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Accuracy of the Bible

TheKnight

Guardian of Life
It's one thing to believe is something on an abstract level (like "there is a god", "god is good", "god watches over me", etc...). It's another thing to go beyond that and use the Torah as if it was infallible and claim it as an objective reason for your actions and behaviours.
I don't really see how it is different.

Unrealistic for whom? God? Surely he could think of a way to provide me at least with the same "evidence" he provided to others. I'm not really asking for proof (what you described), I would agree that's unresonable - proof exists only in math and logic. Push the Andromeda Galaxy away from a collision course with Earth - that's a miracle worthy of the title. Extend the life of our Sun by a couple of billion years simply by thinking it. Make Mars habitable by clapping your hands and give us the means to get there. Give us an argument for the existence of an intervening god that has not yet been exploded by philosophers, an argument that would put an end to our doubts. Those are the things I would consider evidence. Not really much work for a god but far beyond a booming voice and a burning bush.
Until any of those things happen, there's no reason to believe that they will.


I don't see how there's a difference, if there is an omniscient god. Those two situation are the same to him. Whether we have a choice or not, our choice was known at the point of creation and indeed - even before that. Even if you can get around the implication of determinism, the point still stands.
That God could have changed the outcome?


No, not really. I disagree with god's gameplan.

Understandable.



Well if you do not think in terms of "why these laws are the way they are", how could you participate in creating them? Or even harder - changing them. If there were no law against slavery, would you be fine with it? And if there were a law
enforcing it, would you not object? It's the law, therefore it's right? I find this almost...well...antisocial.
I would obey the until it was changed. My point only applies to obeying the law. I have no problem considering the why when we go to change the law or when we discuss the application of the law. My point is that when it comes down to obeying the law, we obey (or should anyways) because it is the law. Not because of the reason for the law.

But are the only things that are immoral the things god tells you are immoral? Is it not the case that you find things immoral that god doesn't really touch on in this particular revelation?
Things are only immoral if they are prohibited for us to do. In essence, it can only be immoral if God says that it is. I have not yet found any moral situation that is not addressed in Jewish law.

I don't think our differing views regarding the basis of morality play much role here actually. I really take it as a bit of a cop-out, since I do try and make valid and reasoned points whenever I can and do not feel that I am repeating myself too much. Obviously I understand the implications of accepting my conclusions as valid and I can see why you would want to avoid further discussion on the matter, so I accept the "cease fire", but not without feeling a little smug.
I can see that we have been going over the same thing. I've debated with those of similar opinion to you and it tends to simply go back and forth back and forth. The underlying issue is deeper than the specific topic of our argument. It's a disagreement in fundamental principles and viewpoint.

That can't be right, what exactly are you responsible of then, when you hire someone to kill another person?
The specific crime of hiring someone else to kill another person.

Keep in mind, while the situation came about by chance, you have no way of determining the son's motives. This is an important point, I think. Would you perhaps say that he was responsible if he actually intended his mother to die?
Jewish law does not punish people for thoughts, but for actions. Even if he had intended it, he didn't cause it directly.
 

Commoner

Headache
I don't really see how it is different.

The difference is overwhelming. Just believing in god doesn't really change your behaviour in any specific situation, it may act as a sort of solace at times, a boost at other times. Once you accept a religion, though, your action are no longer your own in a sense. You don't really have an option to analyze each specific situation and come up with the best option. You have only two options - either do what the dogma teaches or abandon the religion (unless you're willing to pretend to agree with it), whereas multiple options actually exist. And what, Knight, is the punishement for apostacy? Slap on the wrist? A "get well soon" card?

Not to mention the death I deserved if I succeeded in convincing you in my arguments, right? Was that not the ultimate straw that broke the camel's back when it comes to the Midianites - the thing that led to their extermination? Theh "wrong" religion, in essence, was their sin, was it not? Not unlike some other events in recent hystory, I would say.

Each decision you make is conditioned by numerous threats. From earthly punishements of being stoned to death to punishements even in the afterlife. Any objectivity has far since been lost once you have allowed for your views to be made permanent, to be fixated.

Until any of those things happen, there's no reason to believe that they will.

I would just go a couple of words less and say: "Until that happens, there's no reason to believe".

That God could have changed the outcome?

No, that god really chose the outcome - perhaps not the specific decisions of individuals, but he did chose the type of outcome. It's not that he could have changed it, it's that he could have not chosen it in the first place.

I would obey the until it was changed. My point only applies to obeying the law. I have no problem considering the why when we go to change the law or when we discuss the application of the law. My point is that when it comes down to obeying
the law, we obey (or should anyways) because it is the law. Not because of the reason for the law.

See - right there, that's the danger. It's not "reason" that guides you, it's dogma - one or the other. How is this not "might makes right"?

Things are only immoral if they are prohibited for us to do. In essence, it can only be immoral if God says that it is. I have not yet found any moral situation that is not addressed in Jewish law.

How could you, you would simply claim that the action was moral since it was not covered in the "wrong1-5" section. And that's exactly what you did with the example I presented you with. You did not consider the implications of the action on the character of the individual, nor could you really draw parallels to the principles that exist in law to assess a "one of the kind" situation. Unless the law addresses it directly, it's not wrong - yet to any person unconstraint by such dogma, the situation is clear.

The specific crime of hiring someone else to kill another person.

Yes. And what exactly is hiring someone? Must it include paying money? Or do "strangers on a train" count? One way or the other, you'll have to broaden the scope of what is considered "hiring to kill" in order to have an effective law. And you will necessarily have to consider situations in which there is no actual "hiring" in the strictest sense.

Jewish law does not punish people for thoughts, but for actions. Even if he had intended it, he didn't cause it directly.

Then there would be no difference between killing someone by accident or killing someone on purpose. If intentionality plays no role, the actions are equal. And that's just insane.
 
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Dirty Penguin

Master Of Ceremony
Your theology is a bit skewed. Whether Adam sinned or not is irrelevant to Christ's atonement for your sin.


I don't see how. Paul directly linked your christ with the supposed sin of a being who he believed was a literal person.

Roman 5:14
Nevertheless death reigned from Adam to Moses, even over them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adam's transgression, who is the figure of him that was to come.

and again in 1Corinthians;

1Corinthians 15:22
For as in Adam all die, even so in the Messiah shall all be made alive.

The very few times Adam is mentioned of leads us to one conclusion and that is the writers of the Old Testament and New Testament scriptures and letters believed he was a real man. NOWHERE in the bible is Adam taught to the people, or mentioned as an allegorical figure.

See: 1Timothy 2:14, Jude 1:14

So if the man "Adam" was not a real person rather an allegorical figure then "sin" was non existent. But we know, from your scriptures, he did exist. He was a real person. This was the belief of the people. The genealogy given throughout the "whole" bible concludes that the man was a real person. If today's interpretation is that he was an allegorical figure then Christianity and what it preaches is in question and starts to look more and more like a cult....
 
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TheKnight

Guardian of Life
You don't really have an option to analyze each specific situation and come up with the best option.
How exactly did you reach that conclusion?

Not to mention the death I deserved if I succeeded in convincing you in my arguments, right? Was that not the ultimate straw that broke the camel's back when it comes to the Midianites - the thing that led to their extermination? Theh "wrong" religion, in essence, was their sin, was it not? Not unlike some other events in recent hystory, I would say.
They were ordered to be wiped out because they knew that what they were doing was wrong. They not only seduced the Israelites into idolatry, but they seduced them physically as well.

Each decision you make is conditioned by numerous threats. From earthly punishements of being stoned to death to punishements even in the afterlife. Any objectivity has far since been lost once you have allowed for your views to be made permanent, to be fixated.
*sighs* Is that really how you view my religion? Because I don't see it that way. I don't know of anyone who believes in Judaism that does.

No, that god really chose the outcome - perhaps not the specific decisions of individuals, but he did chose the type of outcome. It's not that he could have changed it, it's that he could have not chosen it in the first place.
Not chosen what? The outcome?


See - right there, that's the danger. It's not "reason" that guides you, it's dogma - one or the other. How is this not "might makes right"?
It's a shame that you think I'm an idiot. To say it isn't reason is to say that you don't understand the thought process behind it.

But then, I wouldn't expect you to. After all, you don't believe/agree in/with it.



How could you, you would simply claim that the action was moral since it was not covered in the "wrong1-5" section. And that's exactly what you did with the example I presented you with. You did not consider the implications of the action on the character of the individual, nor could you really draw parallels to the principles that exist in law to assess a "one of the kind" situation. Unless the law addresses it directly, it's not wrong - yet to any person unconstraint by such dogma, the situation is clear.
What?


Yes. And what exactly is hiring someone? Must it include paying money? Or do "strangers on a train" count? One way or the other, you'll have to broaden the scope of what is considered "hiring to kill" in order to have an effective law. And you will necessarily have to consider situations in which there is no actual "hiring" in the strictest sense.
"Hiring to kill" meaning to pay money, goods, or something of value to another person in order to have them bring about the death of a human being.

Then there would be no difference between killing someone by accident or killing someone on purpose. If intentionality plays no role, the actions are equal. And that's just insane.

I said that it doesn't punish people for thoughts. I didn't say that it doesn't consider the thoughts whatsoever. If I hate you and want you to die, there is nothing a Jewish court could do to punish me. However, if I directly caused your death, then I would be responsible. The difference between an accidental and a purposeful killing have to do with intent. My specific statement was addressed to your wondering about the son's intentions. It wouldn't matter because the son didn't kill the mom, whether he intended for her to die or not. He had no part in her death.
 

Pure-Truth

Member
Most of the Bible is about Recollections in one form or another.
Some of these are recollections of teachings, others of historical events, others of Jewish laws and still others are of ancient Myths, and a few are about prophecies.
The writers were relying on their memory, and all memories are fallible.
The fact that the Bible is not exactly factual, in no way damages its usefulness for teaching moral and religious truths.

Faith is not about believing in the accuracy of a Bible, It is about Faith in God and following the teachings of Jesus. In this the Bible is a source document, but not the only source of Faith.
So the word of god in fact then is not the word of god,YES!?

Its a shame no matter how we answer that, it has us in a massive delema..

As we cant have fiction and the fictitious gawd referenced as being fact..

2~Duh~Loo!

Pete..
 

Pure-Truth

Member
The way that I know God is from the Bible. Take it away or call it full of errors and what do I believe about God? Which god am I praying to?
A Fictitious one
See my faith is God gave us the Bible and that is how I know him and how I know how to get saved. Yes if the Bible is wrong, my faith is shaken.
Consider how could a gawd get physics so wrong, unless it is fictitious?

you want to know where the fiction begins?
well first consider what the length of a day does to a body of H2O, and consider what we should refer to it as if a body of H2O has not seen the light of day.. let me help here and imply "ICE"

Now open up your bible and read Genesis chapter one verse one through to verse three.. and tell me what should have been written for all man to read about claimed creation?
If the Bible is wrong, did Jesus raise from the dead?
No, unless it is fictitious
Do I need to be born again?
No
Did God create the world?
see my previous response - having the bibles gawd fictitious, and fictitious gawds really cant do anything factual
Did Jesus die for my sins?
No fictitious inferences cant do anything real
See if the Bible is in error my whole faith is in vain.
I see,
what a Dilemma you must have been in, on discovering that the bible is nothing but a collection of fairy-tales and fictitious gawds, angels, demons, magic, miracles oh!? and those pesky spirits that violate their very own physics that is suppose to have them being possible!..

Still better late than never when it comes to facing the truth as it really is, rather than continuing on in the liberal servings and or lashings of self deception..

whats the bet everything is so much clearer now that there is no need for anymore self deception, am I right?

Oh and welcome to the Real reality..

Cheers,

Pete..
 

Commoner

Headache
How exactly did you reach that conclusion?

You simply don't have an option to accept as true eventualities not contigent on the tenets of your religion (or rather those that contradict them) without violating your belief system. It's really a "take it all" or "leave it all" proposition. You can't look at a single commandment, for instance, and claim it as unresonable, without abandoning the basic assumptions your religion relies upon. Sure, in practice you could probably rationalize it and still get away with holding on to the other parts of your religion. But that would make you quite disingenuous, if you were to go on claiming that the Torah is infallible and that that "fact" can be used as an objective reason by itself.

They were ordered to be wiped out because they knew that what they were doing was wrong. They not only seduced the Israelites into idolatry, but they seduced them physically as well.

That doesn't raise an eyebrow for you? "Pure" jewish men were seduced by attractive girls of a different faith? And they should be put to death? And their families, their people? See, this is one of those passages I think you'd have to rationalize to high heaven in order to keep from being overwhelmed by shame over the fact that you once claimed this as the basis of your morality.

*sighs* Is that really how you view my religion? Because I don't see it that way. I don't know of anyone who believes in Judaism that does.

These are facts as stated in the Bible. The only reason we can get away with apostasy without getting stoned to death by what will have been our former buddies is that neither of us live in a theocracy, where god's laws could be enforced by man directly. But don't tell me you wouldn't be risking your life if you turned away from god, not when you claim to hold the Torah as truth.

Not chosen what? The outcome?

I thought I'd explained this in considerable detail. He could have not chosen to create the kind of structure, "architecture" that type of events. Where decisions of individuals could culminate and resonate is such a way that god himself would have to come "down town" and command genocide. Not a good design for an omnipotent god - it's so unstable he has to call the cosmic tech support? Come on now, seriously. :(

It's a shame that you think I'm an idiot. To say it isn't reason is to say that you don't understand the thought process behind it.

I don't think you're an idiot, but I do think some of your ideas are irrational. I think we've already established that your religion would have you act without an objective reason - that religion itself is "reason enough". I don't know if you actually act in such a way or believe the things you claim to believe and I don't have to - I have no choice but to regard your claims as true. And in light of those I form my opinions.

Anyway, my response was prompted by your statement that: " ...when it comes down to obeying the law, we obey (or should anyways) because it is the law. Not because of the reason for the law."

But then, I wouldn't expect you to. After all, you don't believe/agree in/with it.

Au contraire. I think we agree on most things, it's just that we're discussing some topics on which we have different opinions. I'm pretty sure I'm able to understand most rational arguments and I'm not certain that your implication of bias is applicable. It's not that I don't find it resonable because I don't share your faith, it's that I don't share your faith because I don't find it resonable. That doesn't mean I'm not willing to agree with anything you say or with anything your religion teaches.


What exactly is unclear about my statement?

"Hiring to kill" meaning to pay money, goods, or something of value to another person in order to have them bring about the death of a human being.

And how do you judge what is "of value"? Is it based on what the person you are hiring considers to be "of value" or is there another standard you would use?

I said that it doesn't punish people for thoughts. I didn't say that it doesn't consider the thoughts whatsoever. If I hate you and want you to die, there is nothing a Jewish court could do to punish me. However, if I directly caused your death, then I would be responsible. The difference between an accidental and a purposeful killing have to do with intent.

I agree.

My specific statement was addressed to your wondering about the son's intentions. It wouldn't matter because the son didn't kill the mom, whether he intended for her to die or not. He had no part in her death.

See, I don't get this part. How could you argue he did not act with the intent to have his mother killed? When you hire someone to kill another person you intentionally act in such a way that will cause that person to kill someone. I just fail to see the difference, other than the semantics of "what will cause the person to kill".
 
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TheKnight

Guardian of Life
You simply don't have an option to accept as true eventualities not contigent on the tenets of your religion (or rather those that contradict them) without violating your belief system. It's really a "take it all" or "leave it all" proposition. You can't look at a single commandment, for instance, and claim it as unresonable, without abandoning the basic assumptions your religion relies upon. Sure, in practice you could probably rationalize it and still get away with holding on to the other parts of your religion. But that would make you quite disingenuous, if you were to go on claiming that the Torah is infallible and that that "fact" can be used as an objective reason by itself.
I suppose that's true.


That doesn't raise an eyebrow for you? "Pure" jewish men were seduced by attractive girls of a different faith? And they should be put to death? And their families, their people? See, this is one of those passages I think you'd have to rationalize to high heaven in order to keep from being overwhelmed by shame over the fact that you once claimed this as the basis of your morality.
I think that part of your shock is that you limit yourself to just the Torah. You look at this passage as if I am a Christian (not intentionally I'm sure, and I don't blame you. Everyone does it) and that I abide by "Sola Scriptura" whereas I look at this passage from the perspective of the Jewish tradition. In that sense, the written Torah (IE the 5 books of Moses) is like the outline to a lecture. The Jewish tradition as a whole embodies the message and meat of the lecture.

So, all you see is "Jewish men being seduced by women of a different faith and the women put to death for it." There's a lot more to it than that. There's a lot more to everything in the Torah than the simple reading of it.


These are facts as stated in the Bible. The only reason we can get away with apostasy without getting stoned to death by what will have been our former buddies is that neither of us live in a theocracy, where god's laws could be enforced by man directly. But don't tell me you wouldn't be risking your life if you turned away from god, not when you claim to hold the Torah as truth.
It's nearly impossible to stone someone in Jewish law. Reading "If person A does X, person A must be stoned to death" is a lot like taking a penal code and reading "Extortion is punishable by not more than 2 years in jail." In essence, you're reading the law and the punishment (possible punishment I should say) and assuming that everyone who breaks the law receives that punishment.

That's entirely not true. People cannot be executed in Jewish law without a trial. An execution cannot occur unless certain conditions are met...conditions which are virtually impossible to satisfy (such as the person must be warned that what they are doing is a crime by not one but at least two people. After being warned of what they are doing and the repercussions, they must still choose to disobey the law knowing that it is wrong to do so.).



I thought I'd explained this in considerable detail. He could have not chosen to create the kind of structure, "architecture" that type of events. Where decisions of individuals could culminate and resonate is such a way that god himself would have to come "down town" and command genocide. Not a good design for an omnipotent god - it's so unstable he has to call the cosmic tech support? Come on now, seriously. :(
The only reason it is designed that way is because this way is the way that is optimal for the outcome that God desires (the Messianic Age).


I don't think you're an idiot, but I do think some of your ideas are irrational. I think we've already established that your religion would have you act without an objective reason - that religion itself is "reason enough". I don't know if you actually act in such a way or believe the things you claim to believe and I don't have to - I have no choice but to regard your claims as true. And in light of those I form my opinions.

Anyway, my response was prompted by your statement that: " ...when it comes down to obeying the law, we obey (or should anyways) because it is the law. Not because of the reason for the law."
I believe that such, in itself, is reasonable. It is reasonable to obey the law regardless of the reason. For instance, the purpose of a stop sign is to protect motorists from accidents at intersections without lights. Does that mean that if you're driving and can tell that there is no one coming it is OK to run the stop sign? No, it doesn't. It's still against the law to run the stop sign.

That's my point. We obey laws because they are the law. We makes laws for certain reasons, but after they are made we obey them because they are the law. If we obeyed laws for their reasons, then we would disobey them when the reason does not apply and that's not acceptable.


Au contraire. I think we agree on most things, it's just that we're discussing some topics on which we have different opinions. I'm pretty sure I'm able to understand most rational arguments and I'm not certain that your implication of bias is applicable. It's not that I don't find it resonable because I don't share your faith, it's that I don't share your faith because I don't find it resonable. That doesn't mean I'm not willing to agree with anything you say or with anything your religion teaches.
Indeed. That is what I meant. Obviously it isn't reasonable to you. Otherwise you'd believe it. Just like obviously your position isn't reasonable to me, otherwise I'd be in your position.


What exactly is unclear about my statement?
I don't really see how your question of "how could you" applies to "I have not found any moral situation that is not addressed by Jewish law".

The majority of Jewish law is not specific "X is wrong, don't do it." The majority of it is concepts that are applicable to various situations. Hence, you have in the Torah all these story-like descriptions of law.

For instance, "If you see your brother's donkey or his ox fallen on the road, do not ignore it. Help him get it to its feet." (Deut 22:4)

This law is a conceptual law. It could mean and apply to a number of situations. In essence, it means that if you know someone who needs help with something they are trying to do and you have the means to help them, help them.

Most of Jewish law is like that, which is why there are so many different opinions on what to do in certain situations.


And how do you judge what is "of value"? Is it based on what the person you are hiring considers to be "of value" or is there another standard you would use?
You would have to prove that the person who is being hired would alter their normal pattern of behavior in order to get that thing. For instance, they will work really hard to earn more money to go buy it. "Value" would mean something that the person desires and would do something to get. It can't be something that they normally get (like food) because then you'd have to show that the employer's giving of the food to the hiree caused the hiree to kill the person.


See, I don't get this part. How could you argue he did not act with the intent to have his mother killed? When you hire someone to kill another person you intentionally act in such a way that will cause that person to kill someone. I just fail to see the difference, other than the semantics of "what will cause the person to kill".

I suppose that halakhically there could be other opinions. But from my perspective, the son is not responsible for her death. He may be responsible for some other crime, but it isn't murder. My objection to your argument is that you believe that the son would be just as guilty as the father. I am willing to admit that they might both be guilty, but the son would not be just as guilty as the father. After all, he didn't do as much.

And, to somewhat go back on topic, the fact that God knew before hand and let it happen anyways only proves that God is responsible (if it is true). However, that doesn't mean anything. We already know and believe that God is the cause of everything that happens (either directly or indirectly).
 

sandy whitelinger

Veteran Member
I don't see how. Paul directly linked your christ with the supposed sin of a being who he believed was a literal person.

Roman 5:14
Nevertheless death reigned from Adam to Moses, even over them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adam's transgression, who is the figure of him that was to come.

and again in 1Corinthians;

1Corinthians 15:22
For as in Adam all die, even so in the Messiah shall all be made alive.

The very few times Adam is mentioned of leads us to one conclusion and that is the writers of the Old Testament and New Testament scriptures and letters believed he was a real man. NOWHERE in the bible is Adam taught to the people, or mentioned as an allegorical figure.

See: 1Timothy 2:14, Jude 1:14

So if the man "Adam" was not a real person rather an allegorical figure then "sin" was non existent. But we know, from your scriptures, he did exist. He was a real person. This was the belief of the people. The genealogy given throughout the "whole" bible concludes that the man was a real person. If today's interpretation is that he was an allegorical figure then Christianity and what it preaches is in question and starts to look more and more like a cult....
That someone else may have sinned does nothing to your state caused by your sin.
 

Pure-Truth

Member
You lost me.
Hows that possible?
As here you are reading my Post?

OK let me dumb things down..

Think about the north or south Pole..

And make believe you are there, lets have you pour some water into a deep empty bucket and then you place it outside in the dark for 22 hours..

After 22 hours bring the deep bucket inside and describe its contents..

I will have you being more accurate and closer to facts than the claimed biblical creator ever could, if you indeed refer to the contents of that deep bucket as a "body of ice in a deep bucket" rather than "waters of the deep bucket"..

What I am getting at is - Our sun is our planets source of day light, and without daylight or more accurately "Electromagnetic waves" a body of water simply is impossible!. And had a body of water been possible, via our planet radiating electromagnetic waves AKA "Light" then on the introduction of more electromagnetic waves AKA "Light" a body of water as it exists now simply would not be possible.. seriously think about it, what would happen to a body of water if the temperature increased significantly by the introduction of another star with the same amount of energy..

Have you caught the higher reasoning train?

If you have, welcome to a higher level of reasoning, reasoning that is based on facts rather than fiction, its much more powerful than the writers of the bible from over 2000 years or so ago claiming to be under the guidance of some fictitious god that they invented..

2~Duh~Loo!

Pete..
 

Dirty Penguin

Master Of Ceremony
That someone else may have sinned does nothing to your state caused by your sin.


That's not what your bible teaches nor is it something that the churches are teaching. Every denomination I know of teaches that Jesus died for your sins. Paul taught that the first sin (original sin) started with Adam. But now we're told there was no such person (Adam)....rather he and his supposed history is fictitious. Can't have it both ways. No Adam, no original sin, no doomed mankind needing a savior.
 

Commoner

Headache
I think that part of your shock is that you limit yourself to just the Torah. You look at this passage as if I am a Christian (not intentionally I'm sure, and I don't blame you. Everyone does it) and that I abide by "Sola Scriptura" whereas I look at this passage from the perspective of the Jewish tradition....
...So, all you see is "Jewish men being seduced by women of a different faith and the women put to death for it." There's a lot more to it than that. There's a lot more to everything in the Torah than the simple reading of it.

I'm glad to see at least an attempt at what I perceive as a rationalization. The truth is, I look at the scripture as I look at anything else, not as if I were a Christian or a Jew or a Muslim. Furthermore, the Chatolic church also has its "sacred tradition" and does not consider the Bible to be the only infallible authority. But surely, even in your view, the Bible is the highest authority and everything else (including tradition) comes second.

Perhaps you could argue that the story in the bible is not "the whole story", some believers will even argue that the passages are not accounts of historical events but rather only meant as moral lessons, parables. I would guess you fall into the first category - that the passages in the Bible must be explained by other sources, "enhanced" and added to in order to be understood properly.

For me, the difference is not really that relevent in determining the "value" of the lesson, either in looking at it as a historical event or as a parable. In both cases I am left with the conclusion that there is nothing moral about it. That no amount of "explaining" or "softening" will make genocide compatible with the notions of morality, mercy and justice - the attributes you ascribe to god, the supposed author of these "lesson". And this is just one in a long series of atrocities god commands. By any standard, the character described in the OT should be in Hague answering for his crimes against humanity.

And from a more practical standpoint, if the Bible is not clear enough to be understood without assistance, I'm faced with two nagging questions:

1. Why not?
2. In what way can it then be considered infallible?

It's nearly impossible to stone someone in Jewish law...

And does this not prove my position to a degree?

It's very clear what god expect us to do, clear what he finds "just":

"And he should go and worship other gods and bow down to them or to the sun or the moon or all the army of the heavens, .....and you must stone such one with stones and such one must die."

"...Show him no pity. Do not spare him or shield him. You must certainly put him to death. Your hand must be the first in putting him to death, and then the hands of all the people."

There is not a lot of room for interpretation here. Yet we twist the law in such a way that it makes it almost impossible for someone to be punished - to do as god deems fit. Does this not prove how despicable we find such actions and how immoral (amoral) the character described in the OT really is?

But this is not the only punishement you need to worry about, is it? Don't forget about god's punishement. Don't even try to pretend there are no consequences for the "sin" of skepticism.

The only reason it is designed that way is because this way is the way that is optimal for the outcome that God desires (the Messianic Age).

Bingo! Well, took some time, but we got there eventually. Disregarding the absurdity and egocentricity of "God's final solution", here are the problems with that:

1. There is no "optimal" with god. Optimal strategies only exist when limitations exist - and for your Omnimax there is no such thing.

2. Since there are no limits to what he can do, he could have chosen from an infinite subset of equally sufficient strategies (in other words, he could have chosen anything he wanted). Clearly the one he chose is not compatible with our ideal of "good" as he has chosen a path of violence and vengefulness.

Either he is not omnipotent, or he is not fit to be a "moral authority".

I believe that such, in itself, is reasonable. It is reasonable to obey the law regardless of the reason. For instance, the purpose of a stop sign is to protect motorists from accidents at intersections without lights. Does that mean that if you're driving and can tell that there is no one coming it is OK to run the stop sign? No, it doesn't. It's still against the law to run the stop sign.

That's not what I was saying at all. I agree with you - we cannot arbitrarily choose when to stop at a stop sign and when not to. It's interesting that you mentioned the purpose (one of them) for this particular law, because that is at the crux of the issue. If the purpose of the law were something more sinister (for instance, "floor it at the stop sign so you can hit as many motorists as you can), one could legitimately object to that and not follow the law - that would be the ethical thing to do. This is a completely separate issue than choosing in which situation to follow a particular law and in which situations to disobey it. This is about deciding which law is resonable and which goes completely against all our principles - like slavery.

That's my point. We obey laws because they are the law. We makes laws for certain reasons, but after they are made we obey them because they are the law. If we obeyed laws for their reasons, then we would disobey them when the reason does not apply and that's not acceptable.

No, again - it's important to look at the reason the law was created, not in order to decide in which situations those reasons are applicable and pick and choose when you obey the law and when you don't, but to judge whether the law is resonable at all. Once you establish it as resonable (or at least not something completely unresonable), you follow it each and every time (there are some exceptions in emergencies, etc...).

I don't really see how your question of "how could you" applies to "I have not found any moral situation that is not addressed by Jewish law". The majority of Jewish law is not specific "X is wrong, don't do it." The majority of it is concepts that are applicable to various situations. Hence, you have in the Torah all these story-like descriptions of law. For instance, "If you see your brother's donkey or his ox fallen on the road, do not ignore it. Help him get it to its feet." (Deut 22:4) This law is a conceptual law. It could mean and apply to a number of situations. In essence, it means that if you know someone who needs help with something they are trying to do and you have the means to help them, help them. Most of Jewish law is like that, which is why there are so many different opinions on what to do in certain situations.

Still, if you were not able to find a comparable situation which you could apply the example to, you could not argue it was wrong, you would simply have to accept the stance that it was right. To say that you have not found a situation which you could not decide on using this principle is a truism - of course not, once you except the stance that what is mentioned as "wrong" is wrong and everything else is right, you're pretty much covered on both ends.

You would have to prove that the person who is being hired would alter their normal pattern of behavior in order to get that thing. For instance, they will work really hard to earn more money to go buy it. "Value" would mean something that the person desires and would do something to get. It can't be something that they normally get (like food) because then you'd have to show that the employer's giving of the food to the hiree caused the hiree to kill the person.

So basically it is whatever the person you're hiring decides is valuable. I mean, I don't know what "proof" has to do with it, that's another matter. Just because you can't prove something in a court doesn't make it right, right?

I suppose that halakhically there could be other opinions. But from my perspective, the son is not responsible for her death. He may be responsible for some other crime, but it isn't murder. My objection to your argument is that you believe that the son would be just as guilty as the father. I am willing to admit that they might both be guilty, but the son would not be just as guilty as the father. After all, he didn't do as much.

Well, you see, you look at it from a perspective of the law. I do as well, but I also look at it from a personal perspective. What if I were in that position - if I knew which action would provoke which response, what kind of an effect each action would have.
And when I consider it in such a manner, the only way I could imagine eating that hamburger would be if I had intended for my mother to die. I would hold myself wholly responsible for her death - I would consider myself a murderer. And by that token, I would consider anyone in the same situation a murderer.

And, to somewhat go back on topic, the fact that God knew before hand and let it happen anyways only proves that God is responsible (if it is true). However, that doesn't mean anything. We already know and believe that God is the cause of everything that happens (either directly or indirectly).

Yes, and many of the attributes you claim god has are incompatible with that realization. It makes him into an amoral (or even immoral) tyrant, not a benevolent and beneficent character.
 

TheKnight

Guardian of Life
I'm glad to see at least an attempt at what I perceive as a rationalization. The truth is, I look at the scripture as I look at anything else, not as if I were a Christian or a Jew or a Muslim. Furthermore, the Chatolic church also has its "sacred tradition" and does not consider the Bible to be the only infallible authority. But surely, even in your view, the Bible is the highest authority and everything else (including tradition) comes second.
Wrong. The Bible is equal to the tradition. In fact, to have one without the other is to be unable to properly understand halakha.

I believe that God gave the tradition alongside the Torah at Sinai. In essence, God told Moses what to write (IE the notes of the lecture) and He also told Moses the meat and body of what is to be done (IE the oral tradition).

Perhaps you could argue that the story in the bible is not "the whole story", some believers will even argue that the passages are not accounts of historical events but rather only meant as moral lessons, parables. I would guess you fall into the first category - that the passages in the Bible must be explained by other sources, "enhanced" and added to in order to be understood properly.

For me, the difference is not really that relevent in determining the "value" of the lesson, either in looking at it as a historical event or as a parable. In both cases I am left with the conclusion that there is nothing moral about it. That no amount of "explaining" or "softening" will make genocide compatible with the notions of morality, mercy and justice - the attributes you ascribe to god, the supposed author of these "lesson". And this is just one in a long series of atrocities god commands. By any standard, the character described in the OT should be in Hague answering for his crimes against humanity.
You judge the Bible by a particular standard. I define my standards by the Bible. That is the difference between you and I.

And from a more practical standpoint, if the Bible is not clear enough to be understood without assistance, I'm faced with two nagging questions:

1. Why not?
2. In what way can it then be considered infallible?
1. Why not? Because the Torah is meant to be lived, not studied for personal pleasure. One learns the Torah from a teacher. One who learned from his teacher who learned from his teacher all the way back to Sinai. That's the point. It's not supposed to be something that the casual onlooker can look at and say "That's neat, I want to do that for fun."

In essence, it's a way of ensuring that those who follow it are doing so seriously and appropriately.

2. This notion of infallibility, I'm not sure where you get it. I believe that the Bible is true. And I also believe that it is infallible only when considered with the rest of the tradition. If you have the notes to a lecture, you will not understand the concepts being conveyed unless you attended the lecture. It is the same with the Bible and the Oral tradition.


And does this not prove my position to a degree?

It's very clear what god expect us to do, clear what he finds "just":

"And he should go and worship other gods and bow down to them or to the sun or the moon or all the army of the heavens, .....and you must stone such one with stones and such one must die."

"...Show him no pity. Do not spare him or shield him. You must certainly put him to death. Your hand must be the first in putting him to death, and then the hands of all the people."

There is not a lot of room for interpretation here. Yet we twist the law in such a way that it makes it almost impossible for someone to be punished - to do as god deems fit. Does this not prove how despicable we find such actions and how immoral (amoral) the character described in the OT really is?

But this is not the only punishement you need to worry about, is it? Don't forget about god's punishement. Don't even try to pretend there are no consequences for the "sin" of skepticism.
No, it doesn't really prove anything. As I said, it only says the punishment for a particular crime. There is sufficient evidence within the written Torah itself which proves that an Oral tradition is necessary.

Besides, God Himself says in Deut 17 is the judicial protection clause of the Torah. It says, "Thou shalt not sacrifice unto the LORD thy God an ox, or a sheep, wherein is a blemish, even any evil thing; for that is an abomination unto the LORD thy God. If there be found in the midst of thee, within any of thy gates which the LORD thy God giveth thee, man or woman, that doeth that which is evil in the sight of the LORD thy God, in transgressing His covenant, and hath gone and served other gods, and worshipped them, or the sun, or the moon, or any of the host of heaven, which I have commanded not; and it be told thee, and thou hear it, then shalt thou inquire diligently, and, behold, if it be true, and the thing certain, that such abomination is wrought in Israel; then shalt thou bring forth that man or that woman, who have done this evil thing, unto thy gates, even the man or the woman; and thou shalt stone them with stones, that they die. At the mouth of two witnesses, or three witnesses, shall he that is to die be put to death; at the mouth of one witness he shall not be put to death. The hand of the witnesses shall be first upon him to put him to death, and afterward the hand of all the people. So thou shalt put away the evil from the midst of thee.


What does this verse contain?

1. It shows that if someone is accused of a crime, we should inquire diligently. In essence, we must make an investigation into the crime.

2. He must be put to death by witnesses (presumably in a trial) and not by just one witness, but by two.

3. The witness must be the first to stone him. In essence, the witness must be absolutely sure that the person committed the crime, and the witness must believe that it is OK for the person to be stoned. If the witness refuses to stone the person, then the person is not executed.

The Torah does not command us to barbarism. It's laws provide a judicial structure for the operation of a society. Surely you don't believe that the ancient Jews were a culture of people that went around stoning one another for suspected sins.

Bingo! Well, took some time, but we got there eventually. Disregarding the absurdity and egocentricity of "God's final solution", here are the problems with that:

1. There is no "optimal" with god. Optimal strategies only exist when limitations exist - and for your Omnimax there is no such thing.

2. Since there are no limits to what he can do, he could have chosen from an infinite subset of equally sufficient strategies (in other words, he could have chosen anything he wanted). Clearly the one he chose is not compatible with our ideal of "good" as he has chosen a path of violence and vengefulness.

Either he is not omnipotent, or he is not fit to be a "moral authority".
Or, this path is the one that produces the result that He desires by the best means.
 

TheKnight

Guardian of Life
Continued...

That's not what I was saying at all. I agree with you - we cannot arbitrarily choose when to stop at a stop sign and when not to. It's interesting that you mentioned the purpose (one of them) for this particular law, because that is at the crux of the issue. If the purpose of the law were something more sinister (for instance, "floor it at the stop sign so you can hit as many motorists as you can), one could legitimately object to that and not follow the law - that would be the ethical thing to do. This is a completely separate issue than choosing in which situation to follow a particular law and in which situations to disobey it. This is about deciding which law is resonable and which goes completely against all our principles - like slavery.
Are we talking about whether or not a law/command is reasonable? Or are we talking about when a law/command should be obeyed.


No, again - it's important to look at the reason the law was created, not in order to decide in which situations those reasons are applicable and pick and choose when you obey the law and when you don't, but to judge whether the law is resonable at all. Once you establish it as resonable (or at least not something completely unresonable), you follow it each and every time (there are some exceptions in emergencies, etc...).
As I said, I thought we were discussing the obedience of a command/law. Not whether or not it is reasonable.

Still, if you were not able to find a comparable situation which you could apply the example to, you could not argue it was wrong, you would simply have to accept the stance that it was right. To say that you have not found a situation which you could not decide on using this principle is a truism - of course not, once you except the stance that what is mentioned as "wrong" is wrong and everything else is right, you're pretty much covered on both ends.
I don't have a "if it's not wrong it's right" mindset. In Jewish law, if it's wrong it's wrong and if it's not wrong it's not wrong. That's all there is to it. In essence, there's wrong, there's neutral, and there's good.

So basically it is whatever the person you're hiring decides is valuable. I mean, I don't know what "proof" has to do with it, that's another matter. Just because you can't prove something in a court doesn't make it right, right?
Aren't we talking about judging people? We're discussing whether or not we would hold person A responsible in situation H. That's a form of judgment. I tend to try and judge people's actions based on the way a Jewish court would.


Well, you see, you look at it from a perspective of the law. I do as well, but I also look at it from a personal perspective. What if I were in that position - if I knew which action would provoke which response, what kind of an effect each action would have.
And when I consider it in such a manner, the only way I could imagine eating that hamburger would be if I had intended for my mother to die. I would hold myself wholly responsible for her death - I would consider myself a murderer. And by that token, I would consider anyone in the same situation a murderer.
Law and personal are congruent. When I saw law, I mean God's law. I never mean secular law. If I did, I would specifically point that out, unless it was obvious.

You would hold yourself a murderer. And maybe you would have some sort of guilt (that may be justified) but I would not call you a murderer. Maybe a reckless person, but not a murderer.



Yes, and many of the attributes you claim god has are incompatible with that realization. It makes him into an amoral (or even immoral) tyrant, not a benevolent and beneficent character.
And that is one of the fundamental problems you are bound to come across when describing God. Jewish laws holds that we, human beings, are incapable of accurately describing God. We cannot describe Him/who is He is. All we can describe is the effects of what He does that we can observe. In fact, Jewish law holds that we can't ascribe any characteristic to God, not even the characteristic of existence.

In essence, God is "amoral". He does not have any morality by which He is bound. He is good because He does and intends good things for us. Intrinsically, He is neither good nor evil because that would mean that there is some force external to Him by which He could be characterized. And there isn't.
 

sandy whitelinger

Veteran Member
That's not what your bible teaches nor is it something that the churches are teaching. Every denomination I know of teaches that Jesus died for your sins. Paul taught that the first sin (original sin) started with Adam. But now we're told there was no such person (Adam)....rather he and his supposed history is fictitious. Can't have it both ways. No Adam, no original sin, no doomed mankind needing a savior.
The Bible teaches that through Adam all die, that because of his sin death passed upon all men. Salvation on the other hand comes through Jesus and His death on the cross. Adam's sin only caused death. Salvation is a seperate issue.
 
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