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anEvilAtheist
Guest
No, truth does matter. I accept that some of the people, places, and events in the Bible are historical. For example, we have pretty good evidence that Pontius Pilate existed. I don’t think anyone’s saying that every single thing mentioned in the Bible is made up. What is disputed is how many of the things in the Bible are historically accurate. I heard a compelling case made by an archeologist who argued that the Bible is historically unreliable and modern archeologists no longer think it is a valuable guide. I also think that your links made a compelling case. In order to find out what is true, I would have to do a careful overview of all the data. We obviously don’t have time to research every issue, and this issue does not particularly interest me. I do not think that it’s relevant to the question of whether God exists. A lack of evidence supporting many Biblical claims does not prove that Christianity is false any more than confirmation that some of the events in the Bible are true confirms that Christianity is true.Hi, Evilatheist,
OK … you’re on…let’s take a look at logic…
Now, got to your post #804 where you make the following statement:
Thanks for the links. It’s definitely a controversial issue and there are also a lot of archeologists who think that the Bible is historically inaccurate. However, I thought your links made a great case that a lot of the events depicted in the Bible were true. But to me, it doesn’t really matter. Even if it could be proven that some of the key non-supernatural stories in the Bible were completely accurate, this would not provide evidence that Jesus was the son of God (Just as a book about a girl and her time-traveling unicorn would not be evidence that unicorns exist even if the other people, places, and events mentioned in the book all really existed).
You are commenting on 4 hyperlinks that have been sent dealing with science.
So, if I understand your statement correctly, truth does not matter. Here you are immediately granting that ancient records found in the Bible can actually be independently validated by ancient secular accounts of the same events - and then you dismiss it.
People are perfectly willing to die for a fantasy as long as they don’t know it’s a fantasy.While you may find it convenient to equate the stories of Chist being the Son of God to a novel about a girl and time travel - no one is going to die for a fantasy. Do you know of anyone willing to die for this girl, time travel and her unicorn? And, while you may dismiss the Apostles as 12 crazy men without a life so that dying for a fantasy was simply inconsequential - thousands and thousands of Christians died under the rule of the pagan Roman emperors - and it could not erase Christianity.
Have people died for Islam century after century?A logical argument could not simply dismiss the supreme sacrifice made over and over again, under different tyrants - but, all with the same end: to abolish the message of Christ. No one dies for a myth. People do not die for the same myth century after century. Your little time traveling girl with the unicorn is not worth dying for - Jesus Christ is.
No, I wouldn’t die for Atheism. I don’t even really know what that means. Do you mean that I would die unless I pretended I was Christian or that I would lay down my life in the service of atheism?Are you willing to die for Athieism? If put to the test, I pray for the Grace to die for Christ.
And, there lies the difference.
God bless