by jimwalton » Tue Dec 26, 2023 10:44 am
> Sure, floods have happened. They still happen.
Yep, I agree.
> The narratives about the patriarchs are full of anachronisms.
There are some, yes, but they are certainly not full of them. I am not disputing that the text was not edited in later years, with obviously some insertions that were anachronistic. The point does nothing to prove your argument or to dispute mine. My point is that the patriarchal narratives have never been proven to be false.
> There is an abundance of evidence against the exodus and conquest narrative.
There is no evidence that proves any part of the exodus and conquest narrative to be false. There are vast disputes about many elements of both, but there has been no evidence showing them to be false.
> Sure, but you haven't shown why the anecdotal evidence of the Bible would be reliable.
The Bible has been shown to be historically reliable. We can talk about any particular text(s) if you wish. Arguing in generalities is never fruitful.
> The different authors often disagree with each other,
I disagree. Again, generalities don't make for fruitful discussion. We'd have to converse about specific examples.
> they show different cultural influences
This is not a problem to historicity or its theological claims.
> "Micah 5.2" Do you have any god evidence that this was actually fulfiled?
The evidence we have is that Jesus was born in Bethlehem. We have no evidence to the contrary. If you dispute the claim, the evidence to the contrary is what you must produce.
> "Matthew 8.13" This is about a past event
If you expect that Matthew wrote about this narrative before it happened, that's not the way biographies work. My response to you would be to ask what evidence you have to claim this didn't happen the way Matthew reports it. On what basis do you dispute it?
> The gospels of Matthew, Mark, and John were not written by the people it was later attributed to. They were written decades after the events by people who never met Jesus.
The evidence for traditional authorship is stronger than evidence to the contrary. I know each book's author is disputed in our times, but in the early Church, there was no dispute. There is unanimity of position that the authors were Mt, Mk, Lk, and John. There is no extant copy with any other attribution. In addition, there are reasons to believe the authors are the traditional authors, and the result of my research is that the case for the traditional authors has more weight than the case against.
> There is very good evidence that many books of the New Testament are forgeries
This is simply untrue. The majority of the epistles of Paul are undisputed. The remainder of the letters of Paul are disputed but not proven to be forgeries. The cases for the Gospels are stronger for traditional authorship than for any competing theory. Hebrews is not a forgery, we just don't know the author. James is highly disputed, there is no scholarly consensus. The early Church used James and there is evidence of widespread acceptance. Jude was widely recognized by the early Church. Revelation author is unknown, but it's not regarded as a forgery.
> That means that you should substantiate that claim.
I did substantiate the claim. Theological claims can't be proven but only substantiated. I gave close to 20 points of argument as to why I consider the Bible to be the Word of God.