“ Originally Posted by Kennyc
There is no truth in Christianity, it is all based on myth and fabrication.
true
Here is a man who who knows every thing he is 2000 years old
more about , at least 6000 yrs ago really
“ Originally Posted by Kennyc
There is no truth in Christianity, it is all based on myth and fabrication.
Here is a man who who knows every thing he is 2000 years old
The example I've posted on this forum many times, although the number of years keeps increasing: My wife has been unwaveringly tolerant, loving and loyal to me for 34 years (now exactly half of my life). Based upon this empirical evidence, it is rational of me to have faith that she will continue to do so. This faith does not have the weight of a scientific theory: true beyond a reasonable doubt; but it has enough support for me to sensibly regard it as a constant in my life and make plans on the assumption that it will continue.
Religious beliefs, on the other hand, are not based on empirical evidence.
They are based on trust in the people who taught them the beliefs,
This makes religious belief an irrational faith.
Faith can be supported by reason, or it can be revealed by reason to be balderdash.
Please give an example of "rational faith" in a religious belief.There are many different types of religious belief, not to mention that they are individual to each and every person. Yes, they can be the result of ''irrational faith'', but they can be the result of rational faith as well.
:bugeye:Can you prove to us that you are married?
And were you to scan us your marriage docs, how could you prove to us that they are genuine?
Note: I'm not saying this is the case, just that you don't have any evidence to convince us at this time.
Please give an example of "rational faith" in a religious belief.
Harvestdoing:
Christianity is not a metaphor it is meant to be a solution to a very complex dilema. That dilema is mankind's continual disobedience to natural law, moral law and even personal conscience. More simply stated, we all disobey what we know to be wrong even if our consciences vary as to what we personally believe is wrong. We also all disobey the laws of our country. And finally the more one attempts to live a life of complete obedience to a standard the more they fail at it. This disobedience is what is called sin. The word sin comes from a Greek word meaning "to miss the mark" (as in target practice). The true nature of mankind is we ALL at some point fall short and miss the mark of whatever standard we would use to measure ourselves......
......
......What Christianity teaches is a reality that God who created all things (our manufacturer - so to speak) assumed liability for His creation and took on human flesh and paid the full penalty for our sin - died the death we deserved and was raised from the dead as proof the payment for our disobedience/crimes was accepted and for all who are willing to accept it and place their names so to speak on the class action suit are able to benefit from what Jesus has done.
When you describe the message of Christianity in such a way, I want to run down the road screaming. What you just described is totally preposterous. No modern, rational, thinking person could ever believe such tripe.
Such a vengeful explanation of the purpose and work of Christ leaves me feeling cold (and a bit nauseous).
The closest thing I can think of similar to "rational faith" would be believing the religion without denying reality, evidence, history and the sum of human knowledge that tries to make sense of it.
The closest thing I can think of similar to "rational faith" would be believing the religion without denying reality, evidence, history and the sum of human knowledge that tries to make sense of it.
Now you just need a religion that fits that schema and you're good to go.
Harvestdoing said:Christianity is not a metaphor it is meant to be a solution to a very complex dilema. That dilema is mankind's continual disobedience to natural law, moral law and even personal conscience. More simply stated, we all disobey what we know to be wrong even if our consciences vary as to what we personally believe is wrong. We also all disobey the laws of our country. And finally the more one attempts to live a life of complete obedience to a standard the more they fail at it. This disobedience is what is called sin. The word sin comes from a Greek word meaning "to miss the mark" (as in target practice). The true nature of mankind is we ALL at some point fall short and miss the mark of whatever standard we would use to measure ourselves......
......
......What Christianity teaches is a reality that God who created all things (our manufacturer - so to speak) assumed liability for His creation and took on human flesh and paid the full penalty for our sin - died the death we deserved and was raised from the dead as proof the payment for our disobedience/crimes was accepted and for all who are willing to accept it and place their names so to speak on the class action suit are able to benefit from what Jesus has done.
Gandalf said:When you describe the message of Christianity in such a way, I want to run down the road screaming. What you just described is totally preposterous. No modern, rational, thinking person could ever believe such tripe.
Such a vengeful explanation of the purpose and work of Christ leaves me feeling cold (and a bit nauseous).
Um...Harvest didn't say anything I would not recognize as a tenet of Christianity.
That's because my purpose here is not to convince you to share my faith. It is merely to explain to you the difference between a rational faith, which is based on evidence, and an irrational faith (such as religion or the expectation of winning a large jackpot in the lottery), which is based entirely on hope.You've presented absolutely no evidence that you wife is loyal to you.
I have established a good reputation for being truthful on SciForums, so it is rational for the members to have faith that I will continue to be so. As for being delusional, that is a rare disorder, so once again it is rational to assume that a person you meet at random does not have it. Bear in mind that my assertions are not extraordinary, so your invocation of the Rule of Laplace is out of order. No one needs to provide extraordinary evidence to support the thesis that his marriage is not dysfunctional. That assertion is simply not in the same category as the woo-woo that religionists throw at us, which violates natural laws right and left and, if it were true, would require rewriting the entire canon of science, if not simply discarding it and replacing all the scientists with witch doctors. Oh yeah, and for which there is not even one shred of ordinary evidence, much less extraordinary evidence.For all we know you could be lying, or delusional.
You are falling back on the same trick that religionists often use when backed into a corner: disingenuous argument. The standard of proof in science is beyond a reasonable doubt. The people who attended our wedding are still alive. If you'd like to fly to Los Angeles at your own expense they'd be happy to vouch for it. Our records are on file in the Los Angeles County Hall of Records. I'm not sure they'd pull them out for you, but your attorney could get his hands on them in ten minutes, and (although I'm not certain of this) his fee might be cheaper than a plane ticket to L.A.Can you prove to us that you are married? And were you to scan us your marriage docs, how could you prove to us that they are genuine?
More of the same disingenuity. You carefully sidestep the key issue here: There is an enormous qualitative difference between a man making the unremarkable assertion that he is married, indeed even that he is happily married, and a man claiming that supernatural events have taken place that violate all the laws of nature, including the literally unbelievable assertion that a man came back to life after being thoroughly dead for days.Note: I'm not saying this is the case, just that you don't have any evidence to convince us at this time.
You continue to pursue this disingenuous argument as a foil to distract us from the point of the discussion. This is about me. My faith in my wife's trust and affection is the faith that is rational, because I have satisfactory evidence of it. I'm not asking anyone else to have faith in her. Faith is not necessarily transferable! I've known her for almost 40 years. You barely know me and you don't know her at all. You have no evidence on which to base faith in her, and very little for me. You know that you can trust my knowledge of linguistics--largely because allowing yourself to be deceived about such arcana wouldn't make much of a difference in your life--and that's about all.And what is it that would make me believe that your wife has been loyal to you all these years? Should I believe you?
I have yet to encounter a single religious person whose faith is rational. I'd be interested to hear more about this.There are many different types of religious belief, not to mention that they are individual to each and every person. Yes, they can be the result of ''irrational faith'', but they can be the result of rational faith as well. It depends on the person.
That's because my purpose here is not to convince you to share my faith.
It is merely to explain to you the difference between a rational faith, which is based on evidence, and an irrational faith (such as religion or the expectation of winning a large jackpot in the lottery), which is based entirely on hope.
I have established a good reputation for being truthful on SciForums, so it is rational for the members to have faith that I will continue to be so.
As for being delusional, that is a rare disorder, so once again it is rational to assume that a person you meet at random does not have it. Bear in mind that my assertions are not extraordinary, so your invocation of the Rule of Laplace is out of order.
No one needs to provide extraordinary evidence to support the thesis that his marriage is not dysfunctional. That assertion is simply not in the same category as the woo-woo that religionists throw at us, which violates natural laws right and left and, if it were true, would require rewriting the entire canon of science, if not simply discarding it and replacing all the scientists with witch doctors.
You are falling back on the same trick that religionists often use when backed into a corner: disingenuous argument.
There is an enormous qualitative difference between a man making the unremarkable assertion that he is married, indeed even that he is happily married, and a man claiming that supernatural events have taken place that violate all the laws of nature, including the literally unbelievable assertion that a man came back to life after being thoroughly dead for days.
The standard of proof must be proportional to the ordinariness or extraordinariness of the claim. We stand to lose very little by believing that a single man is happily married. If he's carefully crafted a set of false records, then about the worst that will happen is that he'll pay income tax at the joint rate and we'll lose a little money in the public treasury, and perhaps the government will have to wait twelve seconds before they can afford to start their next war.
But we stand to lose our entire relationship to the universe--our entire notion of reality!-- if we believe the preposterous comic-book crap that the Bible spews at us.
When a believer professes the existence of Christ, he is using a divine model. When a logician argues against it, he is using evidence and the rational model. I also like the cultural anthropologist's model, like this one which appeals to my sense of reality and my tendency to believe that the evidence has not been fabricated, but drawn from relics of history:
Claiming to know what reality IS, is in my opinion, irrational.
jan.
this is in responce to harvestdoing i dont mean to Offend u so i will say this why would our creator need to Clothed his self in flesh as jesus an say i am the son of god when he him self is the truth! jesus never said he was god we all understand god cannot lie, why would he need to. so now why would god say he was jesus when he is the creator of all mankind, would that not be a lie? i think men lie, not god. christanity is not the truth