RE: Theists: would you view the truth?
December 2, 2016 at 12:04 pm
(This post was last modified: December 2, 2016 at 12:16 pm by Catholic_Lady.)
(December 2, 2016 at 6:21 am)ignoramus Wrote:(November 30, 2016 at 11:54 pm)Catholic_Lady Wrote: It would be shocking, devastating, and confusing. I'd feel pretty lost. But I'm not the type of person who just tells myself things that I know aren't true just to make myself feel better. If I went back in time and saw that Jesus never really existed, or that he wasn't who he said he was, I'd be honest with myself and accept it.
Good to hear that Deb.
If that were to be the case, I'd then ask you to tell me where you "really" think you get your morals from ...
Natural law.
(December 2, 2016 at 7:21 am)Ignorant Wrote:(December 2, 2016 at 6:25 am)robvalue Wrote: The thing is, if the words in the bible have value, I don't see why that value disappears even if the events turn out to be semi-fictional. [1] If it's good advice, it continues to be good advice. In other words, belief in the original events doesn't seem to be all that relevant from the point of view of living this life. It just seems to be about making sure you're on the right side for the next life. [2]
If you viewed the events and it's not what you thought, nothing has changed. You're still you, you still have your morality and values. [3]
Of course you'll realise you spent a great deal of time talking to nothing, which would be a shame. [4]
1) Some of the words in the bible have value because they reveal things about human destiny and about god which human nature is not capable of naturally discovering on its own (e.g. God is Triune, The Son of God became incarnate in the person of Jesus, the struggle of the poor is salvific, Jesus rose from the dead and sent the Holy Spirit, everyone will be raised from the dead and judged according to what they've done, etc.). We know these words to be true ONLY by faith, and faith demands the reality of the truth and authority of the revealer. These things would lose their value upon the discovery that the revealer, in whom the truth of the words is known, is neither true nor authoritative nor existent. In other words, you can't know (by faith) that God is Father, Son, and Spirit if the only reason you had for believing it was the authority of a person who a) never existed, b) has not the authority, c) never taught such, etc.
Other words in the bible have value because they reveal things about human destiny and about god which human nature IS CAPABLE of naturally discovering on its own (e.g. murder is bad, social living is good, the golden rule, etc.). Even if it were just men writing according to the wisdom of their culture and time, there are parts which retain their value from the perspective of wisdom, and even literature.
2) Christianity is fundamentally a religion of a person, NOT a book. There is more than mere "advice" in the Bible. It also tells of the relationship God has with us, and what he wants for our life (which is to make our lives divine). If the one who brought that message in his very person never existed, or if he existed in a radically different way than what the Scriptures and the Community today report, then the the faith in that person and the hope for his promises become delusions.
Jesus, in his very person - a union between God and humanity, is the revelation to which we hold. Union with god and his life is achieved through uniting your humanity to his (not to a book). If Jesus never existed or didn't exist like the Bible and the tradition reports, then that raises a lot of questions about the meaning and purpose of human life and the destiny that awaits it.
3) Exactly, but then some of the reasons for which you act may change. Some of the realities from which you determine how to act no longer determine how you act. Some of the things you value no longer exist. You still hold that murder, fornication, extortion, oppression, etc. are "wrong", but the idea of the "best" way to live and the reasons for it requires recalculation.
4) That too
Excellent post, Ig.
(December 2, 2016 at 10:01 am)robvalue Wrote: Let's say it was all perfectly normal stuff. All mentions of gods and miracles and resurrections were fabrications. Jesus was just some preacher who got crucified for being a nuisance.
I suppose the question is what actions do you take just because of the story, and what things don't you do just because of the story. Take for granted you stop any religious rituals and such. I'm interested in morality.
I'd love to hear all theists' thoughts on this.
I'd stop going to church, praying, and believing of course.
Other than that, my moral values are pretty well cemented at this point and I doubt many of them would change. Maybe the little things, like the belief that contraception and pre marital sex are immoral would change, but I still see the benefit of saving sex for marriage, and I still see the benefit of using abstinence during fertility to avoid pregnancy instead of condoms or hormonal contraceptives. So while I may not see those 2 things as immoral anymore, I'd still see the benefit of following those laws and I more than likely still would. Also, I would see no moral obligation to love thy enemy. But of course, I'd still have empathy so I wouldn't go around hurting other people even if I hated them. That's the big thing.
"Of course, everyone will claim they respect someone who tries to speak the truth, but in reality, this is a rare quality. Most respect those who speak truths they agree with, and their respect for the speaking only extends as far as their realm of personal agreement. It is less common, almost to the point of becoming a saintly virtue, that someone truly respects and loves the truth seeker, even when their conclusions differ wildly."
-walsh
-walsh