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Science > or < Scripture?

iambeeman

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I've been noticing what I see as a disturbing tendancy (not just here but other places as well) that christians are trusting in science more so than scripture. Not that I have a great problem per se but when you see people say things like "scripture was writen by falible man" , and there fore not to be trusted entirely then asert that sceince is to be trusted entirely because of peer review it raises alarms in the back of my head. Now I do realise most scientist are likely well meaning and dedicated, but just like everybody else they have a worldview that comes with presupositions, and to assume that it doesn't effect thier conclusions especialy on a subject with no direct observable evedence such as evolution is poor science in and of itself. Scripture has been some how religated dispite all this to a secondary sorce for truth, what ever happened to 2 Timothy 3 "15 And that from a child thou hast known the holy scriptures, which are able to make thee wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. 16 All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: 17 That the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works" Or maybe some christians have fallen for the idea that all truth is scientific truth, which is a statement that fails it's own test.

I don't know I feel like I'm rambleing now. Whats your thoughs on all this?

Just for the record I am in no way pointing this thread at anyone, it's just a trend I noticed that disturbs me.
 

Biblewriter

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You suggest we set our fallible interpretation of a book over observable reality?

No, we suggest that we should accept the infallible word of God over the conclusions of fallible man.
 
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iambeeman

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No, we suggest that we should accept the infallible word of God over the conclusions of fallible man.

I think it would be more accurate to state "No, we suggest that we should accept the infallible written word of God over the conclusions of fallible man."

And what one must remember "observable reality" must be interpreted, and if we can be fallible interpreting a book then why would we be infallible in interpreting observable reality? It seems as though there's a double standard, when A is interpreted we are fallible, when B is observed we are infallible.
 
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Dark_Lite

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Interpreting the Bible is reading words. Science is empirically verifiable and repeatable. Multiple independent theories corroborate each other. When reality is contradicting what one interpretation of the Bible says, the problem is with the interpretation of the Bible, not reality.
 
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iambeeman

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Reality still needs to be interpreted, in a scientific sense. Simply because a given group of people agree with a given interpretation does not make it a correct interpretation. That is not to say that science is necessarily always wrong, I'm simply saying that just because it's science does not make it by definition right.
 
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Papias

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iambeeman wrote:
Simply because a given group of people agree with a given interpretation does not make it a correct interpretation.

No, but as gluadys pointed out, empirically testable ideas are much less subject to interpretation than words are, and that's even assuming the words don't need to be translated from another language, or are present in multiple different versions, or are agreed upon as far as a canon goes, or that we have the original copies (none of which are true for whichever Bible is chosen).

Plus, we have many different groups of people, with different religions, different walks of life, different ethnicities, and so on agreeing on the interpretation. Stacked on top of that, we have different whole fields of science, testing the ideas in completely different ways, with different tools and tests, all coming up with the same answers.

That's really hard to argue with, unless one is going to deny evidence wholecloth.

Papias
 
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Biblewriter

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iambeeman

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No, but as gluadys pointed out, empirically testable ideas are much less subject to interpretation than words are, and that's even assuming the words don't need to be translated from another language, or are present in multiple different versions, or are agreed upon as far as a canon goes, or that we have the original copies (none of which are true for whichever Bible is chosen).

Plus, we have many different groups of people, with different religions, different walks of life, different ethnicities, and so on agreeing on the interpretation. Stacked on top of that, we have different whole fields of science, testing the ideas in completely different ways, with different tools and tests, all coming up with the same answers.

That's really hard to argue with, unless one is going to deny evidence wholecloth.

Papias

Your first paragraph calls into question Gods ability to preserve his written word, considering a speaker (Ravi Zacharias) whom I listen to regularly had the opportunity to examine St. Crisistens (?sp?) translation (4th century, excavated 9th century) of Mathew and it was the same as the one he was holding I have to question this assertion.

Your second paragraph asserts that all these different people groups agree interpretations therefore the interpretations must be accurate, which is rather logical. One must also take into account though that a naturalistic world view fits nicely into atheism, buddhism, pantheism, agnosticism and has been force fit into Christianity, Judaism and Islam. From those whom I've spoken with if you go to university to become a scientist you have to accept the naturalistic word view or you won't do well, so your not actually getting as true a verification of interpretation as your logic would dictate.

As to your last paragraph I'm not rejecting evidence but questioning interpretation of evidence.
 
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juvenissun

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Not many people study science (engineering does not really count). There are even fewer people who are "reviewing" what science is about. Science is about reasoning based on knowledge. So if one did not know enough to make knowledgeable argument, then the current scientific knowledge could be quite convincing.

John 20:29 Jesus saith unto him, Thomas, because thou hast seen me, thou hast believed: blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have believed.

Blessed are those who do not know science well, but are not compromised on their faith by science .
 
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Papias

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B man wrote:

Your first paragraph calls into question Gods ability to preserve his written word, considering a speaker (Ravi Zacharias) whom I listen to regularly had the opportunity to examine St. Crisistens (?sp?) translation (4th century, excavated 9th century) of Mathew and it was the same as the one he was holding I have to question this assertion.


Ravi sat there and carefully checked word for word from the 4th century copy vs. his, (which seems unlikely)? Where they in the same language, even? (Is Ravi's Mt Latin?) Is he a Bible scholar? More importantly, there are centuries between when Mt was written, and a 4th century copy. Obviously a lot of changes could have been made before the 4th century copy. Maybe it&#8217;s better to go by what the Bible scholars say instead of what you heard on the radio about one copy?

Um, it seems that we have some differences in the basic understanding of how well the Bibles have been preserved.

First, there is all kinds of evidence that the stories in the Bibles have been altered. For instance, we&#8217;ve seen how Mt changed the 1Cr geneology to make it fit what he wanted to say. So many verses (sometimes whole paragraphs, see Acts 8) have been added to the Bibles over time that they amount to thousands of words. Some obvious examples include most of chapter 16 of the Gospel of Mark, which was added long after Mark was written (and by someone else), and the start of John chapter 8, which also was added later. Both of those are missing from our earliest manuscripts.


Second, we have over 5,000 of those early manuscripts, and no two of them, except for the smallest scraps, agree with each other word for word. The most common differences are spelling errors, but there are missing words, missing lines, missing pages and paragraphs, repeated lines, and so on. The worst manuscripts we have are often the earliest ones, showing that the sloppy copying was worse early on.


That&#8217;s extremely important because (third) for most of the New Testament, we don&#8217;t have any manuscripts for decades or even centuries after the originals, so we have little clue as to what was changed between the originals and our earliest manuscripts. So, for instance, several decades after, say, Mt chapter 8 was written, it may have been extensively changed &#8211; added to, parts cut out, and then all subsequent copies made from that altered version (or copies of it), and we have no way to know if that&#8217;s true or not. We do also have many clear instances where Christian scribes altered the text when copying it. The average gap between when the originals were written and our earliest surviving copy is over 150 years &#8211; plenty of time for radical changes. On any of this, you can look all this up yourself, from credible Bible scholars &#8211; you don&#8217;t have to take my word for any of it.

Fourth, these isn&#8217;t, and never has been, agreement on what goes into the Bible and what doesn&#8217;t. The Hebrew canon (the list of books in the Old Testament or OT) changed over time. You can see this from the Dead Sea Scroll (DSS) community, which included Jubl, En & more as part of their Bible, and other Jewish writings. The gyrations used in making the New Testament (NT) were similar, with many early Christians excluding Jm, Jd and others now in most modern Bibles. The Pe[bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse]ta Bible (ha, look what it did to the name of that Bible! It's Pes hi tt a) historically lacked 2 Pt, 2&3 Jn, Jd & Rv, and those have been added to some newer versions. Bibles well into the 6th century included other books in the NT, such as Ld, Hm, 3Cr, & many more. Luther made changes too (which were changed back later). In 1590 Pope Clement VIII removed 3 OT books to an Appendix, which was finally removed by Pope John Paul II in 1979. As a result of these repeated changes throughout history and into modern times, some Bibles have over 80 books, or 73, or 66, or 79, and so on. You might want to start with basic background info, such as "who wrote the Bible" by friedman.

This is only a greatly simplified summary &#8211; there are many more convolutions, changes, and differences in the many Bibles. My Bible has 73 books. How many does yours have? How can you say mine is wrong, even though it&#8217;s used by more Christians than yours?

The conclusion from all of this is that the Bible hasn&#8217;t been preserved very well at all over history. By saying that it is God&#8217;s job to preserve the Bible, you are saying that God&#8217;s not competent to do that, because it obviously hasn&#8217;t been preserved, especially not with Godly perfection. I think it&#8217;s much more respectful of God to attribute the terrible job of preserving the Bible(s) to humans.

Your second paragraph asserts that all these different people groups agree interpretations therefore the interpretations must be accurate, which is rather logical.


For that, I'll need to make more direct arguments on why I see creationism as wrong, which is not allowed in this forum, so I'll have to leave it as is, unless you'd like to open a thread about the agreement of people from so many different religions in the main origins forum.


Have a nice day-

Papias
 
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iambeeman

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Ravi has a Masters of Divinity you can see his other qualifications at rzim. org/ aboutus/ ravizacharias. aspx (I can't post links yet so remove the spaces).

As for the rest of it I'll have to get back to you, I'm very very busy (renos on the whole up stairs, custom honey orders, bees to medicate, a yard to get in order all before the snow comes, oh and a baby on the way!!!!)
 
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AV1611VET

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Hi, Beeman! Nice to meet you! :wave:
I've been noticing what I see as a disturbing tendancy (not just here but other places as well) that christians are trusting in science more so than scripture.
I too trust science, but only to a point.

Here is a set of standards that I have come up with, that I use to dictate what I believe:

  1. Whatever the Bible says is -- is.
  2. Whatever the Bible says isn't -- isn't.
  3. If the Bible doesn't say, but science does -- go ahead and believe it at your discretion.
  4. Above all: NEVER let science override the Bible, no matter how convincing science may sound.
 
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I've been noticing what I see as a disturbing tendancy (not just here but other places as well) that christians are trusting in science more so than scripture. Not that I have a great problem per se but when you see people say things like "scripture was writen by falible man" , and there fore not to be trusted entirely then asert that sceince is to be trusted entirely because of peer review it raises alarms in the back of my head. Now I do realise most scientist are likely well meaning and dedicated, but just like everybody else they have a worldview that comes with presupositions, and to assume that it doesn't effect thier conclusions especialy on a subject with no direct observable evedence such as evolution is poor science in and of itself. Scripture has been some how religated dispite all this to a secondary sorce for truth, what ever happened to 2 Timothy 3 "15 And that from a child thou hast known the holy scriptures, which are able to make thee wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. 16 All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: 17 That the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works" Or maybe some christians have fallen for the idea that all truth is scientific truth, which is a statement that fails it's own test.

I don't know I feel like I'm rambleing now. Whats your thoughs on all this?

Just for the record I am in no way pointing this thread at anyone, it's just a trend I noticed that disturbs me.

Are we trusting in science more than scripture or are we allowing science to shed light on what scripture may mean? Just because you trust science doesn't mean you trust it as much as or more than scripture.

All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness; That the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works.

It doesn't say all scripture is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for science. The Bible teaches us how to get to heaven, not how the heavens go.

No, we suggest that we should accept the infallible word of God over the conclusions of fallible man.

Does that include the conclusions of fallible man that says we have to interpret it literally?
 
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Biblewriter

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Not many people study science (engineering does not really count). There are even fewer people who are "reviewing" what science is about. Science is about reasoning based on knowledge. So if one did not know enough to make knowledgeable argument, then the current scientific knowledge could be quite convincing.

John 20:29 Jesus saith unto him, Thomas, because thou hast seen me, thou hast believed: blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have believed.

Blessed are those who do not know science well, but are not compromised on their faith by science .

I am a licensed professional Engineer. But I had to prove I was really an engineer by taking an exhaustive series of examinations because I was only formally educated as a scientist!

But to be a good engineer, a person has to by nature be detail oriented and highly precise. As a natural engineer, I approached my scientific studies in this fashion. And in my formal education as a scientist, I observed systematic gross oversimplification of observed data, and massive groupthink on a scale unimaginable, if it had not been right there before my very eyes. I read articles in scientific journals calling for discipline against those who dared to question the approved forms of groupthinking, and other articles stressing the need to indoctrinate students with rigor.

When climategate broke, many scientists wrote that it was massive deception on a scale hitherto unknown in the scientific community. I answered that such practice was already well known in the community of disbelievers in science's sacred cow, evolution.

Most of the evidence given for the theory of evolution is questioned as even accurate by experts in the various disciplines involved.

The most shocking example of the outright dishonesty involved in this debate that I personally observed was when we were taught (as freshmen) the theory of recapitulation. As advanced embryology students, we were later taught that this is actually "outside of the facts." The thing that particularly offended my brother, who was just a year behind me, was that he was taught these two things by the same professor! In his first year at the university, this professor used this theory to prove evolution, and in his third year the very same professor taught him that it was not true.

I was personally subjected to extreme pressure because I resolutely refused to click my heels together, raise my right arm, and cry out "Hiel Darwin."

Much later, I was required to sign a paper warning me that I would be discharged from my position if I shared my faith in Christ with anyone in any way connected with my employer, whether a co-worker or a supplier, on a 24 hour a day basis. And the company President ordered management to see to it that made I made no contact with any of their customers.

So don't waste your breath telling me that science is objective. I have personally observed the very opposite.
 
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Biblewriter

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B man wrote:



Ravi sat there and carefully checked word for word from the 4th century copy vs. his, (which seems unlikely)? Where they in the same language, even? (Is Ravi's Mt Latin?) Is he a Bible scholar? More importantly, there are centuries between when Mt was written, and a 4th century copy. Obviously a lot of changes could have been made before the 4th century copy. Maybe it’s better to go by what the Bible scholars say instead of what you heard on the radio about one copy?

Um, it seems that we have some differences in the basic understanding of how well the Bibles have been preserved.

First, there is all kinds of evidence that the stories in the Bibles have been altered. For instance, we’ve seen how Mt changed the 1Cr geneology to make it fit what he wanted to say. So many verses (sometimes whole paragraphs, see Acts 8) have been added to the Bibles over time that they amount to thousands of words. Some obvious examples include most of chapter 16 of the Gospel of Mark, which was added long after Mark was written (and by someone else), and the start of John chapter 8, which also was added later. Both of those are missing from our earliest manuscripts.


Second, we have over 5,000 of those early manuscripts, and no two of them, except for the smallest scraps, agree with each other word for word. The most common differences are spelling errors, but there are missing words, missing lines, missing pages and paragraphs, repeated lines, and so on. The worst manuscripts we have are often the earliest ones, showing that the sloppy copying was worse early on.


That’s extremely important because (third) for most of the New Testament, we don’t have any manuscripts for decades or even centuries after the originals, so we have little clue as to what was changed between the originals and our earliest manuscripts. So, for instance, several decades after, say, Mt chapter 8 was written, it may have been extensively changed – added to, parts cut out, and then all subsequent copies made from that altered version (or copies of it), and we have no way to know if that’s true or not. We do also have many clear instances where Christian scribes altered the text when copying it. The average gap between when the originals were written and our earliest surviving copy is over 150 years – plenty of time for radical changes. On any of this, you can look all this up yourself, from credible Bible scholars – you don’t have to take my word for any of it.

Fourth, these isn’t, and never has been, agreement on what goes into the Bible and what doesn’t. The Hebrew canon (the list of books in the Old Testament or OT) changed over time. You can see this from the Dead Sea Scroll (DSS) community, which included Jubl, En & more as part of their Bible, and other Jewish writings. The gyrations used in making the New Testament (NT) were similar, with many early Christians excluding Jm, Jd and others now in most modern Bibles. The Pe[bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse]ta Bible (ha, look what it did to the name of that Bible! It's Pes hi tt a) historically lacked 2 Pt, 2&3 Jn, Jd & Rv, and those have been added to some newer versions. Bibles well into the 6th century included other books in the NT, such as Ld, Hm, 3Cr, & many more. Luther made changes too (which were changed back later). In 1590 Pope Clement VIII removed 3 OT books to an Appendix, which was finally removed by Pope John Paul II in 1979. As a result of these repeated changes throughout history and into modern times, some Bibles have over 80 books, or 73, or 66, or 79, and so on. You might want to start with basic background info, such as "who wrote the Bible" by friedman.

This is only a greatly simplified summary – there are many more convolutions, changes, and differences in the many Bibles. My Bible has 73 books. How many does yours have? How can you say mine is wrong, even though it’s used by more Christians than yours?

The conclusion from all of this is that the Bible hasn’t been preserved very well at all over history. By saying that it is God’s job to preserve the Bible, you are saying that God’s not competent to do that, because it obviously hasn’t been preserved, especially not with Godly perfection. I think it’s much more respectful of God to attribute the terrible job of preserving the Bible(s) to humans.



For that, I'll need to make more direct arguments on why I see creationism as wrong, which is not allowed in this forum, so I'll have to leave it as is, unless you'd like to open a thread about the agreement of people from so many different religions in the main origins forum.


Have a nice day-

Papias


All this is true, as far as the actual words go, but it is deceptive. The truth is, that the vast bulk of the ancient manuscripts of the scriptures that have come down to us are remarkably similar, considering that they were all individually copied by hand. The errors that the vast bulk of the manuscripts contain are obvious copying errors such as you have listed. (words misspelled, missed, or repeated, lines dropped, lines doubled, etc.) Scholars still debate about the actual original word in only about one word out of a thousand.

There is much ado made about "the oldest manuscripts." But there are exactly two such manuscripts, and they both came from the same region. These two manuscripts differ from the mainstream in numerous places, and the systematic nature of the differences strongly suggest that the differences stem from willful editing, not copying errors.
 
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