Tuesday, 25 April 2006

  • WargoCC83 & Christianity

    “10 More Answers from a Christian”

     

    Q:  Original Ten Questions

     

    A:  WargoCC83 on IntellectualSpirit's post.

     

    Response:  Previous reply.

     

     

    Q:  1. In the face of alternate explanations for the “necessary being” or the “default reality,” why is a *sentient* being more likely than a mindless mechanism like a multi-verse that would satisfy all the same necessary criteria, but generate infinite numbers of possible worlds without regard for reciprocation?

     

    A:  1.Are you asking why God created the Universe is more likely then everything just happening?

     

    Response:  Why do you think the ultimate natural state of everything is a sentient life form similar to you in relevant ways?  God is said to have always been…and “everything just happening” implies a timeline of events…which would not be the case if everything has always been instead.  See what I mean, more here.

     

    Q:  2. Before getting into which is the true religion, how does one know that there even is a true religion? 

     

    A:  2.They don’t

     

    Response:  Is that an answer?  How did you personally eliminate the possibility that there is no true religion since we aren’t really steeped in evidence of the interactive supernatural?   

     

    Q:  3. How does Christianity step out of the metaphysical scam mold in the way that you might admit other metaphysical scams do not?

     

    A:  3.Give me a scam so I can have something to compare it to

    Response:  My post “Eight Examples:  Is it a Meta-scam?” should work. 

     

    Q:  4. How does God get to claim responsibility for the good parts of other religions like they couldn’t come up with that stuff on their own?

     

    A:  4.Because he has claim on everything

     

    Response:  Um…even sin?

     

    Q:  5. Since there is the possibility that the OT is bogus in its metaphysical claims, how are we to believe that God could not create a free world that allowed for people to chose between only good choices (or even withdraw from a loving relationship with God with an informed decision by only apathy and not evil)…especially when we are expecting such a world in the future by admission of Christian doctrine?

     

    A:  5.God can create that kind of a world. Mark 10:27

     

    Response:  Okay…then why are we to believe that a benevolent deity would not do just that and not waste billions of people on this one? 

    Q:  6. For all intensive purposes, we can pull a text from an eastern religion and presume it is the inspired word of God and it would be all but indistinguishable from the OT and the NT.  It may even surpass the texts in quality.  How does inerrancy have any meaning in this case, when it is arguably a big tradition game surrounding ancient teachings that could be played with any number of diverse texts that teach subtly suspicious different things?  


    A:  6.Truth comes from searching and finding meaning, not random words.  Therefore, the truth can come from both Christian and non-Christian sources.

     

    Response:  Okay, I agree.  However, that is not the claim of Christianity.  Truth is exclusive within, and maybe without, though there’s no real way to objectively tell that it’s true if you are not being goaded by doctrine to think so.  How do you get to “the Bible is inerrant” in an intellectually honest way when the methods of support are that plastic?

     

    Q:  7. Since there are a number of different religions and denominations and sects that have believers that know that what they believe is true specifically and their spiritual experiences have confirmed it…yet they espouse different and contrary teachings…who’s experiences should I disrespect for the sake of non-contradiction? 

     

    A:  7.The teachings which you feel lead you away from truth.

    Response:  And so you would agree that if I feel I am lead away from the truth by taking any claims of religious certainty seriously, I am finding the truth by disregarding them?

     

    Q:  8. If God had a little wager with Satan as in the book of Job, and picked you the Christian believer out in particular…and it entailed God never once ever intervening in your life to test your faith…would you be able to tell the difference in any practical way?

     

    A:  8.I am not sure what you mean by intervening.  If everything was created by him including Satan, what kind of life could be led in order to avoid everything he has influenced?

     

    Response:  I mean in terms of direct providence.  Could you tell if God never did anything overtly for or against you other than sustain reality as is? 

     

    Q:  9. Debates more often than not go their separate ways with no positive proof of any metaphysical claim…does the Christian belief system teetering on the brink of reality resemble more an invitation to a trusting, loving personal relationship or more like a metaphysical scam like every other meta-scam that has nothing to show for itself?

     

    A:  9.Christian belief system is like any belief such as a belief in Cleopatra or Caesar.  Its events are based on oral tradition and old writings.  It’s teachings are based more interpretation combined with a desire to find fulfillment without material possessions while maximizing mental strength in the form of faith.

    Response:  Are you saying you believe Caesar was really a god because of the traditions about him? 

     

    Q:  10.  If we take away all the certainty of belief as perhaps the answers to these questions indicate…and have an agnostic approach to the claims…a wager even…how is it that we still fit the definition of Christian and assert creeds, go confidently up to God in prayer, and maybe even die a martyrs death?

    A:  10.If we don’t have belief then we don’t fit the definition of a Christian.

    Response:  So you are a Christian that is certain of the truth of Christianity in objective ways.  That implies I too can be that certain.  However, the answers to these questions do not lead me to that level of certainty.  Why have you withheld from me the correct answers?  Are you in cahoots with God to give me the strong delusion that the important parts of Christianity are false?  All you have done here is back out of strong affirmations which leads one to conclude that you have no way of knowing if anything about your religion is really true.  Perhaps you can understand why I think that makes you an agnostic like me?

     

    Ben

Comments (59)

  • anonymous
    ARU,

    I'm going to link you off of some of my other xangas, if you don't mind. May I also hotlink your banner?

    JT
  • WAR_ON_ERROR
    Not sure what you mean, but sure.  Sounds good. 
  • Traci_Ladd
    I was complaining about my own short attention span.  It's a thing I'm going through right now!  Didn't realize you wanted on Yahoo...I'll check on that.
  • Traci_Ladd
    Oh yeah, and the audio doesn't work for me.  ??? Maybe I'm not doing something right?
  • stevogvsu
    That guy didn't answer the questions very well now did he? I agree with the idea that everyone is an agnostic, no one knows if god exists, They can claim that they do, but in reality that have no clue. Personall,y I think that if there is a god he/she/it isn't worth acknowledging and no current world religion has it right.
  • WAR_ON_ERROR
    Don't be too hasty.  I haven't asked every Christian on the planet.  Perhaps a handful have decent answers...
  • WargoCC83

    1. "think the ultimate natural state of everything is a sentient life form " Are you asking me if rocks have emotions?  "if everything has always been instead"  O.K, I'm not sure where you getting this from.  You are saying that the earth always was?  And there is no timeline of events?  Please support text so I can see where your view of Christianity is coming from here. 

    2. "How did you personally eliminate the possibility that there is no true religion" I didn't.

    3. I am still not 100% sure what you are judging on.  So I'll just pick necessity.  Please further explain what you mean by "conflict with important matters" and how Christianity fails here. 

    4."Um…even sin" Well we know very little about him from the gospels.  We know that only he is good and all things are possible for him.  So we can't rule out that he doesn't have claim to sin and I take back that he has claim to everything.  I jumped the gun on that one.  But where did you get the idea that he has claim to other religons?

    5."benevolent deity would not do just that"  I dont know.  How is that an argument against Christianity?

    6. "How do you get to “the Bible is inerrant"  I never said the Bible was inerrant

    7.  "finding the truth by disregarding them" Your at least on your way.  Yes.  You cannot find truth by lieing to yourself.

    8. "tell if God never did anything"  Ya, if he told you or had the holy spirit tell you.  Other than that, the consistant answering of unlikely prayers or the answering of an impossible one.

    9."Caesar was really a god because of the traditions about him"  Please link me to a website where he is proclaimed God so I can see where your coming from.  As far as I know, there isn't any ancient scripture supporting him as God or supporting him doing supernatural works.  If I remember correctly from history class, he heard he was son of God from his mom when he was young, and from an oracle when he was older. 

    10. "you have no way of knowing if anything about your religion is really true."  Please explain this statement.  Give me an example of something that you know is true so I can see where you are coming from.

  • anonymous
    "I contend that we are both atheists. I just believe in one fewer god than you do. When you understand why you dismiss all the other possible gods, you will understand why I dismiss yours."

    I forget who said it...but damn if it aint a great quote.

    JT
  • WAR_ON_ERROR

    Wargo,

    Thanks for responding:

    "1. "think the ultimate natural state of everything is a sentient life form " Are you asking me if rocks have emotions?  "if everything has always been instead"  O.K, I'm not sure where you getting this from.  You are saying that the earth always was?  And there is no timeline of events?  Please support text so I can see where your view of Christianity is coming from here. "

    No, I’m asking if you why you think the ultimate state of affairs is more likely a sentient life form than not in light of other more simple options.  Have you not heard of the “necessary being?”  Have you never described your conception of God in any philosophical way?  You know, God has to be, but everything else is arbitrary? 

    I’m not saying the earth always was.  Every moment of earth always was in reference to “eternity.”  The timeline itself is a permanent static object that always was from deduction.  This is my view of time and space in reference to a multiverse or an “allverse” as I like to call it.  But as far as Christianity goes…why is eternity a sentient lifeform and not just a thing basically?  Why a complex mind?  How does that ring true to you in other than psychologically comforting ways?

    "2. "How did you personally eliminate the possibility that there is no true religion" I didn't."

    So you are content to not know that there even is a true religion before you buy into one?  And we are to trust your judgment in matters?

    "3. I am still not 100% sure what you are judging on.  So I'll just pick necessity.  Please further explain what you mean by "conflict with important matters" and how Christianity fails here. "

    I’m judging on the shape of the presentation of self.  All important factors that could easily be accessible to reality checks are conveniently behind closed doors.  What we do see as an active role in the world piggy-backs off of normal phenomena such as emotional responses, the success of religious movements, holy books, congregations of loving people, etc.  There are other explanations for where your religion came from…and so to my knowledge there is no necessity to explain anything about the world from that viewpoint.  We could open the Bible to page one and start counting off all the red flags for scammage.  To top all this off, our eternities are at stake and our entire earthly lives are demanded.  The mold this fits could easily conceal a big non-truth.  Sometimes such a fit is temporary and the party asking much very quickly moves to make sure you know they are not hiding anything from you.  However if this is the case for an inordinately long period of time (like thousands of years)…the case is to be closed as it is a clear breach of something we know well…appropriate interpersonal standards.  I assume perhaps you would feel this way about another religion such as Islam or Mormonism?  So the natural question is how does your metaphysical scam step out of the mold of a lie in an objective way we can all see that other scams do not?

    "4."Um…even sin" Well we know very little about him from the gospels.  We know that only he is good and all things are possible for him.  So we can't rule out that he doesn't have claim to sin and I take back that he has claim to everything.  I jumped the gun on that one.  But where did you get the idea that he has claim to other religons?"

    Often times to salvage the diversity of metaphysical beliefs it is said that God inspires the truth in other religions as well.  But this puts God as either negligent of other people besides his chosen people (by having nothing to do with it) or being the author of confusion (as though it doesn’t compound the world’s problems).  There’s simply no reason to claim that God couldn’t have kept and maintained many “flocks of sheep” all over the world.  We could all be his chosen people from the beginning to the end of time.  If the truth could be kept sacred for the Jews…why in the world could it get so corrupt for everyone else?  Unless of course this is just an ad hoc explanation to account for the fact that it is not difficult to believe that everyone can make their own stuff up and there’s no reason to not think the Jews didn’t do the same as though in a non-theistic world there’d be no spectrum of successful religions.  Any thoughts to the contrary on why that’s not a better straight forward explanation?

    "5."benevolent deity would not do just that"  I dont know.  How is that an argument against Christianity?"

    It shows your deity to be negligent and the more likely case to be that ancient people were trying to accommodate a not so good world into a theistically ideal one.  Judaism’s creation and the fall was one version they came up with and refutes itself with what it promises in the future.  Maybe you don’t find that contradictory in important ways but many other people do. 

    "6. "How do you get to “the Bible is inerrant"  I never said the Bible was inerrant"

    So you depart from orthodox belief on this doctrine with what justification?

    "7.  "finding the truth by disregarding them" Your at least on your way.  Yes.  You cannot find truth by lieing to yourself."

    That’s not a very informative answer on which group of believers I should disrespect in order to come to the truth?  Perhaps you disregard religious experiential truth?  Which is fine by me, but I would ask you…why do you think so many people from so many different religions attain such divinely granted certainty in their contradictory convictions?  And they’ll tell you plainly it’s the only scamtastic way to believe.

    "8. "tell if God never did anything"  Ya, if he told you or had the holy spirit tell you.  Other than that, the consistant answering of unlikely prayers or the answering of an impossible one. "

    Are you asserting that such a thing has happened to you?  If so, feel free to divulge.  And are you asserting God can do impossible things?  I’m assuming you mean impossible things for a human to do?  Do you think that if God let an entire nation go without providence for 100 years there would be no one that would have unlikely prayers answered?  Perhaps they are the ones that stay Christians while the other chance prayers weren’t answered?  Have you double and triple checked like Gideon?

    "9."Caesar was really a god because of the traditions about him"  Please link me to a website where he is proclaimed God so I can see where your coming from.  As far as I know, there isn't any ancient scripture supporting him as God or supporting him doing supernatural works.  If I remember correctly from history class, he heard he was son of God from his mom when he was young, and from an oracle when he was older. "

    Weren’t all Roman emperors proclaimed gods to be worshipped?  I thought that was common knowledge?  Here’s a link for whatever reason you doubt me:  “Caesar was declared a god of the Roman state.”  The point remains, if any bit of history mentions something ridiculous, you pretty much have to believe it unless it’s directly busted somehow.  Have fun with trying to conjure up some double standard.

    "10. "you have no way of knowing if anything about your religion is really true."  Please explain this statement.  Give me an example of something that you know is true so I can see where you are coming from."

    I have a car.  There is no objectivity test that claim cannot pass.  I’m pretty certain.  No one is going to doubt me.  On the other hand:  God exists…angels or demons?  Heaven or hell?  Sheol?  The soul?  An afterlife?  Magically external morality?  Jesus as God and any of his miracles?  Anything important about your belief system at all?  Any one of these line items could easily be open for world review and not one of them is.  All there is are lousy excuses.  This isn’t really meant to be that complex of a question.  I just don’t think “maybe’s,” “could be’s,” and “for all I know’s” really cut it for a serious relationship with this religion or any other.  You are basically lying if you repeat any doctrines with any amount of conviction and are left to goad yourself into believing further than is warranted…which people obviously do on a regular basis.  And I think it can be very abusive to an individual and communities and world situations with such unaccountable beliefs that demand so much on nothing.  If you can’t easily and straight forwardly support your knowledge base of entirely important interpersonal things…why in the world do you think you aren’t a meta-scammer?  (That’s someone that takes a metaphysical scam seriously, btw) And I contend it’s immoral if the consequences go beyond your mind.   

    ARU
  • WAR_ON_ERROR

    WR,

    It is, and that rhetoric works great...against a monotheist.  Except the ones that regard angels and demons as a type of lesser gods.  In which case they have billions, just like polytheists.  Isn't it difficult to formulate an argument that holds up against so many angles?

    ARU

  • WargoCC83
    1. “why is eternity a sentient lifeform and not just a thing basically?  Why a complex mind?”  This is the first time I have heard of a timeline having feelings.  I don’t think your making an argument against Christianity here.  Please post excerpts from the gospels so I can see why you have come to believe that this is how Christians think.
    2. “So you are content to not know that there even is a true religion before you buy into one?”  If you’re 3 years old and have never heard of religion, then you don’t assume that there is a true religion, and you don’t assume there isn’t.  You don’t know anything about the subject.  Do you feel that this is incorrect?
    3. “are other explanations” A car fails the necessity standard.  The knowledge of a car is dependent on the accuracy of the senses.  Since our senses can be fooled, we admit there exist the possibility of an alternate explanation for why we have perceived a car.
    4. Are you backing down on your argument here? What is your argument?  If we don’t agree with the way God runs things then God must not exist?  Please clarify.
    5.  “It shows your deity to be negligent”  By saying negligent I am assuming that you are saying that there is good that God could be doing, but isn’t.  In that case, are good and evil subjective or absolute?  If it is subjective, you can’t claim God is being negligent because you can’t tell if there is any good he isn’t doing.  If it is absolute, then where is good coming from?
    6. “So you depart from orthodox belief on this doctrine with what justification”  Well why don’t you believe its absolute truth?  I am a Christian, meaning I follow what I believe to be the teachings of Christ.  A 5000 year old earth has nothing to do with the validity of Christianity.
    7. “I should disrespect” Choosing to not believe in a religion is not disrespecting the religion. “certainty in their contradictory convictions”  People base their opinions on their best available knowledge.  People are naturally stubborn when it comes to their beliefs or anything that affects their emotional state of being. 
     8. “that would have unlikely prayers answered”  Not on a consistent basis relating directly to the prayer. No.
    9.  It appears though, that there is no support or even mention of miracles or teachings that lead us towards enlightenment.  No real support of an outstanding moral character either.  Since we have no backing that he was a God, we have no reason to believe it’s true.  Yes, the fact that it is a widespread belief that a person is a God adds to evidence that he is indeed a God.  Just like the widespread belief that China exists increases its possibility of being a fact. 
    10. Since question 10 was originally dealing with how can we be agnostic and still be a Christian, are you now dropping this question since I have stated that we cannot be both by definition? 
  • WAR_ON_ERROR
    Wargo,

     

    Sorry about taking time to get back to you...I was more excited about posting my ARU dictionary.

     

    “1. “why is eternity a sentient lifeform and not just a thing basically?  Why a complex mind?”  This is the first time I have heard of a timeline having feelings.  I don’t think your making an argument against Christianity here.  Please post excerpts from the gospels so I can see why you have come to believe that this is how Christians think.”

     

    Eternity is not generally regarded as a timeline.  I’m using it as just another vague term for the necessary being.  I think the first chapter of John puts God, the Father outside of our timeline.  I’m sure he’s called the eternal one somewhere close.  Plenty of Christian authors and apologists have described God as being the default state of affairs…one who could not fail to exist…the necessary being.  How many ways do I have to say it?  There may be a million euphemisms for sex, but there are only a few (that I know of) for philosophical discussions on the nature of God.  Perhaps you feel you’ve found a quaint way of avoiding the question, but it really isn’t going to help anyone on this topic.  Why do you think a complicated functioning entity that can best be described as a mind just happens to exist for no reason at all?  To the extent we shouldn’t even question it…it’s just so true?  That’s pretty standard Christian apologetics.  If you don’t think so, someone’s left you out of the loop.  Why a mind?  Why not a bunny rabbit?


    “2. “So you are content to not know that there even is a true religion before you buy into one?”  If you’re 3 years old and have never heard of religion, then you don’t assume that there is a true religion, and you don’t assume there isn’t.  You don’t know anything about the subject.  Do you feel that this is incorrect?”

     

    If you are saying its fine to just buy whatever religion happens to be in your hemisphere…fine.  I’ll let the Hindus in India they have a fool-proof reason to reject Jesus and get away with it.  However, for the sake of rationale discussion, at an adult level of digesting your surroundings like the multiplicity of religions, it might best be appropriate to make sure you know there is one before you are “fully baked” into that belief system.  If you don’t give a hoot about being wrong or knowing why you believe what you do in more than the subjective way you’ve described, I guess I can just make a note of that for future reference.     


    “3. “are other explanations” A car fails the necessity standard.  The knowledge of a car is dependent on the accuracy of the senses.  Since our senses can be fooled, we admit there exist the possibility of an alternate explanation for why we have perceived a car. “

     

    No, it’s a pretty necessary explanation to explain how I get so quickly to different points on the map without having to call any of my friends to pick me up.  It would be very difficult to get around pertinent information and explain away its existence.  I’m not talking about the .0000000001% chance that anything you believe is true could be mistaken.  I’m talking about simple mundane alternative explanations that are competing with the supernatural that must be seriously underselling itself.  I’ll be sure and let everyone know though that in a conversation about the reality about Christianity a Christian online doubted the existence of my automobile for Jesus. 


    “4. Are you backing down on your argument here? What is your argument?  If we don’t agree with the way God runs things then God must not exist?  Please clarify.”

     

    I went way out of my way to clarify what I meant.  It is an argument to the better explanation that it is more likely people came up with their own beliefs in different parts of the world and that a dominant religion is trying to salvage providential care on God’s part and act like he had something to do with the others.  My question is why do you think the contrary is a better explanation?  If a human institution looks, feels, acts, and sounds just like a human institution…it’s fairly appropriate to discount its claim to divinity. 

     

    “5.  “It shows your deity to be negligent”  By saying negligent I am assuming that you are saying that there is good that God could be doing, but isn’t.  In that case, are good and evil subjective or absolute?  If it is subjective, you can’t claim God is being negligent because you can’t tell if there is any good he isn’t doing.  If it is absolute, then where is good coming from?”

     

    That is the normal implication indicative of the term “negligent.”  Are you insisting that evolution would insist on capturing evil evolutures in genetic structure?  I have exhaustive posts on the topic.  It’d be nice if you’d just actually answer the question.  If God promises to make a good world free of sin and the evil of free will in the future…and there are plenty of folks that can just repent at the last second anyway…this life is so utterly wasteful and pointless on that plan…and it points to the obviousness that a better explanation for it is that it’s a poor theological accommodation for a non-theistic world.  My question is, why do you believe it is a better explanation that what I’ve just said here is not so?

     


    “6. “So you depart from orthodox belief on this doctrine with what justification”  Well why don’t you believe its absolute truth?  I am a Christian, meaning I follow what I believe to be the teachings of Christ.  A 5000 year old earth has nothing to do with the validity of Christianity. “

     

    I see that inerrancy = young earth creationism to you.  Are you catholic?  I assume you mean that you don’t take the Bible seriously on every topic it seems to cover?  Just the one’s you like?  That’s fine.  I do the same.  But I’m not a Christian.  You seem to define Christianity so narrowly nothing about it has to be extraordinary anyhow.  Why does Jesus have to be God?  Why a heaven or hell?  Why anything other than, "a desire to find fulfillment without material possessions while maximizing mental strength in the form of faith." 


    “7. “I should disrespect” Choosing to not believe in a religion is not disrespecting the religion. “certainty in their contradictory convictions”  People base their opinions on their best available knowledge.  People are naturally stubborn when it comes to their beliefs or anything that affects their emotional state of being. “

     

    Well it is disrespectful-esque when people take personal offense to you rejecting their testimony.  You don’t seem to have a problem living in a world where people are allowed to feed their rampant delusion that buries them in false beliefs…while the Holy Spirit sits back and lets it happen…apparently you’re cool with taking your regional religion for granted is cool, but having really good feelings about it that confirm its authenticity is bunk, huh?

     

     “8. “that would have unlikely prayers answered”  Not on a consistent basis relating directly to the prayer. No. “

     

    Do tell.  If you don’t mind.  Perhaps it’s true.  From a scientific standpoint, do you feel that we could catalog consistently answered unlikely prayers over a long period of time and actually give the unbelieving world a reality check?


    “9.  It appears though, that there is no support or even mention of miracles or teachings that lead us towards enlightenment.  No real support of an outstanding moral character either.  Since we have no backing that he was a God, we have no reason to believe it’s true.  Yes, the fact that it is a widespread belief that a person is a God adds to evidence that he is indeed a God.  Just like the widespread belief that China exists increases its possibility of being a fact.  “

     

    Um…why does a god have to be good?  Isn’t it a miracle enough that he ran the Roman Empire?  I’m sure that was the standard applied at the time.  Why isn’t it good enough for you?  The nature of this question was an observation that seems to cut across many debates…that it’s a draw…maybe its true, maybe its not…obviously you seem to think the evidence of Jesus being divine is better than the evidence of Caesar being divine.  Why not both?  God’s don’t always have to flaunt it do they?  If you think the evidence for a positive case is good, and you show it, this question doesn’t apply to you.  If not…then answer it.


    “10. Since question 10 was originally dealing with how can we be agnostic and still be a Christian, are you now dropping this question since I have stated that we cannot be both by definition?  “

     

    Well…then for you, what would you tell folks that try to let it seem to be okay to be both an agnostic and a Christian?  Why should they be more confident and informed?  All these questions are geared towards soliciting reality checks and building foundational paradigm support for the important claims of the belief system.  If these were answered reasonably and had been for thousands of years there’d be no such thing as science vs. religion. 

     

    ARU

  • WargoCC83

    1.”Why not a bunny rabbit?”  We don’t have evidence it’s a bunny rabbit.  We just have evidence that it’s God by the testimony of Christ. 
    2. “is one before you are “fully baked” into that belief system”  I disagree, you should keep an open mind and except that maybe all of them should be rejected.  You start by examining the evidence then go from there.
    3. “the .0000000001% chance that anything you believe is true could be mistaken”  Please explain this statement.  If you live in a world like the matrix, you would have all the exact information for a car that you would have now.  There is no greater possibility for the truth to be the car than the possibility that there isn’t since the evidence supports either conclusion equally.  If say, you believe in Caesar, please post why.
    4. “contrary is a better explanation” We have evidence for the existence of Christ and his miracles through the gospels.  The books don’t talk about a miracle worker that existed ten thousand years before they were written.  They talk about him existed 50 years prior.  How do you explain their existence?
    5. “believe it is a better explanation”  Any knowledge of God or his plans for us after death come from Christ (If we are Christian).  Therefore if we don’t like his plan “life is so utterly wasteful and pointless on that plan” that is not an argument against Christianity.  (If we don’t like God’s plan then there is no God) is an invalid argument.  Since the belief is based on Christ, the only way to attack the validity of God’s plan would be to attack the validity of the one who taught it. 
    6. “define Christianity so narrowly”  (Christian: Professing belief in Jesus as Christ or following the religion based on the life and teachings of Jesus, Dictionary.com)  I’m don’t think I define it so narrowly, I am using the actual definition. 
    “Why a heaven or hell?  Why anything other than”  Because we have evidence of it through the gospels. 
    7. “when people take personal offense to you”  Being disrespectful is either proactive – when you go out of your way to offend somebody, or passive when through laziness you ignore any manners or standard of conduct that makes others feel offended.  Stating your personal opinion in a non-offensive way is considered perfectly acceptable.  However, I can definitely see how people feel disrespected by you based on the way you seem to approach religious topics “you’re cool with taking your regional religion for granted is cool, but having really good feelings about it that confirm its authenticity is bunk, huh?”  A bit less sarcasm would be appriciated.
    8.  “unbelieving world a reality check?”  Only if God is indeed answering those prayers.
    9. “ran the Roman Empire”  Nope, many people have led empires and have had great armies. “Caesar being divine.  Why not both”  Running an empire is more common than instantly healing people of leprosy by simply touching them.
    10.  “both an agnostic and a Christian”  I would have to hear their viewpoint before I could an opinion.  If they say they don’t know there is a God like we don’t know if you have a car, then it is safe to say they could be both.  Christianity isn’t based on knowing anything, it is the belief of Christ.

  • WargoCC83
  • WAR_ON_ERROR

    Wargo,

    “1.”Why not a bunny rabbit?”  We don’t have evidence it’s a bunny rabbit.  We just have evidence that it’s God by the testimony of Christ.” 

    Are asserting no one knew there was a God until Jesus’ testimony 2,000 years ago?  Are you asserting there is no philosophical proof of God’s existence otherwise?  No natural theology? 

    “2. “is one before you are “fully baked” into that belief system”  I disagree, you should keep an open mind and except that maybe all of them should be rejected.  You start by examining the evidence then go from there.”

    How is it that you can turn my statement around and portray it like I’m not the one asking for evidence so I can “eliminate the possibilities” as I said and “go from there” as you said?  “Fully baked” is just an exaggeration.  If the evidence is so obvious to you, then it should be no trouble to spell it out for me and everyone else.

    “3. “the .0000000001% chance that anything you believe is true could be mistaken”  Please explain this statement.  If you live in a world like the matrix, you would have all the exact information for a car that you would have now.  There is no greater possibility for the truth to be the car than the possibility that there isn’t since the evidence supports either conclusion equally.  If say, you believe in Caesar, please post why.”

    We live in a constant state of uncertainty, though we do find things to be more certain than others…what’s the big deal?  But the evidence is such that “I have a car” is a true statement even if it can be relegated to “within the confrontations of the matrix” and thus is still more than true enough and more than necessary enough as I’ve explained before.  Christianity on the other hand…within or without the matrix is not anywhere near that.  And if you think otherwise…then certainly you can go into a little detail about how I can know that too.  How many rounds has this been?


    “4. “contrary is a better explanation” We have evidence for the existence of Christ and his miracles through the gospels.  The books don’t talk about a miracle worker that existed ten thousand years before they were written.  They talk about him existed 50 years prior.  How do you explain their existence?”

    All of the sudden you are asking the questions.  If you’d like to ask an atheist 10 questions about why they’re not a Christian…be my guest…someplace else.

    However, the short answer is:  Bogus beliefs and fanatical stories get passed objective review all the time because of how badly credulous people want to believe them.  Sometimes even in the direct presence of contrary witnesses.  Historically to our world, it really doesn’t matter.  Do you think the mentioning of Caesar being a god was ten thousand years later?  Or did people believe that right in front of him as they worshipped despite the lack of overt evidence?  Why is it wise to believe anything of the sort in history just because something mentions it and gets away without be directly busted?  That opens up a wide arena of things that you likely don’t actually accept.  Is there an indisputable case for the supernatural in our day and age to make that credible?  I don’t think so…  I hate giving people links to things not me…but for further reading, check out Richard Carrier’s “Why I don’t buy the Resurrection Story” and “Kooks and Quacks of the Roman Empire: a look into the world of the gospels” for in depth historical discussions on issues most relevant to our discussion here.  There's also interesting links on the site about the gospel of Luke (and how he botches borrowing material from Josephus), the gospel of Mark (and its dubious origin in fiction), and the sleight of hand formation of the New Testament Canon. 

    Back to the question:  It seems your argument is that you believe your religion is authentic, therefore there must be some reason you don’t care about to explain why it’s okay for other religions to be so deviant?  Locally that’s no where near a better explanation.  Obviously I presumed you thought your religion was correct….but any sensibility as to why God doesn’t inform everyone on equal terms is what was being asked for.  Those are obviously sub-par salvation management skills to an uninitiated observer that's looking to see if your beliefs are bogus or not. 

    “5. “believe it is a better explanation”  Any knowledge of God or his plans for us after death come from Christ (If we are Christian).  Therefore if we don’t like his plan “life is so utterly wasteful and pointless on that plan” that is not an argument against Christianity.  (If we don’t like God’s plan then there is no God) is an invalid argument.  Since the belief is based on Christ, the only way to attack the validity of God’s plan would be to attack the validity of the one who taught it.” 

    It’s not about not liking it…it’s about making a good personal judgment call about the supposed actions of a good deity that don’t make sense before I decide to waste all of my emotional dollars living the rest of my life in that questionable belief system.  Otherwise for all I know, instead of giving it every benefit of the doubt, somebody just made up a bad idea for other reasons.  I can make up excuses all day for every deity throughout history with enough imagination.  That doesn’t mean I’m going to take it seriously.  But it seems your answer to this question is… “I don’t know.”  And that’s fine.  Poor judgment, in my opinion, but at least it’s nearly a direct answer.

    “6. “define Christianity so narrowly”  (Christian: Professing belief in Jesus as Christ or following the religion based on the life and teachings of Jesus, Dictionary.com)  I’m don’t think I define it so narrowly, I am using the actual definition. 
    “Why a heaven or hell?  Why anything other than”  Because we have evidence of it through the gospels. “

    So have you sold all your stuff?  Half of it?  Fasted for endless days?  Taken Nazarite vows?  Shunned all the evil of the world?  Preached the kingdom of God from door to door?  Performed greater feats that Jesus himself?  

    But to my actual question…you don’t consider the Bible inerrant?  What do you say to people who do?  Perhaps it is not an authority on heaven or hell as well?  Maybe not even Jesus’ divinity?  Perhaps it is just good enough to teach you how to live well?  How would you know?


    “7. “when people take personal offense to you”  Being disrespectful is either proactive – when you go out of your way to offend somebody, or passive when through laziness you ignore any manners or standard of conduct that makes others feel offended.  Stating your personal opinion in a non-offensive way is considered perfectly acceptable.  However, I can definitely see how people feel disrespected by you based on the way you seem to approach religious topics “you’re cool with taking your regional religion for granted is cool, but having really good feelings about it that confirm its authenticity is bunk, huh?”  A bit less sarcasm would be appriciated.”

    There are many forums where rejecting the convictions of religious fideistic feelings is taken as disrespectful even if you have good reasons for doing so.  People who believe it is the obvious direct intervention of God do not accept that other people are “allowed not to believe that is the case.”  This is an outside observation that doesn’t necessarily have anything to do with my personal debating activities.  It’s regularly included in debates over theism as though we should just be in awe at the power of God and not the power of desperation, depravity, wishful thinking, and credulity.  Pretending like there was no meaning to my sarcastic statement and that it can be dismissed because of its trappings is not going to help my opinion of you or your beliefs.  Should you not turn the other cheek and answer my question anyhow ever so patiently with a legitimate answer…as though a bit of sarcasm can’t communicate a point?  A simple reality check or three will end my sarcastic rejection of the Christian belief system.  Let’s share some blame here, if there is any at all on my part.

    “8.  “unbelieving world a reality check?”  Only if God is indeed answering those prayers.”

    Are you saying it’s too hard to find real believers these days?  Is God yet again withholding evidence?  If there is so much evidence from the Gospels, why does it matter if there is more?  Are you not going to let me in on the long series of unlikely answered prayers that you know about?   Do you actually feel you are answering any of my questions sufficiently?


    “9. “ran the Roman Empire”  Nope, many people have led empires and have had great armies. “Caesar being divine.  Why not both”  Running an empire is more common than instantly healing people of leprosy by simply touching them.”

    Certainly the Roman Empire is one of the most grand of all of history?  I’m sure that’s what they thought even then.  How could they possibly have conquered so much of the known world if they weren’t gods?  Why are you not extending every apologetic luxury to Caesar?  Am I to just believe that Jesus healed people of leprosy because a piece of religious propaganda says so half a century later?  Just because?  At least Caesar got a lot further with his kingdom before he was murdered.

    “10.  “both an agnostic and a Christian”  I would have to hear their viewpoint before I could an opinion.  If they say they don’t know there is a God like we don’t know if you have a car, then it is safe to say they could be both.  Christianity isn’t based on knowing anything, it is the belief of Christ.”

    Don’t I have to know about the gospels to believe in Christ?  And how does that not dovetail into needing to know all these other things to attain the certainty one needs to be a non-agnostic Christian in an unbelieving world?  Who's fault is it that God demands so much of us from the ambiguity of history?  Mine?  God's?  Or the people that were just satisfying their needs at the time?

    ARU

     

  • WargoCC83
    1. “until Jesus’ testimony 2,000 years ago”  Nope, I’m not saying that at all.  You asked why I believe and I told you.  Could there be more evidence that I don’t know about? Yep.
    2. “If the evidence is so obvious to you” Your original question 2 was about knowing if a true religion existed before you started looking at religion.  I said no.  Why do you believe that I am incorrect?  How do you have evidence of a true religion if you don’t know anything about religion?
    3.  “But the evidence is such that”  Then please tell me your evidence that makes it more likely for the car to exist then for you to actually be living in a matrix where you car doesn’t exist so I can understand where you are coming from.
    4. “Do you think the mentioning of Caesar being a god was ten thousand years later” But he had no miracles.  He ran an empire, that’s it. Do you believe Caesar existed?  Please post why he isn’t just another “Bogus beliefs and fanatical stories”.  After all, you said why not consider running the Roman Empire a miracle. “as to why God doesn’t inform everyone on equal terms is what was being asked for” I have no clue why he does what he does.  What does it matter? Do you have an argument against Christianity?  If so, please post it so I can see it. 
    5. “personal judgment call about the supposed actions of a good deity”  O.k., well if you find something wrong with his actions then let me know and we will talk about it and if it is an argument against Christianity.
    6. “So have you sold all your stuff”  Are you questioning my faith or Christianity?  What is your argument here? If the follower isn’t perfect the religion must be flawed? Please explain. “What do you say to people who do”  If they said that the Bible was perfect, I would ask them how they are interpreting it.  That way I could get a better idea of their argument.
    7. “meaning to my sarcastic statement” If there was an argument in it, I didn’t see it, please post your argument so I can answer. “of religious fideistic feelings is taken as disrespectful even”  Although people might take offense to you, that doesn’t mean that you have been disrespectful.
    8. “why does it matter if there is more”  I didn’t say it did.  You asked why I believed and I told you.  You asked if there could be more and I said yes.
    9. “if they weren’t gods” Through military force.  They simply had the best army and a desire to expand. “Jesus healed people of leprosy because a piece of religious propaganda” Why wouldn’t you believe it? You believe in Caesar don’t you? 
    10. “know about the gospels to believe” No, not that I’ve been made aware of. “that God demands so much of us” If he demands is then he demands it.  Why does it matter?  What is your argument?
  • WAR_ON_ERROR
    “1. “until Jesus’ testimony 2,000 years ago”  Nope, I’m not saying that at all.  You asked why I believe and I told you.  Could there be more evidence that I don’t know about? Yep.”

     

    So basically you are completely ignorant of the philosophical discussion surrounding the existence of God, and you just believe it must work out somehow because Jesus said so?    


    “2. “If the evidence is so obvious to you” Your original question 2 was about knowing if a true religion existed before you started looking at religion.  I said no.  Why do you believe that I am incorrect?  How do you have evidence of a true religion if you don’t know anything about religion?”

     

    Okay, so you just took it for granted that there was a true religion when you were young…I get it…


    “3.  “But the evidence is such that”  Then please tell me your evidence that makes it more likely for the car to exist then for you to actually be living in a matrix where you car doesn’t exist so I can understand where you are coming from.”

     

    I already did that.  Apparently it is good enough for you to accept the tenets of your religion as uncritically as I accept the existence of my car…


    “4. “Do you think the mentioning of Caesar being a god was ten thousand years later” But he had no miracles.  He ran an empire, that’s it. Do you believe Caesar existed?  Please post why he isn’t just another “Bogus beliefs and fanatical stories”.  After all, you said why not consider running the Roman Empire a miracle. “as to why God doesn’t inform everyone on equal terms is what was being asked for” I have no clue why he does what he does.  What does it matter? Do you have an argument against Christianity?  If so, please post it so I can see it.” 

     

    Rising from the dead doesn’t make you god, it just makes you very powerful.  There are many people that believe Jesus performed miracles and even rose from the dead, but wasn’t a god.  I’m not doubting the existence of Caesar.  I don’t really care one way or the other.  However, since you believe in gods uncritically just because an ancient piece of religious propaganda says so, you really don’t have any reason to doubt Caesar’s claim to divinity.  Why does he have to perform miracles?  Are you weak in faith?  You would have made a great roman citizen.


    “5. “personal judgment call about the supposed actions of a good deity”  O.k., well if you find something wrong with his actions then let me know and we will talk about it and if it is an argument against Christianity. “

     

    I have a general listing of what I think is wrong with God's actions (in the previous post) right here. 

     

    If your answer to the question is, “I don’t know,” we’ll just leave it at that.  Do you understand why someone might find it a little fishy that God is going to make a world in the future that is free from the “free will” threat, but that he couldn’t have just done that originally that way and it wouldn’t really have mattered for the rest of eternity?  Even with the expense apparently being so high that most of humanity will be burning in hell because of that decision? 


    “6. “So have you sold all your stuff”  Are you questioning my faith or Christianity?  What is your argument here? If the follower isn’t perfect the religion must be flawed? Please explain. “What do you say to people who do”  If they said that the Bible was perfect, I would ask them how they are interpreting it.  That way I could get a better idea of their argument.”

     

    Just curious as to how serious you take it.  Aside from inerrancy (which you don’t seem to care about), the point remains why do you think the Bible is an authority on God, angels, demons, heaven, and hell?  As long as there is something good we can get out of it, how do we know the NT knows any better than any other religion? 


    “7. “meaning to my sarcastic statement” If there was an argument in it, I didn’t see it, please post your argument so I can answer. “of religious fideistic feelings is taken as disrespectful even”  Although people might take offense to you, that doesn’t mean that you have been disrespectful.”

    The meaning was you respect your regional religion uncritically as though that proves something, but you don’t respect the truth their feelings reveal as though that is arbitrary.  Perhaps you don’t recognize hypocrisy as an argument. 

     

    “8. “why does it matter if there is more”  I didn’t say it did.  You asked why I believed and I told you.  You asked if there could be more and I said yes.”

     

    And you avoided my question that if God didn’t participate in the prayers of an entire nation, do you suppose there’d be quite a few folks that would still be able to claim that he did?  That's probability.  You say that you could tell if God was absent for 10 years because your unlikely prayers wouldn’t get answered?  Okay, I also asked what was so unlikely that happened to you?  Perhaps you are mistaken.  If you don’t want to put the specifics on the table…I guess that’s fine.  But in terms of the information I do have…it doesn’t seem we can really tell prayer does anything specific for people.


    “9. “if they weren’t gods” Through military force.  They simply had the best army and a desire to expand. “Jesus healed people of leprosy because a piece of religious propaganda” Why wouldn’t you believe it? You believe in Caesar don’t you? “

     

    I don’t think Caesar was a god.  I think the Jewish people were oppressed and obsessed with their Old Testament and with over 20 different sects of Jews at the time it’s no surprise they came up with a religion that divined out the character of their messiah.  Note they don’t even have to have prophecies that say they are talking about the messiah.  Not only can the piggy back on completely unrelated prophecies about completely different people but they don’t even have to ascribe the entire passage to Jesus.  Someone being functionally crazy and charismatic enough to embrace that role was bound to come along or at least there was bound to be a mystery religion that created that messianic character in the heavens to fulfill that need.  Caesar had to be a god in order to fulfill the need for more imminent authority.  There’s always some function to it. 

     

    But your answer to this question is that no one else claimed to do miracles?  Have you read the NT?  Plenty of false prophets and messiahs could do miracles by Paul’s own attestation.  The test was whether or not they professed belief in Jesus.  Would you care if I listed a couple of other folks in history that were said to do miracles?  I think you will find the nature of my original question stands and the end of this debate like every other will teeter on the brink of reality.  Thus why do you think it is good judgment to assume in that case ambiguity means it is more likely true?  I mean for all I know all of the claims throughout history of anything is true.  I wasn’t there.  But only so many of those claims take it to a personal level.


    “10. “know about the gospels to believe” No, not that I’ve been made aware of. “that God demands so much of us” If he demands is then he demands it.  Why does it matter?  What is your argument? “

     

    So you don’t have to know anything about Jesus to believe in Jesus?  You must mean something else.  Are you just talking about belief in God?  That’s not what this question is about.  You do profess to have to know some things to take your religion seriously and it doesn’t really appear that you do.  You just seem to have embraced it uncritically since childhood.  If that is all you have to contribute to this discussion, then I think we are done here. 

     

    It does matter what a metaphysical scam demands because we do know what good interpersonal standards are.  In fact (among other examples) the Gospel of John basically pats credulity on the back by saying “blessed are those that have not seen and yet have believed.”  In other words, the scam has to operate in the mold of a lie, and thus it must stake down prideful pronouncements from that vantage point.  This is an exercise in critical thinking to be able to pick out the common denominator of all of the various claims and how conveniently every possible reality check is unnecessarily circumvented.  Why does the gospel of Mark end with almost no resurrection story at all?  Why were only women in the know?  Why did Jesus only stick around for 40 days?  Why did an invisible entity start guiding the church in his stead?  Why did all the miracles accompanying the gospel message stop?  Why are there all such fantastic events recorded in religious propaganda half a century later and not abundant in our world today for us to verify?  Why are there no serious historians of Christianity until the third century?  Why didn’t God go out of his way to make sure a few historians of the time would record some direct information for posterity if such events were really important for the divine plan?  The list goes on and on.  God isn’t taking us seriously.  Religions are just doing what they can to get by.  Thus the nature of all of my questions is asking the truth to casually step out of the mold of a lie.  Surely you don’t like being taken advantage of in your ignorance, do you? 

     

    ARU

  • WAR_ON_ERROR
    Wargo,

     

    One final thought:

     

    The level you have accepted your religion at is justified at a sociological level.  Incidentally however that also justifies every other belief system as well including atheism and agnosticism.  And all of this is all well and fine in a tolerant world with the exception that often times it turns out our sociologically justified belief systems aren’t tolerant by nature of that belief system and we have all sorts of confrontations ranging from debates, to society and law where what you believe does start effecting other people and there is no end in sight of religion letting a secular society be.  Thus the standard of justification goes up to the level we are currently at which you have no professed justification.  Eventually religion will die off completely as it cannot survive forever at its current level of ambiguity.  Either religious extremists will feel too threatened and will find some way to cripple the world or society will grow up and push through the birth pains of the secular world and thrive without religion when humanity’s needs are more taken care of and people feel less threatened by the unknown.

     

    ARU

  • WargoCC83
    1.  “ignorant of the philosophical discussion surrounding the existence of God”  I have heard a few justifications.  None of them seemed to have backing from the gospels.  If you have a logical argument way to back up God without using evidence feel free to post it.
    2. “there was a true religion”  The concept of a true religion didn’t come up until after I had already learned about religion.  I don’t see how it could be any other way.
    3. “uncritically as I accept the existence of my car” You started with your car talking about how it explained the experience of how you got from point A to B so quickly.  Then you seemed to change the subject and say there was no other possible way to explain the experience and thus that made pass your “necessity test”.  You never tried to show that a car was the only explanation you just seemed to assume it.
    4. “does he have to perform miracles” Basic principles that are so commonly understood that they are not questioned, help solidly my  belief that they are real.  So when a man comes by who can break those principles by instantly healing people by touching them, it is clear that his understanding of the world is far greater than mine. I understand how a man can gather an army and take over using common knowledge.  You can’t do that with a person who instantly heals people.  They only way you know how he does it is based on what he tells you.
    5.” the question is, “I don’t know”” I have told you everything I know of God comes from the gospels.  So, unless you haven’t read the gospels then most likely I won’t have the answers to you questions of why God does things.  But like I said, not knowing why he does something is not an argument against Christianity. “most of humanity will be burning in hell”  Luke 13:24,  is the verse that I think your thinking of.  It says that many will not be saved, but it does not say most won’t.  Is there a different verse you’re thinking of?  And yes, I can understand why people think the way things are is a little odd given the final outcome.  I hope that encourages them to read the gospels and find that strict interpretation of a philosopher’s words isn’t the most logical approach.  Always look for double meanings and look to see what Christ is actually saying.  My interpretation of who God is might be from the gospels, but really its just my interpretation.  Maybe the fact that nothing is impossible for God means something else. 
    6. “how serious you take it”  Pretty serious, but at this point I feel that I will better help society by growing as a person and donating money to charity.  To give up everything and become a street preacher would be good if I had enough wisdom to teach and convert people but if I did that now I wouldn’t be able to help anybody. “is an authority on God” I feel that Christ is, and parts of the Old testament he hints to, so I except those as well.  He says scripture cannot be ignored but doesn’t lead us to think it should be interpreted literally based on the way he used it to support himself.  John 7:27
    7. “truth their feelings reveal” I think the feelings you get are a lot different then mine.  You seem to not be in favor of God’s plan.  I just think I can’t judge.  How could I? When I hear “good” I think in the best interest of.  All I know of this world is what I have been taught, read, or observed through my senses.  So I don’t know what’s in my best interests.  On what grounds could I argue against Christ’s message of God’s will to save those who believe in his son.  I don’t even know if I am interpreting that correctly let alone have the right to shoot it down.
    8. “quite a few folks that would still be able” No I don’t think there would be. “that you could tell if God was absent for 10 years” I am not saying me personally that this has happened.  I am saying that if it happened, it would be a form of proof.
    9. “don’t even have to have prophecies” If they are just going to make up a Messiah, why not just make up a character that does fulfill the prophecies laterally.  To me that is evidence that he isn’t made up.  “Someone being functionally crazy”  He didn’t seem crazy, he was arguing with the most educated of the day and the crowd who feared the word of the scribes due to the power of religion, turned on them for an uneducated man  who might have got them sent to hell.  Clearly the crowd thought he was mentally stable. “Plenty of false prophets and messiahs could do miracles by Paul’s own attestation” “other folks in history” Please post some verses and names of miracle workers so I can better see where you are coming from.
    10.  “So you don’t have to know anything about Jesus to believe in Jesus” Exactly, that is one interpretation. People aren’t defined by the atoms in their body, they are defined by the ideas teachings that make up their personality and soul.  Those who believe in Jesus are the ones who believe in his teachings on how to live.  This can be done even if you have never heard of his story.  This is just one of many interpretations of course.  It also falls in line with the promise that all those will be rewarded based on their deeds on earth.  Not on deeds and who had the best copy of the handed down gospel. “blessed are those that have not seen and yet have believed”  Once again, interpreted many different ways.  Those who have believed and not seen are led by the holy spirit and are thus blessed.  Or, those who believe in the story of Christ but have not seen miracles.  Or, those who believe in the way to live life (Christ Teachings) but have never seen miracles. “you don’t like being taken advantage” Can’t say that I feel like I’m being taken advantage of.
  • WAR_ON_ERROR
    Wargo,

     

    “1.  “ignorant of the philosophical discussion surrounding the existence of God”  I have heard a few justifications.  None of them seemed to have backing from the gospels.  If you have a logical argument way to back up God without using evidence feel free to post it.”

     

    Wikipedia lists the classic ways of trying to get to God through logical exploration.  And I would argue that if God is who classical Christianity says he is, you absolutely must be able to come to the conclusion of who God is, and what God is purely from such a way.  Since supposedly he is the only option for reality to be at all, there is no room for arbitrariness.  Logic must point to and describe exactly the God of Christian theism.  However, that is not the case.  I’ve shown in a few posts here on this xanga how purely logical explorations of the nature of metaphysics points indisputably towards an allverse.  My original question was geared towards someone that was familiar with that kind of inquiry. 


    “2. “there was a true religion”  The concept of a true religion didn’t come up until after I had already learned about religion.  I don’t see how it could be any other way.”

     

    Well guess what.  There are other religions and belief systems that teach completely different things than what you were taught.  Many of them don’t have room for Jesus to be what the orthodox Christian gospels say he is.  Many of these people are purely innocent bystanders and took to their religion when they were young just like you.  And some people don’t subscribe to religion at all.  Surely this is not new to you.  As I said in my epilogue comment previously, you are justified believing in purely sociological terms…however those are not the terms we are speaking of currently.  Every religion (that I know of) falls short academically (presumption before ignorance), philosophically (ad hoc accommodation), epistemically (unsound knowledge base), and still seeks to put its way into social and legal realms with the pretension of certainty.  I find spiritual relativism (God could secretly be behind all the good religions) and the lack of epistemic accountability (we don’t have to prove anything) repugnant especially in the face of moral absolutes (our reference frame or else).  I’m sure individuals find plenty of ways to rationalize these obstacles away, but in my world, you are not entering in through the front door of honest inquiry.  If you actually wish to do that successfully, answering the original question (and all the other original questions) will have to happen in a more than sufficient way.  Otherwise, you are wasting my time (and yours). 


    “3. “uncritically as I accept the existence of my car” You started with your car talking about how it explained the experience of how you got from point A to B so quickly.  Then you seemed to change the subject and say there was no other possible way to explain the experience and thus that made pass your “necessity test”.  You never tried to show that a car was the only explanation you just seemed to assume it.”

     

    I guess if pressed, I don’t find it difficult to presume I could not present a host of documentation that would be acceptable in any court of law (not to mention photo and video and tons of eye witness testimony).  And it costs you next to nothing to accept that I do in fact have a car.  This isn’t a change of subject.  This is elaboration on a point I should not have to over state.  I have a post going over why exactly some things fit the meta-scam mold and other things do not to show that it is not some arbitrary concoction to demonize Christianity.  The point is, you don’t really have to go too far out of your way to infer that there isn’t a reason to accept that there are other explanations for the origin of Christianity without even resorting to aliens or demonic forces.  Just the fact that it sits in the ambiguity of history and makes such outrageous interpersonal claims that are to hit all of humanity to the core should be an absolute dead ringer for knowing it is bogus.  History simply cannot budget the weight of evidence required to make that justified…even if we had the absolute best possible case…which we don’t.  We have pretty much the worst as folks like Richard Carrier so eloquently elaborate on in great detail.


    “4. “does he have to perform miracles” Basic principles that are so commonly understood that they are not questioned, help solidly my  belief that they are real.  So when a man comes by who can break those principles by instantly healing people by touching them, it is clear that his understanding of the world is far greater than mine. I understand how a man can gather an army and take over using common knowledge.  You can’t do that with a person who instantly heals people.  They only way you know how he does it is based on what he tells you.”

     

    Well you certainly have not proven Caesar was not a god.  You just don’t think he was a god.  Surely it is inappropriate to demand proof of one?  They aren’t there to appease you…you are there to worship them.  Who are you to say otherwise?  Tell me, have you ever met any charismatic faith healers, Wargo?  Ever ran across extremely persuasive and confident people?  Seen the drastic effects they have?  Ever known any religious people who were willing to lie and even kill for what they believe?  Ever met any cult members?  Cult leaders?  Every talked to anyone from the Flat Earth society?  Know a lot about complex group behaviours?  Perhaps it is easy to understand the exploits of Caesar but more difficult to understand how people could be so easily deceived in mystical ways.  I’ve met people that say they are from other dimensions.  I’ve met people that say they take on other people’s ailments and heal them vicariously because of it.  I’ve met people that say the can travel out of their bodies and explore the neighborhood.  And I don’t believe any of them.  Why is that?


    “5.” the question is, “I don’t know”” I have told you everything I know of God comes from the gospels.  So, unless you haven’t read the gospels then most likely I won’t have the answers to you questions of why God does things.  But like I said, not knowing why he does something is not an argument against Christianity. “most of humanity will be burning in hell”  Luke 13:24,  is the verse that I think your thinking of.  It says that many will not be saved, but it does not say most won’t.  Is there a different verse you’re thinking of?  And yes, I can understand why people think the way things are is a little odd given the final outcome.  I hope that encourages them to read the gospels and find that strict interpretation of a philosopher’s words isn’t the most logical approach.  Always look for double meanings and look to see what Christ is actually saying.  My interpretation of who God is might be from the gospels, but really its just my interpretation.  Maybe the fact that nothing is impossible for God means something else.” 

     

    Thanks for correcting my error there.  For some reason I did think Luke said, “most” instead of “many.”  However Mathew 7:14 says,

     

    “Enter through the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and*only a few find it*.”

     

    and that implies most do not.  If you just aren’t going to take the words of a Jewish ascetic extremist at face value…someone who preached absolute perfection with the background of the all-intolerant Yahweh of Moses behind him…I can’t do anything about that.  By the way, I have read the entire Bible from cover to cover as a believer and made haste to use every available commentary and apologetic tool to understand it verse by verse.  The benefit of the doubt was most certainly granted at the time, generously.


    “6. “how serious you take it”  Pretty serious, but at this point I feel that I will better help society by growing as a person and donating money to charity.  To give up everything and become a street preacher would be good if I had enough wisdom to teach and convert people but if I did that now I wouldn’t be able to help anybody. “is an authority on God” I feel that Christ is, and parts of the Old testament he hints to, so I except those as well.  He says scripture cannot be ignored but doesn’t lead us to think it should be interpreted literally based on the way he used it to support himself.  John 7:27”

     

    I’ve been thinking of donating my tithe to the secular web, personally.  I think I am nearing being willing to support them in that way.  I always thought the idea of tithing was a good idea.

     

    There are many Christians that would dispute what you’ve said about Jesus’ usage of the literalness of Genesis 1-11.  As for me, I still don’t see how you can know the Bible is an authority on God or the afterlife.  It just seems you haven’t looked at it from any other perspective other than face value.


    “7. “truth their feelings reveal” I think the feelings you get are a lot different then mine.  You seem to not be in favor of God’s plan.  I just think I can’t judge.  How could I? When I hear “good” I think in the best interest of.  All I know of this world is what I have been taught, read, or observed through my senses.  So I don’t know what’s in my best interests.  On what grounds could I argue against Christ’s message of God’s will to save those who believe in his son.  I don’t even know if I am interpreting that correctly let alone have the right to shoot it down.”

     

    Well…I’ve not had any theistically confirming fideistic feelings to speak of.  All I am doing is relating what other people have told me and I think its pretty easy to judge where these feelings come from and why they interpret them the way they do.  There are those that think the experience of God cannot be any other way. 

     

    I’m not in favor of God’s plan because it looks more like crude theological accommodation of a world that is predominantly about “whatever.”  The Bible says wisdom is justified by the fruit produced, right?  However, if you judge God’s wisdom in how he has chosen to deal with humanity, it is apparent at the salvation level, most will burn in hell for eternity…on the Moses level, all but two of the 3 million Israelites died wandering the desert…on the damage control level after the fall…only 8 people were saved out of the billions of Nephilim.  Not very comforting.  And these are Biblical examples of God’s tactics in action.  In terms of decent shepherding, these are fairly bad results, wouldn’t you agree?  It’s hardly like the parable of the one of the 99 sheep that goes astray and God carefully goes and searches for it…and brings it back…its more like the Pharisee that traveled over land and sea to win one convert and made him twice the son of hell that they were…to use the face value of the gospels.

     

    As you get older, obviously you know yourself better and you do know what is best for you…at least better than anyone else does and no one is going to tell you absolutely what job to get, who to marry, or how to raise your kids.  You do have to be a judge of things.  If you are going to be a mature adult that is more or less in full recognition of the kind of belief system you hold, you have to be willing to judge it for what it is.  You owe it yourself and the rest of us.


    “8. “quite a few folks that would still be able” No I don’t think there would be. “that you could tell if God was absent for 10 years” I am not saying me personally that this has happened.  I am saying that if it happened, it would be a form of proof.”

     

    Wait…so you are just making up the evidence of unlikely answered prayers? 

     

    As a general statistical observation you don’t think many people would be able to win the “prayer lottery?”  I mean, I really have no idea the scope of what you are personally talking about (since you still haven’t elaborated), but it seems fairly certain that there are going to be people that happen to get what they want even in terms of unlikely things even if God doesn’t exist.  If it weren’t so that generally the answers to prayers are ambiguous…I think that would be obvious to everyone.  They have done some prayer studies and they were statistically negligible in result.  CYAT even admitted that about the first round of studies, but then went on to brag about the second round…that turned out to be slightly better but because of strong evidence of tainting of the data.  So the secular world has no proof of prayer other than its meditative effects which of course have nothing necessarily to do with the existence of the variable in question. 


    “9. “don’t even have to have prophecies” If they are just going to make up a Messiah, why not just make up a character that does fulfill the prophecies laterally.  To me that is evidence that he isn’t made up.  “Someone being functionally crazy”  He didn’t seem crazy, he was arguing with the most educated of the day and the crowd who feared the word of the scribes due to the power of religion, turned on them for an uneducated man  who might have got them sent to hell.  Clearly the crowd thought he was mentally stable. “Plenty of false prophets and messiahs could do miracles by Paul’s own attestation” “other folks in history” Please post some verses and names of miracle workers so I can better see where you are coming from. “

     

    Um…because they can’t.  The text that they divine the prophecy from talks about someone completely different than Jesus and since they do that across so many different texts in the Old Testament, it is impossible to relate all the details to one person…so they just take what they need and go.  I’m not even making this up.  This is straight forward Sunday School, here.  Most of the scamtastic parameters are right there in front of you if you look for them. 

     

    A better phrase than “functionally crazy,” would be “functionally delusional.”  Meaning it is arguable that Jesus was mistaken about his own identity (if he even existed at all).  Jewish culture is rich in metaphor, theological egoism, and moral extremism, and it’s no surprise there are those that buy it deep and in functionally diverse ways.  Not that Jesus was necessarily psychotic, but there are plenty of serial killers and very morally obtuse people that look, talk, and sound just like everyone else.  I don’t know if you have ever heard of the apologetic device known as the “Trilemma” (Jesus as either: Lord, Liar, or Lunatic) but it seriously limits your available options.  I have met many functionally delusional people that talk just like everyone else and hold complex logical conversations, but believe all sorts of bullshit about themselves.


    “10.  “So you don’t have to know anything about Jesus to believe in Jesus” Exactly, that is one interpretation. People aren’t defined by the atoms in their body, they are defined by the ideas teachings that make up their personality and soul.  Those who believe in Jesus are the ones who believe in his teachings on how to live.  This can be done even if you have never heard of his story.  This is just one of many interpretations of course.  It also falls in line with the promise that all those will be rewarded based on their deeds on earth.  Not on deeds and who had the best copy of the handed down gospel. “blessed are those that have not seen and yet have believed”  Once again, interpreted many different ways.  Those who have believed and not seen are led by the holy spirit and are thus blessed.  Or, those who believe in the story of Christ but have not seen miracles.  Or, those who believe in the way to live life (Christ Teachings) but have never seen miracles. “you don’t like being taken advantage” Can’t say that I feel like I’m being taken advantage of.”

     

    Well then if that is your interpretation it really doesn’t matter whether you are a Christian or not.  You might as well be anything under the sun as long as you are trying to get things right.  Obviously most people are by nature trying to do just that if we hold them to fair standards, nothing particular about Christianity will matter in the end.  And that just begs the question…why bother informing us of anything at all…if it really doesn’t matter for most people and its just going to cause people more confusion in the long run?  People would by nature just do their thing unencumbered by all the excuses religious extremism affords to take depravity to new levels.  People would just make up their own religions which seems to be good enough.  You still haven’t presented any good reasons to take Christianity’s extraordinary claims seriously.  You have established it as an authority on the things it speaks of.  Even many of the moral lessons are in question.  I’ve even presented many reasons not to take it seriously…and I’m the one asking the questions.  I don’t mind answering yours, but surely you can see where this doesn’t technically get us anywhere…and that your version of Christianity isn’t cut out for a step into the real world. 

     

    ARU 

  • WargoCC83
    1.  “classical Christianity”  I’m not sure what this is, you can attack it all you want but in the end if you aren’t attacking Christianity then what is the point of asking the question?

    2. “There are other religions and belief systems that teach completely different things than what you were taught”  What’s your point?  Do you think they have found a way to teach people the concept of a true religion before teaching what religion is in the first place? “in purely sociological terms” All evidence of history comes from the society that I’m in yes.  But if I throw that out, I can’t believe in any history because its all based on information I have gotten through society. 

    3. “not to mention photo and video and tons of eye witness testimony”  Lets start here then.  Lets say that in order to believe something it must pass a necessary condition defined by photo’s video and tons of eye witness testimony.  You pretty much just through out all of history.  To say that you shouldn’t believe something unless this standard is met is absurd.  Although you can use it if you want, but don’t ever tell me that you believe in Socrates.

    4. “inappropriate to demand proof”  No not at all.  We demand it in Christ’s case and find gospels supporting miracles.  In Caesar’s case we find somebody who could rule.  The clear choice to believe in Christ is made. “Why is that?” Probably because a person like that would be so noticeable that once they came out in public people would be flocking to them from every town.  If you weren’t in a mob watching people being instantly healed, then its safe not to believe them right away.

    5. “and that implies most do not”  Your right, that does seem to say that if few find it, he is implying less than half.  Back to the question, your argument still remains that if you don’t like Gods plan then the plan must be bogus correct? So if you liked his plan, are you saying you would believe it?  Clearly this is not the case and thus even you don’t believe the fact that the plan is unappealing is proof against God’s existence.

    6. “I still don’t see how you can know the Bible is an authority on God or the afterlife.”  The Gospels are handed record of Christ.  A man who can do miracles like he did must have a better understanding of the world than me. He says scripture cannot be ignored but that does not mean its interpreted literally.  I don’t “know” it is an authority on God anymore than I “know” Socrates existed.  I simply have enough evidence that cannot be turned down.  So far you have failed to tell me how much evidence I should have to believe a story 2000 years old.  Once you do, we can debate on that.

    7. “fairly bad results, wouldn’t you agree” No, because I cant tell good from bad.  They are subjective from my point of view although I believe they are absolute through God.  Thus if he says they are good, then they are.   “least better than anyone else does”  No, because I believe in God.  Thus God knows more than me and I can’t condemn his decisions.

    8.”you are just making up the evidence” No, your original question asked “would you be able to tell the difference in any practical way?”  And I replied that the consistent answering of unlikely prayers would be proof, or if he or the holy spirit told you. I never said that he has come to me personally or answered me consistently. “prayer studies and they were statistically negligible in result”  Which is exactly my point.  It shouldn’t be that you win the powerball every time you pray for it 10 times in a row.  Thus, the answering of exactly that would be evidence that and would be something that could help you tell if God was intervening.

    9.  “I’m not even making this up” So you are saying if I take a verse from the old testament talking about the Messiah, it would be impossible for me to relate this to Christ because it would already contradict the ones he is currently being supported by?  Therefore, the people in your mind who made up Jesus, already used as much of the Old Testament as possible to put into a character and couldn’t come up with a story to better fit any more verses? “met many functionally delusional people” How many of them could walk on water?

    10. “make up their own religions”  Why do that when you can just listen to somebody who has never sinned?  Now that he has come into the world more people know of his philosophy on life which will bring us to heaven. “your version of Christianity”  Like I said, its not my version.  I got it from dictionary.com.  Just look up the word Christian.

  • WAR_ON_ERROR
    “1.  “classical Christianity”  I’m not sure what this is, you can attack it all you want but in the end if you aren’t attacking Christianity then what is the point of asking the question? “

     

    Well I don’t consider it so much an attack as it is an inspection.  The problem is you don’t understand the question, though it does pertain to the legitimateness of your belief system.  And that’s fine.  Not everyone is a professional apologist. 

     

    “2. “There are other religions and belief systems that teach completely different things than what you were taught”  What’s your point?  Do you think they have found a way to teach people the concept of a true religion before teaching what religion is in the first place? “in purely sociological terms” All evidence of history comes from the society that I’m in yes.  But if I throw that out, I can’t believe in any history because its all based on information I have gotten through society.  “

     

    The point is, you’ve accepted a belief system whole sale because of where you were born and haven’t found further justification than that and everyone else is as justified believing in their own version of reality by that standard.

     

    “3. “not to mention photo and video and tons of eye witness testimony”  Lets start here then.  Lets say that in order to believe something it must pass a necessary condition defined by photo’s video and tons of eye witness testimony.  You pretty much just through out all of history.  To say that you shouldn’t believe something unless this standard is met is absurd.  Although you can use it if you want, but don’t ever tell me that you believe in Socrates. “

     

    Well my car clearly is overkill.  I guess I fell into that trap.  Historians do entertain plenty of options when they feel they are necessary to understand their picture of the past.  And unless you are going to tell me you believe absolutely everything in history or that you think historians should, obviously we are dealing with something a tad off the scale in terms of normal human records.  The standard of necessity is but just one of the factors in a metaphysical scam and is not meant to be taken in and of itself.  If somehow important historical facts were contingent on some important aspect of Christianity that would be something…however that is not the case, and there is no need to interpret it that way.  Combined with closed doors and piggy-backing off of mundane phenomena and the huge interpersonal demands it puts on each one of us, that is a bust for a meta-scam.  There are many random tidbits of history that aren’t necessary or contingent on historical facts.  However, the standard of necessity only applies when in conjunction with the others. 

     

    “4. “inappropriate to demand proof”  No not at all.  We demand it in Christ’s case and find gospels supporting miracles.  In Caesar’s case we find somebody who could rule.  The clear choice to believe in Christ is made. “Why is that?” Probably because a person like that would be so noticeable that once they came out in public people would be flocking to them from every town.  If you weren’t in a mob watching people being instantly healed, then its safe not to believe them right away. “

     

    You still haven’t supported the notion why we simply shouldn’t believe both of them are gods.  Or why Jesus isn’t just a great prophet who could perform miracles.  Or a deceiving demon that can perform miracles.  Or someone with mystical Hindu powers.  Or alien technology.  You haven’t eliminated any other possibility…and that is just the nature of God choosing to come to us through history…we can’t confirm anything. 

     

    “5. “and that implies most do not”  Your right, that does seem to say that if few find it, he is implying less than half.  Back to the question, your argument still remains that if you don’t like Gods plan then the plan must be bogus correct? So if you liked his plan, are you saying you would believe it?  Clearly this is not the case and thus even you don’t believe the fact that the plan is unappealing is proof against God’s existence. “

     

    No, it would just be one less thing I have against it.  As it is, if there are things I distinctly morally disprove of…obviously I’m not buying the rest of the belief system.  So it can actually work in one direction.  For instance, I like the religion of Jainism better than Christianity, but I still don’t see any reason to think it’s true.  But if I had something distinctly against it, obviously that would be one more road block on top of the matter, right?  I know you need to portray me as just not liking it, but if there is such a thing as “absolute morality” or “moral accountability” I certainly wouldn’t pick Judaism or Christianity for reasons stated in my “God, the Stepfather” post.  Unless you are going to pull the bologna that a non-theist can’t find something evil in an objective way. 

     

    “6. “I still don’t see how you can know the Bible is an authority on God or the afterlife.”  The Gospels are handed record of Christ.  A man who can do miracles like he did must have a better understanding of the world than me. He says scripture cannot be ignored but that does not mean its interpreted literally.  I don’t “know” it is an authority on God anymore than I “know” Socrates existed.  I simply have enough evidence that cannot be turned down.  So far you have failed to tell me how much evidence I should have to believe a story 2000 years old.  Once you do, we can debate on that. “

     

    For starters, since God has chosen to speak to humanity through history, he can provide the best most accountable form of history there is.  Something any objective historian would love to work with.  Within Jesus’ lifetime, God could have pulled in many historians of the time and had them chronicle exactly all from their own perspectives every jot and tiddle that came out of the Son of God’s mouth.  The accounts could have been filled to the brim with absolutely every little mythic detail from the very first second they were written.  Paintings and portraits could have been commissioned.  Coins could have been minted.  Monuments could have been erected…and the list goes on and on.  The various historians from near and semi-far could have each had their biases and some could have been overtly hostile to the idea, but recorded what they saw anyway.  Ask any modern historian.  This is what they want to see.  Afterwards, each of them could have mysteriously disappeared into the crowd and their works could have surfaced periodically throughout the ages untouched and unblemished.  The dating of them would be perfect, there’d be no way to dispute the writing objectively and it would be completely consistent with that historians style…since they wrote it.  The evidence would be overwhelming.  Historicity would be unavoidable and the only thing left for people would be to decide how far into heaven they want to get from the start.

     

    Or the other option…four gospels all stumbling over the same words, all different in details…the first one simple and almost with a resurrection story, the next two broadening the horizon of legend and the fourth just going way over the top with theological ingenuity…none of which we know the author of…and all of which are mouth pieces for a religion 50 years later.  Not to mention all the admitted forgeries and heretic gospels floating around and the known tampering with the ones that were kept.  For historians, this is considered almost the very worst we could have to work with.  

     

    “7. “fairly bad results, wouldn’t you agree” No, because I cant tell good from bad.  They are subjective from my point of view although I believe they are absolute through God.  Thus if he says they are good, then they are.   “least better than anyone else does”  No, because I believe in God.  Thus God knows more than me and I can’t condemn his decisions. “

     

    You were hinting at absolute morality in a previous comment of yours…and all of the sudden you can’t tell good from bad?  Damn.  Anything for god.  He could take a ripe old literal poop on you right now and you’d have to thank him for it.  The results are right there…all you have to do is apply your common sense, before you presuppose that God exists and God is good.

     

    “8.”you are just making up the evidence” No, your original question asked “would you be able to tell the difference in any practical way?”  And I replied that the consistent answering of unlikely prayers would be proof, or if he or the holy spirit told you. I never said that he has come to me personally or answered me consistently. “prayer studies and they were statistically negligible in result”  Which is exactly my point.  It shouldn’t be that you win the powerball every time you pray for it 10 times in a row.  Thus, the answering of exactly that would be evidence that and would be something that could help you tell if God was intervening. “

     

    So…you are saying you couldn’t tell if God took a ten year vacation from directly intervening in your prayer life?  Sounds like a personal relationship to me.

     

    “9.  “I’m not even making this up” So you are saying if I take a verse from the old testament talking about the Messiah, it would be impossible for me to relate this to Christ because it would already contradict the ones he is currently being supported by?  Therefore, the people in your mind who made up Jesus, already used as much of the Old Testament as possible to put into a character and couldn’t come up with a story to better fit any more verses? “met many functionally delusional people” How many of them could walk on water? “

     

    No, I’m just saying that the standards of prophecy for Jesus are extremely low.  I don’t have a problem with Christians seeing Jesus all over the Old Testament, but claiming that as some kind of proof is bogus given the way they go about doing it.

     

    I’ve not met anyone that I know can walk on water.  And that would include Jesus.  So if Jesus did walk on water…I wouldn’t know.   If you read that link about kooks and quacks of the roman empire you will find numerous references to others in that time period that have performed non-Christian miracles. 

     

    “10. “make up their own religions”  Why do that when you can just listen to somebody who has never sinned?  Now that he has come into the world more people know of his philosophy on life which will bring us to heaven. “your version of Christianity”  Like I said, its not my version.  I got it from dictionary.com.  Just look up the word Christian.”

     

    I’m as sure of Jesus’ holiness as I am of Caesar’s godhood. 

     

    ARU

  • WargoCC83
    1.  “though it does pertain to the legitimateness of your belief system” In that case, stop asking questions and just present your argument.

    2.  “version of reality by that standard”  By what standard should we judge history?  What level of documentation does it take to believe in a historical figure or event?  What should be thrown out of the history books?  My point is that it is easy to be strict with the level of documentation for something you don’t want to believe happened.

    3. “necessity only applies when in conjunction” Either it is proof or it isn’t.  The fact that I am caught at the crime scene is either held against me or it isn’t.  If you want to come up with a standard of proof that much of history fails against then feel free. But don’t just apply it to the subjects you don’t like.

    4. “shouldn’t believe both of them are gods” I stated because Caesar didn’t perform any miracles. “Jesus isn’t just a great prophet who could perform miracles”  He says that he was the Son of God.  His miracles testify to his word.  “deceiving demon that can perform miracles” No evidence yet of demons, hindu Gods, or aliens.  If we find another gospel that says he was a hindu God worshipping alien demon, then we will have something to go on.  “we can’t confirm anything”  If held to your necessity test you are correct.  But there are some people who believe in history without living witnesses and video tapes.

    5. “one more road block on top of the matter, right” Agreed.  Emotions always get in the way whether Atheist or not. But for the sake of this discussion, lets only talk about the logical arguments against Christianity rather than just questioning things you don’t like that don’t logically one way or the other prove the religion to be true or false.

    6.”he can provide the best most accountable form of history there is” Only if he wants to though. We have no reason to believe he wants to.  We know the end, that those who believe in Christ will live (whatever way interpreted) but how he chooses to do it is not listed in the gospels.  This isn’t a logical argument against God, because for it to work you have to assume that God’s will is lined with historians.

    7. “before you presuppose that God exists and God is good”  O.K., in that case we can’t say they are bad results because we haven’t assumed there is a God let alone one who had a plan.  Now you don’t have an argument.  You have to start with the assumption that it is true, and then find your contradiction.  Or else, it logically your argument won’t work.

    8. “Sounds like a personal relationship to me” Well I’m sorry you don’t like it.  Do you have any arguments against Christianity or is number 8 done?

    9. “is bogus given the way they go about doing it” In that case, you are not saying Jesus the man and miracles are made up, you are saying the connection between him and the Old Testament is made up.  If he and the miracles were made up, they would be much more in line with the Old Testament.  As for you link, it had a lot of reading attached to it that I can’t get to now.  You will have to give me some more time to become knowledgeable about it.

    10. “I’m as sure of Jesus’ holiness as I am of Caesar’s godhood” How can you read the teachings of Christ and not find pure truth in it?  What was wrong with Christ morally? What did Caesar have on him? Try finding teachings from Hindu, Buddhist, anywhere that are more moral. And what was your argument?  That if God simply wanted his people to be good, why send Jesus instead of having them start up their own religions. And I answered that as his son he could help us the most.  Any more arguments?

  • WAR_ON_ERROR
    Wargo,

     

    ROUND 8:

     

    “1.  “though it does pertain to the legitimateness of your belief system” In that case, stop asking questions and just present your argument.”

     

    My argument is, if you can follow it…the crux of everything must not be constrained by any underlying principle or it is not by definition the crux of everything.  Therefore it must be the utmost of inparticularity.  This is by definition the opposite of any intuition that would come to the conclusion it could be anything resembling a mind.  A mind must be constrained by some principle in order to fit the definition that would be at all palatable to a relationship with us.  And yet this is where classic theism places God, the Father.  However it is a contradiction in terms, a married Bachelor, or a circular square.  Personhood and infinity do not jive and there are many ways to come to this conclusion.  This is but one.  Therefore God, the Father does not exist. 

     

    That’s the basic negative case against God, the Father, from logic alone.  Jesus’ testimony means absolutely nothing to me on the matter.  The positive case is what the identification of the necessary being is…what was just described that didn’t fit with the definition of mind…and that is where I dovetail into a proof of the allverse if you are interested in hearing my thoughts on that. 

     

    “2.  “version of reality by that standard”  By what standard should we judge history?  What level of documentation does it take to believe in a historical figure or event?  What should be thrown out of the history books?  My point is that it is easy to be strict with the level of documentation for something you don’t want to believe happened.”

     

    It suffices to say, you have to be a “theostorian” to come to the conclusions you do.  I don’t know if you’ve checked my ARU dictionary.  The entry reads: 

     

    Theostorian:  A theologian who takes the existence of God for granted and sees no need to eliminate other possible explanations before coming to the conclusion there is a sound case for historicity for his or her belief system as long as God himself doesn’t come down from heaven and tell him otherwise.  He invents and upholds any and every contrivance to circumvent the obvious indications that the holy writings are not as straight forward as they are meant to appear.  As long as they can get away with it, it is as good as true.  No positive or necessarily grounded proof is needed for either inerrancy, prophecy, or any other extraordinary claim.  It is completely justified apart from reality checks.  They also normally know squat about anything historical that isn't Bible related.

     

    Regular rules of historical inquiry don’t get you there. 

     

    “3. “necessity only applies when in conjunction” Either it is proof or it isn’t.  The fact that I am caught at the crime scene is either held against me or it isn’t.  If you want to come up with a standard of proof that much of history fails against then feel free. But don’t just apply it to the subjects you don’t like.”

     

    I have come up with a standard that I have explained to you how it holds up in all cases.  I even have a post that goes through many examples.  I would venture to say you just don’t like it.  I find when I do not listen to the voice in my head that says I’m being scammed…I do my self a great disservice.  And I’ve merely elucidated what goes into that sensibility.  Your two tone standard doesn’t really hold up since you being at the crime scene is of course examined in light of all the evidence.  The metaphysical scam mold is about considering the entire shape of confrontation with all the evidence and you only picked on one part and blew it out of proportion.  Why do you expect me to be convinced?    

     

    “4. “shouldn’t believe both of them are gods” I stated because Caesar didn’t perform any miracles. “Jesus isn’t just a great prophet who could perform miracles”  He says that he was the Son of God.  His miracles testify to his word.  “deceiving demon that can perform miracles” No evidence yet of demons, hindu Gods, or aliens.  If we find another gospel that says he was a hindu God worshipping alien demon, then we will have something to go on.  “we can’t confirm anything”  If held to your necessity test you are correct.  But there are some people who believe in history without living witnesses and video tapes.”

     

    And I don’t see any reason why a god has to prove himself to you with miracles.  In fact Jesus himself said an evil generation asks for signs and wonders.  Perhaps that was Caesar’s idea as well.  How would we know? 

     

    “5. “one more road block on top of the matter, right” Agreed.  Emotions always get in the way whether Atheist or not. But for the sake of this discussion, lets only talk about the logical arguments against Christianity rather than just questioning things you don’t like that don’t logically one way or the other prove the religion to be true or false.”

     

    I don’t consider good judgment to be predominantly emotional.  If your god says one thing and does another…something isn’t right.  How else would I know if I am dealing with the right God or not if I am not given enough information to judge?  Otherwise Yahweh’s acts are too ambiguous to entertain a real impression….and that doesn’t make for good religion. 

     

    “6.”he can provide the best most accountable form of history there is” Only if he wants to though. We have no reason to believe he wants to.  We know the end, that those who believe in Christ will live (whatever way interpreted) but how he chooses to do it is not listed in the gospels.  This isn’t a logical argument against God, because for it to work you have to assume that God’s will is lined with historians.”

     

    Have you noticed what happens when things are ambiguous?  People are hurt, suffer, and die unnecessarily through the conflict of ideas.  I assume that God is a good god who is accountable to good deeds.  Holding himself to historical inquiry is a good idea.  Liars hop the fence to steal the sheep.    One has to exercise mature judgment and not just say, “I can give an amoral God infinity of room to maneuver!  He’s a good person off stage!”  That means something to me.  It’s another suspicious closed door to a metaphysical scam that isn’t adding up. 

     

    “7. “before you presuppose that God exists and God is good”  O.K., in that case we can’t say they are bad results because we haven’t assumed there is a God let alone one who had a plan.  Now you don’t have an argument.  You have to start with the assumption that it is true, and then find your contradiction.  Or else, it logically your argument won’t work.”

     

    No…you just have take the idea seriously enough to apply it to see if it holds up.  And if it doesn’t then that is the argument that works. 

     

    “8. “Sounds like a personal relationship to me” Well I’m sorry you don’t like it.  Do you have any arguments against Christianity or is number 8 done?”

     

    I’m sorry you can’t see that it isn’t a personal relationship and thus you are being scammed.  You could be using your emotional dollars for something else that’s real.  Even if I weren’t who I said I was and was totally lying to you about everything I said here…that would still classify as more personal a relationship than you have with Jesus, in my opinion.  And I use the phrase “in my opinion” very generously here.  If you personally honestly couldn’t tell if God was hands off for a decade…that is by definition the most obtuse personal relationship I could possibly think of by any set standard…and that is the nature of the question asked…what it intends to point out.   So I ask you…do you admit defeat?  If not, why should question 8 be done?  Why must I always accept unreasonable standards?

     

    “9. “is bogus given the way they go about doing it” In that case, you are not saying Jesus the man and miracles are made up, you are saying the connection between him and the Old Testament is made up.  If he and the miracles were made up, they would be much more in line with the Old Testament.  As for you link, it had a lot of reading attached to it that I can’t get to now.  You will have to give me some more time to become knowledgeable about it.”

     

    No…that doesn’t follow.  I specifically said it is impossible to concoct a person from every word in every passage used no matter how ingenious the diviners of the messiah were.  It’s just a logical impracticality.  Do you not follow what I’m saying here?  If I give you a list of passages from several fictional works and ask you to harmonize them as best you can…there are going to be leftovers.  That means the connection is made up of a weak foundation and is just as bogus as the rest of the equation.  Dude, read everything on Carrier’s site.  If the man told me tomorrow that Christianity was legitimate, I’d probably convert back.  I trust his coverage, methodology,  and his judgment that much.  Take all the time you need there.

     

    “10. “I’m as sure of Jesus’ holiness as I am of Caesar’s godhood” How can you read the teachings of Christ and not find pure truth in it?  What was wrong with Christ morally? What did Caesar have on him? Try finding teachings from Hindu, Buddhist, anywhere that are more moral. And what was your argument?  That if God simply wanted his people to be good, why send Jesus instead of having them start up their own religions. And I answered that as his son he could help us the most.  Any more arguments?”

     

    For one thing I see his teachings (and the entire NT) obscured by the cowardly blameful wrath of Moses and Yahweh.  Another…I find many things wrong with the content of what he says when I ask myself my honest opinion of it.  Another…there are better moral teachers out there.  There is a good example of again on Richard Carrier’s site, for just such a confrontation such as this…  I find it hard to believe that you’ve done a lot of research into other religions and moral teachings.  Perhaps I am mistaken?  I’ve recently been reading the Tao Te Ching and it seems to me and feels to me as good at least as the Psalms. 

     

    It doesn’t really seem you are processing anything I say.  Just blindly holding your fort.  If only that were virtuous given the circumstances.  Is anything getting through?  If I’m not mistaken, question ten was about what to do about the apparent state of agnosticism we find ourselves in, in reference to the answers to these questions, and how that ranks up to the confidence required to be a real Christian.  Otherwise, from what I can tell of what you’ve restated of mine, my contention would be that why confuse the issue with *unconfirmable* absolute truth…when for the most part most won’t even hear it or be judged by it and presumably can get by on their own?  Doesn’t it make more sense that its just one more of the same?  Why make the world a more contentious place to live?  Didn’t Jesus say he didn’t come to bring peace to the world…but instead a sword?  Now where do you think he got an idea like that?  Song of songs?  I don’t think so.  Muhammad seemed to concur as he conquered.  And between the two of them per the inspiration of the moral indignation and extremism in the Torah, they have left pointless nasty scars on history, when he could have given us extra reasons not to war instead.

     

    ARU

  • WargoCC83
    1. “And yet this is where classic theism places God, the Father”  Thank you for your argument against the concept of God defined by classic theism.  Now, do you have any arguments against Christianity?

    2. “Theostorian:”  Feel free to attack me or call me whatever you like.  However, I would prefer if you could counter my argument when your finished. You feel it is correct to attack Christian history with one standard and the rest of history with a different standard. This shows that if anything, backed up by name calling, your emotions are doing your debating.

    3. “Why do you expect me to be convinced?”  You decided to pick a standard that the majority of history before 1800 fails against.  We no longer have credible eyewitnesses or video tapes that we can bring into court of those events.  Why not just say the standard was people?  If people were involved then it fails the necessity test.  It pretty much eliminates everything before 1800 as well. 

    4. “why a god has to prove himself to you with miracles” I have never seen a miracle like the ones of Christ.  And I don’t have to either.  You are correct, the wisdom of Christ is enough to make many people have faith because no other religion has that.  However, miracles testify to what is beyond the knowledge of most people and thus helps increase belief. I suppose if Caesar had that kind of wisdom then he would have been more convincing. 

    5. “If your god says one thing and does another…something isn’t right”  Give me an example.  Use anything from the gospels or passages of the OT which Christ interpreted for us.

    6. “inquiry is a good idea” You mean from your point of view its good.  You cannot assume that it is good in reality.  You are upset that we don’t know a lot about him, not that what we know about him contradicts something. 

    7. “you just have take the idea seriously enough to apply it to see if it holds up” O.K., so don’t take it serious, just make the assumption if it were true then it creates a contradiction so it must be false.  Now what’s your contradiction about God?

    8. “do you admit defeat”  How can I admit defeat when you haven’t stated your argument yet.  You originally asked about the possibility of knowing that God is intervening or a lack there of.  I told you some ways although none of them have happened to me.  What’s your argument?

    9. “are going to be leftovers”  Exactly, but only to the point where I couldn’t fit one more thing about him without taking something away due to contradiction.  Therefore, if we could add more to the story of Jesus to make sure he was better supported (from the viewpoint of the people who supposedly made up the story) then his story would be at the point where we couldn’t add more to it without creating a contradiction to the rest of it.  So, your argument fails unless I cannot find one piece of Old testament scripture that would support Jesus if I simply added on to his already supposedly made up story.

    10.  I did get to read about “Musonius” although not much was said about him.  His sense of humor was the main thing Carrier seemed to argue for.  Apparently teaching as a humorous friend has less of an impact than teaching as somebody with authority.  Making his ability to change the world much more limited than Christ and Carriers argument for the importance of humor invalid.  Carrier also seemed to be upset that Christ’s form of teaching required more reflection and deep thought where as Musonius had a message that nobody had to search for.  What Carrier fails to realize is that truth comes from deep thought and reflection and a teaching style that emphasizes those qualities and grasps the attention of the people will ultimately do more good. 

    “hear it or be judged by it”  We will definitely be judged by it because it is stated that those who say that they believe but don’t follow will not find heaven.  “get by on their own”  Some can I’m sure, but more can be helped because Christ came to inspire truth and inspire us to find it.  “but instead a sword”  He came and preached truth so that people would be inspired to be better people and be led to heaven instead of just sitting quietly and accepting things they way they are.  When people have strong different opinions this can lead to violence or “sword”.  Thus, bringing the sword was not bad, it was a way of stating the encouragement of thinking and the nature human emotions that would eventually come to play as a reacton.

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