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dronald
Guest
And that’s when it becomes a matter of trust. I, as an anonymous internet stranger can go on a website and claim to be either gender. An internet stranger may not be trustworthy so some may believe and some may not.Modern concepts like ‘conspiracy’ are rather anachronistic when talking about the kinds of processes that would have applied at the time. However, even a Christian might be puzzled at the remarkable ability of Jesus to ‘fulfil’ all sorts of supposed ‘prophesies’ in the Tanakh but only ones that can be ‘fulfilled’ textually and what that might mean about the way the New Testament was written and how a canon was arrived at.
However, when I look at the Bible and the history of it, I trust that these men were telling the truth. I trust that the same men who recorded Jesus’s words about not telling a lie would also be honest when writing their accounts of what they saw and heard. Some may look at it and say, “I do not trust these men for [X] reasons.” While I have my own, many reasons why I trust them.
Thanks for the first part, I enjoy reading it!Err? Only part of it, the bit that Christians tacked on the end of the Bible.![]()
Hm, perhaps with what you’d expect from the Messiah, but Islam is consistent on how it feels about its prophets.Well, you see, to us and, obviously, to Muslims . . . . it’s rather obvious - so it’s a matter of Christian diversion rather than Jewish/Muslim agreement.
David didn’t commit adultery, Solomon never got into idols, Jonah never got angry with God and Jesus never died. But I get your point; it must be obvious.