tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post6690416834834864706..comments2024-03-27T11:13:34.520-05:00Comments on The Dunamis Word: Is The Euthyphro Dilemma Really A Dilemma For Christians?Unknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger52125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-70011744385541235612014-05-28T20:28:14.405-05:002014-05-28T20:28:14.405-05:00Gandy,
you said this also: "Now i understan...Gandy, <br /><br />you said this also: <i>"Now i understand that you will propose that Jesus was in fact this higher being.I understand that.But there is still no "truly objective" way for anyone of us to prove the "truth value" of this sort of claim.For we are still forced, to need to agree, by use of faith."</i><br /><br />Now, the mistake in this statement is the assumption that all "faith claims" are equal. I believe that is a false premise. God has not simply spoken to one man, such as Moses. He spoke to a nation of people who heard him on the mountain. (Ex. 13. 20-22, 19:18-25) This is an example of god revealing himself to more than one person. This is an algorithm that kinds of sets Judaism apart even if God spoke to only Abraham. He also spoke to Issac and Jacob as well. <br /><br />Most "faiths" (not all) have a dynamic character that has an exclusive relationship with God that noone hears or sees but the individual. That is not in Judaism, nor in Christianity. Islam, falls on that sword. Mormonism, falls the same way.<br /><br />The second tier is evidence and the claims made. There is much evidence for Christianity and thankfully it is not proven by one method, but by many. I speak of the moral argument and in absence of God, one could ask, then how and by what means does morality arrive? God is not only the best answer, but considering HIM and what HE has done and communicated to us corresponds with reality and what we actually experience whether one believes in God or not. <br /><br />We ALL have been given something more than what we fin in nature. We have a sense of not only communication, but morality and as I have stated, that morality is not self-serving at it's best. In fact, I would argue that the BEST moral values are selfless, which totally contradicts the assumptions of survival of the fittest and the "self-serving gene" that is believed among many materialists to be responsible for the development of society. Those premises, as fancy as they may be, simply don't correspond with reality. So truth is more than what you and I can make it out to be and it exists apart from our realization of it. God being truth has a similar existence in my opinion, but I hold that truth comes from HIM and we can know that truth only because of HIM. <br /><br />Yes, my friend, we have discussed some pretty hot topics and as you said this is one that we can go on and on over and about and I welcome the views no matter how diverse or opposed to mine. It always helps to understand how good people such as yourself come to their conclusions. So thanks for stopping by and feel free to add to anything that I be taking 'bout 'round here-LOL District Supt. Harvey Burnetthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15315686602819371111noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-60709894195627478012014-05-28T20:10:04.480-05:002014-05-28T20:10:04.480-05:00Gandy,
I also find this interesting. You said: T...Gandy, <br /><br />I also find this interesting. You said: <i>The only way for humans to truly be able distinguish and recognize truth, with a value that was honestly completely objective. Might be, if some higher being were to actually be here, right at this very moment in time.To state their own "objective opinion", as to the truth of matters.</i><br /><br />Well, isn't that the Bible message? Christians hold that God HAS spoken, showed himself and is here at this very moment. <br /><br /><b>Heb. 1:1-3 ~ 1-God, who at sundry times and in divers manners spake in time past unto the fathers by the prophets, 2-Hath in these last days spoken unto us by his Son, whom he hath appointed heir of all things, by whom also he made the worlds; 3-Who being the brightness of his glory, and the express image of his person, and upholding all things by the word of his power, when he had by himself purged our sins, sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high</b><br /><br />We would also appeal to Col. 1:27 which says:<br /><br /><b>"To whom God would make known what is the riches of the glory of this mystery among the Gentiles; which is Christ in you, the hope of glory:"</b><br /><br />I believe that God has stated the "truth of matters" as you say. What more can he say but what he has spoken? You would hold, that if he spoke it, he must make some corrections. I would hold that if he must make some corrections (about what he said or amend what he said) then he is NOT God.<br /><br />God is not perceived apart from the human mind, however he is not a convention of the human mind and exists apart from the human mind. I think that is the point that you were making. Kind of like that tree falling in the forest thing. Just because I am not there to hear it does not mean that it does not make a sound. District Supt. Harvey Burnetthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15315686602819371111noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-55421101471666266962014-05-28T17:39:30.227-05:002014-05-28T17:39:30.227-05:00Some theists, as you put it may be lost without a ...Some theists, as you put it may be lost without a book, but no true believer would because HIS word is written upon our hearts. So take books out of the equation and you will find that the believer has not simply come to faith because he or she read a book, but because he or she established a relationship. <br /><br />Te separate God from the human mind is not anything that scripture would teach. Remember when Jesus was asked this same question in Matthew to the religious leaders of the day? He said this: <br /><br />Matthew 22:37-38 ~ 37-Jesus said unto him, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and <b>with all thy mind</b>. 38-This is the first and great commandment. <br /><br />To love God is to love HIM with all of us. The cognitive does not create God, it finds God or comes to know who God is. God exists aside from our inability to find and or know HIM. This is the point of my diatribe. Many things work as such. under a materialistic paradigm, one may know nothing of gravity, but one yet does not float into outer space. So knowing God does not define HIM, knowing God is perceiving him as he moves apart from the mind. <br /><br />I'll deal with some of your other statements shortly, I have a meeting to attend. Thank my friend!District Supt. Harvey Burnetthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15315686602819371111noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-57685568739763812032014-05-28T17:27:33.004-05:002014-05-28T17:27:33.004-05:00Gandolf,
Thanks for the response and sorry it to...Gandolf, <br /><br />Thanks for the response and sorry it took me so long to get back. Let me examine a few of the more pertinent things you said. You said: <i>As to whether trees might have a way to "feel anything", actually i cannot be 100% sure about that.However i do know that there are some trees that do exist as a kind of parasite</i><br /><br />You miss the point of what I am suggesting. The point is that neither trees nor rocks make any sort of moral statement or have any sort of moral direction. There is nothing intrinsically evil about a tree or a rock. This is what we find in materialism. The question, where does evil and or good come from in a truly materialistic universe? There is no mechanism to make rocks jump from a morally neutral position to human beings (if we are simply materialistic byproducts of chemical reactions and dirt over time). To say that any material could ever develop morals over any amount of time is simply fantasy and the biggest farce that anyone could ever believe. What is the mechanism of this? Secondly what of consciousness? What by any means could possibly give innate material matter consciousness under any amount of time?<br /><br />These are simple and mere dilemmas of materialism and there is and never has been any satisfactory answer to it, and to use the science of the gaps argument "since will tell us one day" is wholly unfulfilling. <br /><br />A MUCH better and more RATIONAL answer is that GOd, who is a supernatural being, exists, and communicated attributes to us. How? By HIS nature which is good, thus providing a distinguishing factor within HIS creation placing attributes within the creation that do not exist on their own. The evidence is the order of the created world itself, which is ordered to facilitate OUR existence. That same God has not communicated this truth to creation in the manner that he has communicated it to us. In other words, dogs still don't know that their acts are evil neither do they care, but MAN does. So this is the difference and we can make all kinds of arguments to support that thesis. <br /><br />Material creation can NEVER come to know truth or morality. As I have stated, no such thing exists on its own in a material only creation. So the question is by what mechanism would we, if we are only the product of material, come to know this and how could it ever be truth if truth is not some subjective state of being or conclusions? If TRUTH exists, it exists whether I know it or not. Truth is not dependent upon me coming to the knowledge of it for it to be true. If I however, create my own version of truth, then we all have a problem because noone will agree to any truth outside of personal motives to do so. <br /><br />So I propose, that you cannot, under a truly materialistic construct, know moral ontology unless you create it for yourself. The argument that we agree to "co-exist" is totally unfulfilling. We disagree many places and yet we co-exist. Countries disagree, yet co-exist. China disagrees with Japan and or the US, yet we co-exist. So we do NOT implore moral values to simply co-exist and co-existence is not the only or primary reason for moral values. <br /><br />We apply moral values because they make sense in the world as it is ordered. We love because love is fulfilling and creates the outcomes most favorable, at least under most circumstances. ALL of this displays the abject difference between a purely materialistic creation, as your requires under atheism, and a theistic creation in which God exists and dispenses moral truths to us as humans. District Supt. Harvey Burnetthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15315686602819371111noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-60645640913974796232014-05-02T04:02:17.069-05:002014-05-02T04:02:17.069-05:00Now i understand that you will propose that Jesus ...Now i understand that you will propose that Jesus was in fact this higher being.I understand that.But there is still no "truly objective" way for anyone of us to prove the "truth value" of this sort of claim.For we are still forced, to need to agree, by use of faith.And while your group (Christians) points toward Jesus as being the higher being,meanwhile some other groups, will also be busy proposing that their own God, is in fact the most highest, higher being<br /><br />Thus why human moral opinion, always remains somewhat subjective in value.And i think that this has to do with the problem, that fm, was previously discussing with you.<br /><br />Its a very interesting subject Harvey.A subject that you and i have already discussed more than once or twice before. Yet i don't see that there still isn't room for further discussion.Gandolfhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02624178234332819107noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-81378245317255198432014-05-02T03:59:01.519-05:002014-05-02T03:59:01.519-05:00So i would agree with you, in the sense that i agr...So i would agree with you, in the sense that i agree there is something within man that helps us distinguish and recognize truth.And propose that this is the human mind, that uses experiences, so as to compute answers to help us distinguish and recognize truth. And i propose that this "best explains" why we might also have need to change our mind, sometimes<br /><br />I understand that some theist feel that living a life without God (without holy books to use as a guide),that the life of living beings, would essentially need to revert into complete chaos .IE = that life would become a life whereby "anything goes".<br /><br />Yet this proposition really isn't backed up by conclusive evidence.For one thing we know that the animal kingdom lives within a form of social conformity , that helps them to define and regulate the way they learn to coexist.We know that there are also a few groups of humans that have evolved ways to learn to exist within a form of "social conformity",that helps them to define the way they learn to coexist ,See here for one instance http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pirah%C3%A3_people . Thus the idea that beings would necessarily need to revert to an existence of complete chaos, is not backed up by evidence.<br /><br />Whether a certain group may revert toward living a life of chaos.Is dependent on some other factors of life,that are relative to situations that arise. For instance, we could propose that Hitler arose to power,due to the fact the the German folk were living within tough economic times.Or that Stalin developed a strong nastiness and hatred of faithful folk, in part due to his own personal experience of faithful folks bigotry, he had met within schooling.And so on .Situations have an affect of human growth,and this fact is still being well proven today, with the way we see evidence that some humans are indeed still developing a very strong distaste for religion<br /><br />Now admittedly, there might still be certain things that "groups" do , that you and i "ourselves" , might tend to disagree with.Yet all of us are still forced to need to come to such conclusion, by use of the human mind. Even if we were to point to some holy book ,as our reference point.We would still, in affect, be proposing that the "mind's" of prophets(humans) , were in effect being delegated as being a form of authority. Thus we refer to authority of "human opinion", which always remain subjective in value.No matter what "group" it be, whether it is a group of Christians , a group of Islamist, a group of Buddhist ,a group of Hindu, a group of Piraha people.And so on. Nothing ever changes. Other than the fact that the conclusion is then being arrived at, by "consensus" of the particular group in question , which then can add a form of objective value (being that more than one persons conclusion ,is being taken into account). Even though this kind of "group conclusion" too, still remain somewhat subjective in value, because the conclusion still always "flows" from within "human minds"<br /><br />The only way for humans to truly be able distinguish and recognize truth, with a value that was honestly completely objective. Might be, if some higher being were to actually be here, right at this very moment in time.To state their own "objective opinion", as to the truth of matters .Gandolfhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02624178234332819107noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-64910829788344239422014-05-02T03:56:18.723-05:002014-05-02T03:56:18.723-05:00Yeah thanks Harvey i'm doing fine.Hope you fol...Yeah thanks Harvey i'm doing fine.Hope you folk are all well too, considering the severe weather patterns,with floods and sinkholes and tornado's and suchlike.We see in the news that you folk are dealing with tough times.And we think of you all,and hope for the best.We have also had our own severe weather patterns here to deal with too. Unusual high winds, and floods and even the odd tornado too in certain places as well.Something that we never used to really experience over here<br /><br />Anyway i regard to your reply.With all due respect.And with no offence intended or implied Harvey.But i still don't see that you said anything that really navigates the problem. <br /><br />Your reference to a rock and a tree.Seems to overlook the point, that a rock neither has either feelings or a mind of its own.Therefore it would seem there is no reason to even expect that a rock would have reason to consider anything as being either good or evil. <br /><br />As to whether trees might have a way to "feel anything", actually i cannot be 100% sure about that.However i do know that there are some trees that do exist as a kind of parasite. Species that can overcome and grow by devouring the life of another tree..But living beings (such as humans) certainly cannot be compared to a rock.Living beings have feelings and a mind,and there is issues like the social structure of their group, which evolve to help them govern and regulate the way they will learn to coexist. "Coexistence" is a huge factor of life ,within so many groups of social beings<br /><br />To be honest i'm not even quite sure why you would try to compare the existence of living beings,with the existence of rocks.As a test,you could just try hitting a rock with an hammer,and then try doing the same thing to a living being as well too. And get back to me, if you still feel that your comparison was realistic.I have to wonder was it? even a very fair comparison Harvey. Maybe you had simply overlooked the vast difference that does exist between living beings, and other things like rocks.<br /><br />I accept that moral epistemology = How we come to know truth right or morality .<br /><br />You suggest that God is the dispenser of moral truth and has given us the ability to know right from wrong.And so on. You propose that there is something "created within man" that helps us distinguish and recognize truth.<br /><br />To a certain extent i would agree. But i propose that what helps humans distinguish and recognize truth.Is information that is gathered within the human mind, through experience of living life.And this proposition can help "best explain" why would would also observe, how holy books are known to display morals that evolve over time too.Things like whether its ok for humans to choose to wear clothes of two different cloths.Whether we should need to kill our children, for being rebellious.And so on<br /><br />This shows that moral opinion does indeed change(evolve) over time,due to human experience of life.The human mind is being used, almost kind of like a computer.For instance. Information learned by past experiences, can be stored, and then can also be passed on to future human generations.<br /><br />Had God "created within man" an special organ, or sense, with which we would use to automatically know right from wrong. Or as you put it, to help us "distinguish and recognize truth".That was something "separate" from the human-mind. In the sense that right and wrong would have absolutely nothing to do with what our human mind thought about it. Then it couldn't explain why our moral opinions, do indeed change sometimes.Gandolfhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02624178234332819107noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-47388262720718047742014-05-01T21:11:37.172-05:002014-05-01T21:11:37.172-05:00The second and third parts as I perceive, is basic...The second and third parts as I perceive, is basically that all faith is "subjective" and therefore an extension of the human mind is not objectively true but subjectively true. <br /><br />I would answer by saying that truth can exist without my human mind or without my understanding f it. I don't know many truths of science, yet they exist apart from my ability to discover or even perceive them. There are objective materialistic truths. When I was young I had (and still have) no clue how to define or describe Boyles Law adequately, but I now know that a certain relationship of gas to pressure exists exists and is held constant and as that is an objective materialistic "truth". These things are recognized everyday, aside from my ability to "know" them. So truth can exist apart from my "human mind" or my ability to categorize it. <br /><br />Now, there are other non materialistic truths that exist apart from my perception of them. Many of which I assume in order to function in the world. Example, in order to effectively communicate with you, I have to make the assumption that you also have a "mind", which noone can see, and that it (your mind) consists of or contains "thoughts" which cannot be harnessed or obtained to view by materialistic means or experiments. In other words, the very assumptions that we use to communicate is based on a world of objective, non materialistic truths. Since those things exist (objective, non materialistic truths) and their existence is not always dependent upon the human mind to understand them, then we can conclude that objective truth exists apart from the human mind. <br /><br />Now, since the object of God is man and his condition, why would we even want truth to exist without or apart from the human mind? I mean, HIS truth is all about us, our condition and our redemption. It would be self defeating if the human mind is not an element in perceiving truth. <br /><br />In summary, truth is not contingent upon the human mind as is your claim. I think I have demonstrated that, but the human mind can perceive truth. Christians claim that that perception is only because God exists as we can also demonstrate that materialism offers no mechanism by which anything, be it truth or lie, right or wrong, can be perceived. District Supt. Harvey Burnetthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15315686602819371111noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-73305407391822372392014-05-01T20:29:45.303-05:002014-05-01T20:29:45.303-05:00What's up Gandolf? Hope you are doing well.
Y...What's up Gandolf? Hope you are doing well.<br /><br />You present about 3 problems as I see it and understand it. 1- How do we know that Christianity is true whereas Islam is false? 2- Religion is religion and all is faith. "Faith" is only that, a "belief" that what one believes is right and therefore only, merely, subjective. 3- A fourth thing you introduce is that truth is only apprehended by the human mind. <br /><br />First, what you are talking about in # 1 (as I have labeled it) is moral epistemology or how we come to "know" truth, right or morality. I think I've dealt with it but you raise some good points that should be addressed. Let me sum it up like this, I believe the answer that best conforms to reality is the answer that says that God (the Supreme supernatural being) is the dispenser of moral truth and has given us the ability to know right from wrong and morality whether it is religious or spiritual truth or the ontology of morality. eg: There is something that has been created within man and placed there by God to help man distinguish and recognize truth. That ability does not come from a purely materialistic paradigm. There is no mechanism whereby any material distinguishes any higher set of values, be it truth or right or wrong. Materialism makes no distinction between right and wrong. There is no "good" tree nor is there an "evil" rock for example. So there is nothing in materialism that would distinguish or define the ontological nature of truth, nor the epistemological nature of truth, YET truth exists and we know this instinctively and find this through experience within the world. I would further add that all truth under a purely materialistic paradigm is subjective. That faith is subjective is the claim that you make about faith. I would say that because there is a "law giver", ie: God, we have received by way of "image and likeness" the ability to "know" truth, right and wrong. As I state, there is nothing in materialism that even distinguishes right and wrong, yet alone teaches us that something is right and wrong, except for what we consent to "attribute" as right and wrong. <br /><br />This relates to truth distinguished from and under Islam, as God has given us the ability to "know" him and therefore discern truth. Does this mean we know everything? No. However, we have the ability to "know" the truth that is pertinent to our existence, no matter what the cultural norm is. Surprisingly, Islam agrees that Jesus was perfect, holy, sinless, did and performed miracles, was born of a virgin and that he will return. These are all Christian faith truth values. Where we disagree is a matter of what God did in the world and why. When we combine not only literary truth, but textual criticism and other arguments Christianity has a sound and solid case for truth over Islam. Those differences are not faith differences. They are factual and mutually exclusive differences between the belief systems that cannot be reconciled. District Supt. Harvey Burnetthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15315686602819371111noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-8697083070635255842014-05-01T02:58:22.081-05:002014-05-01T02:58:22.081-05:00Howdy Harvey. Hope you have been keeping well.You ...Howdy Harvey. Hope you have been keeping well.You know i think that fm has a good point.There is no real way for you,or anyone else either for that matter.To be able to prove that the bibles moral opinion, is actually of anymore "objective value" than the Quran opinion is.<br /><br />In every case you are forced to rely on human conclusion.A conclusion which is subjective.The nearest you can come, to coming up with some sort of conclusion, that also has a form of "objective value" to it. Is to also take into account what other peoples conclusion is.So as to decide by consensus. Yet either way the decision is still being made by use of human mind, or human minds<br /><br />To claim that any particular holy book, is "the" word of God. Rely's on human faith. Human faith that is connected to human conclusion ,which still remains subjective in value<br /><br />To prove a holy book, holds moral opinion, that is truly objective in value. You need to devise a way,to show that we can come to that sort of conclusion. Without any use of the human mindGandolfhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02624178234332819107noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-42799852958405381372014-02-22T19:13:23.337-06:002014-02-22T19:13:23.337-06:00I also think that subjectivism speaks more to the ...I also think that subjectivism speaks more to the nature of sin in the hearts of men and women rather than changing interpretation. Most of these folk don't claim to interpret it any differently. They simply live it out differently. It;s almsot like changing words...words and their impact change over time. Men change, but God doesn't. Along with changing men comes our change in our perspective of GOd. Jude knew this. That's why he said to "earnestly contend for the faith once delivered". So that is an important thing to do. It is there and can be found, but that is the nature of sin and weakness. District Supt. Harvey Burnetthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15315686602819371111noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-54260666756765692402014-02-22T19:10:17.922-06:002014-02-22T19:10:17.922-06:00You said: For instance, I'm familiar with COGI...You said: <i>For instance, I'm familiar with COGIC and I know that 50 years ago, there was no way no how, that a COGIC woman would be wearing pants or makeup. COGIC saints, whether male or female, didn't go to movies. This was justified by certain passages in the Bible.</i><br /><br />That's what I said. That is a situation of orthopraxy, not orthodoxy. Pants weren't worn in biblical times, and there were no "movies" to attend either. At the time that COGIC was formed both issues were issues of particular importance (not that personal appearance, or places that one goes is unimportant now), but neither of those things have anything to do with the primary belief of Christianity. Paul taught "liberty" in many things in serving Christ. I will agree that people are used to a fundamentalist way and approach to studying, but that has nothing to do with what unifies and makes us Christian. We are not lost to confusion on those things. <br /><br />In general, I will agree with you that folk have laxed their practice and the only way we know how they interpret things is how they live that out. I think what you are saying is a profound observation. It's like, "what do you really believe then, if you live like this"? Then "why did you change IF the first way you believed is true?"...So you'll get no fight from me there. All I know is that some of these folk have backslid and become weak in the faith. District Supt. Harvey Burnetthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15315686602819371111noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-65165624572385667122014-02-22T18:54:38.567-06:002014-02-22T18:54:38.567-06:00You said "What we believe about which books a...You said "What we believe about which books are inspired has nothing to do with Orthodoxy either. Orthodoxy and orthopraxy are two different issues. Critics often treat them as the same thing. But they are not."<br /><br />That's beside the point. My point is that on many questions, whether important or trivial, there is no consensus on how to interpret the Bible. For instance, I'm familiar with COGIC and I know that 50 years ago, there was no way no how, that a COGIC woman would be wearing pants or makeup. COGIC saints, whether male or female, didn't go to movies. This was justified by certain passages in the Bible.<br /><br />Now, 50 years later, in the same denomination, reading the same Bible, the prohibition on women wearing pants and makeup has been relaxed. You can go to the St. Louis meeting and see Bishops wives and supervisors walking around wearing make-up, something that would've never been allowed 50 years ago, much less among Bishops wives or supervisors. The rationale on lifting the prohibition against pants, makeup, and movies are based on the same Bible that was used in 1964 to say the opposite. These are trivial issues that can't even be agreed upon by a single denomination.<br /><br />My point was that interpretation of the Bible is very subjective, depending on who you ask or even when you ask.fmhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13759116863929766807noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-84879132091566348972014-02-21T19:07:40.371-06:002014-02-21T19:07:40.371-06:00So far as the universal agreement argument, I have...So far as the universal agreement argument, I have sufficiently dealt with that issue and you have not refuted it. But I will restate:<br /><br /><b>"In short, universal consensus is not and has never been how truth is either established nor confirmed. However, what we find within Christianity, as we have found since its dawn, there are essentials that unify and that are not in dispute. Sin is the problem between man and God. Jesus is God, he lived, was fully god and fully human, died for the remission of our sins, and was raised bodily and physically, and he will return to judge the quick and the dead. No matter how many books are in the bible, those things are not in dispute. No matter whether one takes a literal or figurative approach to biblical interpretation, these things are not in dispute and since early on, evidence shows that these were the beliefs that were commonly held among Christians everywhere. So your argument kind of falls on its own sword for these reasons and more"</b><br /><br />What we believe about which books are inspired has nothing to do with Orthodoxy either. Orthodoxy and orthopraxy are two different issues. Critics often treat them as the same thing. But they are not. District Supt. Harvey Burnetthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15315686602819371111noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-83291515789430876482014-02-21T19:02:12.442-06:002014-02-21T19:02:12.442-06:00Maybe I AM familiar with evolutionary biology enou...Maybe I AM familiar with evolutionary biology enough to know that abiogenesis is impossible under a purely materialistic paradigm, as biological life doesn't come from nonlife and further that immaterial realities such as morals just doesn't come from slime. As I said, show me a moral or immoral tree or rock. Then, maybe we have something. Until then all we have is a materialistic fantasy and myth that doesn't even get out of the gate. <br /><br />And yes we will disagree because as we have seen, there is a growing amount of evidence that moral epistemology and basic moral ontology does not arrive out of some preservation for the group or species as materialists claim. We are not a "blank slate" as studies have shown and continue to show. http://bethelburnett.blogspot.com/2014/02/babies-moralitywhat-are-real.html<br /><br />So far as your strip club analogy, that is what we are saying. Under a purely materialistic view there is nothing wrong with ANY action. All actions are subjectively equal, if not of the same result. Socrates held that people who "know" will do good or the best thing. Under this sort of view, a married man going to a strip club can be seen as ethical or good and the same sort of good as a man who is faithful to his wife and avoids the strip club. That is confusion!<br /><br />So having a moral law giver is not a negative, since I can present a case with some degree of certainly that morality cannot be developed from material substance and further that in reality, it is plain to see that all actions are not equal whether that is in function or result. <br /><br />Now, you can talk about what what people "believe" God tells them all day. But the record speaks for itself. We see no christian conspiracy to commit murder or mass murder and just about every atrocity that occurs such as you mention is universally condemned as not being representative of Christianity, whether in practice or belief. So the case is trumped up severely...What we NEED to look at is folk and even countries who made atheism their mission and view the results. need we say Stahlin? In over 10 to 60 million deaths at the hand of ONE? Need we say Pol Pot? In over a third over 2 million, of Cambodia gone? How about Napoleon, who was an atheist? over 6 Million dead? <br /><br />Why and how did these people not only arise but gain stronghold over all people to commit these atrocities? In their "minds" they had the right. They rejected the moral law giver. This was the sad result. <br /><br />Religious folk, and Christians in particular may act immoral, but that immorality is IN SPITE OF what Christianity teachers. Materialists may act immorality, but their immoral acts are not condemned by atheistic premises. They are simply equal actions. There is no clear and compelling WHY? of atheistic morality also. Survival of the species is an insufficient answer, because the whole of materialistic philosophies are about self and self interest. As long as I survive who cares about anything and any one else. That is materialism carried out to it's N'th degree. District Supt. Harvey Burnetthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15315686602819371111noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-50074305210524268472014-02-21T09:03:34.282-06:002014-02-21T09:03:34.282-06:00You said"is both inaccurate, misrepresentativ...You said"is both inaccurate, misrepresentative of the scripture and totally out of context. So please move on, this is answered more than adequately and though you try, you still haven;t proved that God kills babies or children. <br /><br />Yes I have, because that's what the text says in a straight-forward manner. Any "interpretation" is just trying to whitewash it. The strange thing is, I only hear christians say that violent passages like these are always taken out of context. These are the only verses that do not mean what they say on the page, in black and white. The "good" verses like John 3:16, Psalm 23, Phillipians 4:13 and others are NEVER, EVER said to be taken out of context when interpreted as they are written on the page. And if anyone try's to point out that one of those verses means something different, you're going to point out whats clearly written on the page.<br /><br />Furthermore, as I said earlier, interpretation of scripture is extremely subjective. That's proven by the many thousands of opinions about what the bible "really" says. On top of that, christians among themselves can't seem to agree on which bible is the correct bible and which books are the word of god. A billion catholic christians think the bible has 73 books which are the word of god. Certain books that are held as inspired today were not held as inspired by early christians. Even today christians can't agree if one is always saved or can they lose salvation, do you pray to Mary and saints, down to little issues like smoking cigarettes or wearing makeup.fmhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13759116863929766807noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-22816442570681876982014-02-21T08:47:06.742-06:002014-02-21T08:47:06.742-06:00Maybe you should familiarize yourself with evoluti...Maybe you should familiarize yourself with evolutionary biology. It explains a wide range of things about human behavior, including the development of morals among humans and how they were developed to maximize our survival as a group.<br /><br />Obviously we are going to continue to disagree because I don't think what is moral or not comes from an authority figure. There are arguments on both sides for murder being wrong, whether you want to say it's because a god commands it or not. However, in some things, like my earlier example of strip clubs, you can only justify going to 1 of these places as being wrong because an authority figure said so. There's nothing intrinsically wrong with going to one. Wrong things can happen at them, but then wrong things can happen anywhere.<br /><br />Also, divine command theory is very subjective, because it all depends on the god you believe in. Under this theory, the 9/11 terrorists did nothing wrong by flying airplanes into a building. I know you think it was, but that's only because you think they have the wrong god. But that's just a matter of faith, because it's no way you can objectively demonstrate you have the right god as opposed to any one else. Andrea Yates killed her children, which she says the christian god told told her to do. Obviously you disagree with that, because your idea of god doesn't not allow him to tell anyone that. Again, that's only faith and what you happen to believe about god's nature. You could be wrong. And you have no way of showing that god wasn't actually talking to her.But if the christian god was indeed talking to her, then by your own beliefs, you are forced to admit that she was right for killing her kids.<br /><br />I on the other hand, can say she was wrong, regardless if a god told her to do it or not. You can't.fmhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13759116863929766807noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-29881628901750163032014-02-18T20:59:27.373-06:002014-02-18T20:59:27.373-06:00Done a quite adequate job with the meta-ethical fo...Done a quite adequate job with the meta-ethical foundation of morality in which we hear Jeffrey Dahmer reject atheism in his own words. God rest his soul and the soul of those his victims. Subjective moral values and moral values based on one's "common sense" are not binding upon anyone. That's simply the truth. <br /><br />http://bethelburnett.blogspot.com/2013/04/moral-duty-jeffrey-dahmerif-there-is-no.htmlDistrict Supt. Harvey Burnetthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15315686602819371111noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-91047204745911073642014-02-18T20:41:30.006-06:002014-02-18T20:41:30.006-06:00So far as the 2 female Bears that killed 42 childr...<b>So far as the 2 female Bears that killed 42 children out of group of probably more than hundreds or so, by the direction of God, what I ask you, is how do you know that it is wrong? Both of us know that killing unjustly is wrong all day. God commands us against killing and that is upon the innocent. So the moral value exists clearly. 42 children and more accurately teenagers or young men, dying innocently, against no instructions would be a problem. However, as I said they were neither “children” in the sense that the critic intends nor were they innocent as they understood to observe and obey the holiness of God and not to mock his prophet. What they were bullies moving by group think. What they were mocking is the better question. I believe they were mocking the fact that this prophet no longer had a head. <br />The scriptural key, if one interprets the actions of God at all, is that Elijah had been taken, and now Elisha was alone. He was the anointed man of God. The kids were mocking God and his relationship to God. They were mocking the anointing of God, all of which they were familiar with since they could speak. So what should be God’s lesson in this? Should God say don’t do something and when one “does” nothing should happen? Should God allow the criticism of his anointed without cause when the criticism is actually levied at he himself? If he was "fake" all things are lawful and good. But he isn't fake. He is a real God. <br /><br />When we see something like this, a proper interpretation of it is not only the words, but the CONTEXT of the words and the sitz em laben. You decontextualize the event like most critics do or create your own 21st century Western context to evoke emotion. That is disingenuous. Maybe it is because of spiritual blindness, maybe it is because your analytical skills aren’t as sharp as supposed…I don’t know but to interpret this as God just indiscriminately killing kids over "little instances" where men act imperfect, is both inaccurate, misrepresentative of the scripture and totally out of context. So please move on, this is answered more than adequately and though you try, you still haven;t proved that God kills babies or children.</b> <br /><br />CARM address this adequately as well: http://carm.org/why-did-god-kill-42-lads-merely-saying-elisha-District Supt. Harvey Burnetthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15315686602819371111noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-91335370019600079502014-02-18T20:36:34.676-06:002014-02-18T20:36:34.676-06:00You said: I make my own morality based on intellig...You said: <i>I make my own morality based on intelligence and common sense.</i><br /><br /><b>So you are judge, jury, and executioner? A traveling court of one? Then how does that scope out when others have opinions contrary to yours? What is common sense and how is that attained? Does this mean that mentally impaired folk cannot have morality. It seems that if they can’t come to the place of “common sense” they can’t be moral, Please explain this and how are you sure your morality is right? I don’t have to tell you have no base for morality. However, why do you have a moral duty? Do you know why? Since evolution tells you that it is in your self interest to act selfishly and preserve yourself, then why do you not bash somebody’s head in that threatens that? I am unashamed to say that my moral epistemology is biblically centered. You haven’t demonstrated one modicum of evidence or direction as to where yours comes from. One day you could wake up and “common sense” could be something else to you the next day than how you feel about it today. That to me is scary. I can point to a lot of people who were crazy religiously and otherwise and did horrible things. But the word of God didn’t change and or endorse or encourage them to do those things. It was their version of “common sense” that caused the problem. There have been a lot of religious terrorists, I will agree. But there is an abundant amount of people who have killed because it was “common sense” to do so. Jeffrey Dahmer said as much…he recounted BEFORE he repented of his sins, that atheism opened the door to every type of self gratification that he could find because he understood that there was nothing on the other side of it. No accountability for anything so why should there be any restraints? Before he died, Dr. Paul Kurtz understood the same problem with Humanism and atheism. As it pertains to trashing religion he stated: <i>“Most of my colleagues are concerned with critiquing the concept of God. That is important, but equally important is, where do you turn?”</i> <br /><br />He even realized that when there is nothing on the other side, and people understand that what you believe means that there is ultimately no accountability for anything, it becomes a futile system of belief and this ultimately leads to a changing interpretation of “common sense” That’s why it is important. .The word of god is TRUTH and it shall stand. You know how I should act, because you can read what I should do. That's the only way you know any moral duty, whether you'd like to believe it or not. What comes up in your mind is insufficient to bind anyone to any standard…fact is that you claim to be worried because I may "think"god tells me something, but there is NOTHING supporting and or predicting your actions except your own mandates of your mind. THAT is dangerous and THAT is scary!.<br /> <br />So it is clear that you understand that there are moral duties, the problem is that you can’t tell me why and a greater problem is that your morality is rooted in the subjectivism of your own mind. As stated, by contrast, my morality is objective, has a sure foundation (whether I adhere to it or not is my choice) is not changing and is not subjective in its nature. It seems those elements are all of the things that are needed for any society and people to be stable and have sustainable growth and achievements. </b>District Supt. Harvey Burnetthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15315686602819371111noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-83792440478488543502014-02-18T20:30:34.079-06:002014-02-18T20:30:34.079-06:00So far as your diatribe on the diversity of interp...<b>So far as your diatribe on the diversity of interpretation found regarding the bible being ample reason to discard it, well if we were to be consistent in your proscribed methods, then we would have to discount and throw out about all of science now wouldn’t we? Scientific hypotheses, even those things we hold as scientific facts are always disputed and there is only “general” or “wide range” “consensus” on most and many subjects. Look at astrophysics, even big bang cosmology itself. There is not agreement on those principles and for as many that postulate a big bang there are nearly as many who continue to postulate some form of steady state aren’t there? <br /><br />In short, universal consensus is not and has never been how truth is either established nor confirmed. However, what we find within Christianity, as we have found since its dawn, there are essentials that unify and that are not in dispute. Sin is the problem between man and God. Jesus is God, he lived, was fully god and fully human, died for the remission of our sins, and was raised bodily and physically, and he will return to judge the quick and the dead. No matter how many books are in the bible, those things are not in dispute. No matter whether one takes a literal or figurative approach to biblical interpretation, these things are not in dispute and since early on, evidence shows that these were the beliefs that were commonly held among Christians everywhere. So your argument kind of falls on its own sword for these reasons and more</b><br /><br />You said: <i>Ok, why should I take what you say about evolution, when the only reason you're denying it is because it conflicts with your faith? You have nothing to back up your position besides "The bible says it, that settles it".</i> <br /><b>NO, you seem to misunderstand, evolution doesn’t conform to reality. No transitional forms, no species becoming completely different species and changes and mutations within species have been found to not enhance species, but to make the species worse. Everyone agrees with variations and adaptations, but what Darwin and evolution calls for is macro-evolutionary change. That is simply not supported by the evidence. God didn’t tell us that…more and more of your venerated scientists affirm those things. Some give in because of professional pressure to conform and nothing more . Do the research since you are a critic. Be critical even about what you are told regarding the ‘agreement” among scientists about evolution as I did. You will find what I am saying to be true. <br /><br />By the way, I only introduced evolution in response to your presentation on slavery. It was the interpretation of and ideas set forth by promulgators of Darwinian evolution that affirmed that certain races were favored and therefore the inferiority of blacks and women could be based on scientific means. Biblical standards were not so. As I stated slaves had rights and there is a more and more mounting evidence and proofs, that women in ANE times were much more affluent and had many more rights of both property ownership, mobility and resources than has been assumed historically</b>District Supt. Harvey Burnetthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15315686602819371111noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-47809662002601156702014-02-18T20:28:18.132-06:002014-02-18T20:28:18.132-06:00You said: According to you i'm "scriptura...You said: <i>According to you i'm "scripturally illiterate". And that's your opinion. I'm taking the words to mean as they are written on the page, like I would if they were written anywhere else. I don't need someone else's interpretation of what a straight forward statement means. Beat your slaves with a rod means beat your slaves with a rod, stop trying to pretend like straight forward statements mean something else when they don't agree with what you want to believe. </i><br /><br /><b>I'll be a little more nice, but this is what I mean FM, the scripture you call into account is <i>Exodus 21:20-21: 20 -Anyone who beats their male or female slave with a rod must be punished if the slave dies as a direct result, 21- but they are not to be punished if the slave recovers after a day or two, since the slave is their property.</i><br /><br />You say the scripture commands a slave-owner to beat their slaves with a rod and you don’t need anyone telling you otherwise. However, a cursory reading of the text displays that these were restrictions and guidelines for one who beats a slave, not a commendation or encouragement to do so. This is a classic example of why I say scripturally illiterate. To say that God encourages or condones the beating of slaves is a false assertion read into the scripture. <br />The fact is that if slavery is endorsed by God, especially the type you consider (chattel slavery) then how do slaves have any rights at all? According to v.1 of the same chapter, a slave could go free after 7 years without paying a dime for his freedom. Where is that in and under the construct of chattel slavery? <br /><br />What you want God to say is, “thou shalt have no slaves”. I agree, like you, that would have been nice….BUT, the sin of man makes that nearly impossible. It is not impossible with sin to worship God, but one of the first relationships that breakdown with men is the relationship towards other men. Slavery is a product of sin. Like other sins that god knows will continue until such time as there is a remedy among men to sins power (eg: Jesus) God sets parameters those parameters not only set boundaries around the institution of slavery, they set restrictions upon the slave owner. Simply put, there was NO encouragement to beat a slave as you say. There were limitations and a punishment if one was beat incorrectly, improperly and unjustly.</b><br />District Supt. Harvey Burnetthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15315686602819371111noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-16269318977318086162014-02-18T11:52:25.710-06:002014-02-18T11:52:25.710-06:00IAnd why is it that it only ever seems to be the u...IAnd why is it that it only ever seems to be the ugly bits of the bible that are ever taken out of context? Why don't we ever hear christians complaining of John 3:16 being taken out of context? fmhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13759116863929766807noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-89977348474257046092014-02-18T10:59:18.470-06:002014-02-18T10:59:18.470-06:00You said "How do you KNOW that 42 children dy...You said "How do you KNOW that 42 children dying at the hands of a Bear under God's direction was wrong"<br /><br />Come on, you're grasping at straws now. What sane and civilized person will agree that sending bears to tear to pieces 42 children, simply for doing what children do and name calling, is right? I can't even believe you're asking this question. I know it's wrong because it's barbaric. Even if they were middle-aged men in their 40's and 50's, what had they done to deserve to be ripped apart by bears???<br /><br />And the funny part is, is that you're being very hypocritical. Atrocities like this are ok, as long as they come from the god you believe in.<br /><br />But when Muslims fly planes into towers and kill innocent people by the thousands, you'll shake your head and point the finger at how bad Islam is and how bad Allah is. You know, because they have the "wrong" god, according to your belief, but if they had the right god, it would be totally ok.<br /><br />So, let me get this straight: It's ok for your god to send bears to rip apart 42 children, but it's wrong if Muslim's say their god tells them to fly airplanes into buildings and kill people?<br /><br />Under divine command theory, if you adhere to Islam and believe him to be the source of morality, flying planes into buildings as a suicide bomber is perfectly fine as long as you think Allah is commanding it.fmhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13759116863929766807noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2357475346759651140.post-76769172408673850432014-02-18T10:44:05.894-06:002014-02-18T10:44:05.894-06:00You said "You have not delivered any scriptur...You said "You have not delivered any scriptures (very few) in their context. You are using the scriptures as a pretext and isegeting thought and what you want them to say into them. That's the problem. You are scripturally illiterate."<br /><br />According to you i'm "scripturally illiterate". And that's your opinion. I'm taking the words to mean as they are written on the page, like I would if they were written anywhere else. I don't need someone else's interpretation of what a straight forward statement means. Beat your slaves with a rod means beat your slaves with a rod, stop trying to pretend like straight forward statements mean something else when they don't agree with what you want to believe. I guarantee when the bible makes a straight forward statement about homosexuality, you take it as it is written on the page. You don't start with all that context mess to make THAT PASSAGE mean the opposite of what it says on the page. You're picking and choosing with the best of them.<br /><br />And before you can tell me I'm scripturally illeterate, maybe you christians need to get your own house in order first! Why don't you all come to a consensus on just what is the correct version of the Bible and then how to interpret it. Then you can tell me I'm interpreting it wrong. But as long as you can't agree on whether the Bible has 66 or 73 books, whether the Protestant Bible is the inerrant word of god or whether it's some other version, whether you're always saved or can you loose salvation, is the Pope infallible, should you pray to Mary and saints, is the bible literal or figurative right down to issues within the same denomination as to should sanctified christians go to movies and should sanctified christian women wear makeup and pants.<br /><br />Get those issues straight first and then tell me im "scripturally illiterate". You're just hurling insults now because I don't agree with your position.<br /><br />You said "See that's what I mean...This is a classic diversionary tactic of atheists...like someone has to have an advanced science degree to understand what is written and interpret it ptoperly...You have nothing but your materialistic fantasy to make a judgement about faith. "<br /><br />Ok, why should I take what you say about evolution, when the only reason you're denying it is because it conflicts with your faith? You have nothing to back up your position besides "The bible says it, that settles it". Your position is based on your personal belief system Science is based on evidence that can be shown and proven. That's why I take what science says over the preacher that's an armchair evolution denier. Because you would deny ANY and ALL positions that conflict with your faith, whether it's evolution or not. <br /><br />And if you have sufficient evidence like you say, that would over-turn evolution and show it to be wrong, why are you writing about it on a blog? Why are you not showing it to actual scientists who have the ways and means of evaluating it? That doesn't even make sense.<br /><br />You said "So YOU make the moral authority...What relationship to all humans does your "determinations" make?"<br /><br />I make my own morality based on intelligence and common sense. I don't need a god to tell me not to bash someone's head in simply because I feel like it at the time. Stop trying to say I have no basis for my morality, simply so you can justify your god's mass crimes that make Hitler look like an amateur. That's all you're trying to do. You're trying to make it so your god has to be right. Sorry, those of us who are not brainwashed by religion can see god as less than good for ordering slaughter for arbitrary things.<br /><br />If it takes a god to tell you not to kill people so you don't walk around just randomly doing it, then I thank that god you are a christian. But even if there is a god handing down morality, how do you get that it is the christian god?<br />fmhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13759116863929766807noreply@blogger.com