by jimwalton » Tue Oct 24, 2017 5:05 pm
> No, you gave evidence that a caterpillar can resurrect (they can't actually as someone else explained), not that humans can resurrect.
I gave evidence that having all life functions cease and then restored is something that happens naturally at least in this one case. But you probably understand that part of the point about Jesus coming back from the dead is that it was otherwise impossible unless it were a miracle from God. If I show you it happens in this one caterpillar, my point is that it's not against science. If I show you that the whole point of Jesus' resurrection was that it was miraculous because humans don't rise from the dead, then in the case of Jesus it is substantiation of his deity.
> So the parting of the Red Sea could happened naturally (so long as you don't believe the Bible to be true with the east wind part).
Hmm. I DO believe the Bible to be true with the east wind part. God used a natural mechanism to accomplish a divine purpose. In this case the miracle wasn't contrary to nature, but the miracle was in the timing (the east wind arose as Moses lifted his staff, remained until the Israelites crossed the path, and then closed on the Egyptians). It's not a contrary-to-nature miracle, but a utilization-of-nature miracle.
> According to the Bible, man was created both before and after land animals.
I disagree with this. This discussion needs to be much longer, but I take Genesis 1 as an account of functional creation, not material creation (as Dr. John Walton teaches in his book, "The Lost World of Genesis 1"). It is not a chronological account of material creation (as traditionally interpreted by the young earth, 6-day creationists), but an account of God bringing the cosmos into order to function as his temple. It speaks of God assigning roles and functions, not of him creating the world. (Of course He DID create the world, but that comes from other texts, not Gen. 1.) Genesis 1 is literally about function, not structure.
> According to the Bible, the city of Tyre was destroyed
Prophecy properly understood is more like a syllabus for a college class than a crystal ball predicting an exact future. Almost all prophecies are contingent on other factors (see Jer. 18.1-12; also Jonah 3). Ezekiel 26 prophesies the destruction of Tyre, but Ezk. 29 says that it won't be—a prophecy acknowledging the non-fulfillment of an earlier prophecy. It's because of the contingency of prophecy as part of its nature.
For instance, if someone today were to predict that the stock market would take a plunge, and then took some action that actually caused it to happen, he or she would not be praised for their ability to predict. The aspect of predictiveness would be diminished by the direct link to causation. In the same way, the predictive element in biblical prophecy must usually be kept distinct from causation (or it stops being predictive). Obviously, "prediction" isn't the best word to describe biblical prophecy. Prophets, as you know, weren't predicting anything, but only giving the word of the Lord. The prophecy was God’s message, not the prophet’s. If predicting is understood to preclude causation, then God cannot predict, for he is the final cause of all. So in the end it must be recognized that prophecy is more interested in causation than in prediction. It is true that biblical prophecy spoke of events before they happened, but the purpose was that God would be properly recognized as having caused those events as a part of his ongoing plan.
Rather than regarding prophecy as prediction, it is more helpful to consider it as "God's syllabus." The syllabus for a course doesn't "predict" what will happen in each class period of the term, but presents the instructor's plans and intentions for each period. The significance of the document is that the instructor is in a position to carry it out. Likewise, when a judge passes a sentence on a convicted criminal, he is not "predicting" what will happen to that person. Rather, he is decreeing what ought to be done and is in a position to see that it is done.
In prophetic literature, God is declaring his intentions and decreeing his judgments. Though these were still future when spoken, they could be considered prediction only in the broadest terms.
In this case, Ezekiel prophesied that Nebuchadnezzar would besiege and invade Tyre (Ezk. 26.7), which he did from 585-572 BC. But he didn't devastate the city the way Zeke described, which he admits in 29.17-18. That it did not happen is not a blot on God’s reputation, because who knows how the prophecy could yet be fulfilled?
Nebuchadnezzar destroyed the city, but it was rebuilt. Alexander the Great later razed it to the ground. The ruined city is now a peninsula where fishermen dry their nets, as predicted by Ezekiel. The destruction of Tyre was also prophesied by Zechariah (9.4) in about 515 BC. After being destroyed by Alexander, the city was rebuilt on a different location, but never regained the prominence it formerly had.
> According to the Bible, the Romans required people to go to their hometown for a census (they didn't in reality, this was the only way to satisfy the Messiah being born in Bethlehem).
The word Luke uses is ἀπογράφεσθαι, a registration. It could have been a census, but it wasn't necessarily. It was a recording of family information probably for the purpose of taxation (though it doesn't say that), whatever word one wants to use. We know that Rome, with some regularity, did order such registrations, and that they took a while to fulfill them throughout the empire. *The Deeds of the Divine Augustus* (paragraph 8, lines 2-4) confirms that Augustus himself ordered a census in 8 BC — a census that sounds empire-wide in scope (with 4 million citizens in an empire in which most people were not citizens. In a world without the ability to travel and communicate nearly as speedily as ours today, it would be expected that it might take such an endeavor years to unfold and come to both fruition and completion.
> they didn't in reality, this was the only way to satisfy the Messiah being born in Bethlehem
Sure they did. I don't know what you mean.
> Look at all the contradictions in the Bible.
I'm not aware of any contradictions in the Bible, but this is a much longer discussion. There are a number of discrepancies, but most are fairly easily resolved.
> Many things in the Bible can't be proven one way or another...
I also can't prove to you I saw a rainbow last week, that my back has an itch on it, or that I had a headache yesterday. Lots of facts aren't subject to scientific proof, but that doesn't make them untrue.
> I touched on this, they are accepted, but if there is a motive to lie, they lose credibility.
Right. So it's not "eyewitness testimony" that is suspect, but the veracity of the testimony. It's the person (motive and speech), not the means (eyewitness testimony).
> These are personal feelings
A doctor pushes on my stomach. "Does it hurt when I do this?" "Does it hurt here?" He depends on my testimony. I go to an eye doctor. He has all of his fancy equipment, but he has to ask me, "Which of these is most clear for you?" I just get tired of people saying, "We can't believe personal experience or eyewitness testimony." We depend on it all the time for so many thing. It's not just feelings. It's how I see, the pain I have, or the symptom I am experiencing.
> Are you even trying at this point? It's an opinion, a thought, and it's completely subjective and doesn't make a statement about reality.
My wife loves broccoli. I hate it. All I'm saying is that when I say I hate it, it's real. I can't stand the stuff. Do you believe me? It's all you have to go by.
> "Expert review." ... Not exactly what you mean by this. If you mean eyewitness testimony in court, then it's eye witness.
I go on the Internet to read expert reviews about the new iPhone, what its features are and how it works. If eyewitness testimony is unreliable, I shouldn't do any such thing. But if there is any credibility to eyewitness testimony, then I can give as much credence to the review as is commensurate with my trust of the source. Again, it's not testimony as a category that is unreliable, but only unreliable people.
> A lot of history is based on what multiple people wrote.
Some is, but for much we have only one source. Again, it's not eyewitness testimony as a category that is unreliable. If we have 4 corroborating sources, or even 2, we can claim it's reliable as a source of historical information.
> but if you're going to claim something extraordinary happened, I'm going to want extraordinary evidence of it occurring
I don't need extraordinary evidence, but only a trustworthy, reliable source. If your best friend in the whole world that you have learned to implicitly trust swore to you they saw something unbelievable, and you could sense in their eyes, the tone of voice, and body language that they were dead serious, you would tend to believe it over someone you didn't know or trust. It's not the extraordinary evidence that would make the difference, but the genuineness of the source.
> You see what you want to see, and you hear what you want to hear while ignoring all the evidence against these things. You ignore how many sources say 'no, this didn't happen' in favour of one that says it did.
This is a generality that doesn't take us anywhere. What are you asserting that I am claiming against "all the evidence against these things"?