I see a lot of Christian haters on this forum.

Page 11 of 12 [ 177 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1 ... 8, 9, 10, 11, 12  Next

Philologos
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 21 Jan 2010
Age: 83
Gender: Male
Posts: 6,987

30 Aug 2011, 6:59 pm

See - there it is.

By you - you have what seem to you adequate reason to believe it is all conditioned a to b to c and God alone knows what came before a. Only you cannot plot the conditioning enough to prove with proof.

By me - I have what seem to me adequate reason to believe it is all driven and steered from Gen 1:1 through to Revelation by God - and who can postulate where / how God was before he turned the light on? But I cannot bring the proofs to Show and Tell, and most will say it thundered.

So - which one of us has a right to call the other a self-deluding idiot - and on what ground?

I am Thomas - ready at any moment to change stance if the evidence piles up in another direction.

Hopefully you can say the same - I would hate to waste verbiage on a surface thinker.



91
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 30 Oct 2010
Age: 41
Gender: Male
Posts: 3,063
Location: Australia

30 Aug 2011, 7:33 pm

Awesomelyglorious wrote:
91, you're relying on the very nitpicky distinction between a logical contradiction and a more general disproof.


There is no such thing as a general disproof in relation to logic, you making up terms now. There are two arguments from evil; the logical and the evidential. Thom_Fuleri did not distinguish between the two, hence my statement that he was unaware of the discourse. When discussing the problem of evil, it is first worth discovering which one they are talking about.

Thom_Fuleri wrote:
It doesn't disprove the existence of god - just the existence of a nice one with any reasonable power.


As soon as you start talking about disproving things, you need to use more than the evidential argument; otherwise the language must be kept to strict probability statements. This is a mistake AG that you have repeatedly made also.

Awesomelyglorious wrote:
And you have to realize that he's never actually committed to the idea that God's non-existence is 100% shown as true. Instead, you've pigeon-holed him into that because there is something defective in how your brain handles opposing ideas.


See previous statement, you are making the same mistake.

Awesomelyglorious wrote:
91, the confabulations you put up are absurd.


They don't have to be any like probable, this is the logical form of the argument, I just showed a way they could logically work together, that is enough to end the argument.

Thom_Fuleri wrote:
God's will necessarily must ALWAYS be done, so this means our free will can only be free when it agrees with God's. We cannot go against God's will, and thus we don't really have free will.


Do you really want to go there... I seriously doubt that you have read up enough on Molinism, Arminianism or even Open Theism to really justify such a comment.


_________________
Life is real ! Life is earnest!
And the grave is not its goal ;
Dust thou art, to dust returnest,
Was not spoken of the soul.


Awesomelyglorious
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 17 Dec 2005
Gender: Male
Posts: 13,157
Location: Omnipresent

30 Aug 2011, 7:42 pm

91 wrote:
There is no such thing as a general disproof in relation to logic, you making up terms now. There are two arguments from evil; the logical and the evidential. Thom_Fuleri did not distinguish between the two, hence my statement that he was unaware of the discourse. When discussing the problem of evil, it is first worth discovering which one they are talking about.

Empirical disproofs are possible. Even further, most people are not going to consider the distinction practically useful. I mean, MAYBE God is logically incompatible with certain fact, but he is certainly unlikely given certain facts. An incompatibility claim is just a very very high degree of probability. (100% probability)

Quote:
As soon as you start talking about disproving things, you need to use more than the evidential argument; otherwise the language must be kept to strict probability statements. This is a mistake AG that you have repeatedly made also.

The term "disproof" in general discourse allows for empirical arguments and a high probability of incompatibility. "I saw John Doe last week" is enough to disprove the notion that John Doe died two weeks ago, however, nobody believes that seeing someone a week ago is logically air-tight.

Quote:
They don't have to be any like probable, this is the logical form of the argument, I just showed a way they could logically work together, that is enough to end the argument.

Umm....... the issue is that he's not committing to either. Knocking God from 100% to 99.99% unlikely is not a significant alteration, so it doesn't matter.

Quote:
Do you really want to go there... I seriously doubt that you have read up enough on Molinism, Arminianism or even Open Theism to really justify such a comment.

Arminianism usually is underdeveloped. We've already discussed Molinism enough to know that it has significant and well-recognized problems, particularly in that God can use dummy variables as a way of getting any desired outcome. Open theism rejects God's foreknowledge and thus isn't part of the discussion.



91
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 30 Oct 2010
Age: 41
Gender: Male
Posts: 3,063
Location: Australia

30 Aug 2011, 7:57 pm

Awesomelyglorious wrote:
Empirical disproofs are possible. Even further, most people are not going to consider the distinction practically useful. I mean, MAYBE God is logically incompatible with certain fact, but he is certainly unlikely given certain facts. An incompatibility claim is just a very very high degree of probability.


Empirical disproofs certainly can be crafted, that is no excuse for ignoring the choice between the incompatibility formulation and the evidential formulation of the problem of evil. Further, you are mistaken, an incompatibility claim is not just another sort of probability claim, the two are in fact, irreconcilable.

Quote:
The term "disproof" in general discourse allows for empirical arguments and a high probability of incompatibility.


You really never studied philosophical arguments, your just being openly sloppy now.

Quote:
Umm....... the issue is that he's not committing to either. Knocking God from 100% to 99.99% unlikely is not a significant alteration, so it doesn't matter.


Its refutes the logical problem of evil; by far the more powerful of the two in terms of conclusion.

Quote:
Arminianism usually is underdeveloped. We've already discussed Molinism enough to know that it has significant and well-recognized problems, particularly in that God can use dummy variables as a way of getting any desired outcome. Open theism rejects God's foreknowledge and thus isn't part of the discussion.


Have we, I must have missed the part where you became an expert on divine foreknowledge and overturned centuries of study.


_________________
Life is real ! Life is earnest!
And the grave is not its goal ;
Dust thou art, to dust returnest,
Was not spoken of the soul.


Awesomelyglorious
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 17 Dec 2005
Gender: Male
Posts: 13,157
Location: Omnipresent

30 Aug 2011, 8:07 pm

91 wrote:
Empirical disproofs certainly can be crafted, that is no excuse for ignoring the choice between the incompatibility formulation and the evidential formulation of the problem of evil. Further, you are mistaken, an incompatibility claim is not just another sort of probability claim, the two are in fact, irreconcilable.

Irreconcilability is the possibility of two traits existing in conjunction being 0%. That's.... just that. If there is a deeply implausible possibility though, where the two ideas are compatible, all that is shown is that the probability is 0+I%, where I is the probability of the implausible possibility. However, for all other worlds, the ideas are still incompatible as far as we know.

Quote:
You really never studied philosophical arguments, your just being openly sloppy now.

Hunh??? I was talking about "general discourse". You're being openly stupid.... again.

Quote:
Its refutes the logical problem of evil; by far the more powerful of the two in terms of conclusion.

Right??? And.... if God is now 99.99% unlikely, how does this matter?

Quote:
Have we, I must have missed the part where you became an expert on divine foreknowledge and overturned centuries of study.

Molinism is the major idea, and it has well-known conceptual flaws, 91. This isn't controversial, and the rhetoric doesn't change a damn thing about that. I mean, seriously 91, the popularity of Open Theism is in part a matter of the perceived flaws in reconciling free will and foreknowledge in a philosophical sense. In any case, your bluster is not proof of anything.



91
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 30 Oct 2010
Age: 41
Gender: Male
Posts: 3,063
Location: Australia

30 Aug 2011, 8:36 pm

Awesomelyglorious wrote:
Irreconcilability is the possibility of two traits existing in conjunction being 0%. That's.... just that. If there is a deeply implausible possibility though, where the two ideas are compatible, all that is shown is that the probability is 0+I%, where I is the probability of the implausible possibility. However, for all other worlds, the ideas are still incompatible as far as we know.


You continue to ride is a haphazard fashion between two very different sorts of arguments. The logical problem of evil is powerful simply because it does not allow one any escape or resort to wider evidence if it stands. The evidential argument from evil, far from being powerful, allows for this. It means that your probability calculation has to take into account the positive evidence for the existence of God also; not just, what you see as the cumulative evidence against. The end result is a formula so complex, that the possibility just becomes a statement of how likely the author thinks the existence of God is. For example, you can say, God most likely does not have a reason for x and conclude the existence unlikely. I can say, given the positive evidence God must have a reason for x and make it likely. The argument requires an almost omniscient calculation to be accurate. Otherwise it is just ends up being subjective.


_________________
Life is real ! Life is earnest!
And the grave is not its goal ;
Dust thou art, to dust returnest,
Was not spoken of the soul.


Awesomelyglorious
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 17 Dec 2005
Gender: Male
Posts: 13,157
Location: Omnipresent

30 Aug 2011, 8:44 pm

91 wrote:
You continue to ride is a haphazard fashion between two very different sorts of arguments. The logical problem of evil is powerful simply because it does not allow one any escape or resort to wider evidence if it stands. The evidential argument from evil, far from being powerful, allows for this. It means that your probability calculation has to take into account the positive evidence for the existence of God also; not just, what you see as the cumulative evidence against. The end result is a formula so complex, that the possibility just becomes a statement of how likely the author thinks the existence of God is. For example, you can say, God most likely does not have a reason for x and conclude the existence unlikely. I can say, given the positive evidence God must have a reason for x and make it likely. The argument requires an almost omniscient calculation to be accurate. Otherwise it is just ends up being subjective.

Except it really doesn't. God obviously fails any sensible probability calculation, as there are such a large number of evils and such poor explanations for why they exist, that the idea that God is implausible becomes obvious. Even requiring a calculation ends up being silly and more demonstrative than it being a situation where the math is really doing the heavy lifting. God is just a stupid idea.



Master_Pedant
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 14 Mar 2009
Age: 35
Gender: Male
Posts: 4,903

30 Aug 2011, 9:02 pm

91 wrote:
Awesomelyglorious wrote:
Arminianism usually is underdeveloped. We've already discussed Molinism enough to know that it has significant and well-recognized problems, particularly in that God can use dummy variables as a way of getting any desired outcome. Open theism rejects God's foreknowledge and thus isn't part of the discussion.


Have we, I must have missed the part where you became an expert on divine foreknowledge and overturned centuries of study.


So citing an uncontroversial textbook definition of a rather elementary term in a very uncontroversial field is an "[inapproperiate] appeal to authority", yet referencing the mere fact that there are controversial schools of thought is enough to refute AG's refutations of said schools?


_________________
http://www.voterocky.org/


Awesomelyglorious
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 17 Dec 2005
Gender: Male
Posts: 13,157
Location: Omnipresent

30 Aug 2011, 9:06 pm

Master_Pedant wrote:
91 wrote:
Awesomelyglorious wrote:
Arminianism usually is underdeveloped. We've already discussed Molinism enough to know that it has significant and well-recognized problems, particularly in that God can use dummy variables as a way of getting any desired outcome. Open theism rejects God's foreknowledge and thus isn't part of the discussion.


Have we, I must have missed the part where you became an expert on divine foreknowledge and overturned centuries of study.


So citing an uncontroversial textbook definition of a rather elementary term in a very uncontroversial field is an "[inapproperiate] appeal to authority", yet referencing the mere fact that there are controversial schools of thought is enough to refute AG's refutations of said schools?

According to 91 logic, apparently so.



Orwell
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 8 Aug 2007
Age: 36
Gender: Male
Posts: 12,518
Location: Room 101

30 Aug 2011, 9:12 pm

Awesomelyglorious wrote:
Thom_Fuleri wrote:
Oh, I don't expect to change anyone's views. I just like poking people's sillier beliefs and seeing how they react. 91 is a wall-builder. Some lash out, some run away, some use the "la la la I'm not listening" response, but wall-builders just keep laying more bricks to keep the evidence out. It's fun to dismantle them as they build and see them get flustered.

That's the thing. 91 actually won't be dismantled as he'll come up with some line of BS and pretend it's reasonable and actually accuse you of dishonesty for not buying into his anti-reason. It's.... one of the stranger things I've seen.

Yeah, 91 is going to walk out of here thinking that he's won the argument and demonstrated mistakes in your reasoning regardless of whether they are real or not. He's mental. I don't know why either of you are bothering to engage him. Especially AG, who has already spent pages and pages on this exact debate with 91.

We already know this guy is profoundly irrational. We already know he rejects plain facts, textbook definitions, and basic logic whenever they become inconvenient to him (which is quite often). There is nothing to be gained from discussion with such a mind.


_________________
WAR IS PEACE
FREEDOM IS SLAVERY
IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH


Awesomelyglorious
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 17 Dec 2005
Gender: Male
Posts: 13,157
Location: Omnipresent

30 Aug 2011, 9:16 pm

Orwell wrote:
Awesomelyglorious wrote:
Thom_Fuleri wrote:
Oh, I don't expect to change anyone's views. I just like poking people's sillier beliefs and seeing how they react. 91 is a wall-builder. Some lash out, some run away, some use the "la la la I'm not listening" response, but wall-builders just keep laying more bricks to keep the evidence out. It's fun to dismantle them as they build and see them get flustered.

That's the thing. 91 actually won't be dismantled as he'll come up with some line of BS and pretend it's reasonable and actually accuse you of dishonesty for not buying into his anti-reason. It's.... one of the stranger things I've seen.

Yeah, 91 is going to walk out of here thinking that he's won the argument and demonstrated mistakes in your reasoning regardless of whether they are real or not. He's mental. I don't know why either of you are bothering to engage him. Especially AG, who has already spent pages and pages on this exact debate with 91.

We already know this guy is profoundly irrational. We already know he rejects plain facts, textbook definitions, and basic logic whenever they become inconvenient to him (which is quite often). There is nothing to be gained from discussion with such a mind.

Orwell, don't be silly. We both know why I would engage 91. It's because I am profoundly irrational in another way. http://xkcd.com/386/



91
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 30 Oct 2010
Age: 41
Gender: Male
Posts: 3,063
Location: Australia

30 Aug 2011, 9:51 pm

Awesomelyglorious wrote:
Except it really doesn't. God obviously fails any sensible probability calculation, as there are such a large number of evils and such poor explanations for why they exist, that the idea that God is implausible becomes obvious.


You just ignored the wider evidence, hence why the argument is considered flawed for that reason. I would say that on the whole the evidence for the existence of God is pretty good. Hence why you need a logical disproof, but you cant generate one. Arguing past this, takes you well past the evidential argument from evil... it essentially makes it an argument for or against god with all evidence available. Since you an atheist I don't expect you to find the evidence as compelling as I do, but to me and to many others it is. Hence the limitation of the argument.


_________________
Life is real ! Life is earnest!
And the grave is not its goal ;
Dust thou art, to dust returnest,
Was not spoken of the soul.


Telekon
Velociraptor
Velociraptor

User avatar

Joined: 16 Feb 2011
Age: 39
Gender: Male
Posts: 411

31 Aug 2011, 1:54 am

Awesomelyglorious wrote:
Except it really doesn't. God obviously fails any sensible probability calculation, as there are such a large number of evils and such poor explanations for why they exist, that the idea that God is implausible becomes obvious. Even requiring a calculation ends up being silly and more demonstrative than it being a situation where the math is really doing the heavy lifting. God is just a stupid idea.


The validity of the problem of evil argument does not entail the non-existence of God. It entails the non-existence of an all-good God. The argument is not sufficiently general to defeat all forms of theism. IOW, even if the problem of evil argument is valid, the possibility remains that some form of theism that doesn't conceive of God as an all-good being is true (e.g., deism, process theism, Aristotelianism, Judaism).



Thom_Fuleri
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 7 Mar 2010
Age: 47
Gender: Male
Posts: 849
Location: Leicestershire, UK

31 Aug 2011, 11:08 am

Philologos wrote:
See - there it is.

By you - you have what seem to you adequate reason to believe it is all conditioned a to b to c and God alone knows what came before a. Only you cannot plot the conditioning enough to prove with proof.

By me - I have what seem to me adequate reason to believe it is all driven and steered from Gen 1:1 through to Revelation by God - and who can postulate where / how God was before he turned the light on? But I cannot bring the proofs to Show and Tell, and most will say it thundered.

So - which one of us has a right to call the other a self-deluding idiot - and on what ground?

I am Thomas - ready at any moment to change stance if the evidence piles up in another direction.

Hopefully you can say the same - I would hate to waste verbiage on a surface thinker.


Dude... what?
If you're replying to something, please quote it. Otherwise it reads like you're talking to the voices in your head.



Thom_Fuleri
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 7 Mar 2010
Age: 47
Gender: Male
Posts: 849
Location: Leicestershire, UK

31 Aug 2011, 11:19 am

Awesomelyglorious wrote:
Orwell wrote:
We already know this guy is profoundly irrational. We already know he rejects plain facts, textbook definitions, and basic logic whenever they become inconvenient to him (which is quite often). There is nothing to be gained from discussion with such a mind.

Orwell, don't be silly. We both know why I would engage 91. It's because I am profoundly irrational in another way. http://xkcd.com/386/


But of course. I don't argue to win, I argue for the fun of it. I'll quit when it grows boring or unpleasant.
And xkcd is always brilliant.



Namazu
Yellow-bellied Woodpecker
Yellow-bellied Woodpecker

User avatar

Joined: 25 Jun 2011
Age: 44
Gender: Female
Posts: 53

31 Aug 2011, 11:03 pm

AngelRho wrote:
Namazu wrote:
Therefore if a perfect being is the only one that can be trusted not to betray our trust, why then should someone feel safe putting their trust/faith in something that has been recorded by men? The Bible's texts are in fact fairly inconsistent in their depictions of God.

That the Bible is recorded by men shouldn't really be a problem. The assumption is that if an imperfect being (humans) is, well, imperfect, then nothing is reliable. But however flawed we may be, we still only have our senses to rely on if for no other reason than mere survival. So if we can rely on our senses to get us THIS far, then we can rely on our senses to understand what it is God is saying to us.

And the texts are not inconsistent. Part of the condition of human perception is that it does not often take in a view of the whole. Rather than inconsistent, I'd just say that they are incomplete in and of themselves. Taken as a whole, they are closer to a complete view of God's wishes for His creation.

Namazu wrote:
To point out the most glaring example in Christianity: the stark contrast between the wrathful, unforgiving, vengeful, jealous, racist and at times spiteful portrayal of God and the peaceful, all forgiving, proactive, unprejudiced, selfless, patient and meek portrayal of Christianity's Messiah.

The nature of God is one of forgiving, proactive, unprejudiced, selfless, patient, meek, etc. But this overlooks the fact that God disciplines those who belong to Him. God also provides justice on behalf of those who belong to Him. Thus those who do evil who would negatively impact His chosen deserve to be severely punished. Even the book of Revelation depicts what will happen to those who do not turn from sin and believe. Nowhere in the gospels did Jesus ever say that everyone wants to be saved or that everyone WILL be. And those who are unfaithful will be cast into the "outer darkness."

Moreover, God is consistently forgiving and patient in the OT. God hold out for Israel's repentance. And rather than completely destroy them, He allowed the Assyrians to invade and deport them. So death and destruction isn't necessarily the first resort, but rather the last. God kept His promise to David by ensuring a lasting kingdom in Judah. And God even held off punishment because SOME kings chose to do what was right. Vengeance only came when Judah crossed a sort of point of no return, and even when the Chaldeans invaded there were still prophets calling for repentance. And even when the end came, the prophets were still reminding those who were left that God's vengeance would only be temporary and that those who genuinely repented would constitute a faithful remnant that would return and rebuild the nation.

There are no inconsistencies between the OT and the NT. Jesus was teaching those who had only known a misunderstanding of the ancient Judaic religion, a religion centered on a legalistic interpretation of Torah and oral tradition rather than one that called for repentance and sought to bring worshipers in--it was rather about keeping the "unclean" out and not really ministering to the spiritual needs of the community. The focus was on the leadership (among other things) and not God. All Christ wanted to do in terms of "religion" was restore the intended purpose of the ancient Judaic purpose all along. He ended up fulfilling the role of the sacrifice for all sinners who repent and believe in the grace of God to forgive.

If it's a problem with the Son of God dying to save the world from sin, then fine. But only seeing inconsistency is really just missing the bigger picture.

Namazu wrote:
Before his death by being staked to a crucifix, he is said to have pleaded with God to show mercy upon humanity "For they know not what they do." So which portrayal of God is the legitimate one? God as portrayed in the various accounts of his wrathful, merciless and destructive punishment of Man's imperfection? Or God as portrayed by the accounts of the Messiah who condemned no man or woman to death and who's only described instance of indignation was at the disrespect a group of merchants had shown to a place of worship? Even all that show of indignation prompted was a mere upending of their stalls, admonishment of the disrespectful act and a proverbial 'slap on the wrist'; not the death and damnation of the merchants themselves.

Well, that wasn't Jesus' purpose. The point of the OT all along is that sin brings death, repentance brings life. The religious leaders of Jesus' time focused too much on the sin and not the sinner. Jesus often brings a gentle "now you know; don't do it again." Jesus' indignation here just reflects the sentiment of the Father. The Bible doesn't say this explicitly, but I do wonder if Jesus hadn't done what the Pharisees wanted to do all along but were either afraid to do or were powerless to do it. If we assume they were money-hungry and corrupt, then they were complicit in the act. But not all the Pharisees necessarily agreed on all things, which was just part of their culture of scriptural scholarship. If I were a bettin' man, I'd bet that there might have been a few cheering Jesus on.

Also, I think you have to consider who it was in charge. The Jews had limited self-rule, which makes sense, but they ultimately answered to the Romans. Jesus was about winning souls. Usurping political power and costing an unnecessary loss of life would have been counterproductive, and later apostles (Peter and Paul, for example) came to understand that the best way to win souls was by working through the culture, not in direct opposition to it with the exception of issues of morality. Publicly denying Christ would be unacceptable, as would the worship of other gods. So the matter of death-dealing is relegated to political authorities. This isn't even really inconsistent with OT practices because Torah initially gave the priests and judges judicial authority. As long as the people were dedicated to following God's commandments, everything went well. It was only chaotic when the leaders were weak or inconsistently exercised authority in accordance with law. So, yes, while ceremonial law is important to the worship lives of the people, much is also written to keep an orderly society. As to what God Himself does, well, vengeance belongs to the Lord. If people do not correct themselves, if evil is so ingrained into the fabric of their society, there's really nothing left for God to do.

A lot of Christian preachers, at least back in the day, taught all about death and hell. It was kind of scary and depressing. I think over time you hear less about that because people got sick of having the hell scared out of them. I don't think Jesus' teaching really centered on death and hell. You hear about it because it is a consequence of making the wrong choices. But rather life is the focus and it always had been. Even in the tabernacle and the temple, the mercy seat was above the law, indicating that God's mercy is more of a priority than strict execution of law. There's always room for mercy, and Torah is full of merciful ways of dealing with wrongdoing. Sure, there are crimes that are entirely unacceptable and can only be remedied by death. But by far the only consequence for wrongdoing is an act that is equivalent to the transgression. Personal injury lawsuits in the western world are founded on the same idea, though I think we have an ugly tendency in our society to overreach.

Namazu wrote:
Is God not capable of saving all of humanity? Is such a thing outside his power? Why would he suffer the sinners to be born at all if their ultimate fate was to burn for all eternity in some sadistic kind of place of unending punishment for being the weak beings they were created to be?

Perhaps it would be better for them to never have even been born, but it's an even greater wrong I think to never even allow them a chance. Now, sure, God is capable of saving all of humanity. But the issue is that not all of humanity even WANTS to be saved.

Namazu wrote:
Forgive all who trespass against you? Then should not God forgive all who trespass against him? God was depicted as promising to forestall the destruction of Sodom even if just for the sake of one person; and allow that person to flee.

God forgives those who ask for forgiveness. If you don't want to be forgiven, or if you don't see in yourself a reason you need to be forgiven, then you don't have to ask. If you don't want to be with God, He's not going to force you into an eternity in His presence--not to mention it would be unjust to those who actually do what God commanded. And even if God did force you to spend an eternity with Him against your will, what would the difference between heaven and hell really be? I wonder if hell isn't a better place for some than heaven.

Namazu wrote:
Yet, I have yet to meet a person who I would call purely evil.

OK, but this is a subjective matter of opinion.

Namazu wrote:
God can't do this with a soul? God would rather burn the gold away along with the impurities?

Sure, God can do this with a soul--IF it is the desire of the soul that God should do it.

Namazu wrote:
My argument against Christianity as a religion and religion in general, is that it is based on scripture written by human hands or passed down orally by human mouths. Anyone can claim their inspiration came from a god; because how could you prove a deity didn't inspire them?

There are no reasons why Biblical writings should have even been written down and passed down in the first place. Not if God didn't have a reason for it. If He spoke it and commanded someone to write it, then all one must do is examine the claims themselves and decide whether you want to believe it or not. If you don't believe it, then there's nothing left to argue about, is there? But if one DOES read and understand the claims being made and feels this makes sense, then Christianity and/or Judaism MIGHT actually be legit. There's a longer argument here, of course, but I think that's the basic idea.

Namazu wrote:
Things have been done in the name of religion and its god-beings to justify genocide, torture, enslavement, murder, war, oppression, suppression of knowledge, racism, summary executions, bigotry, misogyny, rape, theft, suspension of due process, imposed illiteracy, barbarism, the outlawing of science, vandalism, the outlawing of music and other forms of artistic expression, indentured servitude, child abuse, intolerance, nationalism, terrorism, extortion, assassination, segregation, ritualistic suicide/mutilation/human sacrifice/animal abuse/castration/cannibalism etc., as well as eugenics, sex-specific infanticide, unfair taxes, imprisonment, imposed social castes, and hostile occupation; to name a few.

Where did Christ command that Christians do these things?

Namazu wrote:
Does it not bother any of you that the Messiah never recorded his teachings in his own words by his own hand? Who could be trusted more than God (A perfect being) in the flesh? Does it not bother you that for over a thousand years the "Holy" Roman Catholic Church has been hoarding away the oldest of the old in religious documents associated with the so called 'New Testament' and deny those outside the Vatican's inner circle from even seeing them or knowing explicitly what they contain?

Well, this is contradictory with what you wrote before. People wrote it and other people don't believe it. Ok, fair enough. So if THE person writes it, it should be more believable? No. Think about a court of law. Just because "I said so" doesn't mean that the evidence holds. Evidence is more believable if examined or experienced by multiple witnesses. It's not enough that "Jesus said something," but rather that several people heard and agree that He said it. And not everyone trusted Jesus, anyway. So, if not everyone trusted Him it wouldn't matter if He wrote the entire Bible in one sitting in the company of His disciples. And it wasn't His job, anyway.

The problem with your RC conspiracy theory is that if they're "hoarding" stuff we need to know, how do YOU know about it? You got an insider at the Vatican who can back this up?

Actually, there have been things that recently have been made public. Even back during the time of Christian persecution in the early church, books of the Bible were collected and burned. It would have done no good to burn books if you didn't know which books to burn--those that early Christians actually read. So we have very clear evidence of what was widely distributed, read, and believed early on in the church, and those books correspond to our "modern" Bible. Those "extra" books are inconsistent with known scripture, were later written by leaders NOT associated with the early church, lack apostolic authorship, had authorship outside the Jewish world, and were even flat-out heretical. Even the apocrypha included in Catholic (and other) Bibles is still included in sections clearly denoted as such. So, not even Catholics understand these books to be necessarily inspired but are rather answers to Protestant objections. If I understand correctly, the appearance of apocrypha didn't even happen until the counter-reformation. The Catholic church doesn't really have that much to hide nor any reason to hide, since most of it's history is well known. Also, not all Christians are even Catholic, and I include myself here as a non-Catholic believer.

Namazu wrote:
Why would the truth be something to hide? To use a familiar saying: "That which thrives in darkness but withers in the light of day; does not belong on the vine."

Who is hiding anything? And if it is hidden, how do you know?

Namazu wrote:
It makes no sense that an all knowing God would deliberately place temptation in front of a being he had specifically made to be susceptible;

Which is why God didn't do that. He created a being and gave it a will to act on its own apart from God. Adam had the choice of life or death. God gave Adam clear instructions. Sure, Adam was tricked into doing something. But if Adam sensed weakness in himself, or if Adam was confused by hearing conflicting messages, all he had to do was call on God for help and remove himself from the situation. God never allows someone to be tested or tempted beyond what they can reasonably bear.

As an example, take a person who is an alcoholic but wishes to break free from it. If he empties his liquor cabinet and stays away from the liquor store and away from bars, will God decide to test him by supernaturally refilling the stash? Adam had the power to avoid the tree of death. He merely made the wrong choice.

Namazu wrote:
As for the teachings of the Messiah? They can only be called sublime wisdom. Observing those teachings would enable mankind to shed their intensely self serving, judgmental and reactive ways; and adopt a more selfless, forgiving and proactive philosophy that would benefit ALL of mankind. I do not argue with this wisdom. I argue with the religion that contradicts these teachings and encourages those who practice it to divorce themselves from all accountability for their actions and follow religion as a divine institution; as if it carried the authority of God on earth.

OK, so you call "Take up your cross and follow Me" sublime wisdom? How wise, in present-day terms, is it for someone to knowingly choose a path of life that will end in a premature death? That's what "Take up your cross" means--it is an instrument of death, not merely a burden to deal with. What about eating Christ's flesh and drinking His blood? Does that sound like sublime wisdom? Some would object, saying it favors cannibalism and vampirism. There are tons of things in the NT, the very words of Jesus, that resemble insanity and suicidal tendencies. Now, sure, it might ignore the underlying truths and the message. But Christ might have been a gifted prophet in His own day. He might have been kind to the marginalized. But to make the claims Jesus made, any ordinary person making those claims today would have been locked up in a state hospital. So, "just a prophet" or "just a wise man" simply doesn't cut it.

Namazu wrote:
I don't hate Christianity. I hate irrational observance of dogmatic religious tenants that insist that a Creator and His will are something that can only be revealed through a middleman. The Bible is in essence dictated but not written by its alleged author; which gives me reason to question the integrity of His clerical assistant.

The RC church doesn't seem to me to be His clerical assistant. I'll agree with you in that one DOES have to question authority to be sure what that authority says is true and that authority deserves to be recognized. I'll agree that SOME or CERTAIN Christians have really messed up the faith in their own time. I just don't agree that this has ALWAYS been the case, nor was it the case from the very beginning. And I'm not Catholic. Lot's of Christians aren't Catholic. And "good Catholics" didn't always agree with the "Church." And even Catholics have come to understand where they've gone wrong in the past and seek to correct the mistakes of the past by the witness of their own lives. Maybe the Crusades and the Inquisitions WERE their fault; so what? This has nothing to do with the church, any church, right now and today.

And lots of churches are also starting to recognize that part of the problem is positional authority. Sure, they still have "lead pastors" or "senior pastors"/"associate pastors," but they see their job as more instructive than authoritarian. They prefer to hand over their presumed "power" to those in the church who actually feel a desire to lead and do the work of Christ in their communities. They are rather guides as opposed to a kind of corporate CEO, which is the traditional pastoral role in protestant churches. It really makes a difference in how congregations perceive themselves and their actual role in living out the words of Christ, and these are the churches you see most often experiencing consistent growth. The more authoritarian churches are on the decline, and I think part of the reason this is is because preachers and even lay leaders have their fists clenched around their power and positional authority that they fail to open their hands to accept what God really wants to give them, which blesses the entire community rather than only the leader.

So, to a degree, I understand where you're coming from. I just don't think that it is quite as pervasive as you might have been led to believe that it is.


I think you missed the point almost entirely. I'll start at the end and work my way to the beginning. I KNOW that the RC church has the oldest know copies of the NT. I am not talking about the memoirs of the various Popes and what not. I couldn't care less about something that came AFTER the earliest copies of the NT. You seem to have taken your critique of my post on a completely different tangent. THEY do not allow anyone outside of the RC inner circle view these scrolls and parchments. No photographs no reproductions nothing. I know that they have them because the Archeological expeditions were well publicized at the time and their acquisition the ancient texts before they could be fully deciphered. That they keep them locked away from outside eyes can in fact be interpreted as a bid to HIDE those texts from being closely scrutinized. As for my statement about God's "Clerical Assistant?" That is just a more PC way of saying his secretary/stenographer. As if to suggest that God dictated His will to a human secretary who in fact is not very trustworthy. I think you confused "Clerical" to mean "Cleric" as in a religious sense. Sorry if I was unclear.

I noticed you dodged a few of my original arguments. Such as the one stating that it makes no sense that God would feel threatened by mankind's attempt to build a tower to the heavens; and therefore sabotage their efforts to prevent them from getting TOO powerful. I think the very Idea that God found US threatening is pretty absurd. Nor did you write anything in regards to the the absolute commandment "Thou shall not kill." and the contradiction of the order to kill all who broke the rules. I find their absence in your breakdown of my argument mildly amusing; but not unforeseen.

Oh and I never said I didn't think there was ANY truth to Bible, so no I am not contradicting myself when I state a concern over the 'Church's' hoarding of ancient writings. I would just like to know for sure that the Catholic Church didn't change anything in those texts to suit their own personal agenda. If they did than it proves there was RECENT tampering which would add credibility to my belief that there has been ANY tampering or fabricating to the texts we know have. If they are identical, those texts, to what is openly available it would suggest that scriptures as we know them are at least free of tampering. No it doesn't prove that the originals didn't include fiction. But it doesn't prove that they came to us exactly how they were intended to, no? I might be more inclined to give the whole Christianity thing another look. So either way by preventing outsiders from seeing these ancient texts they are denying the world another potential 'proof' of the legitimacy of Christianity and it's claims; which I just happen to find a little suspicious. Believe what you want.

The placing of moral context on Adam's so called disobedience assumes that Adam KNEW the full implications of what he was doing; which he clearly did not. A parent doesn't sentence their child to death for making a mistake in ignorance of its full implications. A child does not know stealing candy from other children is wrong fresh out of the womb. They typically learn such things by trial and error. Do you think if Adam and Eve truly understood what would happen when they partook of the 'Fruit' that they would have made the same decisions? Humans learn through experience. If we don't make mistakes we tend not to know how not to make them, without prior experience or observation. So believe what you will, If it gives you comfort to think this life is a punishment from God and that God punishes the 'bad' and rewards the 'good' with extreme prejudice or has favorites among us; do so. Good and Bad though widely subjective I think can broken down into one simple concept: Good is something done that benefits those around us and not just ourselves. Bad is something that is done for one's personal benefit alone and consequently is obtained to the detriment of those around us. More Selfless (Good/Right) as opposed to more Selfish (Bad/Wrong). If those actions are done deliberately to obtain those consequences; then the dynamic can be interpreted to be Virtuous (Good/Right/Godly?) and Evil (Bad/Wrong/Sinful?). Unintentional consequences are simply consequences and lack any moral/ethical/altruistic bent. That's my analysis of the dynamic anyway, so feel free to disagree.

As for the "Teachings" being sublime? I am talking about the ones that revolve around this one very simple rule: 'Love Thy Neighbor.'
When you take THAT as the central theme of his teachings and the ways he expanded on that idea i.e.: 'Do unto others as you would have done unto you.' When struck 'Turn the other cheek.' or 'Love thy enemy.' or 'forgive those who trespass against you' (Note there is no mention of it making any difference whether or not THEY wish to be forgiven?) or that fine example 'He who is without sin cast the first stone.' (Which contradicts the kill all who break the Commandments theme, yes?)

My argument is not: There is no benevolent God.
My argument is men cannot be trusted not to lie and embellish and outright fabricate information. You also can't put it past them to attribute things to God that have no real connection or do not truly reflect His opinions if 'He' indeed has any.

The Old Testament is like the Chop-Suey of religious texts. For instance you may or may not be aware of it; but the oldest book in the Old Testament is not Genesis.
The book of Job is in fact older; and also interestingly enough not even Jewish. Genesis is a parable; a simplified telling of a more complex idea. You say that a person must rely on ones senses to determine God's message. Well then by all means use them. Have you ever heard a serpent talk? Where is the Garden? Or the flaming death sword said to guard its entrance? It took God the almighty a whole six days to create the universe? Longer than that if you subscribe to the belief that a day to God is thousands of years to us. If God can call things into existence by speaking their name aloud into the void; do you think that God couldn't have SPOKEN the entire Universe in a single utterance? And that tree; that damned tree. It wasn't called the Tree of Death. It was called the tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. Think back on the typical usage of the term Know/Knowledge. When Adam KNEW Eve it is assumed that this meant Carnal Knowledge or bluntly SEX. If you take away all the crude mechanical connotations; what is the act of Sex then in essence? It is experiencing another person in this sense physically in an intimate fashion. To have personally experienced something is to KNOW a thing. Eating an apple isn't going to give you Knowledge/Intimate Experience of anything other than that taste, texture, moistness and firmness of an apple's flesh. Knowledge of Good and Evil implies intimate experience (First hand) of the forces of Good and Evil. This universe. This world. This reality IS the Tree; IS the source of intimate experience of the Forces of Good and Evil. The Tree is a representation of an imperfect universe filled with trials. Our lives in this universe and our experiences we gain before we die are a parallel to the symbolic partaking of the Fruit of the Tree.

Death is NOT a punishment for disobedience. Death is a natural consequence of this physical state of being. God put the Tree there because the Garden provided us with everything needed or wanted. The one thing God couldn't give us in the "Garden" was what it meant to have to work for the things we want and need. It denied us the ability to be proactive (determine for ourselves by our own actions through the 'toiling in the fields to cultivate the earth and CAUSE it to bear a harvest.') and DO in order to RECEIVE. God denied nothing to us in that place, that 'Garden' and he gave us the option to obtain the knowledge (The chance to experience life in all its terrible beauty in THIS physical reality). Eat of that tree and you will die was a warning that in order to gain this knowledge we would lose ALL of the comforts of the 'Garden' chiefest of which was implied immortality. By LIVING in the Physical world we had to accept Physical death as a necessary consequence.

Though I can not say for sure; I believe the 'Serpent' represented our hubris in thinking we could exist separated from God. In a sense we FELL from grace (Left behind perfection and the absence of want; 'grace' being that perfect place or the 'Garden') and were cast out of 'Heaven' and forced to 'Crawl on our bellies' (Do things the hard and often humbling way; like in infants, who must 'Crawl' before they learn how to walk.) upon the 'earth' (The physical world.) This bit is my own interpretation of the Opponent, so feel free to give as much weight to it as I give the various Canon :roll: interpretations of the whole God vs. the Devil soap opera-like battle of the ages.

Maybe I'm wrong. I have looked at a great many interpretations of Judaism including the mystical practice known as Kabbalah. It was through researching that I came to understand how much of the 'Bible' may be wild misinterpretations of stories passed down in ever changing tongues. It occurred to me how much I was at the mercy of those who passed these stories along, because misunderstandings are a guarantee in life when dealing with other people. It was then that I decided that Mankind could not be entirely trusted to preserve any sort of message from 'God'. So instead I place my faith in my belief that there something one might call "God" out there and that keeping that "Faith" in a creator, augmented with all the things I had believed deep in my heart to be Truth self evident: That self sacrifice and acting to better the lives of those around you; Loving my Neighbor and doing unto others as I would have them do unto me. A common theme in many religions, though the teachings of Yeshua the Messiah, were my first experience of that philosophy, and believe very much that Yeshua and many throughout time have beseeched the world to live by these simple rules all of whom met with similar fates. I believe these rules are the only thing that can truly save mankind from utter destruction by its own hands.

If I indeed require forgiveness which is a possibility I know likely to be true to some degree; and the Source of All Things is offering this gift, I gladly accept. But I will not accept an offer given to me by anything other than the one who made the original offer; presented me directly with the offer. Until Humanity and I can shed our hubris and our purely self serving ways, I can not justly put faith in humanity not to attempt deception. So as I said. I trust the Source of All Things to sort out the details between now and my death. In return I will try everyday to live the best life I can. The Messiah worshiped and spoke to 'God' in solitude; I see no reason why it should have to be any different for the rest of us. That said, I neither want nor need organized religion. Think what you want of those who reject Christianity; just know that to truly 'witness' for your God you must live as a example of the things you say you believe in. Hypocrisy only serves your 'Satan'. This is the last I will say on this matter. I feel it is fruitless to make someone see something they wish not to see. I am well aware of the potential irony of that statement, but there you go. No hostilities intended and It is my sincerest hope that no one loses any sleep or intact capillaries over this discussion.



Last edited by Namazu on 01 Sep 2011, 1:52 am, edited 2 times in total.