TA1LGUNN3R wrote:
okay...All I can say is maybe it'll sink in eventually.
"It no longer will change"...? C'mon, guy, try studying a little history. If you think the bible you have now is in any way, shape, or form an actual account of history, then I don't know what to tell you. The selection process of what went into the bible and what was tossed alone should convince you, not to mention the accounts of stuff that never happened (e.g. mass slavery of Hebrew people in Egypt).
-TG
Ok, so you say: Mass Slavery of Hebrew people in Egypt never happened. However: 1. How are going to prove that? Where are your sources? How can you prove that your sources are reliable, and how can you prove that the source proving your source is reliable (ad infinitum) This is the problem with relativism. You can't. Because the first step just ain't there. Now, you say the selection process should convince me, but Taking apart the Bible into Old and New Testaments: 1. Is it so strange to keep the writings of just the major apostles. (Paul, Peter, James, John. Don't know about Jude) Along with the four Accounts of Jesus until just after Resurrection, and Said Disciples account of what would happen after: Seems pretty logical to me. Also Old Testament without Rabbinical writings is correct. If you wanted to include everything, you couldn't even fit that into something people could even read/ transcribe/ study, Its like saying you wanted to transcribe the world.
2. Relativism (Rationalism) vs. Absolutes:
I have a basis because of Absolutes. Because I believe in absolutes if A is absolutely right then Anti-A is absolutely wrong.
If you don't believe in absolutes, but instead relativism it looks like this: According to my rational A is right, but I can't be certain that Anti-A is definitely wrong. Aka: You can't prove that i'm wrong, because according to many of you truth is relative. Black and White don't really exist they are just a shade of grey to you.