dave rowett wrote:
I'm not getting into the homosexual debate - i'll leave it at that but you have me wrong and my apologies if you feel that way.
I have no idea what sort of "homosexual debate" you wish to avoid, but I'm not looking to engage in any either. Just cut out the personal stuff. And thank you for your apology.
dave rowett wrote:
Right Tim, in a previous thread you stated that you weren't entirely convinced that Jesus existed at all or something of that nature.
Yes, precisely. And that's a position echoed by many on this forum, nobody can really claim to know exactly what parts of the Gospel narratives are true, if indeed any of it is true. The best anyone can base an opinion or an argument on is an informed assumption, i.e. making sense of the narrative. The Bible is literature. Some people hold that it contains profound truths, other say it is the "only" source of profound truths, and some just look at it as a narrative. I fall into the last category. I couldn't possibly prove that there is accuracy or historicity to the events as written in that narrative. However, the narrative itself - i.e. the corpus - does have a history that can be traced. Admittedly there are evidential gaps or differences of opinion as to how or when or why that history developed as it did, and there is nothing wrong with speculation unless and until someone claims to know the answer, to have the factual explanation at hand. And at that point those facts should be presented. If they aren't, or can't be, then that explanation has not transcended from speculation to fact. Still, you can read a book to see what it says. If someone says it really doesn't say that, or used to say something else, then it is not unreasonable to ask that person how they arrived at their conclusion. If it's speculation, OK. But when they say it's fact, that they have the proof but they won't reveal it to anyone, well - would you believe them?
dave rowett wrote:
Yet you clearly defend traditional Christian beliefs with astonishing conviction as if your life depended on it. I'm not just saying that, this is how you come across to me personally.
Well, how I come across to you personally really doesn't have anything to do with me, now does it? You don't seem terribly interested when I try to explain what I really think.
I'm not defending "traditional Christian beliefs", if that were the case why would I hide those beliefs under a bushel? Every Bible-believing Christian I know would consider it anathema to deny the tenets of their faith, and none of those I know are shy about proclaiming it whether asked to or not.
There is a difference between the
veracity of the narrative (meaning that one believes every element really happened exactly as written) and the
accuracy of the narrative (meaning that one believes the narrative is an authentic account of the author's intention). I hold firm to the position that what is written, and what I can read for myself, is an accurate reflection of that author's intention, unless and until I am shown otherwise. Not that what they wrote IS necessarily true, but rather what they believed to be true and wished to convey. My mind is not closed to the idea that edits and redactions were made and that those redactions may have affected the original intent, but I'm not simply going to take someone's word for it. Academics and scholars make new discoveries all the time, and commonly held wisdom shifts in light of new information. I'm in favor of that, in fact it fascinates me because I find history to be interesting. But when pseudo-academics and pseudo-scholars attempt to reinterpret tangibles - things that do exist - and expect to be taken only at their word, I have a problem with that. Call me a cynic if you like, but I don't think I'm unreasonable.
dave rowett wrote:
For example, there are many ways in which you could interpret the various sayings and actions of both the Magdalene and Jesus throughout the scriptures especially in the Gnostic gospels.
Granted, but I take issue with it when people base interpretations on things that aren't there in the first place. We can argue to the nth degree over which English word is a better translation for a Greek word, but don't try to reinterpret the Greek word to fit your meaning of choice. Speculate away as to the underlying messages or hidden significance, but please, show your work. Explain how you arrived at your conclusion. Those who get all pissy when asked to do so are usually the ones with nothing to show, which then leads to questions of bias. It happens every day, in myriad subjects, all over the world. It is human nature to question, but it is also human nature to want qualified answers.
dave rowett wrote:
From a strictly neutral prospective such as my own I can see things which others on here have pointed out, as having substance and credibility where as you always defend the traditional meaning. The bible does not contain any key on how to read the bible or any indication of how it should be perceived.
Common language is the key to understanding the Bible, we no longer live in a world where only the priesthood have access to the texts and the rest of us are expected to believe what we're told. I don't think you would disagree that what we can read by picking up a Bible and turning to a random page is representative of the traditional meaning in our common vernacular. Much of it is allegorical, or metaphorical, which certainly would involve one's own perception to understand. On the other hand, I'd venture to say most of what is in the Bible is fairly straightforward and uncontroversial, they only key being required being the ability to read and a broad vocabulary.
dave rowett wrote:
Therefore my own natural conclusion to you defending those traditions is either you have been told how to perceive the bible by others or you have a vested interest in how you think it should be.
A vested interest? Such as? Did someone rat me out as the Prince-Bishop of Osnabrück
again...?
What child raised to be a Christian
isn't told how to perceive the Bible in their early years? If that's some sort of reason for suspicion, then cuff me and lead me away! What was taught to me as a child isn't the way I view Christianity today, far from it because now I'm viewing it from the outside as a critic, no longer as a participant. And by critic I don't mean opponent, just someone who finds all the baggage that goes with it irrelevant to my life and circumstance. I don't have scores to settle, I got over that spell years ago.
dave rowett wrote:
You are sending out mixed messages Tim, you are claiming to look at this through a neutral set of goggles yet you always jump on the side of tradition. You spend hours finding traditional meanings for various scriptures but never seem to stop and think of your own interpretation, it's always someone else's.
Would you consider anyone who always jumps on the opposite side of tradition to be neutral? Let me relieve you of another misconception - I am not neutral and my interpretations are always formed from what I can read with my own eyes and process with my own mind. That should counteract any suggestion of "mixed messages" in the future. If your mind is already made up to reject my own explanation of how I think, how I interpret, how I respond (which I suspect is the case) then any future "mixed messages" are your issue, not mine.
dave rowett wrote:
Where is the rule of thumb on how the scriptures should be perceived Tim?
It's the brain, Dave - not the thumb.
TCP