by jimwalton » Tue Dec 12, 2017 12:14 pm
> if you're going to measure the truth of something by the social effects then Christianity would be seen as evil
I'll admit that Christianity doesn't have a clean history. There are some eras and some events where people falsely representing themselves as Christians did abominable things. There's no doubt about it. But taken as a whole (which is what we have to do to be responsible), Christianity has had extremely positive effects on culture: hospitals, schools, water wells, food relief, medicine, and a large list longer. Here in Western culture our legal system, government, philosophy, literature, music, art, economics, education, and science have all been shaped around the principles of Christianity to a positive effect.
> The issue of what Muhammad did is very complex and it requires a lot of background knowledge as well as an understanding of the culture at the time.
I agree with this.
> I don't think you can seriously claim that in Numbers 31;17 the women were simply taken as wives
I absolutely can claim it and prove it, but that's a different discussion and longer than we have room for here. There is no evidence to take the story in any other direction. But as I said, that's a different discussion.
> Christians have tried to escape this by saying it's the God of the old testament and so on. I can bring up many verses which are brutal. That's not a good indication of anything.
These verses, I have learned through many discussion on this forum, are widely misunderstood and greatly distorted to make YHWH a brutal beast of a deity. But again, these are discussion we would have to have about the specifics, and it's longer than we can get into here. If you want to discuss them, start a new post, and I'll interact with you on them.
> What adding verses to the Bible proves is that it's not infallible.
We know about these verses, and we don't consider them to be authoritative. Their presence doesn't detract from the Bible being authoritative. Our Bibles mark that these verses were added later and aren't part of the original.
> It can be changed.
No it can't. We mark that these verses were added and they don't belong. We recognize the text that is authentic and the text that isn't, because it can't be changed.
> The issue is we don't know whether the Bible we're reading now is corrupt or not, the earliest full manuscript is still from the 4th century.
The point is that we DO know that they Bible we're reading now is 99% accurate. The research is extensive and thorough. The manuscripts and fragments are abundant.
> Mark, Matthew, Luke and John did not write the Bible.
I would argue very strongly that they did. The evidence is greatly in their favor. I don't know what you've been reading, but again, we can have this conversation as you wish.
> Matthew is 92% similar to Mark.
This is not true. Matthew is almost twice the length of Mark and has large blocks of teaching that aren't in Mark. It's not even close to 92% similar to Mark. I don't know where you got this tidbit, but it's false.
> If Matthew was an eye witness then why did he copy from Mark?
Scholars seem to think there was a common document that they both used as resource, called "Q". You can't guarantee to me, however, that if Q is real, that Matthew didn't either write it or contribute to it. So how you can you say with such confidence that Matthew's Gospel isn't an eyewitness account? You can't, really.
> The disciples of Jesus were aramaic speaking peasants, they did not speak Greek but I'll give them the benefit of the doubt and say they did, that does not mean they could write Greek.
Many of the people of the ancient world were multi-lingual. Aramaic was the language of the region, but Latin was the legal language and Greek was the language of commerce. How do you know the disciples didn't speak Greek? I would be pleased to see your evidence. Jesus spoke Greek, because he addressed soldiers, Gentiles, and even Pilate. So if Jesus spoke Greek, possibly the other disciples did also.
As far as writing Greek, the Bible authors used secretaries (1 Peter 5.12; Jeremiah 36.4).
> In Acts Peter is said to be illiterate, so clearly Peter didn't write 1 Peter.
I don't know where you got this. But in any case, Peter used a secretary to write his book (1 Pet. 5.12).
> The resurrection
You're just throwing things at me here. Would you like to have a reasonable discussion about these things? I would be glad to, but you're just tossing things around.
Women at the tomb. There were many. Because John only mentions 1 doesn't mean only 1 was there. He mentions the one he is telling a story about. This is not a problem.
Angels at the tomb. There were several, and they came and went as needed. That's why people see different angels and different numbers of angels at different times. This is not a problem.
The rock. It was rolled away sometime before dawn, before the women arrived. Matthew 28.2-4 is a parenthesis explaining what happened earlier.
These are not contradictions. Somehow you have gotten a bunch of bogus information about many things. I would guess it's from the Internet, but maybe not. I don't know your sources, but they are distortions, misrepresentations, and sometime outright falsehoods. You can't believe everything you read on the Internet.
> The Gospels are different accounts written by different people at different times for different people.
This is undeniably true.
> They are prone to errors and change.
This is false, and this point doesn't follow from your previous sentence. Let's talk more.
Last bumped by Anonymous on Tue Dec 12, 2017 12:14 pm.