r***@yahoo.com
2006-11-03 03:18:04 UTC
Originally, I was responding to mark in another thread, but since this
is more about the bible and its trustworthiness than whether or not
Jesus is God, I thought it best to form a new thread.
The issue of the bible being the word of God is so important to
Christianity that I want to continue to take on issues surrounding its
trustworthiness.
Among these are:
What place does the claim to be the word of God have in a document that
is the word of God?
Circular logic
Supporting Evidence vs. absolute certainty
And to mark specifically, issues surrounding the problem of hearing
from God
morning, spend time reading and then pray over what I have read. The
amount of time can depend, sometimes only 15 minutes sometimes 30,
sometimes more, but yes I pray over what I read.
Also from Oct 30
word of God"?
It would have to be accurate/truthful. But lots of documents can be
accurate without being considered the word of God.
What is that other elusive criteria? [I REALLY would like an answer to
this!]
Would it be that somehow it deals with the subject, or makes the claim
for itself.....
I hear the accusation of circular logic about this, and the argument
is:
The bible is the word of God. How do we know the bible is the word of
God?
The bible says it is the word of God. How can we trust the bible?
Because the bible is the word of God. How do we know the bible is word
of God?
[Repeat endlessly]
The argument here is WHY we should trust the bible, and if the answer
is purely "because it is says to", then the argument is circular
and therefore fallacious.
But we can see the documents historical value, their relative
legitimacy and primacy in telling the story. And reason through the
actions purported within. None of that counts as hard logical proof,
but such things are not to be had in this area at any rate, nor is it
reasonable to think we need logical proof. Mere evidence should
suffice. And when talking about the events of Jesus and the apostles,
the NT is the best we have.
If there is specific reason for doubting the veracity of the accounts,
then those should be weighed. But lacking objections they can be
treated as any other documents that verify events. While beyond the
scope of a NG post, I'm convinced they are valid given historical,
textual, and logical evidences: that is to say that they are
sufficiently rooted in history and support what we know about the time
and places, the textual transmission seems sound, and the accounts seem
consistent.
Now that is more than just "it's trustworthy because it says so".
Its acceptance is grounded in reason, not circular logic.
However, at some point one does begin to move beyond arguments and,
based on the track record, begins to accept certain things because the
bible says them even though specific supporting arguments may not be
known.
This is not a completely blind faith, it is grounded, but it is faith.
But more to the point of the documents being the word of God is what
those events sayings mean for our lives and how we respond to them.
One can accept that the history is more or less accurate, yet not
respond at all to the message.
This is true of any doc- you can read some call to clean up the
environment because of global warming, believe the book to be basically
accurate and yet not respond in any way. Or just because you believe
the book to be basically true, you wouldn't think it was directed by
God.
For me, I believe it records the events accurately. I have no real
reason to doubt that.
And IF those things really happened, then I accept that a man named
Jesus came according to ancient prophecies, was crucified, rose again
and his church spread by the power of the Holy Spirit.
So again, there are 2 issues- the matter of accurate record and then
acceptance of the record.
But if, given the nature of the events, the record is accurate, then I
feel compelled to respond in kind.
asking? No.
You learn something by hearing. How does one "hear" God since God
is not a physical being that is speaking audibly?
It comes down to a mental sense. God communicates spiritually, but
using our thoughts.
The trick is that every human has thoughts. How do you discern what is
from God and what is not? It is not only possible that humans can
mistake their own thoughts for God, but necessarily true given 1) the
contradictory things that different individuals believe God to be
telling them, and 2) the fact that truth doesn't change.
is more about the bible and its trustworthiness than whether or not
Jesus is God, I thought it best to form a new thread.
The issue of the bible being the word of God is so important to
Christianity that I want to continue to take on issues surrounding its
trustworthiness.
Among these are:
What place does the claim to be the word of God have in a document that
is the word of God?
Circular logic
Supporting Evidence vs. absolute certainty
And to mark specifically, issues surrounding the problem of hearing
from God
Every pray about what you learn from the Bible?
As a matter of fact this is my habit every day. I come to work in themorning, spend time reading and then pray over what I have read. The
amount of time can depend, sometimes only 15 minutes sometimes 30,
sometimes more, but yes I pray over what I read.
Also from Oct 30
To me, truth of God, comes only from God,
by definition, of course....and there is no tangible, or logical evidence
that supports the Bible as the word of God.
What would be the criteria for any document to be considered "thethat supports the Bible as the word of God.
word of God"?
It would have to be accurate/truthful. But lots of documents can be
accurate without being considered the word of God.
What is that other elusive criteria? [I REALLY would like an answer to
this!]
Would it be that somehow it deals with the subject, or makes the claim
for itself.....
I hear the accusation of circular logic about this, and the argument
is:
The bible is the word of God. How do we know the bible is the word of
God?
The bible says it is the word of God. How can we trust the bible?
Because the bible is the word of God. How do we know the bible is word
of God?
[Repeat endlessly]
The argument here is WHY we should trust the bible, and if the answer
is purely "because it is says to", then the argument is circular
and therefore fallacious.
But we can see the documents historical value, their relative
legitimacy and primacy in telling the story. And reason through the
actions purported within. None of that counts as hard logical proof,
but such things are not to be had in this area at any rate, nor is it
reasonable to think we need logical proof. Mere evidence should
suffice. And when talking about the events of Jesus and the apostles,
the NT is the best we have.
If there is specific reason for doubting the veracity of the accounts,
then those should be weighed. But lacking objections they can be
treated as any other documents that verify events. While beyond the
scope of a NG post, I'm convinced they are valid given historical,
textual, and logical evidences: that is to say that they are
sufficiently rooted in history and support what we know about the time
and places, the textual transmission seems sound, and the accounts seem
consistent.
Now that is more than just "it's trustworthy because it says so".
Its acceptance is grounded in reason, not circular logic.
However, at some point one does begin to move beyond arguments and,
based on the track record, begins to accept certain things because the
bible says them even though specific supporting arguments may not be
known.
This is not a completely blind faith, it is grounded, but it is faith.
But more to the point of the documents being the word of God is what
those events sayings mean for our lives and how we respond to them.
One can accept that the history is more or less accurate, yet not
respond at all to the message.
This is true of any doc- you can read some call to clean up the
environment because of global warming, believe the book to be basically
accurate and yet not respond in any way. Or just because you believe
the book to be basically true, you wouldn't think it was directed by
God.
For me, I believe it records the events accurately. I have no real
reason to doubt that.
And IF those things really happened, then I accept that a man named
Jesus came according to ancient prophecies, was crucified, rose again
and his church spread by the power of the Holy Spirit.
So again, there are 2 issues- the matter of accurate record and then
acceptance of the record.
But if, given the nature of the events, the record is accurate, then I
feel compelled to respond in kind.
IMO, one learns what is His word, by asking Him, not
by reason, not by usenet :-) and not by logic or history, so right off,
I already know a great deal about how a number of folks here think, and
how they go about discerning the word of God. I respect those
positions, but I most certainly do not agree with them.
OK, but let's think this through: does anyone learn something byby reason, not by usenet :-) and not by logic or history, so right off,
I already know a great deal about how a number of folks here think, and
how they go about discerning the word of God. I respect those
positions, but I most certainly do not agree with them.
asking? No.
You learn something by hearing. How does one "hear" God since God
is not a physical being that is speaking audibly?
It comes down to a mental sense. God communicates spiritually, but
using our thoughts.
The trick is that every human has thoughts. How do you discern what is
from God and what is not? It is not only possible that humans can
mistake their own thoughts for God, but necessarily true given 1) the
contradictory things that different individuals believe God to be
telling them, and 2) the fact that truth doesn't change.