Uh, yes it is. Unless Pieman is tricking me here.
On this I’ll just add that Pieman was obviously just speaking very loosely; I’m sure he wasn’t trying to trick you.
And I think the injustice of original sin is pretty obvious. If Adam and Eve had the chance to make their choice – obeying God out of love of him, or disobeying him and giving into temptation by the devil – why do we not get the same choice? That is to say, why do we not start out our lives as innocent as they did, with the free choice of paradise without any hardship whatsoever?
Why don’t we get to be unaffected by original sin? Obviously because there is such a thing as original sin. If we were unaffected by it, it could only be because there was no such thing. But we believe that there is and you haven’t said anything here that would explain the ‘injustice’ of it.
Then again, I personally value knowledge of good and evil, so I can’t imagine why God supposedly discouraged eating from a tree that would give such knowledge.
I’m not sure if you’re entirely serious here, but you’re obviously misinterpreting what we believe. The effect of eating was ignorance, not knowledge.
But I digress. Inherited guilt is not justice in any sense of the word, simple as that.
“Simple as that” is really not an argument, simple as that. Do you or Hitch have any real arguments? If not, then maybe you’ll begin to understand why ‘religious’ types tend to dismiss him and his ilk as raving fanatics.
Are you asking why I think that is Jesus’s message in the story, or are you asking me what Jesus’s reasoning behind this message probably was? I can’t really answer the latter, as I think there is none beyond an attempt to somehow make the unfalsifiability of Christian claims a good thing.
I was asking the latter, to which you give me a contradictory reply: on the one hand, you really can’t answer; on the other, your answer is that Jesus knew that Christian claims were (would be?) unfalsifiable and he wanted this to be regarded as a good thing. Now my follow-up question is: how did you arrive at this answer? Was it through a process of sincere open-minded inquiry, a genuine search for the truth about what Jesus seems to have meant? (I’ll give you a hint: I’m pretty sure the short answer to the last question is
no.)
The former is pretty self-explanatory; it’s as obvious to see that that is the message of the story as it is to see that the message of the story of Abraham’s attempted child sacrifice is “Even when God seems to be asking you to do things that make no sense to you, do as he commands anyway, for you will be rewarded for your faith.”
What do you mean “self-explanatory”? What part of the story explains itself that way? (It would help if you actually made specific reference to the story in answering this question.)
I disagree with Jesus here because I value evidence, of course.
But obviously Jesus values evidence too, but his concept of evidence is different from yours.
I don’t think that faith is a virtue, at least according to the Hebrews 11:1-2 definition of faith.
Why not?
Archaeologists (sp?) and Biblical scholars can confirm this. Interestingly, Justin Martyr’s writings even acknowledge the similarities between the story of Jesus and the pagan myths of “the sons of Jupiter”. I recommend “The Hidden Story of Jesus”, which, strangely enough, involves a historical journey made by a Christian; these aren’t just fringe groups
of atheists who have an agenda against the historicity of Christianity, even several Christian scholars agree that many suspicious similarities between the Gospels and myths that predate them exist.
Of course none of this seems to particularly relevant to proving your claim. All you have is fallacious appeal to authority and a bunch of “so-what?”…
I do agree that it is recklessly ambitious of me, yes. I have not yet received a college education in matters of higher criticism of the Bible, nor do I intend to. I honestly can’t be bothered to waste my life confirmed what I already know based on what educated people have told me. Call it faith if you (undoubtedly) will, but I call it having justified trust in people more knowledgeable than me.
…but you at least do admit that your claim is recklessly ambitious (i.e., intellectually irresponsible). You are mistaken, however, in connecting this admission to the fact that you are uneducated. Your claims would be irresponsible regardless of what education you had received.
Karen Armstrong comes to mind. I can’t recall the names of the authors of The Bible With Sources Revealed or Who Wrote the New Testament. Suffice it to say I have reason to think that the Documentary Hypothesis is a sound one. The independent sources of evidence for it are not unlike those that support the theory of evolution.
Suffice it to say? Suffice it to say that you are just happy to voice your opinions here and seem uninterested in examining whether those opinions are actually credible.
This makes sense, but I do find it odd that the Catholic Church claims absolute knowledge of certain doctrines, yet it can’t even sort out morality sufficiently. Even today, the Pope seems to think that condoms are worse than AIDS. But then, that may just be Hitchens misleading me.
I would guess Hitch has been misleading you. What did he actually say about this? In any case, you’re completely begging the question here, perhaps something Hitch taught you to do, so again, maybe this is why the guy is not taken seriously by a lot of intelligent people. (I don’t know - I’m open to hearing what he actually said.)