Res Ipsa, (and pgm 1985)It can be proposed that people are introduced to Jesus through the Bible, find him enough of an inspiration that it leads them to faith and hope in a creator. People find insight in this that can lead to deeper moral reflection, a sense of gratitude and responsibility to people and life that supports them. People can use the Bible to help share mutual expressions of gratitude and responsibility helping to build communities.Res Ipsa wrote: ↑Wed Jul 17, 2024 3:48 pmIf anyone has been able to make the argument without begging the question, I haven’t seen it.Physics Guy wrote: ↑Mon Jul 15, 2024 8:17 pmThe claim that God has asserted the authority of the Bible is a human claim. I can easily add a third principle to my absurd coin-flipping doctrine:
Then I can go around saying, “Hey, I’m not the one asserting the authority of coin-flip morality! No, it’s from God. It says so right there in Principle 3.”
That doesn’t make my three principles actually infallible. They’re still ridiculous. And the same kind of argument doesn’t work any better for the Bible, because it’s an invalid argument.
You can’t dodge the question, “How do you know that God really endorses the Bible?” by saying that the Bible says so and the Bible carries God’s own authority. That’s like me claiming to be king, because I use my authority as king to appoint myself king. It’s just circular.
That this happens to people is real observable facts. People use those facts as a frame of reference to understanding the Bible. The idea that the Bible is inerrant is an interpretation, assumption, some people hold on to. I know of no facts to support the idea. I see the observation that the Bible claiming inerrancy would not show that it is. It may also be observed that the Bible makes no such claim. The one line in Timothy really makes no claim further than I what stated in the first paragraph, the scriptures are good for learning and teaching.
I find myself thinking that it is puzzling to find people looking for exact rules for actions in the Bible and suggesting our moral thinking is flawed and unable to do moral thought. 2000 years of Christian living has shown that we cannot help but think about moral decision with or without the Bible and people are fully capable of mangling distorting and forgetting with or without Bible rules.
Starting way back with Paul it was seen that the Christian view was to use ones mind to make moral decisions based upon caring for others and responsibility not a collection of rules. Paul was quite familiar with these rules but did not see them as the future but a starting point in the past. Christianity has understood that but in time of conflict and confusion there is a tendency to hope old rules will overcome uncertainty. In the years after the reformation movement started that effort led to war and bloodshed not understanding, (well beyond many people recognizing the limits of our understanding)