Quote:The Constitution of the United States has no authority aside from the government that supports it as in "we the people." The Bible's authority comes from the support of God* and his people.
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* Evidence for same still unavailable.
The Canonical Gospels Have No Authority
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Quote:The Constitution of the United States has no authority aside from the government that supports it as in "we the people." The Bible's authority comes from the support of God* and his people. * Evidence for same still unavailable. (January 13, 2015 at 2:05 pm)Godschild Wrote:(January 13, 2015 at 1:11 pm)Davka Wrote: My understanding, based on years of (admittedly layman's) reading and picking the brains of various scholars, is that these "memoirs of the apostles" were not the synoptic Gospels + John, but rather included various writings which today are called the "gnostic gospels." Circular reasoning. Besides, there was no "Bible" at the time of Christians shooting other Christians' writings down. "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it" ~ Aristotle
(January 12, 2015 at 10:28 am)FallentoReason Wrote:(January 12, 2015 at 10:19 am)Drich Wrote: their is a big gapping hole in this line of reasoning. The assumption being because we only have a written record of 2nd century involvement with the gospels that they must have orginated in the second century. But again with out a complete record to draw from the certainty in which this book makes its assumptions is based of fallacious reasoning. In short 'the car forum' in which the assumptions are made are no where near complete.
We can only evaluate the evidence we have....not the fantasies that spring from your desperation to believe in nonsense.
Unlike you, some people actually read your holy horseshit to see what it says...not what they hope it says. https://www.secularhumanism.org/index.php/articles/5656 Quote:Another bewildering author is Philo of Alexandria. He spent his first-century life in the Levant and even traversed Jesus-land. Philo chronicled contemporaries of Jesus—Bassus, Pilate, Tiberius, Sejanus, Caligula—yet knew nothing of the storied prophet and rabble-rouser enveloped in glory and astral marvels. Quote:The Bible venerates the artist formerly known as Saul of Tarsus, but he was a man essentially oblivious to his savior. Paul was unaware of the virgin mother and ignorant of Jesus’s nativity, parentage, life events, ministry, miracles, apostles, betrayal, trial, and harrowing passion. Paul didn’t know where or when Jesus lived and considered the crucifixion metaphorical (Gal. 2:19–20). Unlike what is claimed in the Gospels, Paul never indicated that Jesus had come to Earth. And the “five hundred witnesses” claim (1 Cor. 15) is a forgery. Quote:I read the works of second-century Christian father Athenagoras and never encountered the word Jesus—Athenagoras was unacquainted with the name of his savior! This floored me. Had I missed something? No; Athenagoras was another pious early Christian who was unaware of Jesus. Now, I wouldn't expect you to take my word for it so you can check it yourself. He's right. In the two extant writings we have of Athenagoras he makes impassioned defenses of xtian silliness but never mentions anyone name "jesus." Odd, no? Here you go. http://www.earlychristianwritings.com/athenagoras.html Read it and weep. He's one of your boys. (January 14, 2015 at 1:23 am)Drich Wrote:(January 12, 2015 at 10:28 am)FallentoReason Wrote: I partly agree with what you're saying. Except where your example fails is that it's not representing the actual reality of things. To make it true to our dilemma at hand, your example should have you posting in a car forum and only then if you never once mentioned your 1967 Mustang or 64 Ranchero can the person 100 years from now rightfully conclude that you never owned them, with the assumption being that it's incredibly unlikely that you wouldn't mention such information. Remember that we're not dealing with mindless data. We're dealing with people who have certain *intentions* and from these intentions we can justifiably expect certain things of them. Like I said, you have to remember that people have intentions. The early Church Fathers (and apologists) obviously wanted to defend the faith. Put yourself in their position, and tell me which books would be your go-to sources to take on such a task? Obviously the eye-witness Gospels, among other things perhaps. The fact that they haven't mentioned them is (1) bizarre and not in line with their intentions and (2) the chances of our records being such that we're missing exactly those people who *did* mention our Gospels is extremely low, because it's a random assortment of extant documents. "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it" ~ Aristotle
(January 14, 2015 at 1:23 am)Drich Wrote: But again with out a complete record to draw from the certainty in which this book makes its assumptions is based of fallacious reasoning. In short 'the car forum' in which the assumptions are made are no where near complete. It's not our problem that the record as it stands looks exactly like a record in which your claims are false, Drich. You can't stuff those claims into every little gap, because "we don't know" is not evidence for your god. The fact that you're pushing to link your argument so closely to ignorance is so very telling.
"YOU take the hard look in the mirror. You are everything that is wrong with this world. The only thing important to you, is you." - ronedee
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