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If god were as you suggest he is, he would have no problem demonstrating it's existence. Instead, we're having this conversation.
Well now see this is precisely the problem Mr. Bearpaw. The two sentences you just typed are not an answer to the question I posed.
I wholeheartedly agree with you. But I am not concerned at the present moment about what God is able to do or not able to do. I simply asked for you to give me an example of evidence for God that could not be dismissed as something other than having resulted from God.
If you cannot do this, then just say so.
Well now see, that is precisely the point, isn't it. I have no idea, but your god should.
Well now see, that is precisely the point, isn't it. I have no idea, but your god should.
Yup.
And even if it turns out it is impossible for proof to be obtained - guess what - that still doesn't make it ok to light people on fire for disagreeing with you.
The most recent posts from Variant and several others serve to prove my point which I made earlier.
Many atheists ask for evidence for Gods existence and say that if only they had this evidence they would be obligated to believe God existed.
When asked what this evidence would look like, they cannot give an example that could not be explained away as something else other than an act of God.
The implication is that any act of God to demonstrate His existence is a priori impossible.
Therefore, those who maintain this view are not justified in using the absence of evidence as a sound argument for not believing in Gods existence.
Onus of proof is on you who claim they're reliable, not on those who reject your claim.
If you start from the a priori assumption that the NT documents are accurate, then any further argument is rendered moot.
'Liar' is ambiguous - it presumes that all of what Jesus said was a lie, but what if only some things were a lie? And is he still a liar if he genuinely thought they were true, or would he simply be mistaken? If a child answers a question incorrectly, that doesn't make her a liar. So in that same situation, what would that make Jesus? He's not Lord, he's not insane, and he's not a liar - what his he?
Still, Lewis false trichotomy demands that Jesus be declared a 'lair' if he uttered any untruths, so 'liar' is the choice I'll tentatively select.
This was my exact reason in providing the trilemma in the first place to Paradoxum.
So you are not providing a good argument for denying the credibility of the New Testament documents and you are falsely accusing me of presenting the trilemma for something it was not designed for.
If you will notice, all the argument requires is for someone to generally accept the fact that Jesus existed and that the sayings recorded in the gospels are His. Paradoxum, the person I presented the trilemma to, if you will notice, has not expressed any misgivings regarding these things.
So she is the most appropriate type of person to present the argument to which renders your statement unnecessary.
Lewis meant to counter the assertion that Jesus was a moral teacher and no more than a moral teacher. This clearly cannot be a tenable position as he demonstrates. If Jesus was just a man, He would be the worst type of man imaginable if He were sane, and if He were not sane, well, then He may have actually thought He was God incarnate. All the evidence we have suggests He was not insane and He was not a megalomaniacal liar nor was He a mythological misrepresentation of some rabbi carpenter.
He was God.
And yet I gave an example I would find convincing.
Another example I would give would be if I had witnessed Jesus's ministry first hand as told.
So, your argument is moot.
Lewis can only counter this assertion by depending on the entirety of the gospels being true.
If for instance the Gospels are wrong that Jesus claimed to be the son of God or the Messiah for instance his argument falls apart completely.
Any key problem with the Gospels reliability renders Lewis's point moot.
And of course any unbeliever has problems with the reliability of the Gospels, it's kind of our thing.
You mean this:
"a in your face booming "look at me" from a God.."
variant said:Perhaps God should just make more bread appear in my refrigerator until I believe.
I would find it unlikely that there was some sort of saintly ninja who would sneak bread into my refrigerator over several months.
With regards to your having witnessed Jesus' ministry public ministry which took place centuries ago qualifying as evidence of God's existence:
1. You cannot witness this event and therefore it does not even qualify
2. Even if you had, it could still be explained away as many people did back then.
So you still have yet to answer the question.
No I meant the bread.
The alternative is that that someone else put bread in my refrigerator, and since no one else would know about the experiment I would find it highly unlikely.
I can witness any similar event. I am saying I would find it convincing first hand.
The standard is what is most likely, not absolute proof, I don't even believe in absolute proof.
Your entire argument is a parade of straw men.
The trilemma is designed for those who agree that the gospels are accurate, but that Jesus was not God.
Really? That doesn't make much sense. If one believes the gospels are accurate, does it not follow that they believe Jesus was God? If they don't, then they don't believe the gospels are accurate.
So if Jesus' claims to divinity were untrue (i.e., he's not Lord), but he was not mentally ill (i.e., he's not a Lunatic), then the trilemma leaves us with only one possibility: he's a liar. But, what if he didn't know he was wrong about his claims to divinity, instead being quite genuine in his belief that he was God, perhaps coming to this conclusion by specious logic on his part? He isn't a liar by any usual definition, but as I just showed, Lewis' trilemma strongarms him into that pidgeon-hole, so we can only conclude that 'liar' now encompasses the unintentional utterance of untruths.Children do not walk around and claim that they can forgive people's sins either. Nor do they claim to be God, or the long awaited Messiah. Children do not walk around and say things like:
[snip] Nor do children run around shouting:
[snip]
Jesus claimed to be The Way, The Truth, and The Life, among many other things. He claimed that in His person, the kingdom of God was being revealed. He claimed that the remission of sins was to be proclaimed in His name and that ALL AUTHORITY had been given unto Him in heaven and in earth.
My Dear Friend,
Lewis was attempting to keep you from making the very statements you have just made.
A man who says these things is either:
1. Telling the truth
2. He is not telling the truth.
If He is telling the truth He is God incarnate.
If He is not telling the truth he is either:
1. Mentally ill and he actually thinks he is God incarnate.
2. He is not mentally ill, knows he is not God incarnate, and is intentionally misrepresenting himself.
If he is misrepresenting himself he is either:
1. Some type of sick prankster joker who thinks stuff like this is funny.
2. Intentionally misrepresenting himself for some ulterior motive.
There is no other way out of this for the one who believes Jesus actually said these things.
And quite sadly, most non-Christians do see Jesus as some type of "Good teacher" kind of like Ghandi, or Buddha.
This simply is not tenable. Christ did not leave us that option.
This is a strawman. Lewis' work does not demand that Jesus be declared a liar if He uttered any untruths. It argues that if you do not infer that Jesus is Lord, or a mentally ill person, then He must necessarily be a liar.
My point is that the trichotomy is either false (it precludes very possible alternatives), or it stretches the definitions to their breaking point (making 'liar' encompass the unintentional utterance of an untruth). There's no two ways about it.Taking Lewis' usage of the word "liar" and re-defining it is not a good way to argue against the trilemma.
I am astonished that this confusion has come up as frequently as it has.
Just because someone believes the gospel accounts are accurate as documents from ancient antiquity, does not mean that they automatically believe Jesus is God incarnate.
It means they may assent to the accounts of Jesus' life and ministry, but when interpreting the accounts, they interpret them to mean something other than what is actually written.
For example, a person can believe that the gospels accurately record Jesus as having healed the sick, but could interpret this to mean something like: "Well Jesus really just cared for the sick"....so on and so forth.
There is a great deal of explaining away that people are capable of doing when it comes to Jesus' teachings and ministry.
Two things quickly:
1. Someone else could have put the bread in the refrigerator or another explanation would be that while bending down to stick it in the fridge, you then stand up quickly causing a rare but possible instantaneous blackout from bending over into the fridge and standing up immediately and develop severe short term memory loss/specified amnesia regarding having put the bread in the fridge. After the fact, you could see the bread and think, hmm..maybe God did it. Obviously, if this amnesia was the cause of you forgetting about putting it in there, then the explanation would be that you in fact did it, but just did not remember. Or atoms could randomly assemble themselves in your fridge to make up a loaf of bread purely by natural causes. Or you could be dreaming that the bread was there...or.... I could go on and on you see..
2. You can witness a person touching a person's eyes and have the person claim that their sight was restored by the one doing the touching. They could be working together and only pretending to be blind. No miracle there. Or, you could have a person that appears to be dead, has taken medications to make their heartbeat and pulse virtually undetectable, made themselves smell like decomposing flesh, even wear special contacts so that when you shine a light in their eye, the pupils do not contract. You could have a man come and say ARISE! and boom the dead man gets up. All explained away. No miracle. You could even have a man that appears to be one legged grow a leg right before your eyes. The man could wear a special device around his leg which allows him to "bend the light" in the area where his actual leg is to give the appearance of no leg being there. This technology exists by the way. He could simply hit a switch and voila, leg! No miracle. A man can appear to walk on water too in several ways without him actually walking on water. And on and on and on we go.
Get my point?
I had responded to the rest of your post, but it all boils down to the same thing. As Lewis' trilemma makes for a very interesting discussion, I'd like to focus there
So if Jesus' claims to divinity were untrue (i.e., he's not Lord), but he was not mentally ill (i.e., he's not a Lunatic), then the trilemma leaves us with only one possibility: he's a liar.
But, what if he didn't know he was wrong about his claims to divinity, instead being quite genuine in his belief that he was God, perhaps coming to this conclusion by specious logic on his part? He isn't a liar by any usual definition, but as I just showed, Lewis' trilemma strongarms him into that pidgeon-hole, so we can only conclude that 'liar' now encompasses the unintentional utterance of untruths.
The point is that the trilemma ignores a very real possibility and in doing so results in one of two things: it either becomes a false trichotomy, or it remains technically a true trichotomy by abusing the definition of 'liar' to encompass unintentional untruths.
My point is that the trichotomy is either false (it precludes very possible alternatives), or it stretches the definitions to their breaking point (making 'liar' encompass the unintentional utterance of an untruth). There's no two ways about it.
The possibility exists that Jesus was simply a sane Rabbi who mistakenly concluded that he was the Messiah (look at Harold Camping or the Millerites for how completely rational people can use specious logic to come to very wrong conclusions). He was sane (so he wasn't a lunatic), he was genuine in his beliefs (so he wasn't a liar), but he was ultimately incorrect (so he wasn't lord). What, then, was he?
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