- Apr 30, 2013
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According to my 'flawed' knowledge, and based upon the 'flawed' evidence, Moses never existed. So by who's standard can we hash this out? Did Moses exist, did Moses not exist? Until you can demonstrate otherwise, without appealing to a human written book (the Bible itself), you are appealing to your 'own' 'flawed' logic, that the Bible obtains pure factWe all only have our brains to assess 'reality.' You possess no better means than I. Ancient people possessed no better assessment capabilities than you or I.
This is exactly my point!
You are appealing to an example, from a book written by flawed humans, with flawed stories and flawed opinions. The exact same thing you can say about me with other publications
So how might we know WHO is actually write?.?.?.?.?.?.?.?.
You appear to be presupposing it is actually true, by way of circular reasoning. Anything a full fledged theist states I'm doing (appealing to my flawed human opinion), I can most certainly say about them, with every bit as much validity.
The circular reasoning could not be more self evident, then from the statement presented below ( from your quote below in red):
'However, as the Scriptures were recorded these types of people did not do the recording. YHWH raised up people called Prophets who He revealed Himself to and by performing miracles and fulfilling prophecies confirmed His words were true. The people of later generations considered these writings to be sacred because they came from prophets who YHWH spoke with and/or by vision appeared to them.'
Basically, "I'm wrong because the Bible is right." "The Bible said it, that settles it."
I have conversed with people of other religions whom claim ample 'evidence' of the supernatural. And I have also read about many unsolved mysteries of mass UFO sightings... I can provide the documented unsolved examples if so needed.... If I was to believe all claimed eyewitness testimony and all claimed anecdotal tales, especially written from long ago, I would have to be pretty darn gullible. I assess each claim, based upon how well it actually stacks up against the provided available evidence.
When I read the Bible, many claims do not align with known and shared reality (at least from my acknowledged 'flawed' logic and reason). Your logic is flawed too, sorry to say... So, what makes YOU right, and me wrong? We both use our brains... What do you have that I don't? Faith, a gut feeling, a warm and tingling sensation, received divine revelation, other? Sorry, this is not meant to be taken as a straw man... My point is, I mostly likely possess the very same mental faculties, and yet come to a differing conclusion, when reading the story of Moses, and study the actual presented evidence. Why is my reasoning wrong, and yours is right?
This is one of the main reasons I can so easily start to question the rest. Many stories do not possess any corroboration, outside the Bible itself. The same reason many can conclude Homer's the Iliad is mythical... Yes, stuff may have happened from the Bible, to 'some' degree, but this doesn't make the supernatural claims real. Otherwise, like I've stated elsewhere, this would then mean Alexander the Great was the son of Zeus.
That's the difference between faith and absolute certainty. I wouldn't say faith is unreasonable necessarily, even if it involves assent to more than what can be proven. Pascal makes a good argument to that effect in his Pensées.
The claim that Jesus is the Son of God is not equivalent to saying Zeus is the father of Alexander the Great, because Christians are actually making different claims about the nature of God. It is important to not over-reify Jesus divinity to the point it denies his humanity.
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