Having trouble wording my response...
December 29, 2013 at 5:33 pm
(This post was last modified: December 29, 2013 at 6:22 pm by InevitableCheese.)
So, wrote a blog post about why science can comment and disprove religious claims, and got this response:
TL;DR - 1. Atheists force their beliefs more. 2. You don't look at the Bible in context. 3. Genesis wasn't meant to be taken literally anyways 4. The Jews were slaves, etc.
I could go into a whole spiel about Christian missions taking advantage of less developed cultures and the helpless, and how the old archaeology used to support Jewish early history was done biasedly by Israeli archaeologists (who have since been disproven and disregarded)
I'm having a spot of trouble wording a response, since I'm new to openly speaking my atheism. Any help you smart people could give me?
Sorry for a double post, but this is what I came up with:
Quote:"Very interesting post.
First of all, when you talk about tolerance and saying that you are fine with people believing whatever they want to, I have to say that atheism has crossed the line even further than any religious group out there (except maybe Shiiete Islam). Dawkins, Harris, Hitchens, and Dennet (especially Dawkins) are easily the most militant group out there who care nothing about forcing their beliefs on other people and they even extrapolate it out into our education system and governmental procedures. If anything, Christianity is doing a bad job at forcing their beliefs on other people, aside from a select few.
The second thing is you say it is a bold claim to say that an ancient text is infallible and inspired as the “Word of God” but what many people have done is taken the text out of context and overcomplicate it with false interpretations. The Bible is not that easy to understand as infallible if you take it in the sociocultural context that it was meant to be taken in. Also, you have a bigger problem on your hands because science and history does not even come close to having the ability to answer certain questions on the “how” and “why” of really anything, simply because science and history are not able to answer those kinds of questions. You are leaving yourself with a lot of unanswered questions, which I think is a very uncomfortable step of faith.
Thirdly, on the point of evolution and its compatibility of the Bible is to be taken from a completely different vantage point than what you presented. The length of the days in Genesis and the historicity of Adam do not matter, as the Genesis text is an account of functional origins, NOT material origins. You are presenting scientific concordism, and I believe in non-concordism, which takes care of these “issues” that you see in the text.
Finally, your history on the exile and Egypt is just simply not true. We have overwhelming amounts of evidence in ancient artifacts and cities and other items and literature absolutely confirm that this event took place. So we have found TONS of credibility to this story.
Good post, however I do feel there is still much to disagree with here."
TL;DR - 1. Atheists force their beliefs more. 2. You don't look at the Bible in context. 3. Genesis wasn't meant to be taken literally anyways 4. The Jews were slaves, etc.
I could go into a whole spiel about Christian missions taking advantage of less developed cultures and the helpless, and how the old archaeology used to support Jewish early history was done biasedly by Israeli archaeologists (who have since been disproven and disregarded)
I'm having a spot of trouble wording a response, since I'm new to openly speaking my atheism. Any help you smart people could give me?
Sorry for a double post, but this is what I came up with:
Quote:1. I support people believing what they want as long as it's a private matter. But as long as it pervades itself into the public and into politics, people like Dawkins and other atheists have every right to speak out against it. And we only voice our opinion. I don't seek to convert anyone, unless they were interested. There isn't a "belief system" to inflict on people with atheism, it's just that I have no beliefs. I believed in science just as much as I did when I was a Christian. And if you want to regard that as faith, then we must mean different things by the word. I don't see atheists at doorsteps at 7.A.M handing out tracts, with P.A systems preaching to the public, or proselytizating the ignorant/helpless/despairing by telling them they'll go to hell if they don't believe. I care about their well-being and trouble of course, but as for using it as a position to spread my beliefs, it doesn't even cross my mind.
2. If I had a nickel for every different biblical opinion created out of "context". Of course we don't take Genesis literally. And if science wasn't able to comment on these things, how come you and me changed our interpretation of it in light of evolution? History can comment on if an event DID happen and WHEN. And I don't need a how or a why when it is shown to have not happened anyway. And if those questions are "unanswered" then we are both left with them, not just me.
3. This is my whole point. We pick and choose what to believe as literal in the Bible based on history/archaeology/science, and which parts to write off as symbols or allegories. This is a matter of personal decision, choosing what your comfortable with no absolute foundation. And despite your own opinion, the majority DO take these stories literally. I hear older, educated men saying a global flood happened, and evolution is "just a theory" and probably false, and it just makes me laugh and ignore them. And hell, these people take up a good percentage of our elected officials.
4. I have my books now, so I was able to find the names of the archeologists I had told you about a while back. I haven't read or seen a single shred of anything that supports pre-exile Israeli history. I never mentioned the exile as false, either. I referred to the Moses story, and to Genesis. Events like this leaves lots of archaeological evidence, but none has been found. Modern archeology regards them as myths, even the conservative Jewish archaeologists. Israel Finkelstein, chairman of the Archaeology department at Tel Aviv University (Israel's largest university), in collaboration with Neil Silberman, have done a lot of work on this, and wrote a layman's book about it. I also think they did a four part documentary. Another prominent archaeologist to work on this is Donald Redford, Professor of Classics and Ancient Mediterranean Studies at Penn State.
"The consolations of philosophy and the beauties of science; these things are infinitely more awe-inspiring and regenerating and majestic than any invocation of the burning bush or doctrine." - Christopher Hitchens