Your response is too ambivalent. You're trying to say that epistemology is a mixture, that is, a "little of this" (such as conscience) and a "little of that" (such as Bible) without being specific as to what that means. (The end result is that you're rambling). Look, I myself am not entirely opposed to a somewhat eclectic epistemology (indeed my own is such) as long as there are some clear, unambiguous guidelines - and preferably tautological ones.
The Bible I have access to is not so badly altered as to be of no use to me.
Well I wasn't alleging it is altered. I said our lenses are tainted.
There are a great many important things shown to me from it. I can still recognize some things changed from what was in the Bible, to not be influenced by being guided from the change in it.
Yes. Exegesis is potentially useful, albeit too fallible to be considered reliable. But yes, exegesis is part of my own eclectic approach.
I can answer, there is our conscience, God-given to start with, that we must go by in any case.
Agreed. Another part of my eclecticism. But when all is said and done - are any of these 'parts' authoritative? If not, we remain stranded in a (high-stakes) guessing-game that arrives NOWHERE
When we are presented with the Bible, preferably around the time we are presented with the gospel, there is some testimony to us for that, in some way. As many of us look at it more, we learn of more testimony to it. That doesn't need to stop, there happens to be a great deal of testimony for it, to trust the Bible, for revelation from God. We can learn it is Yahweh who is God.
What's authoritative here? Fallible exegesis? Nothing? Again, you seem to be rambling.
Well, I did answer. To an agnostic I will do as I have done, discussing the reality of God, which is a separate thing to know which is important.
No you haven't clearly satisfied/answered the agnostic's request for an authority/basis on which to justifiably conclude that the Bible is inspired.
When we know of the reality of God, which our conscience will testify to...
Vague statements that "sound theological", that have a "religious ring" to them but are not really clear/specific as to what they mean. What do you mean we "know" - on what basis/authority should we claim to "know" something? How does this kind of vague statement quench the agnostic's thirst for clear answers?
When that is recognized, the Bible may be shown as having better basis to trust the claim of it being that.
Shown how? So this is your answer to the agnostic's doubts about biblical inspiration? That's not particularly clear - and it's still not addressing the larger issue. Suppose your claim is, "I will use a show of REASON to prove to the agnostic (or recent convert) that Scripture is inspired."
So is Reason, then, authoritative? Reason is what dictates YOUR decision to:
(1) Dismiss most books as uninspired.
(2) Accept each of the 66 biblical books as inspired.
But in so claiming, you've now touted Reason as a higher authority than the Bible because it dictates your decision to accept or reject those books. Meaning, if tomorrow your reasoning leads you to believe that the Koran is inspired, you'll reject the Bible.
So again, what is authoritative? Reason? Historical analysis? Conscience? Blind faith? Nothing?
(1) If any of these are authoritative, it contradicts Sola Scriptura (Scripture as the only authority).
(2) If nothing is authoritative, we have no basis for drawing the conclusion that Scripture is inspired.
You still haven't made a clear commitment to ANYTHING as being authoritative. Whereas I gave you a clear answer. I said that the following principle is ALWAYS authoritative because there is no possible scenario that would warrant departure from it:
"If I feel certain that action-A is evil, and B is good, I should opt for B".
I call it 'conscience' but it doesn't actually use the word conscience (and thus should not be "rebutted" with complaints about the unreliability of conscience).
Conscience is important for that.
Merely "important" ? Not authoritative? Not definitive? We still have no definitive answers from you - no real commitment - 370 posts deep? And 2,000 years post-Christ? How much longer should I wait for you? Another 2,000 years?
As I showed, it is not exclusive.
Yes, you clearly indicated that epistemology is a "little of this" and a "little of that". But that itself is not clear, and expresses no real commitment to anything definitive.
There are really abundant evidences for it, and that inner witness, God's Spirit working with us, perhaps the inner light that Quakers speak of, which you might mean, can work for that as well. Bases for what we think otherwise do not go away, I certainly am thinking more than many people to figure things out anyway. But with knowing to come to the Bible I do not put things in priority over what God says.
Lovely. 370 posts deep and the most I'm able to elicit from you is a big "perhaps". Wonderful.