- Oct 28, 2006
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If they're only convincing for you, then why should anyone take them seriously at all? Seems like you just rendered any kind of knowledge or belief claims both as effectively relative and needing no basis beyond individual conviction
But as for the reasons
1)I could predict there will be an earthquake this year and it could happen, does that mean I have special powers? Jesus getting something right is not the same as him actually predicting to the year, unless you can substantiate such a claim
2) The New Testament documents being reliable in the sense that we can conclude the authors aren't lying, is not the same as reliable in the truth of the claims they make being what actually happened objectively. I can disagree with claims and it doesn't mean I'm saying someone is lying, but that they are, instead, mistaken.
3)Your prayers and the resultant effects are honestly as subjective and unreliable a standard as prophecy in general, because your assessment proceeds FROM your preconception that God will answer, but that preconception does NOT mean God's answer will always be yes, I learned this when I was 12 in Sunday School, I don't think that's some controversial thing in Christianity, because God's "plan" is mysterious and thus someone praying for a job, a spouse, etc, doesn't mean it will happen and just because it might happen is not a reason to attribute agency to the events being effectively set up that way, because it not only suggests your choices don't really matter (including your prayers), but that the events themselves are inconsequential in contrast to the infinite rewards you get in heaven (which don't include being married and such, so...why should that matter?)
4) Just because people can make vague predictions or we can interpret them in a way that would seem to fit doesn't make those predictions and texts that they emerge from, as reflective of reality. Or is Nostradamus just as reliable then? It's like you haven't even considered the problem of self fulfilling prophecies or even just that they don't make precise predictions in any falsifiable manner because that very idea is foreign to ancient people?
5)And Christian apologetics are perfect and without any epistemological or evidential problems? Seems to me you're projecting a great deal, to say nothing of being disingenuous with the capitalization of atheist and skeptic when neither really warrants it in the general context (at best skeptic might be capitalized if referring to the original school back in ancient Greece, but even that's pushing it in terms of the idea that it was or is comparable to Christianity, because skepticism is no more a worldview than atheism, only pieces of something broader that has various names and manifestations)
One word: hermeneutics.
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