« Previous 1 2 3 Next »
» pink101 - No Way, Hosea!
In response to Main Contention posted by BrianTubbs:
.
Brian posts, "...it is YOU who is being anti-intellectual and obstinate.".
.
Come on, Brian. You absolutely know that the question here is not about the existence of a man named Jesus who was crucified; nor is it whether or not the crucifixion was performed. Most people appear to agree that he lived and that he died on a cross to satisfy the Jewish hierarchy that held so much sway with their Roman occupiers.
.
The question is, distinctly, whether or not Jesus was raised from the dead after he died on the cross. It is what you and Migisi have been arguing over.
.
You gave the link to the Craig video in support of your position. And, I am saying that Craig is attempting to pass off the resurrection as common agreement among a majority of scholars.
.
No way, Hosea!
.
A great number of Christians don't even believe that any more. Which brings up my question about where the other side of the debate in which Craig is firing his opening salvo can be seen.
.
Was that Spong?
.
He is a renowned biblical scholar and he doesn't believe that Jesus was resurrected from the dead.
.
-- posted by pink101
»
Brian Tubbs
- My narrow point
Pink, I'm not saying you're anti-intellectual for rejecting the resurrection of Jesus. My very narrow point is that it's anti-intellectual to reject the idea that there is wide consensus on certain facts surrounding the life, ministry, death, and alleged resurrection appearances of Jesus. I'm contending that there are certain facts which have been established to a very high degree of confidence and certainty, and these facts include those offered by Craig in his video.
Now...I'm not saying that the INTERPRETATION of those facts is the same across the board. I'm talking about the facts themselves, such as the crucifixion of Jesus, his burial in the tomb of Joseph of Arimathea, the fact that his women followers were those to first report the empty tomb, and then the fact that many of Jesus' followers (and a few who didn't at first) later claimed to see Jesus alive. THESE facts are widely agreed upon by scholars, and that's the point Craig is making.
p.s. I believe Spong is the guy in the video, yes. And I have been trying to track down the full debate online, so that I could see/hear his arguments. If I'm successful, I will post it here. If you find it, please do so yourself.
» pink101 - Brian's narrow point Pinned Down
In response to My narrow point posted by BrianTubbs:-- posted by pink101
»
Brian Tubbs
- Correspondence View of Truth
Pink, I'm 100% committed to the correspondence view of truth - namely that truth is that which corresponds with reality. I utterly and passionately reject the postmodern extremists, who have called into question the very possibility of holding knowledge or discerning truth. If you have given yourself over to that relativistic view, then we're too far apart for there to be any hope of bridging the gap.
» pink101 - Correspondence View of Truth
In response to Correspondence View of Truth posted by BrianTubbs:
.
I don't see that the gap can be bridged as long as you continue to respond as you do..
.
Before the Enlightenment authority spoke truth into existence. But, with the Enlightenment the cartesian method of discerning truth came to be the accepted route.
.
You appear to be caught up in the idea that all truth emanates from Scripture. The gap between Scripture as the source of all truth and nature is obviously not going to be bridged. It cannot be done. I'm going to continue to doubt that which is not reasonable to accept and, it looks like, you might continue to see the Bible as your source of truth.
.
Is that the gap of which you speak?
.
-- posted by pink101
»
Brian Tubbs
- Continued Misunderstanding
You appear to be caught up in the idea that all truth emanates from Scripture.
I am able to set aside my faith perspective and my view of biblical authority in order to approach a subject academically and at least semi-objectively. I can do that. You obviously don't think I can, but your opinion doesn't determine truth.
As a Christian and pastor, I believe and preach that truth comes from God - and that God inspired the Scriptures. However, as a historian (and I've been discussing the resurrection primarily as a historian), I do NOT approach things that way.
As a historian, I don't say: "The Bible says it. That settles it." I don't say that (when I'm speaking or writing as a scholar or as a historian), and I don't expect others to believe that.
I've made the above point numerous times. Do you understand what I'm saying?
The gap between Scripture as the source of all truth and nature is obviously not going to be bridged.
Again, in THIS PRESENT CONTEXT, I'm not asking you to embrace the Scriptures as the source of "all truth." But I AM saying that the New Testament should be viewed as a set of ancient writings. As such, we should approach it with the recognition that these writings DESERVE to be weighed and evaluated as ANY OTHER DOCUMENT OF ANTIQUITY.
Do you agree? Do you understand what I'm saying?
As a Christian and as a pastor, I believe the Bible to be the Word of God. BUT...as a scholar and as a historian, I am NOT approaching the Bible that way. And I'm not approaching it that way in this discussion. I am asking you to see the Bible as a set of ancient writings and to accord it the same respect that credentialed scholar-historians give to every other document of antiquity.
When you see the New Testament as a set of ancient writings and evaluate it with mainstream scholarly standards, what you will discover is that there ARE facts which can be ascertained from the writings. For example...
We have four ancient documents (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John) that say (among other things) that:
*Jesus was crucified
*His body was buried by Joseph of Arimathea
*Jesus' women followers were the first to discover the tomb empty
Now, Pink, given the common standards of analysis of historical documents, the fact that we have MULTIPLE ATTESTATION (in this case - FOUR documents!) of the above facts is ENOUGH to establish these as historically true!
Where faith comes in is when the ancient documents make supernatural claims (virgin birth, actual resurrection, walking on water, etc.). In those cases, a more critical eye is required - from a historial perspective. But when it comes to basic reporting of events and people, there's no compelling reason for historians to ignore these things.
Do you understand what I'm saying?
» pink101 - Continued Misunderstanding
In response to Continued Misunderstanding posted by BrianTubbs:
.
As a historian, I don't say: "The Bible says it. That settles it." I don't say that (when I'm speaking or writing as a scholar or as a historian), and I don't expect others to believe that.
.
I've made the above point numerous times. Do you understand what I'm saying?
.
I am not sure I understand what you are saying.
.
It does seem that you are saying that the Bible is the source of all truth on the one hand; but, on the other, you are saying something like you can entertain other thoughts even though you will not accept them if they disagree with the Bible.
.
That's a little confusing.
.
.
-- posted by pink101
» Migisi - Continued Misunderstanding
In response to Continued Misunderstanding posted by BrianTubbs:-- posted by Migisi
» pink101 - Offer An Explanation
In response to Continued Misunderstanding posted by Migisi:-- posted by pink101
» pink101 - Offer An Explanation--ERATA
In response to Offer An Explanation posted by pink101:-- posted by pink101
« Previous 1 2 3 Next »
Please follow the guidelines set forth in the Suite101 Posting Etiquette when adding to the discussion.