Christianity Simplified Though LOGIC !

Well, just to nitpick, but Mark is probably early enough to have hypothetically been written by a witness.

Yes, but Mark is not one of the authors who is traditionally held to be a witness.

The Christian church is wrong? We can be thankful that you did not peer review Einstein’s text. I can almost hear you informing him that Newton’s laws are fact. Frankly, were I Jewish, I wouldn’t want you arguing my side. “There’s nothing I like less than bad arguments for a view that I hold dear.” — Daniel Dennett

I’m not saying you’re arrogant. Merely that you present your own opinions as fact. Maybe that’s a bit narrow minded and pontifical, but not necessarily arrogant. Although the royal “we” is a bit much.

Maybe not. But Luke claims that he got his accounting directly from eyewitnesses, and if you say that he recapitulated Mark, then that places Mark as an eyewitness. Also, John calls his accouning a testimony, and identifies himself as the person writing it. And honestly, your demands, when placed upon quite much contemporary and historical text effectively invalidate every biography and record of events that we have, other than autobiographies. And surely even you would concede that those are not objective.

Then why mention it at all? What is the point in constructing a phrase deliberately designed to evoke an exaggerated sense of time if not for the purpose of arguing that the amount of time had some bearing on the accuracy of what you believe to be inaccurate? I have a book about ancient Rome, written about ten years ago. I bought it on the basis of reviews, none of which bothered to mention that it was written long after the fact.

There’s so much wrong with that that it’s hard to know where to start. For one thing, why should I believe your methodology any more than their faith? If it suits you, fine, but the fact remains that, despite all your methodology, you could be wrong. These things ebb and flow. Today’s discovery is tomorrow’s hoax. Yesterday’s mystery is today’s serendipity. I’m not even claiming you’re wrong. I’m just claiming that you don’t know. And you don’t.

No, because geologists make empirical claims. Biblical historians make analytic claims. For what it might be worth to you, this is what I personally believe to be the very best quality online analysis (thus, analytic claims) on early Christian writings. I actually agree with some of the claims you make most of the time (although they’re often off a bit). The difference is that I do not mandate my opinion as the one everyone must have lest their opinion be worthless.

That depends on your point of view. I’m often told, for example, that I post off-topic comments about this or that because I seem to see everything in political terms. Well, my views may be filtered through a political lens, but that’s because I believe that, fundamentally, there is a political pall over everything and sundry that man does. I truly believe that the best solution to disputes over public schools is to eliminate public schools. And yet, if I post my opinion, someone inevitably whines that I’ve gone off-topic. So it is with people who interpret the Bible. It is not a science book, and therefore does not benefit from a scientific interpretation. It can be argued, in fact, that the proper way to interpret scripture is through the lens of faith.

Yes, you are, and no, you can’t.

A man on a pedestal ought not to tell other men that there is no ground under their feet.

You have to be what you demand that the Gospel writers be — a first-hand witness to the events.

Your explanations do not compel anyone to agree with you, though.

That’s not how I see what you’re doing. I see you taking a default position and interpreting the facts to fit it. Oddly enough, the same thing you see in others.

I agree. But that doesn’t make either of us right. Besides, whoever the author is, he certainly is speaking on behalf of David, and David is the character who is delivering the lines. Shakespeare wasn’t Romeo either.

But he shouldn’t already have rotted.

He could be wrong. You could be wrong. I could be wrong. Everybody could be wrong. But you can’t have your cake and eat it too. If David was wrong, how do you know Ezekial wasn’t wrong. Maybe he thought his vision was about the Messiah, when it was in fact about something else.

This is not analogous. Einstein did not argue for magic and not demand that his conclusions be taken on faith. A lot of NT writers took passages and fragments of the OT out of context and attempted to recontextualize them as Messianic prophecies when no such intent is evident in their original context. The “young woman” who bore a child and named him Emmanuel was not Mary (and not a virgin). The “suffering servant” was not Jesus but a personification of Israel. You know this stuff. I don’t have to tell you. Yes, some Christians see these verses as having a hidden Messianic intent, but they see it with faith, not with methodology and not with evidence. You seem to want to say that no one has a right to say that a text should be read for its prima facie meaning as long as someone else says that they can spot a magical, divine, secret meaning, even if that hidden meaning has no relationship to plain meaning. I think that’s absurd.

If a default presumption that a text should be read for its most obvious meaning and that secret, prophetic meanings require evidence is an “opinion,” then I guess I’m guilty.

No he doesn’t. I know apologists like to say this. It is not what the author claims.

How so?

Wrong again. There is a late redaction at the end of John which claims that “we know” the book contains the testimony of an apostle, but the body of the book itself contains no such claim, and even the interpolated appendix doesn’t name the apostle. Plus the book could not have been written by an eyewitness for reasons I have enumerated earlier in the thread.

Excuse me, but what “demands” are you referring to? I haven’t made any demands.

I wasn’t trying to comment on accuracy, I was trying to refute the OP’s assertion that anything in the NT was written by a witness. Accuracy is a different argument.

You really have to ask that question? Because empirical methodology is…well…methodical. It’s based on something. it’s objective. It’s fasifiable. It’s self-correcting. It’s everything that faith is not. Why the hell should anybody apply faith to historical methodology andy more than they should apply to geology?

Don’t be ridiculous. It’s possible to know some things. Pedantically speaking, any piece of “knowledge” is potentially falsifiable, but I’m not going to go around qualifying myself about the age of the universe or the germ theory of disease, and I’m not going to qualify myself about mainstream conclusions of contemporary NT scholarship.

Based on empirical evidence, not guesses or faith.

I’ve had ECW bookmarked for a couple of years now. I agree with you. It’s my go to site for commentary and text. I sometimes correspond with the owner of the site on a couple of other message boards. He’s an extremely cool guy.

I think you’re exaggerating the amount of subjectivity that’s involved. I don’t see my commentary as being any more realistically controversial than evolution.

I don’t know anyone but Fundamentalist Christians who try to read the bible as a science book. Historians study it the same way they study any other ancient literature. Should Homer be read through a “lens of faith?” Why can’t we apply the same methodology (and the same level of confidence in our conclusions) to the Bible as we apply to Homer or to Gilgamesh? Why should the bible be treated any differently?

Heh…I know you are but what am I?
Are you honestly asserting that w can’t ever rule out any intent for any text, no matter how far-fetched, unrelated to the prima facie reading, or historically anachronistic such a reading would be? Can I say that Herman Melville did not intend for Captain Ahab to be a parody of George W. Bush or would that be asserting my “opinion” as fact?

When have I demanded that the authors of the Gospels be eyewitnesses? I’ve made no such demand. I’ve only pointed out that they aren’t.

Of course not, but that’s not the point. My point was that your request for my “qualifications” was unjustified since I have not attempted to argue from a position of personal authority or “qualification.” My arguments can speak for themselves. I notice you haven’t offered much in the way of factual rebuttal to my arguments, and it seems like you don’t necessarily even disagree with them so much as you’re taking exception to my confidence in my conclusions as facts rather than opinions.

That’s not what I’m doing at all. What I’m doing is taking a default position that the text should be read at face value, then I’m stopping. I’m not suggesting any further interpretation at all. All I’ve done is point out that the “Christian” interpretation is not sustainable by the observable evidence.

What makes you think the author is trying to speak as David?

So he was wrong. So what?

In any case, it was believed that the physical body would be completely restored at the resurrection, so a little interim rotting is no big deal. It’ll be all good when the dude wakes up.

I’m not offering an opinion about whether any of them were right or wrong. I’m only commenting on what they said.