Mr_Spinkles said:
It's difficult to say how much of religion depends on observation...on the one hand, the ancient Jews believed epilepsy was caused by demons...although I will concede that you can observe epilepsy, their conclusion (that it was caused by demons) was definitely NOT based on observation
I have so many problems with this statement, I don't know where to begin. First, my son has epilepsy. It is a horrible disease. At its very best it robbs a person of their independence, at its worse... well we don't go there. The treatment is not prize either. My son now lack concentration and his creativity appears to be affected as well. He use to read profusely, he doesn't any more.
I believe there is a war in this world, sometimes seen, sometimes unseen. I know whose side I'm on, I'm His son. He is not responsible for this horrible disease, but somebody is responsible. So you believe what you want, but I know. I have seen, and I know.
Next, epilepsy is a modern diagnosis. I don't think any doctor could, in good conscience, give a reasonable diagnosis based on any decription of a person's physical condition recorded in the Bible. Who is to say that the people that were described in the Bible where not possessed. You weren't there. You don't believe the people that where, so what's it to you?
Mr_Spinkles said:
Notice that despite today's modern video and sound recording equipment, there is actually less evidence of angels, demons, etc. appearing to people than there supposedly was in ancient times (when people blindly believed much of what they read and heard--and hearing/reading stories was the only evidence for supernatural events they had).
First, you haven't been seeing the same videos I have. Second, assuming that angels, demons, etc. are even slightly more intelligent than we are, isn't it logical that they could avoid detection if they chose to? In almost every movie I watch, the first thing that the people do is circumvent the video equipment, and those are just people. Finally, the Bible record what is proported to be a first hand account, for which there is very good archeological evidence.
Mr_Spinkles said:
The funny thing about tall tales is they can be believed, but not repeated. Also, they tend to be second or third hand testimony.
Some tall tales are true, many things cannot be repeated, murders, for instance. But you would reject even multiple first hand evidence of a supernatural event, which of course is your right, but I don't understand why you judge people who believe it.
Mr_Spinkles said:
When a bunch of Christians agree on something...well, of course they agree--they are all Christians.
I take an opposite view. If most people agree about something, be them Christians, scientists, or whatever, they are probably wrong. The majority is usually wrong. I think you must have a rather limited view of Christianity, and those that seriously practice it, but the point that I was trying to make was that most science is based on other science, it would be prohibitively time consuming to question every bit of science that came before. I do agree that on occasion it is necessary to question old beliefs, I do that every day in my Christian walk. I would also agree that most christians don't do that, most scientists don't do that either.
Mr_Spinkles said:
Science is what religion has always tried to be, largely unsuccessfully--a reliable method of finding the answers to things. The ancients thought the best method was to consult the religious leaders in power, or ancient scriptures. Nowadays, if you want to know the causes of epilepsy, you study it using the scientific method with controlled experiments, you don't consult the Bible.
The basic assumption of a scientific world-view (as opposed to SCIENCE) is that TRUTH can be known only by what can be observed, explained, repeated, and tested. Anything that does not satisfy all scientific assumptions cannot be addressed by science, but rather that accepting that there are some things which cannot be known by science, those with a scientific world-view deny that these things even exist.
I agree that if one wants to know the causes of epilepsy, one should set up controlled experiments, etc. I belive that the Bible authors would also agree, but that would not change their belief or mine that it was Satan behind all misery and pain. It also would not change my confidence that it is God behind any treatment or cure. I also believe that God does not depend on science to cure people, I believe He has the ability to transcend science as we know it.
Mr_Spinkles said:
The purpose of religious "truths" in my opinion is to make a person FEEL a certain way about something...not provide a definite answer on how that something works. Notice that many religions are against the healthy, skeptical attitude required for any legitimate search for truth. This is because questioning leads to discomfort and disunity within a community, which are the exact opposite of what religion intends to accomplish.
If that is the case than Jesus was a scientist. He also wasn't concerned with making people feel better, he was interested in real change. I'm in favor of questioning and the legitimate search for truth. I agree that it can lead to discomfort and disunity, but only among those that do not want to accept the truth. For everyone else, the truth sets them free.
Just because most people are wrong about a subject does not make an investigation of the subject illogical.