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Do you believe the Bible is God's word?

Eddi

Christianity
Premium Member
Because I hope that is true. It gives humans value and hope
That's a nice and harmless belief but I don't think it's rational if the only reason you believe it is because doing so gives you hope

It could give you hope and be false
 

SalixIncendium

अहं ब्रह्मास्मि
Staff member
Premium Member
No, it's an honest question. You can just say "I didn't say there was anything wrong with it" if that's not what you meant.
Actually, it is a loaded question. A question that is not loaded would be, "Is there anything wrong with that?"

I answered the question asked in the OP. I never said or implied there was anything wrong with it. You placed me in a position to defend a claim I never made.
 

Saint Frankenstein

Here for the ride
Premium Member
Actually, it is a loaded question. A question that is not loaded would be, "Is there anything wrong with that?"

I answered the question asked in the OP. I never said or implied there was anything wrong with it. You placed me in a position to defend a claim I never made.
Like I said in the post you replied to:

"You can just say "I didn't say there was anything wrong with it" if that's not what you meant."

It ain't that big of a deal.
 

SalixIncendium

अहं ब्रह्मास्मि
Staff member
Premium Member
All people sherry-pick in religious beliefs and books.
Some do. Perhaps many. But saying that all do is quite the bold claim.

I don't, so according to your claim, either I'm lying or I'm not a person.
 

Starlight

Spiritual but not religious, new age and omnist
Some do. Perhaps many. But saying that all do is quite the bold claim.

I don't, so according to your claim, either I'm lying or I'm not a person.
It is not possible to not perry-picking in some extent. All people do it to some extent. But to different degrees
 

Koldo

Outstanding Member
And what's wrong with that?

What's wrong with picking the facts I like and discarding the ones I dislike by treating them as falsehoods?

It precludes rational discourse. Even though we might all be biased, even though we might disagree on what are the facts, it is a necessity to agree that facts are not a matter of strict personal preference. It would be utterly impossible to have a conversation about anything if we all decided to willfully and intentfully twist each other words according to what we would prefer to hear/read.
 

siti

Well-Known Member
God is against killing innocent people
But isn't the central doctrine (of the Christian interpretation at least) of the Bible based on the notion that God approved of the killing of the most innocent of all men at the hands of the wicked? (Acts 2:23). I don't mean to be unkind or undermine your belief if it brings you comfort, but really, if we embark on the walk of life under the misapprehension that either God or Nature (if they're not one and the same thing) only ever does things that appear "loving and just" to our human sensitivities, I don't think disillusionment can be very far away.
 

siti

Well-Known Member
It would be utterly impossible to have a conversation about anything if we all decided to willfully and intentfully twist each other words according to what we would prefer to hear/read.
Pah! RF threads would become a faint shadow of their former glory if posters refrained from twisting each other's words!
 

SalixIncendium

अहं ब्रह्मास्मि
Staff member
Premium Member
It is not possible to not perry-picking in some extent. All people do it to some extent. But to different degrees
It’s absolutely possible. As I said I do not.

By saying this, you are, as I said, telling me I’m a liar or I’m not a person.
 

siti

Well-Known Member
@siti!! Long time no see! How have you been?
I'm good thanks! Just been very busy with other things...a bit surprised people still remember me...its been about 4 years I think.

I think what @Starlight was getting at is that when we read something we read with our own beliefs and preconceptions already in place and interpret what we read on that basis. I kind of agree that we can't completely avoid that. At the other end of the spectrum, deliberate cherry-picking to shore up one's own conscious preconceptions is probably not a healthy way to investigate a matter and will be seen by others as intellectual dishonesty which doesn't help to promote intelligent debate.

As for the OP, if you chuck out all the parts of the Bible that portray God as other than all-loving and all-just from the perspective of 21st century human society, I doubt there'd be very much left.
 

Koldo

Outstanding Member
Pah! RF threads would become a faint shadow of their former glory if posters refrained from twisting each other's words!

Alas, but I tend to give the benefit of doubt that it is not being done intentionally.
 

SalixIncendium

अहं ब्रह्मास्मि
Staff member
Premium Member
I'm good thanks! Just been very busy with other things...a bit surprised people still remember me...its been about 4 years I think.
I remember those whose posts I enjoy reading, regardless of how long they step away.

I think what @Starlight was getting at is that when we read something we read with our own beliefs and preconceptions already in place and interpret what we read on that basis. I kind of agree that we can't completely avoid that. At the other end of the spectrum, deliberate cherry-picking to shore up one's own conscious preconceptions is probably not a healthy way to investigate a matter and will be seen by others as intellectual dishonesty which doesn't help to promote intelligent debate.

As for the OP, if you chuck out all the parts of the Bible that portray God as other than all-loving and all-just from the perspective of 21st century human society, I doubt there'd be very much left.
I’m confident that everyone applies preconceived biases when reading scripture or practically anything else.

But if one cannot reconcile their scripture with their worldview, is it really their scripture?
 

siti

Well-Known Member
But if one cannot reconcile their scripture with their worldview, is it really their scripture?
Well no! Frankly its a bit disingenuous to co-opt scripture to support a personal worldview and then attempt to twist "the Word" to fit...but...isn't that at least partly why there are tens of thousands of Christian denominations all claiming the Bible as their guide and all teaching different doctrines? God's (unconditional) love is a fairly typical doctrine held by many, if not most of them...and yet the Bible hardly bares it out. I really don't think @Starlight is alone in deliberately overlooking the inconvenient truth of the vengeful and violent God of the Bible - just more open about it than most believers I'd say.
 

Starlight

Spiritual but not religious, new age and omnist
Well no! Frankly its a bit disingenuous to co-opt scripture to support a personal worldview and then attempt to twist "the Word" to fit...but...isn't that at least partly why there are tens of thousands of Christian denominations all claiming the Bible as their guide and all teaching different doctrines? God's (unconditional) love is a fairly typical doctrine held by many, if not most of them...and yet the Bible hardly bares it out. I really don't think @Starlight is alone in deliberately overlooking the inconvenient truth of the vengeful and violent God of the Bible - just more open about it than most believers I'd say.
God is not vengeful or violent

Just read this:

This is a question that participants of The Great Adventure Bible studies frequently ask us, and it’s a tough one to answer. We know that God is all good and all loving. In fact, “God is love” (1 John 4:8). And yet, in the Old Testament, we find various scenes in which God’s people are called to “destroy” other nations. Here’s one example:

“When the LORD your God brings you into the land which you are entering to take possession of it, and clears away many nations before you … and you defeat them; then you must utterly destroy them; you shall make no covenant with them, and show no mercy to them” (Deuteronomy 7:1-2)
John_Martin_-_Sodom_and_Gomorrah
Yikes! These do not sound like the words of a God who “is love.” Troublesome passages like this remind us why it is so important to understand how to interpret Scripture “in accordance with the Spirit who inspired it” (see Catechism of the Catholic Church 111-114). Based on this text alone, without proper context, it’s easy to see why someone might think that God commands evil. If we are to understand what is happening here, then we need to keep in mind the following criteria for biblical interpretation:

  1. Pay attention to the “content and unity of the whole of Scripture” (CCC 112). In other words, the rest of Scripture should help to make sense of this passage. So we can turn to similar passages of the Bible to help shed light on this question.
  2. Read the Bible in light of the “living Tradition” of the Church (CCC 113). We have to take into account what God has revealed to us not only in the written words of Scripture, but also in Sacred Tradition. The Church’s teaching on the command, “Thou shalt not kill,” is that “no one can under any circumstance claim for himself the right directly to destroy an innocent human being” (CCC 2258).
  3. We need to remember that there is a “coherence of truths of the faith” (CCC 113). This means that our faith is not self-contradicting. We cannot say it was morally acceptable for the Israelites to kill innocent people then, but that it is no longer acceptable in our day.
So if God is good, and it’s never morally acceptable to intentionally destroy an innocent person, how are we to understand this? Consider what St. Augustine said about difficult passages of Scripture:

“… if in the Scriptures I meet anything which seems contrary to truth, I shall not hesitate to conclude either that the text is faulty, or that the translator has not expressed the meaning of the passage, or that I myself do not understand” (St. Augustine, Ep. 82, i. et crebrius alibi).
We know it’s never morally acceptable to intentionally kill innocent persons. We also know that God is all good. So what was God asking Israel to do in this passage? Was he calling them to act in an evil way by killing innocent persons? Two other stories in Scripture should help to answer this question.

Abraham, God, and Sodom (Genesis 18-19)

In this story, Abraham is like a defense attorney pleading for clemency on behalf of Sodom (a city with some serious problems, as we learn in Genesis 19). Abraham asks God,

“Will you really sweep away the righteous with the wicked? … Far be it from you to do such a thing, to kill the righteous with the wickedShould not the judge of all the world do what is just?” (Genesis 18:23-25)
Abraham affirms that God is just, and it’s unjust to kill righteous persons. So Abraham asks God if he would spare Sodom if there were fifty, forty, thirty, or ten righteous people in Sodom. In each instance God says that he “will spare the whole place for their sake.” From this we learn that God is indeed just, and he will not kill the innocent. As the Catechism says, “God is infinitely good and all his works are good” (CCC 385). “God is in no way, directly or indirectly, the cause of moral evil” (CCC 311). The interesting thing is that God does end up destroying Sodom in Genesis 19. Does that mean there wasn’t a single righteous person among them? Were there no innocent children? Or is there something more to this scene? Let’s look at our next story and see how it can help explain what might be happening.

The Battle of Jericho (Joshua 6)

Jericho was a city within the Promised Land spoken of in Deuteronomy 7; part of a nation that was to be “utterly destroyed.” In the book of Joshua we see Israel besiege and attack Jericho “putting to the sword all living creatures in the city: men and women, young and old, as well as oxen, sheep and donkeys” (Joshua 6:21). What is happening here? A literalistic interpretation of this passage brings us back to where we started: It would seem God was commanding the death of the innocent, including the young. But is this the only possible way to interpret this text? When we read Scripture, it’s important to distinguish between a literal and a literalistic interpretation of a text. The literalist interprets every word of Scripture as literal, historical truth; and does not distinguish among the various types of writing found in Scripture—including poetry and metaphor.

Poussin_Nicolas_-_The_Victory_of_Joshua_over_the_Amalekites_copy


A literal understanding of Scripture recognizes that “truth is differently presented and expressed in the various types of historical writing” (CCC 110). Is the author of Joshua really intending to say that every single living creature in Jericho was utterly destroyed, including innocent children? The problem with this view is that the story itself has an exception to Jericho’s utter destruction. Rahab and her family are spared (see Joshua 6:25). Is it possible that in these examples the sense of utter destruction was not meant to be understood literally, but was used as an expression? Could this refer to a great—but not total—devastation? We use similar expressions frequently. For example, if I described a comedy I really enjoyed and said “I was dying of laughter,” you wouldn’t begin thinking that I was literally dying. You know that’s just an expression for how funny something was. So too, the idea that “every living creature” in Jericho was killed is quite possibly just an expression.

What’s Deuteronomy Calling Israel to Do?

We know from Abraham’s conversation with God that God does not punish the innocent. So it’s not likely Deuteronomy intended to say that God was commanding the death of everyone. In fact, Deuteronomy goes on to say, “You shall not make marriages with them, giving your daughters to their sons or taking their daughters for your sons” (Deuteronomy 7:3). Why would Deuteronomy need to forbid intermarriage with these nations if they were to be utterly destroyed? There would be no one left to marry among them. It’s more likely that the phrase “utterly destroy” was used as an expression.

Perhaps it was intended to describe a complete victory for Israel; a victory that meant separating themselves from anything that might get in the way of their relationship with God. Actually, that’s the reason Deuteronomy gives for this command, “For [the nations] would turn your sons from following me to serving other gods, and then the anger of the LORD would flare up against you and he would quickly destroy you” (Deuteronomy 7:4). This interpretation would mean that God did not command evil. Rather he commanded Israel to avoid evil by removing those temptations that might lead them astray. Christ uses a similar expression in the New Testament to describe avoiding sin:

“If your right eye causes you to sin, tear it out and throw it away … And if your right hand causes you to sin, cut it off and throw it away. It is better for you to lose one of your members than to have your whole body go into Gehenna” (Matthew 5:29-30).
Christ is not speaking literally. He’s using an expression to illustrate the severity of what he is saying. So the lesson here is, don’t literally cut off your hand, pluck out your eye, or lay waste to a nation. Instead, remove those things in your life that draw you away from the Lord. It’s better to separate yourself from those things than to find yourself separated from God.
 
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