Stormy Waters wrote:To believe this you'd have to be that the Bible is riddled with mistakes. Then what value would it have? How would we know which parts are true, and which parts or false?
I have a top hat and a rock. Would that help?
Stormy Waters wrote:To believe this you'd have to be that the Bible is riddled with mistakes. Then what value would it have? How would we know which parts are true, and which parts or false?
Melchett wrote:I have a top hat and a rock. Would that help?
Hoops wrote:I am absolutely blinded by all this enlightenment.
Hoops wrote:I am absolutely blinded by all this enlightenment.
Aristotle Smith wrote:As a believing Christian I think I have good answers for some of the Old Testament problems. On others I think I have o.k. answers. On the rest I freely admit I have no good answers.
Having said that I really can only say two things.
First, each of these issues is very difficult and needs to be handled on a case by case basis. But, I have yet to see a message board post generate the kind of patient reflection needed to work through the issues.
Second, before one flushes a worldview down a toilet based on problems that worldview certainly has, one has to realize that one has to have a worldview (you can't inhabit what philosophers call "The view from nowhere"). I think most serious thinkers will admit that their preferred worldview will have major problems for which there are no good answers. Having said that, you will find no shortage of people (on this board and elsewhere) who are willing to blithely sweep aside the problems in their own worldview without much thought while not allowing the same privilege to those holding opposing worldviews.
Parley P. Pratt wrote:We must lie to support brother Joseph, it is our duty to do so.
B.R. McConkie, © Intellectual Reserve wrote:There are those who say that revealed religion and organic evolution can be harmonized. This is both false and devilish.
Aristotle Smith wrote:Second, before one flushes a worldview down a toilet based on problems that worldview certainly has, one has to realize that one has to have a worldview (you can't inhabit what philosophers call "The view from nowhere"). I think most serious thinkers will admit that their preferred worldview will have major problems for which there are no good answers. Having said that, you will find no shortage of people (on this board and elsewhere) who are willing to blithely sweep aside the problems in their own worldview without much thought while not allowing the same privilege to those holding opposing worldviews.
Stormy Waters wrote:This is false. One could simply say that they don't know the origin of the world, or have a philosophy on life. Of course that would leave you with nothing to counterattack instead of answering these questions.
Stormy Waters wrote:One could simply say that they don't know the origin of the world, or have a philosophy on life. Of course that would leave you with nothing to counterattack instead of answering these questions.
zeezrom wrote:The people of the Old Testament who acted out the atrocities believed in God, right? They likely felt they had a personal relationship with God. God was real to them. It was God.
People are able to have a personal relationship with God today, so we are left with two possibilities:
1. God is the same and people have changed.
2. People are the same and God is different (possibly even a different being entirely)
We can't jump to conclusions and rule out #2.
Zee.