SkepticThinker
Veteran Member
Because it's an unverifiable story.How does that even matter?
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Because it's an unverifiable story.How does that even matter?
A slave is a person who is the property of someone else, and like property may be bought and sold.
If the skeptic wants to know what any holy book says, he'll go to the source,
This should be obvious as I explained it.What do you mean "they are usually depicted as being real"?
Again, they can be treated as being real characters and that is not out of step with what the narrative is trying to teach in regard to morals and values. Now, whether Jesus saw them as real characters I cannot say as I don't attribute omniscience to Jesus, such as when he said that he did not know when the end times would occur, plus he asked other questions as well.It does make quite a lot of difference, because Jesus' followers referred to Adam - the first man, in correspondence to Jesus - the second man, and his death corresponding to Adam's sin.
So, if Adam is allegorical, or even his sin, then Jesus death is meaningless. Isn't it?
So, you honestly cannot see the morals and/or values taught within the Creation accounts or the Fall narrative?Jesus was not teaching a moral by mentioning the creation of Adam and Eve.
What moral was he teaching?
Excellent! The source is in Hebrew!
Here's one of the verses in Exodus about the betrothed daughter:
אִם־רָעָה בְּעֵינֵי אֲדֹנֶיהָ אֲשֶׁר־לא [לוֹ] יְעָדָהּ וְהֶפְדָּהּ לְעַם נָכְרִי לֹֽא־יִמְשֹׁל לְמָכְרָהּ בְּבִגְדוֹ־בָֽהּ׃
What's the literal translation of רָעָה בְּעֵינֵי? If you don't know, then you really aren't understanding the arrangement being discussed. Hopefully at least with regards to these verses, you will return to a position of skepticism?
Joel Baden goes over the creation story and demonstrates the contradictions.
"Evil in the eyes of the master..." is correct. Thank you. That was obtained from a digital, brainless, non-apologetic source.I'm not so motivated to know what the words mean that I would learn Hebrew or even go to a concordance more than once every ten years if that. That's for people who consider those of divine provenance or otherwise meaningful.
What the words mean is what they say to readers in whatever language they are reading them in. Most people I know who read those words and decide what they mean are looking at English and telling others how they understand them. I have no reason to dig deeper than to go read those words myself and decide what they mean according to the English lexicon.
I did send that Hebrew sentence through a digital translator, and that translation is sufficient.
The literal translation of רָעָה בְּעֵינֵי was "Evil in my eyes."
For the full sentence, my translator yielded, "If she is evil in the eyes of her master, whom she did not know, and gave her to a foreign people, he shall not rule to sell her in his clothing" for the full sentence. That's already a little different.
The KJV translates Exodus 21:8 as, "If she please not her master, who hath betrothed her to himself, then shall he let her be redeemed: to sell her unto a strange nation he shall have no power, seeing he hath dealt deceitfully with her," which is altogether different, but what many or most believers are reading.
But this what the people I encounter who use people I are reading or some similar translation, and their interpretation of the English is what defines their beliefs, which is often not the words mean to me. My point about going to the source pertains to going to the apologists' source.
And when they tell me that it means something other than what it means to me, unless they can provide a compelling argument in support of their own, I go with my understanding. I'm an impartial reasoner, and the believer is often a motivated (tendentious) reasoner.
Yes, like with how Jesus is taught by some Christians... The person is taught to believe they are hopelessly lost sinners and only Jesus can save, so they get saved. Then they are told to prove that they truly believe to lead a sinless life, to be good, honest, humble and they'll be rewarded in heaven.Virtues are largely evolved traits I believe, no proof of God there.
So called "Great Teachers" largely only popularised pre-existing man-made philosophy, their own unique contributions were not so significant as to make them greater than the men who came before them and whose shoulders they stood on in my belief. So no proof of God there either.
In my opinion.
If she's already betrothed? I'd guess no, she'd be no longer merchantable. Does the Tanakh deal with that specific point?Can the betrothed daughter in Exodus be bought or sold?
If she's already betrothed? I'd guess no, she'd be no longer merchantable. Does the Tanakh deal with that specific point?
So many threads and so many posts about proving God is real and that he sent messengers. But without Abraham being a real person, several religions crumble. That is... if they insist that Abraham was real.Lester L. Grabbe
Professor of Hebrew Bible and Early Judaism at the University of Hull, England
10:21 Abraham is probably a fictional character, a foundation myth/character developed for theological and philosophical reasons. The Biblical text was not written down until 7/8th century from oral stories. Abraham was an envisioned character who did things but likely is a literary invention. Anachronisms in his story show they were developed later on.
His story was likely developed with the oral history. Hebrew language was developed around the 7/8th century.
21:34 we have enough historical information to know there was no Exodus and early Israel was in Canaan.
33:43 Genesis uses what we would call plagiarism from Mesopotamian literature.
Plagiarism as an idea was not around back then.
Joel, there's several problems here. I'll just focus on one.Lester L. Grabbe
Professor of Hebrew Bible and Early Judaism at the University of Hull, England
10:21 Abraham is probably a fictional character, a foundation myth/character developed for theological and philosophical reasons. The Biblical text was not written down until 7/8th century from oral stories. Abraham was an envisioned character who did things but likely is a literary invention. Anachronisms in his story show they were developed later on.
His story was likely developed with the oral history. Hebrew language was developed around the 7/8th century.
21:34 we have enough historical information to know there was no Exodus and early Israel was in Canaan.
33:43 Genesis uses what we would call plagiarism from Mesopotamian literature.
Plagiarism as an idea was not around back then.
47:35 Yahweh possibly borrowed from Egyptian text (Yahweh from south)
Nearly every story ever told throughout history is "unverified". That has nothing at all to do with the story's ability to convey truth.Because it's an unverifiable story.
Yes! That's the point. It's specified in Exodus 21:8. She cannot be sold. So she's not treated as property. At least not to the extent that one would expect for a slave.
scholars sourced in article about impossible world flood
The Bible describes many of those things as directly commanded by God.You don't understand the difference between allowing something and wanting something?
Okay. To allow something does not mean to want something.
Yes: sounds like your God is either weak or incompetent.For example, you may not want all your teeth taken out of your mouth, but you may allow the physician to do so, because it may be necessary.
Does that help?
Here is how that works. Dr Bowen is a PhD in language of the period. He has credentials for understanding the biblical Hebrew. The 2 apologists he is debating do not.You have too much faith in men who agree with you.
Hopefully that has not blinded you to the fact that they are not the epitome of truth.
I fear that may be the case though.
Absence of evidence argument?
Abraham
The stories thus portray a process of gradual peaceful settlement by separate groups, each represented by a different patriarch. The combination of the traditions reflects the subsequent amalgamation of the groups with their traditions, which led to the creation of the genealogical chain of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. This whole process of tradition development is viewed as taking place at the oral tradition stage, before it reached the written form.
This approach has not gone unchallenged (Van Seters, 1975). The degree to which the stories of Abraham reflect a long process of oral tradition is debatable.
Abraham
Hebrew patriarch
Several theses were advanced to explain the narratives—e.g., that the patriarchs were mythical beings or the personifications of tribes or folkloric or etiological (explanatory) figures created to account for various social, juridical, or cultic patterns. However, after World War I, archaeological research made enormous strides with the discovery of monuments and documents, many of which date back to the period assigned to the patriarchs in the traditional account. The excavation of a royal palace at Mari, an ancient city on the Euphrates, for example, brought to light thousands of cuneiform tablets (official archives and correspondence and religious and juridical texts) and thereby offered exegesis a new basis, which specialists utilized to show that, in the biblical book of Genesis, narratives fit perfectly with what, from other sources, is known today of the early 2nd millennium bce but imperfectly with a later period. A biblical scholar in the 1940s aptly termed this result “the rediscovery of the Old Testament.”
Thus, there are two main sources for reconstructing the figure of father Abraham: the book of Genesis—from the genealogy of Terah (Abraham’s father) and his departure from Ur to Harran in chapter 11 to the death of Abraham in chapter 25—and recent archaeological discoveries and interpretations concerning the area and era in which the biblical narrative takes place.