A
angellous_evangellous
Guest
Abram made a patently false statement in a discussion thread that I would like to address here.
http://www.religiousforums.com/forum/showthread.php?t=10914&page=3 post # 28
My initial response was:
To which he replied:
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Back to the original statement that I protest:
They teach the Bible and not their view of the world.
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I argue that there is not a preacher alive on this earth who teaches the Bible as opposed to their view of the world.
Worldview is a pretty slippery concept. We all have them, and when we read an ancient text like the Bible, we often read our worldview into the text.
I know of too mant examples to list at once... but here's a few.
Honor and shame (and patron/client relationships) ruled their world, and we don't have a clue about the dynamics of honor and shame in the contexts of various texts of the NT unless we study this kind of thing.
Another example is the way that the ancients may have conceived time. It is generally said that we view time linearly and they viewed time circularly. This can cause real problems...
Another example is inerrancy and infalliability of Scripture. This is a completely foreign idea to the ancient writers. They had absolutely no concept of this kind of thing. I can show you pictures of the edited papyri of the NT to prove this.
Absolute fact is nowhere in the NT. So myth and fact intertwine in the eastern mind.
http://www.religiousforums.com/forum/showthread.php?t=10914&page=3 post # 28
I love most Baptist Pastors because their intensity to the Bible. They teach the Bible and not their view of the world.
These are the views of a Bible thumping Jesus freak and have no problem admitting it...
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My initial response was:
Daddy said:This statement is false.
It is false because they may be under the delusion that the worldview that they have is rooted in the Bible.
For example, George Barna fancies that the following is a "Biblical worldview"
http://www.barna.org/FlexPage.aspx?P...naUpdateID=194
Belief that God created the world, that the Bible is inerrant, and heaven and hell is the view of the world that many fundie Baptists hold.
To which he replied:
Because it's true. We don't agree on this, thats fine. Its sad that you let the world decive you. Its hard now days when everyone says "you believe what you want and I'll believe what I want" there is no real truth. I would say there wrong and there is only one truth.
The world was created by God and there is a real heaven and hell.
====
Back to the original statement that I protest:
They teach the Bible and not their view of the world.
===
I argue that there is not a preacher alive on this earth who teaches the Bible as opposed to their view of the world.
Worldview is a pretty slippery concept. We all have them, and when we read an ancient text like the Bible, we often read our worldview into the text.
I know of too mant examples to list at once... but here's a few.
Honor and shame (and patron/client relationships) ruled their world, and we don't have a clue about the dynamics of honor and shame in the contexts of various texts of the NT unless we study this kind of thing.
Another example is the way that the ancients may have conceived time. It is generally said that we view time linearly and they viewed time circularly. This can cause real problems...
Another example is inerrancy and infalliability of Scripture. This is a completely foreign idea to the ancient writers. They had absolutely no concept of this kind of thing. I can show you pictures of the edited papyri of the NT to prove this.
Absolute fact is nowhere in the NT. So myth and fact intertwine in the eastern mind.