S
Syele
Guest
No I’m not saying that. I’m saying that God doesn’t make mistakes. Therefore if a text has a historical mistake it must be ruled out that God personally inspired it. There will be many books with no mistakes that are not inspired but no books that are inspired with mistakes.Ignoring all the other problems with this argument, let’s just continue with it for the sake of discussion… Are you saying that if a book is “historically accurate” then it logically follows that that book must be divinely inspired? If not, then this argument is clearly insufficient to begin with.
Many books refer to others at least by quoting them. I tend to refer to God’s word as one thing out of habit.First of all you’re treating the Bible as one big monolithic piece of literature, which is a huge mistake. It’s not like one guy sat down, wrote the whole thing and said “I’m going to call this book ‘the Bible!’” Also, no book in the Bible ever refers to itself as being part of a larger collection of books in the first place, so your claims that any part in “the Bible” refers to itself as such don’t hold water. Revelation is the only book that claims in itself to even be divinely inspired, as far as I know. The other books do not. In any case, I don’t know why you list the mere claim to be divinely inspired as evidence of itself. An argument, left on its own, does not prove itself.
The Bible is not the Bible because I feel it is. The Bible is the Bible because God said so. Millions of Christians agree on what books beling in there. If you think believeing that the Holy Spirit moving is “whimsical human tendencies” then I must take exception to that. Yes anyone can Say they heard from God. and that dosn’t prove they did. As Christians we have to use discrenment.You are basically saying “it’s my own personal feeling”. Anyone can say this about their own religion. Muslims do it all the time, and they think it is enough proof that their religion is true. As Christians, we must rise above these whimsical human tendencies and base our faith on hard evidence and solid fact.
I didn’t say it proves itself. I said I am convinced it is true based on my experience with the Holy Spirit. Yes it rests on my faith. My faith says the Bible is correct and is the word of God. Why should I alone have to prove such a thing? I shouldn’t it is up to the entire body of Christ not one individual. Calvinists, Arminians, Catholics and people who mix it all up (except a few cults) all tend to agree the Bible is inspired. You all go on about how we do not seem to agree on things… but in this Christians do agree for the most part.Again, you are stating a conditional, but how is the conditional supposed to be proof of itself?? A Muslim, for example, could say “IF the Quran cannot be trusted then we are basing our faith on lies.” By your reasoning, such a statement by itself actually proves the Quran to be true! Sorry but this just won’t wash. You will have to be consistent here.