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Witness/insight claims of the authors of the Bible
#1
Witness/insight claims of the authors of the Bible
I'm curious about the implicit, base claims of the authors of the Bible. I'm not talking about the content... because anyone can write content... but rather the implicit or explicit claims to knowledge that authorship implies. For instance, most if not all books in the Bible are in the form of a third person narrative rather than a first person eye-witness account; and as such appear to implicitly claim 'such and such happened but I wasn't there to see it directly'... eg the story of the Garden of Eden. In the case of the Gospel authors it may be the case that they claim to be eye-witnesses to some of it, but it can't be all unless they were all with Jesus at every moment, which they clearly were not.

1. So from a reductionistic point of view, for each book of the Bible, I'd like to know:
a) who was the author (if it's possible to know)?
b) what was their implicit, or ideally explicit, claim about the source of the information they are relating? (ie eye-witness, second-hand testimony, or from God; and if so in what form? eg 'inspiration', vision, dream etc)

2. And these questions then extend further up the tree to those who compiled the Bible; considering the Bible a compilation, the 'author/s' is/are the compiler/s of that compilation. So again:
a) Who were the author(s) (if it's possible to know... I think it was the Catholics but I'm not sure)
b) what was their implicit, or ideally explicit, claim about the source of inspiration about which books should be included or not? (ie did they claim divine inspiration or not, and if so in what form did it take? intuition, vision, in the case of Catholics, Papal Infallibility etc)
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#2
RE: Witness/insight claims of the authors of the Bible
You're time might be better spent eating shrooms.
Being told you're delusional does not necessarily mean you're mental. 
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#3
RE: Witness/insight claims of the authors of the Bible
(January 12, 2017 at 12:05 pm)mh.brewer Wrote: You're time might be better spent eating shrooms.

Maybe. Never had one though... but always wanted to try Wink

Seriously though, I think it is better for me to look at it from this reductionistic perspective. That's how I think about everything else so why should it not equally be applied to the Bible? In other words deal with the base assumptions/claims first, before moving on to the content... otherwise it's putting the cart before the horse.
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#4
RE: Witness/insight claims of the authors of the Bible
A mind is a terrible thing to waste,.........










unless you do it right.
Being told you're delusional does not necessarily mean you're mental. 
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#5
RE: Witness/insight claims of the authors of the Bible
(January 12, 2017 at 12:12 pm)mh.brewer Wrote: A mind is a terrible thing to waste,.........










unless you do it right.

Big Grin Yeah. But basically I'll always have doubts about all of this, and concentrating on the content seems the wrong approach to dealing with them. Instead better to work from the very root upwards... if the root does not hold water (that's quite a nice pun Wink ) then nothing good can grow from it Wink
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#6
RE: Witness/insight claims of the authors of the Bible
An attribution of genesis is impossible without reference to content.  We can't know the name or names of the people who came up with that gem, the content of the story, however, speaks volumes about them.  The same is true of every book in the bible.  Understanding the content (and I sure as hell don't mean that the way the faithful mean it, lol) is the only way to approach the who and why of the originators.  For another example, the "prophetic" books of the OT are gibberish if we take the content to be an attempt at prophecy in the religious sense.  As social commentary of then-current political realities, or the ideological affiliations of the author, they're immensely informative.

The narratives do hold water, it's just not the water that the religious think they're trucking (nor is it the water that many atheists, responding explicitly to religious claims, are objecting to). /2cents
I am the Infantry. I am my country’s strength in war, her deterrent in peace. I am the heart of the fight… wherever, whenever. I carry America’s faith and honor against her enemies. I am the Queen of Battle. I am what my country expects me to be, the best trained Soldier in the world. In the race for victory, I am swift, determined, and courageous, armed with a fierce will to win. Never will I fail my country’s trust. Always I fight on…through the foe, to the objective, to triumph overall. If necessary, I will fight to my death. By my steadfast courage, I have won more than 200 years of freedom. I yield not to weakness, to hunger, to cowardice, to fatigue, to superior odds, For I am mentally tough, physically strong, and morally straight. I forsake not, my country, my mission, my comrades, my sacred duty. I am relentless. I am always there, now and forever. I AM THE INFANTRY! FOLLOW ME!
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#7
RE: Witness/insight claims of the authors of the Bible
We don't know that they were claiming anything. Any part of it could just have been a story, not meant to be taken literally.

The parts which more closely resemble reality may have been very poor/biased attempts to record the outcome of events, such as battles and such. But I expect the authors of the stupid magic shit parts just made it up, or copied it from other religious stories.
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#8
RE: Witness/insight claims of the authors of the Bible
Read Bart Ehrman's "Jesus Interrupted."  Best source for the bullshit that makes up the fucking NT.
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#9
RE: Witness/insight claims of the authors of the Bible
(January 12, 2017 at 12:00 pm)Emjay Wrote: I'm curious about the implicit, base claims of the authors of the Bible. I'm not talking about the content... because anyone can write content... but rather the implicit or explicit claims to knowledge that authorship implies. For instance, most if not all books in the Bible are in the form of a third person narrative rather than a first person eye-witness account; and as such appear to implicitly claim 'such and such happened but I wasn't there to see it directly'... eg the story of the Garden of Eden. In the case of the Gospel authors it may be the case that they claim to be eye-witnesses to some of it, but it can't be all unless they were all with Jesus at every moment, which they clearly were not.
To that end I would point at the book of revelation. We know moses recorded the pentateuch/the first 5 books of the OT. Which includes Genesis. This means that it is moses who had the third person perspective in Genesis. the next question is how or is there any other biblical precedent that allowed for a 3rd person two view something out of their time and then record it back in their time... The answer is Yes. This very thing happens to John of patmos. an Angel of God took him to see how the world would end. If an angel has the ablity to do this at the end of time, then shouldn't God be able to do the same with Moses? Remember that is who Moses was with those many days on mt. Cyanide while the rest of the jews waited at the foot of the mountain.

Quote:1. So from a reductionistic point of view, for each book of the Bible, I'd like to know:
a) who was the author (if it's possible to know)?
https://www.gotquestions.org/Bible-authors.html

Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy = Moses - 1400 B.C. (prophet)
Joshua = Joshua - 1350 B.C. (appointed leader of the Jews/prophet)
Judges, Ruth, 1 Samuel, 2 Samuel = Samuel/Nathan/Gad - 1000 - 900 B.C. (phophets)
1 Kings, 2 Kings = Jeremiah - 600 B.C.(prophet)
1 Chronicles, 2 Chronicles, Ezra, Nehemiah = Ezra - 450 B.C.(prophet)
Esther = Mordecai - 400 B.C. (ester's uncle and exile of nebcanezzar)/first person
Job = Moses - 1400 B.C.(prophet)
Psalms = several different authors, mostly David - 1000 - 400 B.C. (a collection of preists and kings)
Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Solomon = Solomon - 900 B.C. King of the Jews/prophet
Isaiah = Isaiah - 700 B.C. (prophet)
Jeremiah, Lamentations = Jeremiah - 600 B.C.
Ezekiel = Ezekiel - 550 B.C.
Daniel = Daniel - 550 B.C.
Hosea = Hosea - 750 B.C.
Joel = Joel - 850 B.C.
Amos = Amos - 750 B.C.
Obadiah = Obadiah - 600 B.C.
Jonah = Jonah - 700 B.C.
Micah = Micah - 700 B.C.
Nahum = Nahum - 650 B.C.
Habakkuk = Habakkuk - 600 B.C.
Zephaniah = Zephaniah - 650 B.C.
Haggai = Haggai - 520 B.C.
Zechariah = Zechariah - 500 B.C.
Malachi = Malachi - 430 B.C. the rest are a mixture of prophets and preists (Stand alone prophets and prophets that taught)

Matthew = Matthew - A.D. 55
Mark = John Mark - A.D. 50
Luke = Luke - A.D. 60
John = John - A.D. 90
Acts = Luke - A.D. 65
Romans, 1 Corinthians, 2 Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, 1 Thessalonians, 2 Thessalonians, 1 Timothy, 2 Timothy, Titus, Philemon = Paul - A.D. 50-70
Hebrews = unknown, mostly likely Paul, Luke, Barnabas, or Apollos - A.D. 65
James = James - A.D. 45
1 Peter, 2 Peter = Peter - A.D. 60
1 John, 2 John, 3 John = John - A.D. 90
Jude = Jude - A.D. 60
Revelation = John - A.D. 90

Quote:b) what was their implicit, or ideally explicit, claim about the source of the information they are relating? (ie eye-witness, second-hand testimony, or from God; and if so in what form? eg 'inspiration', vision, dream etc)
Prophets were men in the OT who communed with God directly.

Quote:2. And these questions then extend further up the tree to those who compiled the Bible; considering the Bible a compilation, the 'author/s' is/are the compiler/s of that compilation. So again:
a) Who were the author(s) (if it's possible to know... I think it was the Catholics but I'm not sure)
For the OT it was the Jews. The kept and identified what was canonical and what was not. There are some books like the books of Maccabees that tell of the origins of Hanukkah and the time between the current last book of the OT and the first book of the new. That some sects of Judaism and even some version of Christianity hold as canonical, but on whole do not meet the vetting process the other mainstream books had to pass.

Quote:b) what was their implicit, or ideally explicit, claim about the source of inspiration about which books should be included or not? (ie did they claim divine inspiration or not, and if so in what form did it take? intuition, vision, in the case of Catholics, Papal Infallibility etc)

I'll give you a short answer, and link you to a proper one.

After the first century the church began to splinter as the original twelve had disciples and those disciples had others. In an effort to re consolidate or unify the church under a single teaching or scripture. So the heads of the main stream churches at the time decided to call a big meeting in a little town called nicea around the beginning of the 3rd century. (I think there was like 14 meeting total the last one like 300 years ago or so.) But this first one was to unify the then church under one creed, or mission statment as because again it began to splinter. This is know as the Nicene creed. Remember this creed was issued before the bible was compiled so to some it maybe a little blasphemous. Which is why it has been rewritten several different times to align ourselves with a more accurate reading of scripture.

The second biggest thing to come out of that first meeting was a call to gather ALL writing concerning Jesus. This took decades. The call was not just limited to 'religious writings' but to anything that contained the mentioning of Jesus so it could be sorted and catalogued and preserved. So much of the surviving content written about Jesus from that time religious or secular is still apart of that library, but because the Vatican holds tight lock and key on those books... we may never know what they contain.

So again the church compiles catalogues and stores all writings on Jesus, then they go through it all trying to give us the information need to respond not only to the Gospel but to the relationship offered by God.

Where we know they Got it right is in the fact that no one church is supported completely in it's doctrine by the bible. Even though the R/C church has so tried over thousands of years.
http://www.biblica.com/bible/bible-faqs/...le-chosen/
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#10
RE: Witness/insight claims of the authors of the Bible
They conceptualized the world they inhabited differently than we do.  Magic was very real to them.  Often enough, their explanations of magic sound decidedly like something that we're now much more familiar with - a fact not lost on us, but completely unknown to them.  

My favorite, unrelated to the bible, btw (though not entirely....lol), was the concept of miasma.  We'd call it social unrest.  To them, it was a cloud of tragedy that had a life of it's own, beyond the instigating event and difficult to purge, to hear the tales, attempts to purge it most often made it worse.  A rape happens in a small town (or doesn't, but is thought to have happened).  The residents begin to fear and distrust each other, old grudges are reopened as opportunity presents itself.  Someone gets lynched, the lynching causes the town to break out into rioting, everyone dies.  Someone happens across the remains of the town.....everyone is dead, but they attribute the events to a third party, a war is started to seek vengeance....the cloud moves on to new victims.

It's a cautionary tale, and the backdrop of much divine tragedy (and comedy)...but it's also an early attempt at social science, and it's accurate in important and non-trivial ways, even though it isn't accurate with regards to being a semi-sentient cloud of evil. Bit like accurately describing a whales existence and behaviors, but calling it a fish. Thing is, to the people who came up with miasma, whether it was a semi sentient cloud of evil was beside the point..the stories leave that as a vague "just so" - they were interested in why it happened, to whom, for what...where. They were interested in the behaviors of the whale, not so much whether or not it was a fish.

Today, believers are firmly stuck on whether or not their god really is a fish. That;s all thats left to them,. as it would be all that was left to believers in miasma as they faced modern social sciences.
I am the Infantry. I am my country’s strength in war, her deterrent in peace. I am the heart of the fight… wherever, whenever. I carry America’s faith and honor against her enemies. I am the Queen of Battle. I am what my country expects me to be, the best trained Soldier in the world. In the race for victory, I am swift, determined, and courageous, armed with a fierce will to win. Never will I fail my country’s trust. Always I fight on…through the foe, to the objective, to triumph overall. If necessary, I will fight to my death. By my steadfast courage, I have won more than 200 years of freedom. I yield not to weakness, to hunger, to cowardice, to fatigue, to superior odds, For I am mentally tough, physically strong, and morally straight. I forsake not, my country, my mission, my comrades, my sacred duty. I am relentless. I am always there, now and forever. I AM THE INFANTRY! FOLLOW ME!
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