Preamble: I sometimes wonder why it is that for all the different questions posed here, many conversations seem to gravitate to the same themes: God, omni-properties, free will, physicalism, existence, knowing, etc. Maybe it's just because of the positions of those who post here, but I wonder if there are other reasons. I mean, it seems the discussion hasn't changed since Adam and Eve.
In a similar way, I puzzle over those who continue to raise questions about supposed problems with the Bible. I mean, if you're 16 and this is the first time you've heard these things, I suppose it's part of the process of discovery. But for those of us who've put more than a few years behind us, it would seem there is a realization that this is nothing new.
Discussions on Biblical consistency are as old as the Bible. Augustine wrote about it at a time when the Bible was such a new collection of texts that in a letter to Jerome he refers to it as "those books of Scripture which are now called canonical."
Inerrancy: Roman Catholic views on the Bible's infallability and inerrancy
Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers: Series I/Volume VI/The Harmony of the Gospels - Wikisource, the free online library
Finally, the questions:
1. As an unbeliever, why do you think Christians remain Christian when the inconsistencies have been known for so long? (Though I'm sure someone will say it, I'll try to poison the well and say I'm not interested in answers like, "Because they're a deluded bunch of lunatics" or "Because they're insecure and need a crutch." Rather, I'll lead into question 2 ...)
2. As an unbeliever, why do you think no one has ever successfully corrected all those errors and reissued the "Newly Inspired Version" (NIV for those who get the joke) of the Bible?
3. As an unbeliever, are there any examples promoted as problems that you have decided are not problems?
4. For believers, do you think all the supposed problems are not problems? Or ...
5. Do you believe problems exist, but they don't affect the message?
6. For believers, even if you believe the Bible doesn't have problems, are there some that still niggle at you, where you don't really have a satisfactory answer yet?
In a similar way, I puzzle over those who continue to raise questions about supposed problems with the Bible. I mean, if you're 16 and this is the first time you've heard these things, I suppose it's part of the process of discovery. But for those of us who've put more than a few years behind us, it would seem there is a realization that this is nothing new.
Discussions on Biblical consistency are as old as the Bible. Augustine wrote about it at a time when the Bible was such a new collection of texts that in a letter to Jerome he refers to it as "those books of Scripture which are now called canonical."
Inerrancy: Roman Catholic views on the Bible's infallability and inerrancy
Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers: Series I/Volume VI/The Harmony of the Gospels - Wikisource, the free online library
Finally, the questions:
1. As an unbeliever, why do you think Christians remain Christian when the inconsistencies have been known for so long? (Though I'm sure someone will say it, I'll try to poison the well and say I'm not interested in answers like, "Because they're a deluded bunch of lunatics" or "Because they're insecure and need a crutch." Rather, I'll lead into question 2 ...)
2. As an unbeliever, why do you think no one has ever successfully corrected all those errors and reissued the "Newly Inspired Version" (NIV for those who get the joke) of the Bible?
3. As an unbeliever, are there any examples promoted as problems that you have decided are not problems?
4. For believers, do you think all the supposed problems are not problems? Or ...
5. Do you believe problems exist, but they don't affect the message?
6. For believers, even if you believe the Bible doesn't have problems, are there some that still niggle at you, where you don't really have a satisfactory answer yet?