But you must place faith in those writings. And in the Catholic Church’s interpretation of those writings. And folks might have a difference in faith interpretations perhaps. But I don’t see a soul here calling Jesus a liar.
No more “faith” than one places in the New York Times or any Scientific Journal. When you read an article you put your faith in the one writing the article. That he knows what he is talking about because you did not witness what he witnessed first-hand nor did you have the opportunity to come to the conclusions that he did based on the data that he observed.
When leaving agnosticism I didn’t approach the Bible or the writings of the ECF’s as infallible or authoritative. I merely approached them as any historian would; that the works themselves are
reliable.
What (TedDC) seemed to be suggesting that because a work like the Bible is ancient it must be approached with a radical skepticism. That kind of skepticism calls to question the character of the authors of the works. It assumes first and foremost that the author is lying and that only if the work agrees with the readers expectations can the work be determined by the reader as reliable.
Whereas(TedDC) criticize believers for approaching the Bible with radical acceptance. Both approaches are radical and in their essence un-scientific.
BTW-TedDC essentially called to question the truth of the Bible and the fact that Jesus was divine.
Jesus said He was. Or the Apostles who spread the gospel were liars or were deceived.
So from the mouth of the One who taught the beatitudes and healed people was the same One who said that “before Abraham was I AM”, and that “the Father and I are One.” The One who the Jews wanted to kill because He said that He was “the Son of God, making Himself equal to God.”
So, like I said, either he was a deceiver, or was deceived, or He is Who He said He is; the Lord.