ToGodorNottoGod
Member
My new found friend Thomas t and I have been having delightful conversations on theodicy and it ended up getting more focused on Bible only type conceptualization. I am intrigued by his meaning of it and we discussed it a bit. He thinks the many churches are wrong about God and what the Bible says, which intrigues me, because I can't say I differ all that much form his idea on that.
Anyway, I am the one starting this thread so he can respond and we can begin a conversation (a very friendly one), concerning the Christian God as how the Bible depicts Him. Bible only, no other texts, ideas, or themes are allowed. And this intrigues me tremendously because I am not sure I have ever seen this done, meaning perhaps Thomas t might have a good point. So many have defined God through other disciplines than the Bible, and the Bible is the scripture, not philosophy, not science, not history, etc.
So... part of our problem I am thinking, is going to be which Bible we use since not all of them are the same canon, that never having been finalized as of yet, these few thousand years since the long drawn out bloody and messy process took place through the centuries.
The Protestant canon threw out the apocrypha, while the Catholic canon retains it. The Ethiopian canon included also the Book of Enoch, of which now several have been re-discovered and have been being studied now for several decades. The problem here appears to me to be which book of Enoch? We have 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Enoch, not all written at the same time nor in the same place, yet all contributing to dynamic and fascinating theological themes through history that have come out in our day and challenged our views of reality and spiritual and theological truth. The very serious influence of Enoch on the entire New Testament has been acknowledged and shown by all scholars of the books of Enoch, all of them biblical scholars. It would be rather odd to ignore it since its influence is embedded in the New Testament.
When I asked Thomas t he mentioned he only wants to go with the Hebrew and Greek as they are the original, though he is incorrect, at least historically, I understand what he means. So, I am assuming he will be using a Hebrew and Greek text. Mine will be the Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensian Hebrew text, with NIV by John R. Kohlenberger III. And the Greek texts (once again, there are so many, which one is THE New Testament?!) is open to whatever he wants to use. There is enough online we can find common ground somewhere.
The one I am comfortable with is based on the United Bible Societies Fourth corrected edition - the same text as Novum Testamentum Graece, 26th edition, translators being Robert K. Brown, Philip W. Comfort, and editor J. D. Douglas.
One issue that is going to simply have to come up is what critical lexicons and texts are we going to use since words have more than one meaning, and ancient words especially have different views and meanings than even what some translations have noted. Some groups of peoples anciently used a word to mean something which a different group rejected and gave their own meaning, and we may find both meanings in the Bible we are trying to use! Who is to say if either is the "original" (I mistrust that word, as I don't think we can logically use it in the Bible's case, the Greek itself is not the original language Jesus and his followers used, it itself is a remove from any so-called "original") So we are simply going to be virtually forced to look outside the Bible itself in order to understand it since we are dealing with ancient languages, hence the serious need for lexicons, dictionaries, and other helps in order to see if we can even learn the actual meaning, and actual context of what we are discussing. Not to mention actual Greek, Hebrew, Gnostic, Roman, and many other cultures which the Jews lived in and which did affect the language and their manner of lives, their manner of responding to political, historical, economic, and theological ideas and that is just for the New Testament! How many cultures directly are relevant to the Hebrew we have in the Old Testament?! Nothing in the Bible ever occurred in isolation. It is not a singular item from a vacuum. We cannot possibly make much sense if all we do is work within a vacuum. I'm not sure how we are going to iron this out, but we can give it a try.
With that said, I will give Thomas t the opening discussion of the Christian God using the Bible only. I am presuming both the Old and New Testaments are usable, along with the apocrypha since the world's largest Christian denomination contends it is scripture, so I go with that, so apocrypha is allowed to be utilized. The use of the Books of Enoch are also seriously possibly on the table. Just because we in the West are unfamiliar with the Ethiopian canon does not mean it is invalid, since it is the scripture of a large group of people. And this is just the tip of the iceberg I see, but I will defer to not worrying about ALL the ins and outs of this fascinating issue.
So Thomas t, I am looking forward to your first idea concerning God from the Bible.
Anyway, I am the one starting this thread so he can respond and we can begin a conversation (a very friendly one), concerning the Christian God as how the Bible depicts Him. Bible only, no other texts, ideas, or themes are allowed. And this intrigues me tremendously because I am not sure I have ever seen this done, meaning perhaps Thomas t might have a good point. So many have defined God through other disciplines than the Bible, and the Bible is the scripture, not philosophy, not science, not history, etc.
So... part of our problem I am thinking, is going to be which Bible we use since not all of them are the same canon, that never having been finalized as of yet, these few thousand years since the long drawn out bloody and messy process took place through the centuries.
The Protestant canon threw out the apocrypha, while the Catholic canon retains it. The Ethiopian canon included also the Book of Enoch, of which now several have been re-discovered and have been being studied now for several decades. The problem here appears to me to be which book of Enoch? We have 1st, 2nd, and 3rd Enoch, not all written at the same time nor in the same place, yet all contributing to dynamic and fascinating theological themes through history that have come out in our day and challenged our views of reality and spiritual and theological truth. The very serious influence of Enoch on the entire New Testament has been acknowledged and shown by all scholars of the books of Enoch, all of them biblical scholars. It would be rather odd to ignore it since its influence is embedded in the New Testament.
When I asked Thomas t he mentioned he only wants to go with the Hebrew and Greek as they are the original, though he is incorrect, at least historically, I understand what he means. So, I am assuming he will be using a Hebrew and Greek text. Mine will be the Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensian Hebrew text, with NIV by John R. Kohlenberger III. And the Greek texts (once again, there are so many, which one is THE New Testament?!) is open to whatever he wants to use. There is enough online we can find common ground somewhere.
The one I am comfortable with is based on the United Bible Societies Fourth corrected edition - the same text as Novum Testamentum Graece, 26th edition, translators being Robert K. Brown, Philip W. Comfort, and editor J. D. Douglas.
One issue that is going to simply have to come up is what critical lexicons and texts are we going to use since words have more than one meaning, and ancient words especially have different views and meanings than even what some translations have noted. Some groups of peoples anciently used a word to mean something which a different group rejected and gave their own meaning, and we may find both meanings in the Bible we are trying to use! Who is to say if either is the "original" (I mistrust that word, as I don't think we can logically use it in the Bible's case, the Greek itself is not the original language Jesus and his followers used, it itself is a remove from any so-called "original") So we are simply going to be virtually forced to look outside the Bible itself in order to understand it since we are dealing with ancient languages, hence the serious need for lexicons, dictionaries, and other helps in order to see if we can even learn the actual meaning, and actual context of what we are discussing. Not to mention actual Greek, Hebrew, Gnostic, Roman, and many other cultures which the Jews lived in and which did affect the language and their manner of lives, their manner of responding to political, historical, economic, and theological ideas and that is just for the New Testament! How many cultures directly are relevant to the Hebrew we have in the Old Testament?! Nothing in the Bible ever occurred in isolation. It is not a singular item from a vacuum. We cannot possibly make much sense if all we do is work within a vacuum. I'm not sure how we are going to iron this out, but we can give it a try.
With that said, I will give Thomas t the opening discussion of the Christian God using the Bible only. I am presuming both the Old and New Testaments are usable, along with the apocrypha since the world's largest Christian denomination contends it is scripture, so I go with that, so apocrypha is allowed to be utilized. The use of the Books of Enoch are also seriously possibly on the table. Just because we in the West are unfamiliar with the Ethiopian canon does not mean it is invalid, since it is the scripture of a large group of people. And this is just the tip of the iceberg I see, but I will defer to not worrying about ALL the ins and outs of this fascinating issue.
So Thomas t, I am looking forward to your first idea concerning God from the Bible.