A
Aloysium
Guest
sorry, i was trying to be funny, 
it only sometimes works:shrug:
my bad
consider me reprimanded:blush:
it only sometimes works:shrug:
my bad
consider me reprimanded:blush:
me likeysorry, i was trying to be funny,
it only sometimes works:shrug:
my bad
consider me reprimanded:blush:
I wasnāt being too serious either, so all good. Takes a while to get someoneās sense of humour. Unless you use those smilies, which I donāt like using. Or PRās video snippets.sorry, i was trying to be funny.
Ah, I see what your position is now.I think that weāre talking in circles. They didnāt see anyone. It was just written that they had.
It is interesting how you draw conclusions from evidence. It was merely written that the disciples saw Jesus, therefore they didnāt see anyone. What is it that warrants that conclusion based upon āit was just written?āI think that weāre talking in circles. They didnāt see anyone. It was just written that they had.
Iām not saying they were liars and Iām not saying it didnāt happen. There were misinformed and wrote something that they believed was true. With a little embellishment. That doesnāt make them liars in my book.It is interesting how you draw conclusions from evidence. It was merely written that the disciples saw Jesus, therefore they didnāt see anyone. What is it that warrants that conclusion based upon āit was just written?ā
Youāre not saying the Resurrection didnāt happen? Really? Youāre open to the possibility that it did?Iām not saying they were liars and Iām not saying it didnāt happen.
But Bradski,* who* misinformed them?There were misinformed and wrote something that they believed was true. With a little embellishment. That doesnāt make them liars in my book.
What do you think of this commentary about skepticism, Bradski:Iām a skeptic by nature. So much so that you could describe it as a fault. It causes problems in that I can on times be very difficult to persuade that something is true. And even when I do accept it, I still find myself questioning it.
I thing that doubt should be the default position. Doesnāt make life easy, thoughā¦
Many have undertaken to draw up an account of the things that have been fulfilled among us, just as they were handed down to us by those who from the first were eyewitnesses and servants of the word. With this in mind, since I myself have carefully investigated everything from the beginning, I too decided to write an orderly account for you, most excellent Theophilus, so that you may know the certainty of the things you have been taught. (Luke 1:1-4)Iām not saying they were liars and Iām not saying it didnāt happen. There were misinformed and wrote something that they believed was true. With a little embellishment. That doesnāt make them liars in my book.
The evidence is therefore, for me, very slim indeed that what they were writing about actually happened as they described it.
Morality has itās basis in love not law. Good law is a expression of love. Jesus stated the two most important commandments. Both are commandments to love. If that love exists in you then those commandments are āwritten in the heartā. All good law derives from love in the heart for God and neighbor. Therefore, even a society starting from scratch with no written law will develop law that echos the love in their hearts.How can a civilization develop a moral consensus on anything without reference to the commandments of God?
āLet us with caution indulge the supposition that morality can be maintained without religion. Reason and experience both forbid us to expect that national morality can prevail in exclusion of religious principle.ā George Washington
Do a thought experiment. Imagine a perfectly non-religious society. From whence would morals be derived, and by what (whose) authority?
The Gospel of Matthew is supposed to have been written by an eyewitness. His gospel is the only one that records the raising of many dead people who appeared to many people in Jerusalem after Jesusās death (Matthew 27:51-54). It seems improbable that an event that extraordinary would have gone unnoticed, if for no other reason than for the fact that there would have been a lot of empty tombs in addition to Jesusās. If Luke was so meticulous and complete with his research, why didnāt he (or any other contemporary source) mention that extraordinary event?Many have undertaken to draw up an account of the things that have been fulfilled among us, just as they were handed down to us by those who from the first were eyewitnesses and servants of the word. With this in mind, since I myself have carefully investigated everything from the beginning, I too decided to write an orderly account for you, most excellent Theophilus, so that you may know the certainty of the things you have been taught. (Luke 1:1-4)
Either Luke was lying or incompetent, since he claimed to have ācarefully investigated everythingā ⦠āthingsā¦just as they were handed down to us by those who from the first were eyewitnesses.ā
This sounds like someone who relied upon direct evidence handed down from eyewitnesses to write a complete and orderly account. All this care and attention to detail on the part of Luke, a physician, would seem to preclude misinformation and embellishment. So he was either intentionally attempting to deceive or simply incompetent. Misinformed just does not show up on the radar screen.
Maybe his ox ate it.. . . If Luke was so meticulous and complete with his research, why didnāt he . . . mention that extraordinary event?
Faith without reason? I donāt think thatās allowed.Maybe his ox ate it.
Seriously, at what point does one just have faith?
The absence of that event from his account does not argue against Luke as a reliable or credible source, but rather for it. Luke was writing to a different audience and never seemed to have spent time in or around Jerusalem. He was of Greek background, likely from Antioch and lived for a time in Troas. As such, he personally may not have had the means by which to verify, to his satisfaction, the empty tombs event and therefore could not reliably defend its inclusion if questioned on it by his Greco-Roman audience. That seems to argue for him being meticulous because he did not succumb to including events beyond his means to verify. The exclusion of the event from Lukeās account does not mean it didnāt occur, but merely that Luke had no way to verify it to a standard he could live with.The Gospel of Matthew is supposed to have been written by an eyewitness. His gospel is the only one that records the raising of many dead people who appeared to many people in Jerusalem after Jesusās death (Matthew 27:51-54). It seems improbable that an event that extraordinary would have gone unnoticed, if for no other reason than for the fact that there would have been a lot of empty tombs in addition to Jesusās. If Luke was so meticulous and complete with his research, why didnāt he (or any other contemporary source) mention that extraordinary event?
once you have faith it all makes senseFaith without reason? I donāt think thatās allowed.
True, that.Faith without reason? I donāt think thatās allowed.
Iāll start another thread in the scripture forum in a day or two addressing Peter Platoās response and your questions as well. If this thread is still open when I do that, Iāll let you all know here; otherwise Iāll PM you.True, that.
Fideism is rejected by the Catholic Church.
Now you have to proffer some argument that proves that itās unreasonable to believe that what St. Matthew wrote in his gospel is false if none of the other 3 gospel narratives alludes to it.
By what reasoning do we assume that St. Matthew wrote a lie because the other 3 gospel writers did not include it?
Eye witnesses are notoriously unreliable. It is harder to imagine a story not changing over 2,000 years. The bible used in the UK has itās roots in the 1600s and was very much ātidied upā or ācleaned upā by itās authors to represent the views of the time.Many have undertaken to draw up an account of the things that have been fulfilled among us, just as they were handed down to us by those who from the first were eyewitnesses and servants of the word. With this in mind, since I myself have carefully investigated everything from the beginning, I too decided to write an orderly account for you, most excellent Theophilus, so that you may know the certainty of the things you have been taught. (Luke 1:1-4)
Either Luke was lying or incompetent, since he claimed to have ācarefully investigated everythingā ⦠āthingsā¦just as they were handed down to us by those who from the first were eyewitnesses.ā
This sounds like someone who relied upon direct evidence handed down from eyewitnesses to write a complete and orderly account. All this care and attention to detail on the part of Luke, a physician, would seem to preclude misinformation and embellishment. So he was either intentionally attempting to deceive or simply incompetent. Misinformed just does not show up on the radar screen.
You havenāt looked much into the textual reliability of the Old and New Testaments have you? Your points here are merely general ones which donāt adequately address the specific and unique characteristics of Biblical texts. As such, your critique is of little value. What you can or cannot imagine is irrelevant to the issue.Eye witnesses are notoriously unreliable. It is harder to imagine a story not changing over 2,000 years. The bible used in the UK has itās roots in the 1600s and was very much ātidied upā or ācleaned upā by itās authors to represent the views of the time.