Do you think god actually wrote the words? If you do, I'm looking for words that come directly from the creator of the universe.
What I think about the matter is not relevant to providing evidence to you that the words in the Bible come from God. Ether the evidence is valid or it isn't. Since you're asking for evidence then my opinion isn't a factor in that equation.
I expect they will look different than the words that come from barbaric human minds. Something profound?
There are two problems underlying your statement:
1. You need to check your presuppositions.
What makes you think your presuppositions are true about what the words of God have to look like or say?
Your opinion about how you think God needs to talk doesn't necessarily mean it's true.
2. You give no qualifying standards by which you think we could judge God's words from man's. "profound" as an adjective has no objective measuring value, but is a relative term and subject to your opinion of what constitutes profound.
"different" is again another standard you throw out without any qualifiers - Different in what way? How different? And why do you think it needs to be different in such a way to be God?
If you do know of some verses that could only come from god, I'd like to see it.
As I have been pointing out: You have given no objective standard by which one could judge whether or not the words would come from God.
Your question can't be answered because you haven't done a good enough job outlining the parameters of the question first so we know what would constitute a valid answer to your question.
The reason you haven't done this is because you don't even know what the parameters to your own question are. So how can you even determine whether or not the answer will be valid when you don't even know what you're looking for specifically?
"I'll just know if its true" doesn't solve the problem for you: because you are illogically and falsely presuming your sense of knowing is beyond fault. It does not answer the question of how you would know or how we can assume your personal truth detector is accurately calibrated to discern truth from falsehood.
Maybe I'll be convinced as well?
As I already pointed out, your level of persuasion is not relevant to determining what is true from what is false.
So why are you trying to introduce that standard of judgement into the equation of whether or not the Bible has evidence that it's words come from God?
That is the entire purpose of the post, sorry if that is unclear to you.
You are confused. The purpose of your post is not unclear. The problem with your post is that the method by which you seek to establish your purpose is completely non-existent.
You have no idea what specifically you would expect to see if God's words were in the Bible and you have no objective standard by which to judge those words to determine if they are from God.
The best you can offer is just to shrug your shoulders and say "I dunno, I suppose if it really were God's words then I’d just be convinced when I read it".
And, as I said, your viewpoint is based on the fallacious assumption that your own ability to be convinced that something is true is a reliable measure for determining if something is true or not.
But you logically can't assume you'd believe truth if you saw it. Lots of people reject obviously true realities about a great many things - what makes you think you're so special that your opinion about what is true is beyond question so that it becomes the plumb line by which things are determined to be true?
If you do not think god wrote anything, then you can skip this entire post.
I do believe words in the Bible are given to man by God, so I guess I don't need to skip this post.
If you do, then please show me the words that only god could have delivered. You won't need to convince me, it will be obvious.
Woah, hold on right there. Major red flag.
Who says the words of God in the Bible will be obvious?
And obvious to who?
And by what standard is it obvious or not?
You have a lot of unchecked assumptions operating here. Assumptions which you have no reason to believe are true.
Who judges whether or not it's obvious? You, presumably.
What standard do you use to determine if it is obvious? Presumably it's just your opinion. Whatever seems obvious to you, subjectively, according to a standard you haven't even defined.
So that's just setting yourself up to be the judge of whether or not the words are from God based on nothing more than own your personal subjective opinion.
That is not a sound logical basis to make objective judgements about whether or not any word in the Bible came from God.
You are effectively deifying your own mind and thinking you are all knowing and error-less enough to be able to be the decider of what is truth from false simply by looking at it and just knowing somehow.
You have no objective logical standards which would act as a check against your capricious whims of mental fancy.
A) If the creator of the universe was going to write something for all of humanity to read, why does it include idiotic ideas that only a bronze aged human could possibly come up with?
Your question is not relevant to the original question you posed, or relevant to the issues of inadequacy present in your question's parameters.
You are not answering the question of what you would consider evidence of God's words in the Bible by asking me to explain why certain things are in the Bible.
Where is the infinite wisdom on display that you would expect to see on display if an OMNI-style god wrote a book for all of humanity. I'm looking for that god given wisdom. Something that could only be uttered by an all knowing being.
You have still failed to give us any objective qualifying measurements of standards by which you would expect to judge whether or not something is the wisdom of God vs man's wisdom.
How can you expect people to provide you evidence of something if you can't even define what the something is you're looking for?
Who are you to say that the wisdom in the Bible is not the wisdom God would give us?
How would you know what God would or would not want to communicate?
You're making a lot of assumptions which you have no proof could be true.
Where are your standards and measurements coming from? Just your own opinion about the way you think things should be?
You see you're setting up a fallacy of circular reasoning. You're essentially positing the problem with the Bible is that it isn't what you think it should be. Then you're challenging people to prove it is from God by demanding they show you how the Bible actually is what you think it should be.
But you haven't recognized the fallacious assumption underlying the premise of your position; which is the presumption that the Bible should be the way you imagine it should be - and if it's not then that's proof that it's not from God.
You're committing the fallacy of begging the question by using your conclusion as part of your premise.
You can qualify it for yourself. You tell me what you think proves the words could only have come from a real god.
My own qualifications would not be relevant to your original question - since you were the one who claimed you were looking for something specific and you set yourself up as the judge of whether or not that something met your criteria.
If I gave you my own definition of what God's words should look like in the Bible, and an objective standard by which to judge if they are, then you could simply dismiss those examples as failing to meet your challenge because it doesn't meet your personal subjective definition and your criteria. And you have set yourself up as subjective judge of whether or not the criteria are met without regard to any objective measurements.
This is why I have tried to show you the error of the way in which you are posing the question; You have established no common ground or objective measure by which your question could be answered. You have already decided you think the Bible doesn't meet your standard but you won't tell us what that standard is specifically.
So there's no way of disproving your claim because you can't provide the necessary criteria by which the truth or falseness of your claim could be judged.
B) If an all knowing being has a message to deliver, the context should appear to come from an all knowing being, not a bronze age man.
There are two problems with your statement:
1. You are again stating criteria with no qualifiers.
How specifically should it look if it comes from God?
How would you know it if you saw it?
2 You are operating from unproven assumptions.
Who says God's words have to look the way you personally think they should?
What makes you think you can state that as an objective truth rather than just your subjective opinion?
The details do matter because there are competing claims regarding what God wants you to know. Bible, Q'ran, Book of Morman Etc. Which is actually the word of god and which is just crap humans wrote about the gods they believed existed?
You claimed to have a method for determining whether or not writings came from God, but you have refused to give any specifics about how the method would work.
Ie. What are you looking for specifically?
And by what measure will you judge whether or not those specifications have been met?
You challenged us to meet those specifications but haven't been willing to tell us what those specifications actually are and how one would objectively judge them.