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The First STW Religion Poll
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JunkyardFree Member
Unless somebody found some golden plates with a new set of Gospels on them?
I think they would be unlikely to be widely accepted by the formal church – See joeseph Smith – i assume who you are referencing- fair point though
Personally I would have to see the golden plates though rather than read of his failure to procure them …I am ever the doubter requiring evidence:wink:
thestabiliserFree MemberNot quite it’s interpretive so it has lead to slightly different interpretations based on dynamic equivalence vs literal translation. It’s symptomatic of the iterative changes to the text that have been the accidental result of interpretation, the deliberate result of interpretation or the deliberate and conscious editing and alterations based on the policy of the holders of the docs at the time. Bit harder now it’s so widespread admittedly but whether it was the proto-jewish religious orders or the early christina church deliberate and material changes, omissions and additions have been made over time.
JunkyardFree Memberthe ideas are evolving over time,
GOD DOES NOT EVOLVE. God was always perfect
Of course they have to try to do this as many of their/the bibles pronouncements are clearly false and many of their moral messages are, to the extent they are ignored by their flock never mind “militants” like me.
yes they are in a bit of a pickle but they cannot “modernise” as god is perfect.
CougarFull MemberHow am I being stubborn?
Stubbornly?
(I’m only teasing, bud)
Cougar said – maybe we could rewrite the bible. Of course, we can’t rewrite it cos it’s a historical document
Is it really?
By “historical” do you mean “historically accurate” or “old”?
miketuallyFree MemberNot quite it’s interpretive so it has lead to slightly different interpretations based on dynamic equivalence vs literal translation. It’s symptomatic of the iterative changes to the text that have been the accidental result of interpretation, the deliberate result of interpretation or the deliberate and conscious editing and alterations based on the policy of the holders of the docs at the time. Bit harder now it’s so widespread admittedly but whether it was the proto-jewish religious orders or the early christina church deliberate and material changes, omissions and additions have been made over time.
Everyone knows that only the King James version is correct, as it’s in 18th century English like Jesus and God spoke, not these wishy washy modern versions.
At one point, I owned The Steet Bible, which had been rewritten in modern street parlance, for the youth. That was amazing.
molgripsFree MemberGOD DOES NOT EVOLVE. God was always perfect
The ideas about what the faithful should do have evolved – not God.
By “historical” do you mean “historically accurate” or “old”?
The latter. It’s an old document, so you can only write a new one not re-write the old one. People will still read the old one if you write a new one, and they will still consider the old one to be the actual one.
thestabiliserFree MemberPerhaps for the creationists/literal believers that might be true but theologians are constantly questioning the meaning of the texts and their representation of ‘Gods will’, I don’t think the majortiy of the abrahmic world sees the texts as the absolute word of god, this is something you’ve decided to believe.
JunkyardFree MemberMight want to read what revelation says on that point.
Point remains evolving the worship is just to move from god – the bible says so- no offence but it does and you would know this if …etc
They cannot evolve either they can just “fall on the stony ground/from the path of righteousness”
When this happens the god of love is a bit wrathful.
molgripsFree Memberthestabilisier – I think you’re right, but Junkyard is clinging to this literalism thing so that he has something he can easily argue against.
thestabiliserFree MemberJY Why? When the evidence to the contrary is the various and numerous interpretations and sects in the abrahamic faiths? (they might be wrong but they’re still there)
Mols – yeah I think our fellow atheists ‘going for the throat’ of the God doesn’t exist/the bible’s full of shit argument all the time misses a lot of the more interesting facets of the debate, it’d be better if they let it breathe, they still might be right at the endpoint but they might learn something about the counter argument in the process
molgripsFree Memberthe bible says so- no offence but it does and you would know this if …etc
It might say it, but the point we’ve been trying to make is that just because it says it in the bible, doesn’t mean everyone has to stick to it.
Then again, if you’re as bad at understanding the bible as you are at understanding our posts, then maybe you haven’t got the point there either 😉
teamhurtmoreFree MemberPerhaps for the creationists/literal believers that might be true but theologians are constantly questioning the meaning of the texts and their representation of ‘Gods will’, I don’t think the majortiy of the abrahmic world sees the texts as the absolute word of god, this is something you’ve decided to believe.
Apparently you can do A levels and even degrees on this. Who would have thought it?
Mol your stamina is to be applauded especially when facing the A-team
Stupid, stubborn, molfacts – you have got off lightly so far 😉
Mols – yeah I think our fellow atheists ‘going for the throat’ of the God doesn’t exist/the bible’s full of shit argument all the time misses a lot of the more interesting facets of the debate, it’d be better if they let it breathe, they still might be right at the endpoint but they might learn something about the counter argument in the process
😀
JunkyardFree MemberI am clinging to the fact I have read it and studies it and know it and clinging to the fact you can be taught.
I am starting to lose my faith in the later
I don’t think the majortiy of the abrahmic world sees the texts as the absolute word of god, this is something you’ve decided to believe.
Well Muslims and Jews say their books are the literal word of god – that is pretty basic stuff [ no offence]- so I think you mean Christians there
Christians did till it started to be shown to be false – the pope was not that keen on a heliocentric world nor on evolution but a few centuries later they got there.This is pretty pointless at least christians know their history and their book.
molgripsFree MemberMol your stamina is to be applauded
🙂
I just don’t like it when people don’t understand what I’m trying to say, and vehemently disagree with something that’s not actually my point!
molgripsFree MemberA 2011 Gallup survey reports, “Three in 10 Americans interpret the Bible literally, saying it is the actual word of God.
So they are in the minority. This presumably applies mostly to Christians although the article does not specify.
JunkyardFree Memberjust because it says it in the bible, doesn’t mean everyone has to stick to it..
😯
Most excellent news well in that case I am abrilliant christiana as I dont stick to any of it and god will still save me from my sins even though i id not follow a **** word of it 🙄
Another excellently well made point from a true scholar of religionTHM does not care what you say he just likes to use anyone arguing/debating with me as way of having digs – later on he will say how he just ignores me if you push him – for he is the forgiving turn the other cheek type of christian jesus implored him to be and he loves his “enemy” as himself.
My mistakes he is ignoring it all so mlly thinks your an awesome christian..keep it up
Ok enough this is futile.thestabiliserFree MemberThe Quran is the writings of the prophet, you may know this but there is some slight controversy between a couple of the larger groups over its content.
Orthodox Jews believe literally however, again, they’re not the only jews.
From da Wiki
The Talmud holds that the Torah was written by Moses, with the exception of the last eight verses of Deuteronomy, describing his death and burial, being written by Joshua.[18] Alternatively, Rashi quotes from the Talmud that “God spoke them, and Moses wrote them with tears.”[19][20] The Mishnah includes the divine origin of the Torah as an essential tenet of Judaism.[21]
The modern scholarly consensus, known as the Documentary hypothesis, is that the Torah has multiple authors and that its composition took place over centuries.[22] This contemporary common hypothesis among biblical scholars states that the first major comprehensive draft of the Pentateuch was composed in the late 7th or the 6th century BC (the Jahwist source), and that this was later expanded by the addition of various narratives and laws (the Priestly source) into a work very like the one existing today.
“The consensus of scholarship is that the stories are taken from four different written sources and that these were brought together over the course of time to form the first five books of the Bible as a composite work. The sources are known as J, the Jahwist source (from the German transliteration of the Hebrew YHWH), E, the Elohist source, P, the priestly source, and D, the Deuteronomist source. … Thus the Pentateuch (or Torah, as it is known by Jews) comprises material taken from six centuries of human history, which has been put together to give a comprehensive picture of the creation of the world and of God’s dealings with his peoples, specifically with the people of Israel.” (Professor John Riches of the University of Glasgow).[23]
molgripsFree MemberJews say their books are the literal word of god
Doing a little reading here that does not seem to be quite the case in such simplistic terms, I will continue to read.
Most excellent news well in that case I am abrilliant christiana as I dont stick to any of it and god will still save me from my sins even though i id not follow a **** word of it
Uh.. really not what I said there Junkyard. Reductio ad absurdum.
And leave out the sarcasm. It’s a really crap way to have a discussion.
molgripsFree MemberAs a rabbi, do I believe that God — the eternal, non-physical, animating and creative energy of everything — actually “wrote” the Bible and gave it to us exactly as we have it? Of course not.
Do I believe that the Bible is a holy, sacred document, and do I believe that it contains words that came from a direct human contact with the Divine? Yes, of course I do.
JunkyardFree Memberyou did say folk did not have to stick to the bible and that is a logical conclusion from what you said. Of course its nonsense but dont blame me for your argument being so terrible.
teamhurtmoreFree MemberI just don’t like it when people don’t understand what I’m trying to say, and vehemently disagree with something that’s not actually my point!
Is this your first religion (bashing) thread mol? 😉
molgripsFree Memberyou did say folk did not have to stick to the bible and that is a logical conclusion from what you said.
If you want to be really specifically nitpicking for the sake of argument, try re-reading *carefully* my post:
but the point we’ve been trying to make is that just because it says it in the bible, doesn’t mean everyone has to stick to it.
So I’ve highlighted those to pronouns to make it clear that I was taking any given point contained within the bible, not the whole thing.
But hey, disregard it all if you want. You can be whatever kind of Christian you want. Some folk will disagree with that, some will be cool with it. You can say what you like, no-one made you Pope.
Anyway – you just ripped into me for talking about Christianity whilst not being one – haven’t you just done the same thing?
SaxonRiderFree MemberChristians did till it started to be shown to be false
This, as I have tried to explain, is simply not accurate. I missed a few pages of this thread, so forgive me if I am not addressing some of what has gone on, but my understanding at this point is that there is still some misunderstanding of what constitutes mainstream Christian hermeneutics.
I can absolutely assure you that the Bible, comprised as it is of up to 78 books in total (depending on who you ask, and how the counting is done), has always been read, and always needs to be read, through different lenses depending on the text.
That is not ‘selective reading’. That is just what ancient scholars did with texts, and it is how the earliest Christian communities knew they had to approach the texts. So for example, here is a scholarly paper on the nature of Alexandrian (neo-Platonic) exegesis.
Finally, I have to say that, from the perspective of the ancient Churches (Catholic and Orthodox), the Bible is second to Apostolic Tradition insofar as it constitutes a record of the Christian Faith as it emerged from the time of Jesus through the first century after.
The very idea of an ‘all-or-nothing’ approach to external perceptions of (at least) the Christian religion is unhelpful.
miketuallyFree Memberthe Bible, comprised as it is of up to 78 books in total (depending on who you ask, and how the counting is done)
You can’t even agree on that! 😉
molgripsFree MemberI can absolutely assure you that the Bible, comprised as it is of up to 78 books in total (depending on who you ask, and how the counting is done), has always been read, and always needs to be read, through different lenses depending on the text.
I read a few articles by Rabbis and they said a similar thing.
D0NKFull Member3 to 5 depending on how grumpy I am. Concept of religion is kind of interesting or it would be if organised religion didn’t meddle in so many people’s lives, then it’s just annoying.
Thanks for the exegesis explanation saxonrider. I do still have issues with the concept tho. Presumably all the reviewers were “of faith” so there would be a lot of pressure, (both outside and an internal compulsion) to make their faith look better, so my cynical side says they would reclassify those bits that are unacceptable by today’s standards as allegorical and keeping as much of the “good stuff” as they think they could get away with in modern society – and do the same again in a few decades time when public opinion shifts and science explains more again.
It’s also annoying while trying to discuss/argue the whole religion thing, as someone said “that’s allegorical/back story and we don’t bother with that anymore” smacks very much of edinburgh defence and just because you don’t believe it there’s plenty out there who seem to. AFAIK most of the “be cool to each other” is NT and all the “thou shalt not”, “I will smite thee”, (odd bit of geno/infanti-cide) is OT. With christians being all about Jesus and NT how come there still so many christian groups attempting to block progressive legislation?
Lots of Xtians are an easy going lot and you ask them what they think about certain issue and they are cool with it, unlike their appointed religious leaders. Now I don’t expect you to have to distance yourself from a lone nutter who does something “in <your> god’s name” but when your religious leader argues for/against something claiming he represents the will of the faithful, therefore arguing “in your name” I damn well expect you to kick up a fuss if you disagree.D0NKFull Memberwhat we can do is write new books talking about its contents. And I think there are quite a few of those already.
it would be nice if they were issued with every bible. Currently bibles can be bought and used to show god’s disapproval of all sorts of stuff – I’d be in trouble merely for my mixed material outfit today – without a “no longer applies” clause for some of the whackier chapters/verses.
Still on re-
writinginterpeting the bible. IME (heavily involved in churchy stuff as a kid) the “this is the word of god” is a mantra trotted out a lot during services/ceremonies. It’s only when you highlight (as I did quite a lot) problems/inaccuracies and question it that you get “well what god meant to say was….”So I’d argue it’s only the cynics and those enthusiasts with a more enquiring mind who get to hear the revisions/reinterpretations. I’m sure there are plenty (possibly those trying to get their kids into the local school) who just turn up go through the motions and only know the mantras.
SaxonRiderFree MemberIn the wake of the Enlightenment, we are no longer trained in rhetoric, and our approach to poetry is more like that represented by the fictional Dr J Evans Pritchard of Dead Poets Society.
That said, when the Church declares ‘The Word of the Lord’ at the end of readings, it is not as if it thinks that somehow God whispered in someone’s ear, and it was then committed to paper.
To say something is ‘the word of the Lord’, from a mainstream Christian point of view, is to say that human beings have had an experience that, having had some relevance to their growth and development as a collective or as individuals, is worthy of being understood as a divine lesson of some sort. But that is a bit clumsy, and poetic expressions always invite a deeper engagement than forensic detail.
MrWoppitFree MemberI just don’t like it when people don’t understand what I’m trying to say, and vehemently disagree with something that’s not actually my point!
Hi! 😀
MrWoppitFree MemberPS: Lots of detailed material about the nuts and bolts and various shades of what religious thought is all about and so on. Exegesis. Hermeneutics. Very salutary.
It’s still looking like a lot of guff about Unicorns and Giant Invisible Penguins to me, though…
slowoldmanFull MemberI want to know what happened to all those old Gods with cool names and bad tempers. The Egyptian, Greek, Roman and Norse ones.
D0NKFull MemberThat said, when the Church declares ‘The Word of the Lord’ at the end of readings, it is not as if it thinks that somehow God whispered in someone’s ear, and it was then committed to paper.
says who? That’s almost exactly what I was lead to believe when I was a church goer.
mogrimFull MemberThe Quran is the writings of the prophet, you may know this but there is some slight controversy between a couple of the larger groups over its content.
AFAIK there isn’t any controversy about the content of the Quran. The controversy is over who exactly is a descendent of Muhammed, and who has a right to guide the community. The book itself is “perfect”.
molgripsFree MemberIt’s also annoying while trying to discuss/argue the whole religion thing, as someone said “that’s allegorical/back story and we don’t bother with that anymore” smacks very much of edinburgh defence
It’s far more complex than that.
Another way to think of it: God communicated somehow with these ancients, and they then wrote down as best they could what they experienced. However human language is inadequate to fully convey what was meant, plus the writings are themselves misinterpreted, translated, edited and taken without crucial context, so literal readings just don’t have value. I don’t see this as such a strange idea? People argue over meaning of text all the time. A bit like here on STW, really. Finnegan’s Wake is the literal word of James Joyce, but people are still debating over what it actually means.
and just because you don’t believe it there’s plenty out there who seem to
A minority though, it would seem.
thestabiliserFree MemberSufis treat it as allegorical and years ago the majority of christians would have said the same about the bible, currently conservative islam is dominant, that wasn’t the case 500 years ago. Things change, texts change, interpretations change.
D0NKFull MemberA minority though, it would seem.
I’d accept “sizeable minority” getting some actual figures would be nigh on impossible I’d have thought.
It’s far more complex than that.
yes I know (now) but IME the wide eyed innocent and the unquestioning seem to get the “this is god’s actual words” message, it’s only once you start kicking up a fuss you get “well, it’s complicated” and yes I had a few it’s complicated discussions at the time
SaxonRiderFree Membersays who? That’s almost exactly what I was lead to believe when I was a church goer.
As in all institutions made up of human beings, there is the Institution, and there is the institution. In other words, there is the thing that is bigger than the sum of its parts, and then there are the parts.
I don’t disbelieve you when you say that it’s what you were led to believe. But doesn’t it stand to reason that a monolith like the Church, which has produced some of the greatest minds and works of art known to humankind, should have a slightly less provincial take on things than a person’s local parish/vicar/Sunday school teacher?
Brandon, Manitoba is a legitimate, if tiny, part of Canada, and one born and raised there will certainly be Canadian. But what Canada is, and what it is to be Canadian is a whole lot bigger than that.
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