Steve Petersen
Senior Veteran
The entire point of the video was to demonstrate all such claims made from the Bible. When one adds them all together, do such claims match with later actual discovery and reality? Or, are such claims instead mythology to a lesser or greater degree? If being intellectually honest with one's self, it would appear the later seems a better fit.
There exists too much to unpack, with such assessments... Furthermore, why (must) the resurrection be the catalyst by which such validation reigns true? Is it because a human says so in a book chapter? (i.e. 1 Corinthians 15:14). Or, is it because characters in the story line claims He is the Messiah; just as many others have also claimed to resurrect prior and sense in documented history?
My form of 'progressive' is as follows. One can somehow either minimize, dismiss, 're-interpret', chalk up as parable, not take literally, or other, many other such claims from the Bible. And yet, somehow, all of a sudden, the resurrection did actually happen, and is to be taken completely literally without question? Seems a bit inconsistent?
Like I stated, too much to unpack...
Except for the fact that such statements are made in the NT (i.e. Matthew 5:17-18, Luke 16:17, John 5:45-47, Luke 11:50-51, Matthew 24:38-39, Luke 17:28-32, etc.....); where such statements seem to suggest the OT as 'validated' or literal in many respects
I take a simpler approach.... I start from the beginning to such a book of claims, and start to assess if each such successive claim could have actually happened or not? So by the time I get to the NT, I see so many prior claims which might require 're-interpretation', 'to not actually take literal', 'to view instead as parable', deem 'mythical', etc, that it makes one wonder how any/all such claims in the NT do not simply follow the exact same line of reasoning for such conclusions.
Mythology provides explanations for things we don't understand. As we understand more about ourselves and the universe, our mythology has to change or it becomes ludicrous. If you haven't I suggest you read Joseph Campbell's Mythos. There are also video interviews with him on Youtube.
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