, 2010 at 10:58 PM. Reason : .]
5/11/2010 10:56:49 PM
As to the Miller experiment. That is highly debatable as many believe that the atmosphere that Miller used was not realistic and that he used such an atmosphere to rig the results. Regardless the atmosphere was most likely not representative of the early earth. As for your other points, many of them are new to me and I would like to get both sides of the story!So thanks for the new info to research here. Good stuff.
5/11/2010 11:00:05 PM
^ the miller experiment has been made mostly irrelevant by the direct discovery of pre-biotic molecules on comets.
5/11/2010 11:03:31 PM
5/11/2010 11:08:16 PM
haha...i think everytime i get on this subject it leads to this...
5/11/2010 11:12:06 PM
why does it change anything if instead of a global flood its just a really large flood covering everything he could see, and maybe two of every kind of animal is hyperbole, how does that change anything about the purpose of the story? and how does it change the message if the story of creation is just a metaphor for the way god has his hand in everything? if this is the case then suddenly there is no conflict with what we are learning about how the universe came to be.
5/11/2010 11:23:21 PM
^^^ variety is the spice of life...
5/11/2010 11:28:27 PM
^^How then do you separate the figurative stories from the ones that you should actually believe and base your religious beliefs on? 500 years ago, it wasn't obvious to humanity that the creation story is figurative and saying that it was got you killed.There is nothing internal to the story that makes it figurative. It's only our understanding of reality that makes it obvious that it can't be true. If you concede this point, then you couldn't possibly believe that the Bible is the word of God or even inspired by God. And then why believe any of it?
5/12/2010 8:47:28 AM
as a presbyterian i am called to draw on reason, experience, and the holy spirit inside me when reading. we believe god's word is in the holy spirit as you read, not the words itself. you listen for the word of god and not to the word of god.
5/12/2010 11:30:05 AM