Neo Deist: A rational person could look at my user name and instantly be able to identify the basis of my beliefs.
On another site, I have been debating an ordained Christian minister who is a panentheist. Some liberal Christian ministers are functionally deists. So your claim to be an ordained minister who grew up in the Baptist tradition makes the assumption that your ordination is Christian a natural assumption.
You really must think through your juxtaposition of related claims.
Neo Deist: Unless Alexander was in drag (admittedly their attire was "odd") I think you have some confusion going on there. And yes, his history is hearsay.
Your use of my typo actually betrays your historical ignorance. Alexander had a male lover named Hephaestion.
Neo Deist: BTW, I have never said that hearsay is not truthful, just that the person was not an eyewitness.
Now I got you to waffle. Good! Your need to caricature prompts to keep assuming I'm talking about eyewitnesses. Now take a deep breath and reread my posts, and you'll see I'm talking about" "connections to the eyewitnesses" and asking you why you reject their testimony.
Draka: If hearsay is all you need to believe something then why do you not take the word of others in regards to other beliefs and traditions?
Where do you find me saying I don't? For example, I provisionally accept the fact that Muhammad had a series of mystical experiences that he attributed to the angel Gabriel and ultimately to Allah. But then I ask whether there is reason to believe he was mistaken. Then I notice all the contradictions in the Quran and, more importantly (for me), the fact that most of what the Quran says about Jesus derives from discredited late 2nd to 5th century Christian infancy Gospels. I asked Neo why he rejects Gospel materials that derive from eyewitnesses of Jesus. I expect a more intelligent answer than the hearsay bromide.
IN my thread on connections to eyewitnesses of Jesus, I suggest that the preservation of embarrassing details that one might expect to be excised bears witness to Jesus material that warrants a serious hearing: e. g. the claim that Jesus' own brothers rejected His claims, the claim that he tried and failed to perform miracles in his home down, the claim that He failed in his first attempt to heal the blind man of Bethsaida, but succeeded on his 2nd attempt.
So when Neo's wife tells him Judy said she's getting a divorce, I'll bet Neo accepts his wife's claim that that's what Judy told her. Judy may in fact later change her mind or may just be giving vent to temporary feelings of hostility that she may not follow through on with divorce proceedings. .