Thank You, JAK.
You have addressed near all places in the quoted text which I have "problems" with.
My understanding vs. non-understanding was only a rhetorical device. I think, I
did understand the sentences and expressions
as a grammatical structure. One can assemble sentences which are grammatical correct, meet the requirements of the rules of the language, but make no sense.
Yes, many times, I can not grab the
meaning. But what about meaningless combinations of words?
To list a few:
"God himself was at one time a human being ... who, through obedience to the laws and ordinances of the Gospel"
- Gospel, before the divine God, when that god was a man as we now?
"the eternal laws of the existence"
- Do such things exist? What are they? Who does knew them? Who did define they?
"the fact that God once was mortal"
- Is this a
fact? Can be an
eternal entity
mortal? (If I don't care the mere existence.)
You approached that word combinations from the direction of claim, evidence, conclusion.
I approach them from the direction of sense and meaning - with the same result.
One can talk about a "flying snail".
If it is a snail, it can't fly. If it can fly, it is not of the class Gastropoda.
The "flying snail" is an empty construction of the language. There is nothing to talking about any more.
- Whenever a poet or preacher, chief or wizard spouts gibberish, the human race spends centuries deciphering the message. - Umberto Eco
- To assert that the earth revolves around the sun is as erroneous as to claim that Jesus was not born of a virgin. - Cardinal Bellarmine at the trial of Galilei