linwood
Well-Known Member
This is split off of the "My brain and its constant questions" thread because AE and my back and forth arguing is taking ness`s thread off topic.
AE,
I had rebutted your last signifigant post to me (#101) point by point until I realised I was going to eat a hell of alot of bandwidth and succeed in allowing you to get away from the point.
So instead I`m going to try to address what I feel are the most significant points you made,condense a few others, and entirely ignore the rest.
:jiggy:
First though I want to re-iterate the original question that you never really answered.
-Please define the standards by which the revelations of the Bible are verified as "truth" .
-Please show that these standards aren`t based in some way on inherent Christian or Judaic bias or the Christian/Judiac scriptures themselves.
-Please explain how scientific method is used in these reviews.
Examples would be..
1: How has Christian/Judaic review used their standards to reject the "divinity" of the Koran to be "uninspired" yet used those same standards to find the NT and OT to be "divine".
2: Show how those same standards have been used to review the Cannonical Gospels comparitively.
The only answers you`ve given for these questions is...
[font="]The content of revelation is the means by which we can establish criterea for review
Which is more than vague
And
[/font][font="] (1) It was read in the churches - the OT was previously the only document read in the Jewish synogouge because it was accepted as the normative word of God. The fact that it was read in the churches is one of the most important criterea for later canonization. (2) The church fathers used it as the primary source for theology and instruction. The other source was tradition, which was derived from the NT.
Which contains nothing to verify divinity nor does it even resemble the "scientific" method you mentioned.
Not to mention that it presupposes the "truth" of Judaism/Christianity.
[/font]
Also please explain what you mean by.....
[font="]...the record of the revelation becomes a part of nature ...
...[/font][font="]when a person claims to have something from God, the revelation enters the natural realm...[/font]
[font="]
...as you`ve been using it in alot of your postings lately and I`m uncertain what you mean.
All you have given as evidence of any standard is mysticism and tradition.
Niether of which are very compelling.
[/font]
_____________________________________________________________________
Above that line is really all I am truly interested in.
What follows is merely commentary on some of the arguments you used in the other thread and are not directly relevant to the OP.
[font="]When I wrote that the NT was widely accepted as revelation,[/font][font="]
[/font][font="]No, you did not, you wrote...
[/font][font="]...and the NT was immedeately accepted as revelation. [/font][font="]
There is a rather large difference of intent between the two statements
.
[/font][font="]When I wrote that the NT was widely accepted as revelation,[/font][font="] [/font]
[font="]I did so based upon a critical study of history with very specific criterea, and you incorrectly point to the church councils as proof for Christians accepting the NT as revelation.[/font][font="]
[/font][font="]I did no such thing
[/font][font="] The councils did canonize the NT, but the NT itself claims to be revelation, and several characteristics of the NT church prove that it was widely accepted.[/font][font="]
[/font][font="]I never said it wasn`t widely accepted.
I said it wasn`t immediately accepted and it wasn`t, not in the form the councils eventually gave it.
How long did it take to canonize the NT in the form it is now?
How many councils were involved?
The Orthodox Christian Church existed for well over 300 years before the NT was widely accepted and even then it was disputed by numerous Christian sects.
Thats where you got those heretical Arians and Gnostic Christians.
The NT in it`s current form wasn`t widely accepted for decades even after it was compiled and deemed "divine".
Lastly I give you the Cathars and the Albigensian Crusade in the 13th century as evidence that even 900 years after the NT was cannonized there were very large VERY LARGE portions of believers that did not accept it .
To this very day different Christian sects can`t even agree on what the NT says millenia after it`s acceptance.
I mentioned the ecumenical councils but I specifically singled out the Council of Nicea.
the council of Nicea had nothing to do with canonizing the NT.
I used Nicea as example not as support for canonization of the NT but as evidence of the disagreement within Christianity about what was divine dogma/scripture and what was heresy.
Particularly pointing out the Christian Arian faith which did not agree with what the Council of Nicea eventually published as it`s creed.
[/font][font="]Scientific and reasonable review is the reason why Christians reject the Gnostic Gospels, the JW's, the Mormons, Christian Science, and many other Christian sects. Their prophesies simply don't add up or make sense.
When compared to Christian dogma.
When compared on an equal footing they stand up every bit as well as the NT and OT which is to say "Not very well".
Scientific method would not presuppose the scripture of the NT was correct and use it for comparitive review of other texts.
There is nothing "scientific" about this method.
Considering the prophecies of Christianity don`t add up either sort of hurts your position.
[/font][font="]Historical and reasonable review has been very very kind to Christianity.[/font][font="]
They obviously never reviewed the Gospels or Exodus.
Or did you mean to say "Christian" historical and reasonable review has been very very kind to Christianity.
That would make sense.[/font]
[font="]
[/font]
[font="]
[/font]
AE,
I had rebutted your last signifigant post to me (#101) point by point until I realised I was going to eat a hell of alot of bandwidth and succeed in allowing you to get away from the point.
So instead I`m going to try to address what I feel are the most significant points you made,condense a few others, and entirely ignore the rest.
:jiggy:
First though I want to re-iterate the original question that you never really answered.
-Please define the standards by which the revelations of the Bible are verified as "truth" .
-Please show that these standards aren`t based in some way on inherent Christian or Judaic bias or the Christian/Judiac scriptures themselves.
-Please explain how scientific method is used in these reviews.
Examples would be..
1: How has Christian/Judaic review used their standards to reject the "divinity" of the Koran to be "uninspired" yet used those same standards to find the NT and OT to be "divine".
2: Show how those same standards have been used to review the Cannonical Gospels comparitively.
The only answers you`ve given for these questions is...
[font="]The content of revelation is the means by which we can establish criterea for review
Which is more than vague
And
[/font][font="] (1) It was read in the churches - the OT was previously the only document read in the Jewish synogouge because it was accepted as the normative word of God. The fact that it was read in the churches is one of the most important criterea for later canonization. (2) The church fathers used it as the primary source for theology and instruction. The other source was tradition, which was derived from the NT.
Which contains nothing to verify divinity nor does it even resemble the "scientific" method you mentioned.
Not to mention that it presupposes the "truth" of Judaism/Christianity.
[/font]
Also please explain what you mean by.....
[font="]...the record of the revelation becomes a part of nature ...
...[/font][font="]when a person claims to have something from God, the revelation enters the natural realm...[/font]
[font="]
...as you`ve been using it in alot of your postings lately and I`m uncertain what you mean.
All you have given as evidence of any standard is mysticism and tradition.
Niether of which are very compelling.
[/font]
_____________________________________________________________________
Above that line is really all I am truly interested in.
What follows is merely commentary on some of the arguments you used in the other thread and are not directly relevant to the OP.
[font="]When I wrote that the NT was widely accepted as revelation,[/font][font="]
[/font][font="]No, you did not, you wrote...
[/font][font="]...and the NT was immedeately accepted as revelation. [/font][font="]
There is a rather large difference of intent between the two statements
.
[/font][font="]When I wrote that the NT was widely accepted as revelation,[/font][font="] [/font]
[font="]I did so based upon a critical study of history with very specific criterea, and you incorrectly point to the church councils as proof for Christians accepting the NT as revelation.[/font][font="]
[/font][font="]I did no such thing
[/font][font="] The councils did canonize the NT, but the NT itself claims to be revelation, and several characteristics of the NT church prove that it was widely accepted.[/font][font="]
[/font][font="]I never said it wasn`t widely accepted.
I said it wasn`t immediately accepted and it wasn`t, not in the form the councils eventually gave it.
How long did it take to canonize the NT in the form it is now?
How many councils were involved?
The Orthodox Christian Church existed for well over 300 years before the NT was widely accepted and even then it was disputed by numerous Christian sects.
Thats where you got those heretical Arians and Gnostic Christians.
The NT in it`s current form wasn`t widely accepted for decades even after it was compiled and deemed "divine".
Lastly I give you the Cathars and the Albigensian Crusade in the 13th century as evidence that even 900 years after the NT was cannonized there were very large VERY LARGE portions of believers that did not accept it .
To this very day different Christian sects can`t even agree on what the NT says millenia after it`s acceptance.
I mentioned the ecumenical councils but I specifically singled out the Council of Nicea.
the council of Nicea had nothing to do with canonizing the NT.
I used Nicea as example not as support for canonization of the NT but as evidence of the disagreement within Christianity about what was divine dogma/scripture and what was heresy.
Particularly pointing out the Christian Arian faith which did not agree with what the Council of Nicea eventually published as it`s creed.
[/font][font="]Scientific and reasonable review is the reason why Christians reject the Gnostic Gospels, the JW's, the Mormons, Christian Science, and many other Christian sects. Their prophesies simply don't add up or make sense.
When compared to Christian dogma.
When compared on an equal footing they stand up every bit as well as the NT and OT which is to say "Not very well".
Scientific method would not presuppose the scripture of the NT was correct and use it for comparitive review of other texts.
There is nothing "scientific" about this method.
Considering the prophecies of Christianity don`t add up either sort of hurts your position.
[/font][font="]Historical and reasonable review has been very very kind to Christianity.[/font][font="]
They obviously never reviewed the Gospels or Exodus.
Or did you mean to say "Christian" historical and reasonable review has been very very kind to Christianity.
That would make sense.[/font]
[font="]
[/font]
[font="]
[/font]