If you want to call something that doesn't support a claim "Evidence" then by all means have at it.
Agree.
I've noticed the same thing with the use of the word alibi in crime shows. Sometimes it means a story that proves innocence, sometimes it means a claim that might not check out or serve as an alibi. This is analogous to evidence, which is anything that makes one of two or more competing hypotheses more or less likely to be true than the alternatives, where people apply the word to things that don't do that.
Evidence is what is evident. We have to ask what it is evidence of. What idea does it tend to support or contradict? When the theist tells me that the world is evidence that a god exists, I point out that there are both naturalistic and supernaturalistic hypotheses for the origin of reality including life and mind, and that the world around us does not support the supernaturalistic one over the naturalisitic one. If anything, careful study of nature over centuries has removed gods from most jobs assigned them by religions, making the naturalisitic option more likely than would be the case were it not possible to do this.
Somebody mentioned that the Bible is not evidence of anything in it, and I agree. Nothing written there makes any of its claims more likely to be true. The Bible is only evidence that somebody wrote it. Somebody said that it is also evidence that the writers believed it, but I don't agree. What would it look like if the authors knew it wasn't true? The same - myths and unsupported claims. Nothing in the Bible helps one decide which authors believed what they wrote and which thought like Luther:
- What harm would it do, if a man told a good strong lie for the sake of the good and for the Christian church … a lie out of necessity, a useful lie, a helpful lie, such lies would not be against God, he would accept them."
Are we to believe that all of the biblical authors were better than this, and wouldn't knowingly lie with the same attitude - all's fair if it promotes our religion?
Jesus was one of the greatest spiritual teachers to ever live.
I keep reading this, but don't know what the evidence for this is. If you want to argue that the words attributed to him have had tremendous impact since his death, I'll agree. But if you want to call them exceptional insights, I just don't see it. What teaching attributed to Jesus is both original to the New Testament and is an insight so great that its author deserves to be called a great spiritual teacher?
As far as I can tell, the only words attributed to Jesus that I consider valuable at all weren't original to Jesus - the Golden Rule.
Furthermore, there are many bad lessons in the Gospels.
Jesus says marriage to a divorcee is adultery, that a man who ogles a woman has already committed adultery, and that you must cut off your hand or pluck out your eye if it offends. All pretty bad advice.
He also says don't save money or plan ahead: "Take therefore no thought for tomorrow: for tomorrow shall take thought of the things for itself. Sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof." Good thing I ignored that one. Instead, I saved for retirement. I live among many other retirees who took Jesus' advice to heart, and now they're living off of their Social Security checks with no savings. I think they wished that they had saved more earlier.
Jesus says, "Do not suppose that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I did not come to bring peace, but a sword." Sorry, but those aren't my values.
Jesus also says, "For I am come to set a man at variance against his father, and the daughter against her mother, and the daughter in law against her mother in law. And a man's foes [shall][be] they of his own household. He that loveth father or mother more than me is not worthy of me: and he that loveth son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me." I can't respect that, either.
How about this? "For there are some eunuchs, which were so born from
their mother's womb: and there are some eunuchs, which were made eunuchs of men: and there be eunuchs, which have made themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven's sake. He that is able to receive
it, let him receive
it." No thanks. Is this what is meant by spiritual genius or greatest spiritual leader of all time?
Jesus says it is more important to anoint him with precious ointment than to give to the poor, who will always be there. Sorry, Jesus, but those aren't my values, and I don't respect that comment.
Jesus says anyone who believes in him can play with venomous snakes or drink poison without harm. Good luck with that.
Who said this? : "But those enemies of mine who did not want me to be king over them, bring them here and kill them in front of me."
Who said this? : "If anyone does not remain in me, he is thrown aside like a branch and he withers. They gather them, throw them into the fire, and they are burned." Really? Imagine Buddha or Confucius writing like that. Unthinkable. Trump I can see. That's not good company for Jesus.
Who said this? : "If anyone comes to you and does not bring this teaching, do not take them into your house or welcome them. Anyone who welcomes them shares in their wicked work." Again more like Trump than Buddha.
Like I said, Jesus has nothing to say that I would be interested in, and makes a lot of moral errors by my standards, which only came to be what they are once I left Christianity. This other stuff was an impediment to spiritual and moral growth, a distraction from better ideas.
So perhaps you can explain why you consider Jesus a great spiritual teacher given the paucity of good ideas attributed to him, but all of these bad ideas are.
Seeking after the truth was what led me to where I am today.
Me, too, but our means to determine truth took us to different intellectual universes. At least one of us made a wrong turn.
Reason is a path to knowledge, by which I mean the collection of useful ideas, but faith is not. Reason is like a road that leads you to sound conclusions when applied properly to relevant evidence. This is why there is only one periodic table of the elements. It was developed applying reason to evidence and then testing the predictions it made empirically. Reason took us to the truth.
Faith isn't a path at all. It's like the open sea. A ship is unconstrained in its direction, and if truth is on one shoreline somewhere, it's extremely unlikely that one's faith-based choice of directions to sail will take him there. This is well represented by the tens of thousands of denominations of Christianity alone. Most or all of them are false, not truth or knowledge. Even if one of them were correct, there is no way to identify which one it is.
Because Constantine realized that in order to have a peaceful empire he needed a state religion and Christianity taught love your enemies.
Agreed. Constantine, like all heads of state, wanted peace, not insurrection. What he wanted was a religion that teaches its adherents to accede to oppression rather than rise up against it, the monarch's nightmare. The religion teaches that civil authorities are there by divine providence and that it is sinful to oppose them. It tells them that being meekness, not to be confused with modesty or humility, is a virtue, when it is actually a poverty of character and the unwillingness to assert oneself when one should. Do you feel oppressed or exploited by Constantine, wear that as a badge of honor. You will be rewarded later for being longsuffering now.
- "How can you have order in a state without religion? For, when one man is dying of hunger near another who is ill of surfeit, he cannot resign himself to this difference unless there is an authority which declares 'God wills it thus.' Religion is excellent stuff for keeping common people quiet." - Napoleon Bonaparte
- "If you want to control a population and keep them passive, give them a god to worship" ~ Noam Chomsky
- "Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by the rulers as useful." -Seneca the Younger
I'm sure that Constantine understood that when he chose Christianity as the state religion.