Theism vs. Atheism ... will it ever be settled? |
Post Reply | Page <1 7475767778 174> |
Author | |||
Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 10:43 | ||
^ We have no way of finding out.
|
|||
jampa17
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 04 2009 Location: Guatemala Status: Offline Points: 6802 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 11:09 | ||
There's honesty here Textbook, nothing of what Mike has said is "evidence" of the mistake of people believing in Jesus. Just a couple of questions could take out all this plot of him (the guy in the video) pretending to know more about Jesus and his story...
|
|||
|
|||
Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 27 2004 Location: Peru Status: Offline Points: 19557 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 13:26 | ||
I didn't wanted to enter to this topic until I read the book of Ehrman, which I found interesting, but the guy is obsessed with minor problems. The fact that the Evangelists were literate or illiterate is not transcendental, convicted criminals with little education, Hollywood actors and actress with nothing in their heads, etc "wrote" incredibly well elaborate books....The real thing is that they didn't wrote it by own hand, they narrated their experiences to experts who took this narration to a paper with great coherence....But this doesn't deny the fact that the story comes from the original source who was there. The Evangelists could well used literate people who took their narrations to paper, and that will explain the differences between some Gospels, and even if they wrote them by their own hand, this documents had to be copied by SCRIBES to be preserved and sent to early Christians around the known world the same Ehrman gives a logical explanation:
As a fact is surprising and a proof of validity that texts which crossed so many hands have so much in common. Yes, even if the Evangelists wrote the Gospels by own hand, all the translations, copies, etc must have changed part of the original text, but still the original source are the four Evangelists IMO. Ehrman explains the reason:
There are some discrepancies, but the coincidences about miracles and important facts are amazing for texts that crossed so many hands. Iván Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - August 11 2010 at 13:28 |
|||
|
|||
Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 14:22 | ||
^ Do you think that the circumstances of Jesus' birth, the day he died and the circumstances of his crucifixion are minor points? The four gospels are not consistent about those events.
Of course you know that there were dozens of gospels ... in the end four were chosen because the earth was presumed to have four corners. Even these four carefully selected gospels out of dozens can't agree on whether Jesus was born of a virgin, whether he was born on the day of passover or the day before - or at which time of the day, and other issues that can hardly be considered "minor", and they even drew from some common sources. Sorry Iván, but I fail to see how you can turn this into something that actually increases your faith in the accuracy of the central tenets of your faith. Edited by Mr ProgFreak - August 11 2010 at 14:22 |
|||
Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 14:28 | ||
Another point I failed to mention earlier (because I was at work and posting in a rush) as that it was common for illiterate people to dictate letters and writings to people who were literate, such as professional scribes. Even someone as literate as Paul probably dictated his letters and the other apostles and disciples would have dictated letters and scripts as well as passing on their ideas by word of mouth.
So there is an element of truth in what Mike is saying regarding the spread of christianity from the moment the disciples received the gift of the holy spirit to the establishment of a chuch in Rome and the later Apostolic and Church Fathers who composed the NT. It was mainly spread by word of mouth - that was the editct given to the disciples and why they were given the gift of tongues, but there wre some writings by contemporary followers, many now lost, and many excluded (the so called apocrypha) by the Christian Fathers from the NT. The creation of gospels were not analogous to the telephone game at all - that is a gross over simplification. The emergent religion was a living, practising system that established itself in one location before spreading to the next - people didn't just hear the word and pass it on, they were taught and educated before being sent out as missionaries (Paul was one such acolyte, initially sent out with Barnabas and Luke before being allowed out on his own).
Later, Paul wrote letters to people in an attempt to prevent the word being distorted and to correct some of the recipients of those letters where they had strayed from the original message. If by then the acts of Jesus had become exagerated to miracle status Paul would have mentioned it and corrected it, if he had heard first-hand accounts of Jesus's miracles from the disciples or second-hand accounts from other christians, he would have mentioned them because they would have most certainly been useful to him in spreading the word, but he doesn't. The only miracle that is important to John is the resurrection, because that was the one that (ultimately) resulted in his own conversion.
It is possible that the miracles were added later, (after Paul because he does not mention them or the synoptic gospels so they could have been written after his letters), to glam-up the story holywood style.
|
|||
What?
|
|||
Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 14:30 | ||
BTW: Iván read Ehrman's book Jesus, Interrupted - but I guess that many believers here won't, so let me quickly summarize his position:
Let's assume that the Bible contains an irreconcilable contradiction on a major point. Let's say, just for the sake of argument - that one verse says "you must not judge" and another says "you must judge". Let's also assume that both verses can't be dismissed easily for any obvious reason, like one of them is much more likely to be a mistake than the other. In this case Christians are faced with a problem: It's not possible for them to know what they are supposed to do. Assuming that the books of the Bible initially contained the inerrant word of God when they were written, none of the original books were preserved. IMO you can't shrug that off as easily as jampa17 does when he says that he'll simply trust the priest to have gotten it right. This problem did not cause Ehrman to become an Atheist - it didn't even cause him to become an Agnostic (he had another reason for that). Neither am I saying that any of you Theists who are reading this should abandon your faith because of this. But it might make you think about how sure you can be that the rules that you have been taught to obey are actually from an extraordinary source, and have not been tampered with over the centuries. |
|||
Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 14:35 | ||
I think it's highly likely, especially given the fact that most of the newly converted people weren't Jews (I think Gentiles is the word), and many of them Romans or Greeks. To those people religion without fantastic miracles would have been almost unimaginable. BTW: I'm not saying that they freely invented miracles ... but consider several rounds of telephone game, with each participant being highly motivated and euphoric about spreading the faith, several of them formerly having believed in Zeus or Apollo ... |
|||
Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 15:13 | ||
Edited by Dean - August 11 2010 at 15:14 |
|||
What?
|
|||
Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 15:16 | ||
^ "take my word for it"
And weren't you the one who talked about them "glamming up" the stories a post ago? Edited by Mr ProgFreak - August 11 2010 at 15:18 |
|||
Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 27 2004 Location: Peru Status: Offline Points: 19557 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 15:22 | ||
There are differences, like for example Ehrman mentions when Jesus cleansed the Temple, Mark says that in the last week of his ministry and John says that at the beginning......But the important issue is that Jesus threw the salesmen from the temple and both narratives are coincidental.
Maybe a fundamentalist literalist will say this a huge problem and that places a veil of doubt on this event, in no way, the fact is that Jesus cleansed the temple and both Gospels are coincident. Now, this is even logical, the texts were not kept on books as we know them, but most likely on written on papyrus rolls, and most likely inaccurate numbered, so one roll can be taken in a different order in one Gospel by a scribe, and voila, you got two different timings. But there are no transcendental contradictions in doctrine like You must not judge vs You must judge as you try to imply Mike. Probably this texts were narrated by the Evangelists and written by their own apostles or followers, who in many cases were barely literate or had troubles with a determined language....But the main message is the same. Iván
Edited by Ivan_Melgar_M - August 11 2010 at 15:23 |
|||
|
|||
Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 15:23 | ||
^ I really thought you had read the book.
|
|||
Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 15:27 | ||
Yup - I'm just questioning the methodology - the 'telephone game' IMO does not provide a valid mechanism.
|
|||
What?
|
|||
Ivan_Melgar_M
Special Collaborator Honorary Collaborator Joined: April 27 2004 Location: Peru Status: Offline Points: 19557 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 15:38 | ||
Only once since Monday when I bought the book , but most of the differences bewteen early Christian groups, early doctroine, wetc are nothing new.
Ehrman spends a complete chapter pointing differences between Gospels on secondary issues, like at what time was Jesus Cricified, or the absence of mention of Joseph dreams before Chroist was born (Luke vs Matthew).
Or whre was Jesus the day after Baptized.
I honestly don't find great contradictions except for those who believe in a literal interpretation-
Iván
|
|||
|
|||
Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 15:45 | ||
The "judgement" one is quite interesting and is all to do with context, who is being judged and who is doing the judging. Taken out of context they indeed do contradict, but do they contradict when viewed in context?
For example - if a righteous person were talking to a non-believer who was judging them, they would say "Judge not, least ye be judged" whereas a righteous person judging a non-believer would say "But he that is spiritual judgeth all things, yet he himself is judged of no man." ... an arrogant position no doubt, but one that explains the contradiction. A pious person may never think themselves righteous or spiritual enough to be able to judge all things.
(just guessing / postulating an idea- I haven't the inclination to read up on it - perhaps Rob, Chris, Ivan or Juan can answer more succinctly)
|
|||
What?
|
|||
Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 15:56 | ||
Call it Chinese Whispers ... of course it's a valid mechanism. Whenever information travels through a chain of unreliable stations, the information is bound to get distorted. |
|||
Mr ProgFreak
Forum Senior Member Joined: November 08 2008 Location: Sweden Status: Offline Points: 5195 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 16:06 | ||
He explains why it does matter whether Jesus got crucified on the day before passover, or on the day of passover. You may shrug these things off by calling them minor, but they all form a consistent picture: There's nothing special about Christianity. It started small, the central stories and concepts got beefed up over the decades, and centuries later it happened to be endorsed by the Roman empire. Look at it this way: When seen from this perspective, all the pieces of the puzzle fall into place. When seen from your perspective though, you'll have to construct a plethora of excuses and far-fetched explanations in order to make it all work - sort of. And you haven't even yet reached the really far out there ideas of Catholicism - or the principle of the holy trinity which was established centuries after the new testament had been written. And finally, the best evidence for the inconsistencies and their irreconcilable nature is the fact that even two millennia later the factions of Christianity remain - irreconcilable on major issues. Edited by Mr ProgFreak - August 11 2010 at 16:07 |
|||
jampa17
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 04 2009 Location: Guatemala Status: Offline Points: 6802 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 16:23 | ||
Instead of trying to get "scientific" evidence (which Dean has already told you that you can't apply the scientific method into fiction to prove or disprove something) my advise is to study the preaching of Jesus. Try to find weak points, contradictions, missguidence. You won't find it because those words are wonderful and are crystal clear. It's not easy to follow them, I'm a sinner as any, but the message is wonderful and crystal clear...
|
|||
|
|||
jampa17
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 04 2009 Location: Guatemala Status: Offline Points: 6802 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 16:27 | ||
That's how I understand it Dean... no one can judge anyone else because no one is saint, no one is God but Jesus, so we all can't judge the intentions or acts of others. We are all sinners, then you can't judge the sins of someone else. I have never seen contradiction there. As you are saying, the problem is taking quotes of the Bible away and try to analyse them separetely, without the context...
|
|||
|
|||
jampa17
Prog Reviewer Joined: July 04 2009 Location: Guatemala Status: Offline Points: 6802 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 16:37 | ||
Second, your ideas of the puzzle has been time and time again explained by many (including atheists) without been a problem of contradictions. You adressed me like prefering to believe priests like that is a bad thing, when I'm telling you that they have as a job (not as a free time interest) to study their believes. If they, in those studies would find you so called "weak points" they would abdicate, and quit their religion. But no, there are thousand of priests who have more degrees and titles than your cited Ehrman and their knowledge is based on a lot of studies and scriptures, languages and everything and the knowledge of 2000 years of history. I know that doesn't mean too much for you, but don't expect than an average atheist came by and convince more than well prepared priest who dedictes their LIVES to study and understand.
Third, the difference between christians fractions are human struggles. I won't analyse them case by case but if you read some ecumenism work, you can get that most of the differences are for power and interests away from the message of Christ, which is, at the end, the core of christianity, not the Pope in Rome, not the patriarcs in Russia, not anything else than the message of Christ.
Fourth, I really don't want to post this much, but Mike keep repeating himselves and seems like we have to go back always...
|
|||
|
|||
Dean
Special Collaborator Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout Joined: May 13 2007 Location: Europe Status: Offline Points: 37575 |
Posted: August 11 2010 at 17:18 | ||
Concentrating on the only miracle that is present in all four gospels - the feeding of the 5000 - what kind of incremental Chinese whisper is required to come up with that? Either in the original account there were lot more than five loaves and two fishes, or there were lot less than 5000 people, or they all went off to the nearest village for a take-out... At some point there was a step change from no miracle to miracle with no half-measures of almost miracles in between - Chinese Whispers or a 'telephone game' cannot do that unless one person in the chain says: "Hmm, this bit needs a better ending..." and that's not how the game works.
Now, it possible that I am applying a stricter and more exact definition of the game than you are - but the whole point of the game is that it is random and accidental - not deliberate or premeditated.
|
|||
What?
|
|||
Post Reply | Page <1 7475767778 174> |
Forum Jump | Forum Permissions You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot create polls in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum |