What would you do if it were proven...?

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Personally I think it’s quite likely that there were one or a number of real people who were written about in the events in the NT. In a similar way to Kaid really, as he said about King Arthur, Achilles, and Romulus. I think it’s reasonably likely that there was a person or a few real people behind those stories too.
Unless you can provide a source for this “reasonably likely” premise, all you are doing is providing wild, unsubstantiated speculation. There is no source, within 1 or 2 generations of King Arthur’s, Achilles’ and Romulus’ existence, that documented a “legend” or myth about any of these characters, as there was with Jesus.
 
:confused::confused::confused: This post contradicts everything I’ve read about Catholicism. Do the words Protestant, cafeteria Catholic, and heretic, ring a bell? I’ve heard dozens of times on the forum people saying things like “the church is always right, if you do not understand a certain teaching, pray to God and He will show you,” “the Church can never change bc that would be admitting She was wrong.”
example: contraception

From the CCC:
"No one - no individual and no community - can proclaim the Gospel to himself: “Faith comes from what is heard.391 No one can give himself the mandate and the mission to proclaim the Gospel”
889 In order to preserve the Church in the purity of the faith handed on by the apostles, Christ who is the Truth willed to confer on her a share in his own infallibility. By a “supernatural sense of faith” the People of God, under the guidance of the Church’s living Magisterium, "unfailingly adheres to this faith."417
The mission of the Magisterium is linked to the definitive nature of the covenant established by God with his people in Christ. It is this Magisterium’s task to preserve God’s people from deviations and defections and to guarantee them the objective possibility of professing the true faith without error. Thus, the pastoral duty of the Magisterium is aimed at seeing to it that the People of God abides in the truth that liberates. To fulfill this service, Christ endowed the Church’s shepherds with the charism of infallibility in matters of faith and morals.
The Church through its supreme Magisterium proposes a doctrine "for belief as being divinely revealed,"419 and as the teaching of Christ, the definitions "must be adhered to with the obedience of faith."420

Could you explain yourself?
The point, samiam, is that the Church simply proposes, it does not impose.

All rational human beings are certainly free to accept, or reject, the message of Christ.

Christ can say: you must love your neighbor.

We can say, “Yes, that is correct!” or we can say, “No, Christ is wrong.”

Christ can say: you cannot divorce and remarry.

We can say, “Yes, that is correct!” or we can say, “No, Jesus got it wrong here.”

Christ can say: using artificial contraception is immoral.

We can say, “Yes, it is immoral!” or we can say, “Nope, he got it wrong here.”

Thus, the Church does not “externally enforce” (to use Candide’s phrasing) any beliefs.
 
Absolutely not! *:eek:

This is what we are agreed on, which is quite a bit different from your premise above:
I find this all quite confusing. So you are saying that you don’t think that being restricted to a single opinion (on pain of death) is bad. But you do think we should be free to change our opinions? Why?*
Right.

And Catholics have the Magisterium to be this final arbiter of truth. Atheists and Protestants, sadly, do not have the benefit of this final authority.*

See above.
Exactly, thanks for demonstrating my point. Catholics have the magisterium, which they believe is right. Other religions have other sources which they believe are right (just as strongly as you believe in the magisterium). That’s exactly why it’s irresolvable.
Ok. *🤷

Fair enough. It is a limitation he has imposed upon himself, but it certainly is not the result of Catholic teaching that he proposes this.
Agreed, obviously, but as far as I know you are the only person who has suggested otherwise. Glad we’ve got past this now.
Tis true, to be sure. *Sad, but, alas, true. *:sad_yes:
Also I suspect more or less inevitable. Since there is no enforcement, no visible consequences and standards which are not derived from first principles but from a “higher” reference for issues which are themselves complex. Not to mention the starting point being written in a different language, by people with a culture and education vastly different from ours and living conditions which are virtually unrecognisable.
 
Whatever is proven to our satisfaction about the nature of reality we still have to decide how we are going to live. It is by the way we live that we reveal what our true beliefs are.
If our thoughts and actions reflect our allegiance to truth, goodness, freedom, justice, beauty and love we are heading in the right direction - towards the Source of those realities…
 
Unless you can provide a source for this “reasonably likely” premise, all you are doing is providing wild, unsubstantiated speculation. There is no source, within 1 or 2 generations of King Arthur’s, Achilles’ and Romulus’ existence, that documented a “legend” or myth about any of these characters, as there was with Jesus.
No, actually I’m providing my opinion. That why I wrote “Personally, I think…”.

It may be right or wrong, but I’m not really interested in getting into a debate over the quality of evidence for King Arthur being a real roman soldier. I am interested in where the previous conversation was going beyond demonstrating whether or not Jesus existed as a real person.
 
No, actually I’m providing my opinion. That why I wrote “Personally, I think…”.

It may be right or wrong, but I’m not really interested in getting into a debate over the quality of evidence for King Arthur being a real roman soldier. I am interested in where the previous conversation was going beyond demonstrating whether or not Jesus existed as a real person.
It would be interesting to know the source of your moral values…
 
Personally I think it’s quite likely that there were one or a number of real people who were written about in the events in the NT. In a similar way to Kaid really, as he said about King Arthur, Achilles, and Romulus. I think it’s reasonably likely that there was a person or a few real people behind those stories too.
Which of them were responsible for the teaching of Jesus? Was it a combined effort or were they all writing independently? And what were their motives?
 
Pieman, I’d be interested in this discussion if you are still around. I’m quite interested to see where you were going with this. So to help things along I’ll accept for now your suggestion that Jesus was a real person.

Personally I think it’s quite likely that there were one or a number of real people who were written about in the events in the NT. In a similar way to Kaid really, as he said about King Arthur, Achilles, and Romulus. I think it’s reasonably likely that there was a person or a few real people behind those stories too.
Well, up next I was going to defend the reliability of Matthew based on the criterion of embarrassment earlier - if it edited the baptism, how do we know he didn’t edit anything else? Well, here are some reasons:
  1. At best, this evidence suggest Matthew wasn’t making the positives stronger but the negatives weaker. He wouldn’t, based on this evidence, make the resurrection more extraordinary but the crucifixion less extraordinary.
  2. Matthew was writing to the Jews. The very depiction of Jesus being resurrected in the way he did would be a reason for the Jews to deny it.The presence of the resurrection narrative at all suggests that Matthew valued this enough to keep it clean, even if it meant a smaller audience.
  3. Even if he did edit the resurrection story, many key elements would still be able to be traced to earlier, cleaner tradition.
 
I find this all quite confusing. So you are saying that you don’t think that being restricted to a single opinion (on pain of death) is bad. But you do think we should be free to change our opinions? Why?*
Being free to change our opinions is part of the gift of being rational creatures.
Exactly, thanks for demonstrating my point. Catholics have the magisterium, which they believe is right. Other religions have other sources which they believe are right (just as strongly as you believe in the magisterium). That’s exactly why it’s irresolvable.
Truth, Candide, is always resolvable. We are given the faculties of faith and reason upon which we can come to an understanding of Truth.

Now, in your position as a non-believer, I can see why you are unable to resolve the many apparent theological conflicts.

But believers know that there is A truth, and that this truth is a Person.

And, thus, it all resolves rather nicely. 🙂
 
Also I suspect more or less inevitable. Since there is no enforcement, no visible consequences and standards which are not derived from first principles but from a “higher” reference for issues which are themselves complex. Not to mention the starting point being written in a different language, by people with a culture and education vastly different from ours and living conditions which are virtually unrecognisable.
Ah, but Candide, there are indeed quite visible consequences. Quite visible indeed! One was pointed out quite empirically by Mystic Banana about the chaos and despair that ensues when one has no way to resolve Truths.

Another is the chaos and despair that occurs when we choose not to follow The Way. We see the resulting destruction when families divorce. We see the disordered lives that follow those who are addicted to pornography, drugs, alcohol, etc.
 
Not to mention the starting point being written in a different language, by people with a culture and education vastly different from ours and living conditions which are virtually unrecognisable.
I take it you never studied the Greek philosophers in college, Candide? The truths proclaimed by Socrates, Plato, Aristotle were written in a different language, by people with a culture and education vastly different from ours and living in conditions which are virtually unrecognizable.

And then there are the great Persian poets, Archimedes, the father of calculus, Ptolemy, Euclid…

We should dismiss their works, then, in your paradigm because they didn’t write in English? :hmmm:

Really, Candide?
 
It would be interesting to know the source of your moral values…
No problem, I work them out from axiomatic principles such as “suffering is bad”, “happiness is good” etc. These are based on the definition of those words rather than any reasoned and justified position. If you wanted to change that then you’d need to redefine those words, in which case others would replace them.

The key point is that the concepts of negative experience described by words like “suffering” and positive experience described by words like “happiness” provide practicably objective starting points for morality without need for reference to absolutes like God concepts.
 
No problem, I work them out from axiomatic principles such as “suffering is bad”, “happiness is good” etc. These are based on the definition of those words rather than any reasoned and justified position. If you wanted to change that then you’d need to redefine those words, in which case others would replace them.

The key point is that the concepts of negative experience described by words like “suffering” and positive experience described by words like “happiness” provide practicably objective starting points for morality without need for reference to absolutes like God concepts.
The pleasure-pain principle has long been rejected as an adequate basis of morality. For one thing it reduces good and evil to what **you **experience regardless of the rest of the world - unless you introduce the principle of equality. You can define anything to suit yourself but reality is not based on what suits you:rolleyes:
 
The pleasure-pain principle has long been rejected as an adequate basis of morality. For one thing it reduces good and evil to what **you **experience regardless of the rest of the world - unless you introduce the principle of equality. You can define anything to suit yourself but reality is not based on what suits you:rolleyes:
Rejected by everyone or rejected by theists? I’ve heard the principle of trying to cause the maximum happiness for the maximum number of people… hardly a principle designed to only suit “yourself”.
 
Which of them were responsible for the teaching of Jesus? Was it a combined effort or were they all writing independently? And what were their motives?
I assume you are referring to me saying that I think it’s quite likely there were one or more real people about whom the events in the NT were written?

If so the answers to your questions are simply unknowns. The point of the paragraph was to concede a point of discussion in order to see where things were going. Not to conjecture about who (if anyone) lay behind the stories in question.
 
I assume you are referring to me saying that I think it’s quite likely there were one or more real people about whom the events in the NT were written?

If so the answers to your questions are simply unknowns.
Nothing shall come from nothing!
The point of the paragraph was to concede a point of discussion in order to see where things were going. Not to conjecture about who (if anyone) lay behind the stories in question.
And where do you think things are going? 🙂
 
Well, up next I was going to defend the reliability of Matthew based on the criterion of embarrassment earlier - if it edited the baptism, how do we know he didn’t edit anything else? Well, here are some reasons:
I’m pretty unconvinced by the criterion of embarrassment to be honest. For one thing the culture that Matthew was writing to was vastly different from our own, can we really judge exactly what they would have considered embarrassing? Perhaps Matthew expected them to see it as humble. Afterall Christianities roots lie in the lower orders of society who would have well associated with such a message and indeed with social injustice such as the crucification.

Secondly the criterion can be applied to other stories too. Ie Achilles was supposed to be this amazing hero, but was killed by an arrow through the heel while being exceptionally cruel and disrespectful. Hardly heroic.
  1. At best, this evidence suggest Matthew wasn’t making the positives stronger but the negatives weaker. He wouldn’t, based on this evidence, make the resurrection more extraordinary but the crucifixion less extraordinary.
Why not? Crucifiction was at the time a normal event anyway. Why bother to try to make it seem extraordinary? The resurrection claim is pretty extraordinary anyway, why try to make it ordinary?*
  1. Matthew was writing to the Jews. The very depiction of Jesus being resurrected in the way he did would be a reason for the Jews to deny it.The presence of the resurrection narrative at all suggests that Matthew valued this enough to keep it clean, even if it meant a smaller audience.
I agree that Matthew would have valued the resurrection story. It’s probably the single most important event in the story. However, I don’t believe that supports the argument that the story was accurate. It may be simply that there were other reasons for writing the story that way. As I said it’s difficult to judge literary choices from another language, 2000 years ago and say “he wouldn’t have written it like that if he made it up”.

Secondly, even if the story of the resurrection was written as accurately as it could have been at the time, there are still simpler explanations for the events in question. Ie Jesus wasn’t dead when he was taken down from the cross. Even now people are sometimes believed to be dead when they aren’t. Medicine then wasn’t exactly advanced and I don’t suppose the soldiers etc would have been looking hugely closely.*
  1. Even if he did edit the resurrection story, many key elements would still be able to be traced to earlier, cleaner tradition.
Perhaps, what references do we have to judge against for that earlier, cleaner tradition?*
 
Secondly, even if the story of the resurrection was written as accurately as it could have been at the time, there are still simpler explanations for the events in question. Ie Jesus wasn’t dead when he was taken down from the cross.
This is interesting. So were the disciples fooled into thinking he was dead when he wasn’t? Or were they “in” on the deception?
 
Hi,

I’m new here on CAF but thought I’d post a question which interests me.

For those who are theists - “What would you do if it were proven to your satisfaction that God does not exist

For those who are atheists - “What would you do if it were proven to your satisfaction that God does exist

Thanks for taking the time.
Flawed premise. We would not “do” anything because we would not exist. Try again.😉
 
Hi,

I’m new here on CAF but thought I’d post a question which interests me.

For those who are theists - “What would you do if it were proven to your satisfaction that God does not exist

For those who are atheists - “What would you do if it were proven to your satisfaction that God does exist

Thanks for taking the time.
Difficult to say, I personally find many moral, historic and scientific discrepancies with every form of God I’ve heard about, so if I was convinced any one of them really existed I would be expecting some decent answers to my questions and my resulting actions would depend on those answers.
 
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