Moderator: Community Team
Symmetry wrote:jay_a2j wrote:Symmetry wrote:
That's quite a caveat you've got at the end there. You mean that it can be shown to be in error, in particular? But somehow not in the end?
Quite the non-response you have there...
Look- if the caveat is "it's all right, no matter how wrong at the end". That's a caveat that erases all wrongs,
PLAYER57832 wrote:Too many of those who claim they don't believe global warming are really "end-timer" Christians.
notyou2 wrote:*waves at Jay*
PLAYER57832 wrote:Too many of those who claim they don't believe global warming are really "end-timer" Christians.
jay_a2j wrote:Logic dictates that there is a God!
jay_a2j wrote:Symmetry wrote:jay_a2j wrote:Symmetry wrote:
That's quite a caveat you've got at the end there. You mean that it can be shown to be in error, in particular? But somehow not in the end?
Quite the non-response you have there...
Look- if the caveat is "it's all right, no matter how wrong at the end". That's a caveat that erases all wrongs,
Who said it was wrong at the end? I said, it can not be proven to be in error in it's ENTIRETY. That means, from first page to last page.... error-less.
DoomYoshi wrote:That's possibly the strangest necrobump in recent memory.
jay_a2j wrote:Sorry it took a minute to respond.... The Bible proves itself to be the Word of God.
jay_a2j wrote:Symmetry wrote:jay_a2j wrote:Symmetry wrote:
That's quite a caveat you've got at the end there. You mean that it can be shown to be in error, in particular? But somehow not in the end?
Quite the non-response you have there...
Look- if the caveat is "it's all right, no matter how wrong at the end". That's a caveat that erases all wrongs,
Who said it was wrong at the end? I said, it can not be proven to be in error in it's ENTIRETY. That means, from first page to last page.... error-less.
Dukasaur wrote:Beginning: Genesis. Complete bullshit. You know, normally I try to soft-pedal it, but I'm not in a good mood right now so I'll just give it to you undiluted.
God brings an orderly universe out of primordial chaos merely by uttering a word. In the literary structure of six days, the creation events in the first three days are related to those in the second three.
Until modern times the first line was always translated, āIn the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.ā Several comparable ancient cosmogonies, discovered in recent times, have a āwhenā¦thenā construction, confirming the translation āwhenā¦thenā here as well. āWhenā introduces the pre-creation state and āthenā introduces the creative act affecting that state. The traditional translation, āIn the beginning,ā does not reflect the Hebrew syntax of the clause.
The book has two major sectionsāthe creation and expansion of the human race (2:4ā11:9), and the story of Abraham and his descendants (11:10ā50:26). The first section deals with God and the nations, and the second deals with God and a particular nation, Israel. The opening creation account (1:1ā2:3) lifts up two themes that play major roles in each sectionāthe divine command to the first couple (standing for the whole race) to produce offspring and to possess land (1:28). In the first section, progeny and land appear in the form of births and genealogies (chaps. 2ā9) and allotment of land (chaps. 10ā11), and in the second, progeny and land appear in the form of promises of descendants and land to the ancestors. Another indication of editing is the formulaic introduction, āthis is the story; these are the descendantsā (Hebrew tÅledĆ“t), which occurs five times in Section I (2:4; 5:1; 6:9; 10:1; 10:31) and five times in Section II (11:10; 25:12, 19; 36:1 [v. 9 is an addition]; 37:2).
tzor wrote:DoomYoshi wrote:That's possibly the strangest necrobump in recent memory.
by BigBallinStalin on Mon Jul 21, 2014 2:54 pm
by jay_a2j on Sat Aug 26, 2017 9:37 pmjay_a2j wrote:Sorry it took a minute to respond.... The Bible proves itself to be the Word of God.
That has got to be the strangest definition of "a minute" in all of internet history.
tzor wrote:Dukasaur wrote:Beginning: Genesis. Complete bullshit. You know, normally I try to soft-pedal it, but I'm not in a good mood right now so I'll just give it to you undiluted.
NO really, tell us what you really think.![]()
There are three problems with the first chapter of Genesis.
The first problem is the structure of the chapter. Most people assume it is linear but it appears hierarchical. One could argue that is is hierarchical and non temporal.God brings an orderly universe out of primordial chaos merely by uttering a word. In the literary structure of six days, the creation events in the first three days are related to those in the second three.
The second is that the "zero point" isn't as obvious as it appears. It doesn't help that people have fucked up the first line of the story.Until modern times the first line was always translated, āIn the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.ā Several comparable ancient cosmogonies, discovered in recent times, have a āwhenā¦thenā construction, confirming the translation āwhenā¦thenā here as well. āWhenā introduces the pre-creation state and āthenā introduces the creative act affecting that state. The traditional translation, āIn the beginning,ā does not reflect the Hebrew syntax of the clause.
So strike out the "In the Beginning" and start with "When" and things get interesting. Large oceans and no continent formations. Probably the conditions of the planet 4 billion years ago? We get a hint of the time when the creation of the firmament is mentioned. Ironically the earth's magnetosphere activated 3.5 billion years ago (the Archean Eon). By the way continent formation started 2.5 billion years ago (the Proterozoic Eon). Ironically the Bible has it backwards, initially the land was formed into a single unit (Rodnia), not the seas. Note that this information is as useful as the notion that Lincoln's assistant was Kennedy and Kennedy's assistant was Lincoln.
Finally we get to the third problem. The writers of the story are dealing with the "science" of the day, especially the science of the civilizations that were around them. The world they insisted was created by the chaotic and conflicting desires of competing Gods. They, on the other hand insisted that it was a logical progression and a deliberate design. In other words the whole first chapter was a counter argument against the EnĆ»ma EliÅ”. This happens throughout Genesis. Half of the work is dedicated to a split function; reinventing the myths of the cultures around them and giving them horrible origin stories. (Then we get to the creation of the Twelve Tribes of Israel, the second part of the Genesis narrative.)The book has two major sectionsāthe creation and expansion of the human race (2:4ā11:9), and the story of Abraham and his descendants (11:10ā50:26). The first section deals with God and the nations, and the second deals with God and a particular nation, Israel. The opening creation account (1:1ā2:3) lifts up two themes that play major roles in each sectionāthe divine command to the first couple (standing for the whole race) to produce offspring and to possess land (1:28). In the first section, progeny and land appear in the form of births and genealogies (chaps. 2ā9) and allotment of land (chaps. 10ā11), and in the second, progeny and land appear in the form of promises of descendants and land to the ancestors. Another indication of editing is the formulaic introduction, āthis is the story; these are the descendantsā (Hebrew tÅledĆ“t), which occurs five times in Section I (2:4; 5:1; 6:9; 10:1; 10:31) and five times in Section II (11:10; 25:12, 19; 36:1 [v. 9 is an addition]; 37:2).
Once you realize that this is not a physics textbook, the question of "error" becomes doctrinal more than scientific.
I could go on but why should I? Dissing the past is a common stupid petty thing of the present. One is only comforted by the notion that those who crudely insult the past will be crudely insulted by the future. That is one of the few short term (in geologic time scales) consistent attributes of man.
Dukasaur wrote:Luke 2:1. The bizarre idea that a Roman census forced people to go back to their place of birth to be counted for a census. Nevermind that no record exists of this census.
Symmetry wrote:I had a bit more luck with threads about parables. Some of the peeps who are very literal about their Bible of choice are ok with the idea that some of it is fiction,
jonesthecurl wrote:
Yay verily, 37 months, five days, six hours and forty-four minutes is as a minute in the eyes of Jay.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Too many of those who claim they don't believe global warming are really "end-timer" Christians.
Symmetry wrote:jay_a2j wrote:Symmetry wrote:jay_a2j wrote:Symmetry wrote:
That's quite a caveat you've got at the end there. You mean that it can be shown to be in error, in particular? But somehow not in the end?
Quite the non-response you have there...
Look- if the caveat is "it's all right, no matter how wrong at the end". That's a caveat that erases all wrongs,
Who said it was wrong at the end? I said, it can not be proven to be in error in it's ENTIRETY. That means, from first page to last page.... error-less.
Out of interest, which Bible?
PLAYER57832 wrote:Too many of those who claim they don't believe global warming are really "end-timer" Christians.
jay_a2j wrote:jonesthecurl wrote:
Yay verily, 37 months, five days, six hours and forty-four minutes is as a minute in the eyes of Jay.
It was a joke man!
Symmetry wrote:DY- Parables are the best thing in Christianity, IMHO- they are open to question. I kind of like Buddhists Koans for the same reason.
"Luke 2:1" indicates that you prefer a one of the Bibles divided into chapter and verse, right?
Dukasaur wrote:jay_a2j wrote:Symmetry wrote:jay_a2j wrote:Symmetry wrote:
That's quite a caveat you've got at the end there. You mean that it can be shown to be in error, in particular? But somehow not in the end?
Quite the non-response you have there...
Look- if the caveat is "it's all right, no matter how wrong at the end". That's a caveat that erases all wrongs,
Who said it was wrong at the end? I said, it can not be proven to be in error in it's ENTIRETY. That means, from first page to last page.... error-less.
It's wrong at the beginning, it's wrong at the end, it's wrong pretty much every step along the way.
Beginning: Genesis. Complete bullshit. You know, normally I try to soft-pedal it, but I'm not in a good mood right now so I'll just give it to you undiluted. Genesis is horseshit and lies from start to finish. The earth was not created in seven days. The earth was not created before the light. There was light from quadrillions of stars nine billion years before the earth was formed. Both creation stories in Genesis are bullshit, but the funny part is that they don't even agree with each other. The story told in Genesis 1:1 to 2:3 is different from the story told in Genesis 2:4, so even if one or the other had been true, they couldn't both be. Moving on, there's no evidence for a woldwide flood. There's lots of evidence for lots of different floods that happened in many different times in many different places, and liars and bullshitters point at all these different floods and try to somehow weave them into one, but the fact is they all happened in different places at different times and are completely unrelated events. Furthermore, if somebody had tried to repopulate all the world's animals from only one pair of each, they would all be hopelessly inbred, and the beautiful diversity of life that we see around us would degenerated into some kind of factory farm. There's no evidence that there were ever people who lived to be 600 years old or 800 years old. For that matter, were Noah's grandsons fucking each other's first cousins after that first generation?
End: Revelation. No such event has happened. I think it's astronomically unlikely that it WILL ever happen, but you can't prove a negative, so you can bury your head in the sand and dream that one day it will. I don't know why you would -- it sounds like a pretty awful time -- but to each his own. So go ahead and dream about it.
In the middle: tons of horseshit upon horseshit upon horseshit. Just to grab an example at random:
Luke 2:1. The bizarre idea that a Roman census forced people to go back to their place of birth to be counted for a census. Nevermind that no record exists of this census. The very concept is ridiculous. No ruler would force a mass migration of people just to count them. It's ridiculous, it's stupid, it's asinine. When a census is taken, in ancient times as in modern, people are counted right where they stand. Can you imagine the chaos that would ensue if someone tried to shuffle people around in the middle of a census? It's a difficult process and prone to much error to begin with; can you imagine trying to do it in the middle of a forced mass migration?
But by far the most egregious lie in the Bible is the role reversal of Solomon and Ahab. The Bible paints Solomon as wise and rich beyond your wildest dreams. But we've excavated Solomon's palace, and it was a mean hovel by royal standards. No evidence of wealth whatsoever. Just mean, low-quality earthenware jugs. Ahab, on the other hand, was one of the greatest heroes in Jewish history. By marrying Jezebel, he forged an alliance with the powerful merchant kings of Tyre, and with that alliance he pushed back the mighty Assyrian empire and brought relative freedom to Palestine for the first time in hundreds of years. But the parasitical cult of Jehovah couldn't just admire a man who saved their nation. Because he gave support to the rival cult of Baal, they painted him a bad guy and spread all kinds of disgusting and evil stories about him. So Solomon, a pathetic loser, was painted as a great and wealthy king who brought stability to Isreal, while Ahab, a great and wealthy king who brought stability to Israel, is character-assassinated and painted as a pathetic loser.
Sometimes I'm in a generous mood and I try to defend the Bible, because sure enough it contains beautiful poetry like Ecclesiastes and a considerable amount of wisdom. But bottom line, finding a diamond ring in a dung heap doesn't change the fact that it's a dung heap. The Bible is overwhelmingly comprised of horseshit, with the occasional diamond along the way.
Lest someone thinks I'm picking on Christians, let me be frank: Judaism is a pile of horseshit also. Islam is a pile of horseshit also. Buddhism is a pile of horseshit also. Hinduism is a pile of horseshit also. There are no fairies in the sky ruling our destiny. Our destiny is here, on earth, and we can either make a go of it and reach out and seize the heavens, or grovel in the dirt and cling to the fantasy that heaven is coming to us.
jusplay4fun wrote:As far as I know, all modern Bibles and Bible translations now use Chapter and Verse divisions and notation. Please read from Wikipeadia:
"The Bible was divided into chapters in the 13th century by Stephen Langton and it was divided into verses in the 16th century by French printer Robert Estienne[15] and is now usually cited by book, chapter, and verse. The division of the Hebrew Bible into verses is based on the sof passuk cantillation mark used by the 10th-century Masoretes to record the verse divisions used in earlier oral traditions."
JP4FSymmetry wrote:DY- Parables are the best thing in Christianity, IMHO- they are open to question. I kind of like Buddhists Koans for the same reason.
"Luke 2:1" indicates that you prefer a one of the Bibles divided into chapter and verse, right?
jonesthecurl wrote:Trouble is, it's difficult to argue with a "Literally no error" guy like Jay and a "well, go back and look at the original language and translate it properly, take this bit as metaphor, this bit as a later interpolation" guy like you at the same time.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users