the ppl looking for 'evidence' or proof, seem to be the ones who do not want to take responsibility for their choice to believe..they seem to want it spelled out for them so they don't have to be 'wrong' about their decision..these are the same ppl who scream about inaccuracies in the bible,and ironically argue with the christians who say it shouldn't be taken so literally..
Agreed.
so what they are really saying is 'we can't trust the bible to tell us what to do'
or more to the truth..'we can't trust anyone to tell us what to do'
Also Agreed.
and they are RIGHT!
But not now.
SOLUS
reading your post
made me think about the story of adam and eve and how they got kicked out of the garden..of how the story can be that of 'in the garden' could be a metaphor for us as a species when we were still microbes and such..at a stage where we did not have to think for ourselves, we did not have the ability as of yet..The time when we got 'kicked out' could be the time where we actually were at the stage were we had to start thinking for ourselves..(science Q:What stage could that be?)
just a thought..
I actually think that the garden, indeed our innocence, represents a time when we were still in trees gathering our food. The advent of Adam was the moment we fundamentally changed as a species, capable of communing with God. The gain of the knowledge of good and evil was the point at which we started to recognize a difference between the natural life and some sort of spiritual righteousness. And the expulsion from Eden was the point at which we started hunting as well - the moment we became omnivorous. I believe that when we started eating meat, we started smelling differently, and all the animals with whom we lived in peace in Eden started recognizing us as a threat. In this view, "sin" is seen as an integral part of who we are as humans, indeed it is our capability for consideration and choice that makes us responsible for our actions. But since we are still natural creatures, we cannot be perfect spiritually. The objections from jplappl and SnakeLord are excellent examples of how our natural state gets in the way of spiritual perfection. They are so hung up on physical suffering that their souls cannot transcend this life and experience the Spirit of God. This is the natural state of man.
and i'm all for recanonizing the bible,
i also think a thread should be started with the appropriate links to start a discussion of what should or should not be considered ,i have no clue as to what books were left out or not(much less know what to look for).. this should be started by someone with a working knowledge of such scripts/scrolls and books..
I think rather we should DEcanonize the Bible, or at least the NT. Though Christ never said anything on the matter, those with him recognized that scripture was complete, and that Christ ushered in a new era in which we are finally 'spiritual adults' that can be held responsible for our actions and growth, without requiring the recurring intercession of God. We can now commune with him directly, and are spiritually mature enough to be capable of following him (even if we still choose not to).
in light of what i said above...
Atheism wants to kill god so they could live as they please without fear of consequences...
ironic..
Atheism, or Atheists?
My personal allegory for Adam and Eve is that it is a description of when man first climbed down out of the trees, stood up, looked around and said, "Whoa dude." Unfortunately, with this new-found intelligence comes the realization of our own mortality.
Yeah, this is basically what I was saying above.
Apologies, I considered it a valid thought.
Then I apologize for being so dismissive of it. It just sounded like you were making a leap from God's actions to those of the Isralites. In rereading it, I can better see what you were saying - that for the Israelites to recognize such barbarity as a miracle in the first place seems quite UN-Godlike. Would that be a correct assesment of your comment?
If so, my response is again that Godliness has nothing to do with material things. The laws of Moses were NOT testaments to Godliness. People confuse cleanliness with Godliness (probably thanks to the saying "cleanliness is next to Godliness"), and the laws of the OT were largely observations of cleanliness and rules for conduct that were never intended to apply to anything spiritual. Actually READING the scriptures reveals that. It is only because churches teach such corruptions of the scriptures that people today think that it is what the Bible actually says. Such ignorance and misinformation is precisely why people are so easily miself into believing the Bible somehow justifies the evil that others want to carry out.
Meaningless. The word "perfection" here doesn't seem to have any consistent definition but is always strangely used to justify and condone the slaughter of humans whenever a god so desires.
It is not by any stretch of the imagination inconsistent. You may not approve of how God's perfection is described, but the Bible IS consistent in describing it. Once again, the message is that things of the Spirit are not material. God alleviates suffering of the soul, not the body (though Christ did at times because he was human and could empathize with the suffering of the body, of the material). In every instance of people getting killed at the hands of God in the OT, it is because they got in the way of spirituality, which is consistently the thing God cares about. God has no qualms about killing people to save their souls, or the souls of others - because God (and the spiritual man) recognize the importance of the Spirit, and the irrelevance of the body.
A common and shoddy excuse to the POE. I won't address it further because it's not based upon anything.
POE?
You can consider it a shoddy excuse if you like, but it is common because it is what the Bible says. You can't call it inconsistent or contradictory, but you are of course free to find it unsatisfactory. Such a position is predicted in the NT (1 Cor 2:14).
So it is "practically impossible" for god to perform any miracle that would convince Cat?
Yes, I believe so.
Feel free to quote specific verses that declare that suffering is irrelevant to god.
2 Cor 12 is a good example, though there is plenty more (such as the entire book of Job). I just don't have time to look it all up at the moment.
Nonsense. Countless born agains will explain how they were completely unreligious and unbelieving yet then having witnessed a 'miracle' came to belief.
Just because they thought it was a miracle doesn't mean it actually was, and just because they were unreligious doesn't mean they couldn't be moved by the Spirit.
What rules are you referring to?
The laws of physics to begin with.
Ummm.. post 97 isn't my post.
Oops. Sorry. I probably pasted the wrong Quote tag in front of that line.
SolusCado,
As I said in my post:
The first few verses of genesis says " God SAID let there be.... ....and ther was."
Very basic i'll admit, but it tells you "how" He did it.
Ok Jan. If the intent of the first few verses was indeed to describe what God did rather than how, how would you expect it to be worded? (IOW, it sounds to me like it is saying what God did, not how.)
That contradicts the creation story.
In fact there is nothing in the bible to indicate abiogenesis or the evolutionary
process took place. But it does say beings were created from their own kind which implies species have already been made.
No, it contradicts what you THINK the creation story is. There WOULDN'T be anything in the Bible to discuss natural selection or abiogenesis because the men of the time knew nothing of such concepts. They wouldn't even have the language to describe it, even if such scientific details had been revealed by God. Instead, the Bible doesn't say anything at all about the early development of life.
If God exists then knowledege is a quest to understand Him.
In the bible we can understand that God has full control over material nature. Science seeks to gain more knowledge in a quest to understand nature.
jan.
Knowledge doesn't have to be a quest to understand God alone. Knowledge, or rather the pursuit of it, cane be a quest to understand a great many different things, including God. That science seeks to better understand nature, and that God has full control over nature, is really irrelevant (or at least, I need you to point out the relevance of your comment).