*Sigh*. Perhaps I should stop sleeping, so I can keep up with the replies, lol. I'll reply to this, but then I'm getting some lunch!!!!!
Loomis wrote:Well, prove that.
You only have "god's word" (i.e. the bible) that he or she is the creator (or as you might say, your faith in that word). Well, I am saying that I am god and I have the text to prove it. So by questioning me as god, you are undergoing the same process as you would do reading the bible. You are taking my text and adding your interpretation (which seems to be based largely on your own beliefs in another text).
So, this brings us full circle back to the bible interpretation question. You originally said in regards to the bible "I don't think you should interpret it at all, but rather, just read it as it is written." Well, here you have been given a choice - your god's words (in your bible) and my god (me). However, you have chosen to interpret YOUR bible as the correct answer. If you were to take the holy word as written, you should accept all holy words and not just the one you choose to believe.
Also, about 5 pages back you also said:
awallaceunc wrote:Christians hardly have the right to submit God to literary criticism. You certainly have the right to question it, though; hopefully it will lead you to God. If not, though, be prepared to accept the consequences for questioning too long. Then there's the worst choice of all, not believing or question, but simply ignoring.
By choosing not to believe my text - or those of Judaism, Islam etc - you have 'simply ignored' a whole stack of faiths. You have submitted my claims to questioning, and you have nothing more than your own faith to assure you that your text is any better than mine, or any other text mentioned. By your own admission, simply ignoring is the worst choice of all. But you have no problem with simply ignoring Islam or Judaism (or my religion, were I to found one) simply because it is not your own. Is it that hard to believe, then, that you COULD be wrong? Or if your faith is not wrong, could it not be possible that other faiths have equal access to god?
The subject at hand is interpreting The Bible, which I do not. Rejecting Islam or Loomism hardly effects the way that I read the Bible. I reject these religions, their texts, their gods, everything. On what basis do I reject them? Faith. Faith in God and Christianity. A literal faith in the Bible. I'm not "taking your text and interpreting it" - I'm rejecting your text, and you as a god. Now faith may not be an acceptable or logical explanation to you, but that's the basis.
Loomis wrote:By stating that your faith is the only true one, you have contradicted yourself. You are interpreting both my words, the words of the other religions and the words of your own religion and (hopefully) making a choice based on that, and your own faith.
Where does interpretation enter in? There's no disputing that I reject other religions based on faith alone. I don't interpret their words, I reject them. I'm not concerned with how they are read or understood. I am only concerned with the Bible, which I do not interpret.
Loomis wrote:The only other alternatives are that your religion has either brainwashed you or you are simply prejudiced against those religions that are not your own. Far be it for me to make such an accusation in a civilized debate, so I can only assume that you are making your own interpretation of the bible based on the teachings of your faith (which I have not yet asked you specifically about yet). Thus, the bible MUST be open to interpretation, because by choosing ANY path based on the teachings of god/the bible, you are making an interpretive choice that guides you.
On what do you base this assumption? How is it that believing that Christianity is the true path, based on what the Bible literally says, is an intepretation? There's nothing intepretive about my following the Bible, and nothing intepretive about my rejecting other holy texts and religions.
Of course, one can get into arguments about the fact that Mohammed emerged from a cave with a rewritten account of history that conveniently gave him a claim to global rule, with no witnesses (something that can't be said of Jesus), but such objective arguments don't matter, as faith
is enough. For anyone interested in an objective take on it, though, I recommend
The Case For Christ by Lee Strobel, an atheist journalist who set out to disprove God and the Christian claim once and for all.
And feel free to ask about my faith any time.
PrinceAli-MightyIsHe-AliABabwa wrote:Anyway, Aaron...I don't see how you can enjoy reading the Bible if you can't even think about what you are reading. It's almost as if there was no point.
Where did I say that I don't even think when I read? Hopefully if these 7 pages have demonstrated nothing else, they have demonstrated that I think. There's a difference between
interpeting and
thinking. To interpret (again, as I definied it very early on, because you can get into semantics debates all day long) something is to translate or find the meaning in what is there. But it
already says something. It's in black and white, when read literally. No searches for symbolism, no questioning of "What is this
trying to say?" is needed. Interpretation only comes into play when someone has difficult agreeing with or accepting what is already written there.
PrinceAli wrote:You as a Christian fundamentalist, do have a blind faith...
Again, there's nothing blinding about it. But I know what you mean by the expression, so I digress.
PrinceAli wrote:But I ask you, wouldn't you like to have a faith in a God who believes in science? If God created us in his own image, shouldn't he also be proud of the great achievements science has given us? Science has helped us save many lifes and rid the world of terrible diseases. Science has helped us discover more in the world and explore the solar system. Science has even helped create new ideas and encourage us to spread our imagination.
Who said God hates science?? He loves it. He invented it! But the way you phrased it is important, my
faith lies in God, not in science. Science is a tool we are given. I'm all for saving lives, ridding the world of diseases, discoveries, explorations, new ideas, and imagination, so long as none of them are misused for sin.
PrinceAli wrote:I do understand though, that there are some bad things people have done with science such as create nuclear weapons or C4 type bombs. But like you said, man can have a bad influence on things. Churches and religion is man-made. Priests are men and not God, and can spread the "word of God" in terrible ways and create war.
I totally agree.
PrinceAli wrote:But your Bible tells us that God comes before man and that man-made discoveries and ideas are nothing but sin.
No it doesn't. The point is not to put your faith in man, and not to use discoveries and ideas for sin. That hardly applies to most science.
PrinceAli wrote:Your God came to Earth as a Jew, was tortured, and then spread Christianity? I don't understand.
This is something both you and Loomis brought up, so I want to address it here. I do not reject the texts of Judaism, or the God of Judaism. All Christians are Jews by faith, but completed Jews. God made a covenant with Abraham, in which He promised to bless and anoint his bloodline. Abraham's son was Isaac, Isaac's son was Jacob, who was renamed Israel, which is Hebrew for "struggles for God." That bloodline- the Jewish bloodline- continued all the way down to Jesus. The Messiah had to come from that bloodline. He came to fulfill Judaism- the Messiah is the missing piece to their faith. Christianity and Judaism do not conflict, Christianity is what Judaism became when the Messiah came. Modern-day Jews are those who still haven't accepted that Jesus was that Messiah, they still await the coming Messiah.
So I ask you, which would you choose? Blind faith for people who have to believe the Bible is right, or science and faith that is for everyone and will always progress? [/quote]
Neither. My faith isn't blinding, and it
is for everyone. It doesn't need to progress because it
is universal and eternal, even as a constant. We don't
have to believe the Bible is right- I'm not sure what you were implying by that- we
do believe in it.
PrinceAli wrote:A world that will stay the same as the Bible for millions of years, or a world that will change just like schoolbooks are changed with new discovery?
What do you mean by the world will stay the same as the Bible? And why do you feel discovery is admonished by Christians?
PrinceAli wrote:A God who rejects what man creates, or a god who is proud of what good comes from humans?
God rejects sin. If it is good, He does not reject it.
PrinceAli wrote:A god who values righteousness, or one that will damn you to Hell for having it even if you don't believe Jesus was the savior or never heard of Him.
God does value righteousness, but it is not the focus. Why should it be? Salvation and love are the keys to life, not righteousness. All the good deeds and good intentions in life really don't amount to much. And we've been through the "never heard of Him" thing several times already. The important thing is to
choose to accept Jesus. If you haven't had that opportunity, the Word promises that you are not held accountable for it. Jesus is also promised not to return until the Word has been preached in every country and corner of the world.
PrinceAli wrote:Because I can tell you, a lot of the people involved in creating the Christian religion have the same faith as you do in believing in the same God, but according to you...is alright as long as they have the common belief that Jesus is the way.
I don't understand what you are saying from the elipsis on. People didn't create Christianity, Jesus did. People did create organized religion, though.
Stashone wrote:Aw dude you can't be serious. Not believing in evolution at this point is like not believing in car engines - whether you've observed it or not, the effects are pretty bloody evident!
Not a very fair statement. First, you must realize that even what would seem to be scientific proof does not take precedent over faith, in the eyes of those who have it. To speak of Christians as ignorant neanderthals isn't very kind. And while some scientific evidence does exist to support evolution, there is evidence to support all sort of claims to creation. The point is that it remains a theory, not a proven fact.
And now on to Dacp and Netty. Dacp, you make some good points. Netty, I agree with you that I don't really see rape in particular becoming any more acceptable (but then none of us really know, do we? sort of a moot argument). Speaking from a Christian standpoint, though, morality and Godliness is prophesied to go only downhill from here to the end. As a whole, moral standards (in America and worldwide) have declined sharply even within the last 50 years. Take pedophilia, for example, which certainly is a form of rape. It becomes more and more accepted all the time (in America, at least, I'm not sure about the rest of the world). We even allow virtually simulated child pornography, and there's a grassroots movement for accepting pedophilia. Granted, that's just one selected case study, but it's to say that I think Dacp's point is well-taken, even if the example of rape isn't.
-Aaron