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Rusticus said:How many times does the word "GLOBAL" appear in The Bible? Exactly zero times.
Rusticus said:Anyone who says that The Bible states that there was a global flood is therefore not being honest.
Rusticus said:People may well say that they interpret The Bible to be talking about a global flood. That would be the honest thing to say.
But to say that The Bible talks about a global flood is simply dishonest.
ebia said:My answers, FWIW:
Clearly, quite a few local floods have happened, and still do happen.
Yes.
In the story, yes. In reality, no.
In the story, yes. In reality, no.
In the story, yes. In reality, no, but through the story God makes it with all mankind.
In the story, yes. In reality, I dare say it has rained for 40 days and 40 nights at some time and somewhere. If you'd ever lived in Devon it would seem extremely plausable.
The question is ambiguous.
In the story, yes. In reality, no.
Alchemist said:Critias,
Wrong. Gluadys did not say night2day was a liar, she said what night2day said was untrue.
Alchemist said:Well, if night2day believes a global flood occured, and it didn't, then she has fallen victim to someone else's deceit. Considering what the Bible say about false teaching, for Gluadys to feel bad about the teaching of a global flood and not to warn night2day would be against the Bible, and indeed, the very will of God himself...
Alchemist said:It has absolutely nothing to do with intelligence. There was a time where some very intelligent men believed the Sun revolved around the Earth, and that didn't change the fact they were wrong. All Gluadys is saying is that she believes that a global flood is false teaching, and is warning night2day (as the Bible commands) that she has been deceived.
Alchemist said:Wrong, Critias. night2day has been given evidence for a global flood which she honestly believes to be accurate. From this data, she says there is evidence for a global flood. Certainly, from Gluadys' point (and indeed mine) this is untrue, but night2day did not lie, and Gluadys did not at any point suggest she did. Now if night2day knew there was no evidence for a global flood, yet told others there was, that would be a lie. But Gluadys never said this, she simply said night2day's statement was in her opinion untrue.
Alchemist said:In any case, if night2day was indeed lying, would it not be justified to say so?
I'm sorry Critias, but your statement seems a bit hypocritical, especially when you are so willing to misrepresent Gluadys for no apparent reason...
Peace,
Nick
night2day said:Your capable of doing the same for your own views. But since you can't even get past calling people a liar regarding the Genesis global flood, why bother?
We are discussing the real issue. How one regards the Scriptures ultimately decides how one regards the Christian teachings and faith. Since it is the Scriptures which define them.
This can go back back and forth, but we already know we each regard the Scriptures far differntly than the other.
Regarding the Genesis flood, or anything else in the Bible for that matter, it is a matter of faith, or lack thereof, that what the Bible states is God working through human history to bring about His purpose.
Pardon, but it is not your place to be condesending nor insulting to my intelligence simply because you have a dislike to the fact I simply because I hold to Genesis 1-9 to be as is.
In addition, I highly doubt you know of a tiny fraction of the world's mysteries. Not even I would say such a thing. The world we live in is far too complex and designed for that. All I said all along is to trust in the one who created it in the first place, not in fallible human study which changes day by day by day.
You again stated in your post: "
[/size][/color][/font]So, this is a lie. I am willing to believe you did not know it is a lie, that you yourself are the victim of someone else's deceit. But to say there is evidence of a global flood is a lie." Name-calling is name-calling.
It's very dishearting you feel you need to force your views on someone else...or that person is termed as something other than intellident by your standards if they do not accept certain therories or views
gluadys said:I think you had better re-take some reading for comprehension classes. I gave an example of a written document that would not be evidence. I did not say the bible was the same kind of written document. Just that some kinds of written documents are not evidence, such as a forgery.
gluadys said:The kind of proof you are looking for (e.g. a personal note from Moses that he used Gilgamesh as a source) does not exist. Nor is it needed for anyone who can make a literary comparison. It is obvious that Gilgamesh is a source to anyone who is not closing his eyes and his mind.
gluadys said:Give it up, Critias. If you have to so completely distort what I say to make a point, you dont have a point worth making.
What you are suggesting is analogous to saying that a shopkeeper who takes his days cash receipts to the bank for deposit, should be charged with counterfeiting because one of the bills he is depositing turns out to be counterfeit. Is the shopkeeper to blame because he accepted the bill in good faith? For that matter, even the person who gave it to him may not be the counterfeiter either, but someone who unwittingly acquired the counterfeit bill and passed it on in good faith.
The only person who is committing fraud (aka lying) is the original counterfeitor, not those who innocently and in good faith pass on the counterfeit bill.
This is the position of the majority of YECists. They are personally honest and stating what they believe to be the truth. They do not know (or believe) that their statements are false. The blame rests with those who deceived them, not with the person who repeats the false statement in the sincere belief that it is true.
Nothing leads me to conclude that it is history. God's message in creation leads me to conclude that it is not history.Critias said:So, you don't have faith that this "story" is history?
So from my perspective, all of these things did happen within the framework of the story. The question is whether the story is a story or a factual account of a flood. Given the contradictory evidence in creation, it is IMHO a story. If a global flood actually occurred, I would expect evidence of the flood and no contra-indications. I would expect this because I expect integrity from God, not deceit.
justified said:[/font]
I'm afraid I can't keep up with everyone's bickering on here, but I am curious about this. I am a Christian, and I don't believe in a global flood or a literal seven day creation, but I'm also an Ancient Historian which makes it convenient. How do you view the flood pericope from a historical point of view. Specifically, now.
Critias said:It is you who are closing your eyes because you have accept evolution thus you need to change Genesis. Many times I have asked you to present support for you assertions on this subject, not once have you been able to do so to show that Moses took from the Gilgamesh story.
You know, there are several resurrection stories out there that don't include Jesus Christ, that were written before Jesus Christ came to earth. Does this mean now that He did not raise from the dead and what we find in the Bible is actually a rip off of someone elses writing?
First, you called her statements a lie.
gluadys said:The way you do this is to read the Gilgamesh story, read the biblical story, and note that they are essentially the same story, just with different names. This indicates that one story is the source of the other. Since the Gilgamesh story is considerably older than the biblical story, it could not be using the biblical story as a source. So it had to be the other way around.
gluadys said:In fact, some people support that thesis. I have seen this argument used by atheists. Can you show they are wrong?
gluadys said:I called one statement a lie. And it was. But if you cannot tell the difference between a deliberate lie and the innocent passing on of what one believes to be the truth although it isn't, you are the one who needs to straighten out your thinking.
You are beating a dead horse here, Critias. Time you stopped wasting your effort.
The way you do this is to read the Gilgamesh story, read the biblical story, and note that they are essentially the same story, just with different names. This indicates that one story is the source of the other. Since the Gilgamesh story is considerably older than the biblical story, it could not be using the biblical story as a source. So it had to be the other way around.
ebia said:The only explanation I can think of is that when I wrote Deutorocanonical, you read it as Decalouge.
Critias said:Do you need that exact word to be in the Bible in order to believe it?
Critias said:Now off to calling me a liar as well, eh?
Critias said:More name-calling. Is this the way your debate by resorting to childish name-calling?
Critias said:How about you answer my questions and we actually deal with Scripture?
Say's who? The RCC and the Eastern Orthodox churches have always treated them as inspired, although (in the case of the RCC) of lesser inspiration. Pick up a decent Catholic bible and you'd be hard pressed to pick them out - they aren't stuck together in the middle - and that's how a lot of bibles have been for roughly three-quarters of Christian history. The were in the bible St Paul quoted from (the LXX) and have been since.night2day said:Yes, I see now I apparently did confuse the two words. It still stands those books, whether they be the Apocrypha were never really considered inspired.
The apocraphal "gospels" are a completely different kettle of fish to the deuterocanonical books, although the are sometimes confused with them because of the tendency to call the deuterocanonicals "The Apocrypha" in non-Catholic traditions. I'm not aware of any remotely orthodox church that includes them in their canon.The "other Gospels" (since some do consider them alongside the Apocrypha, but seperate from) such as from Thomas and Mary and others were held highly suspect to be Gnostic in origin. As well as written by others during the days of the early Christian church that held legitement.
Rusticus said:So you are expecting me to believe something that is not in The Bible, just because you think it is a good idea?
Rusticus said:I was under the impression that you think highly of Luther. So, what happend to Sola Scriptura? Martin Luther would turn over in his grave if he heard you talking thus.
Really......
Rusticus said:It is not what I said, but it is your interpretation of what I said.
Rusticus said:What I said was this:
"How many times does the word "GLOBAL" appear in The Bible? Exactly zero times.
Anyone who says that The Bible states that there was a global flood is therefore not being honest.
People may well say that they interpret The Bible to be talking about a global flood. That would be the honest thing to say.
But to say that The Bible talks about a global flood is simply dishonest."
The best way to avoid being called dishonest is to stop being dishonest.
Rusticus said:Of course, you calling me a "childish name-caller" is neither childish nor name-calling?
Rusticus said:If I was interested in name-calling the term "Bully-Boy" would come to mind to describe you. But, seeing that I am not into that sort of thing, I won't call you that.
Rusticus said:I have no intention to share my beliefs with a person who is dishonest.
If you were able to honestly admit that "Global" is your interpretation, rather than what The Bible actually says, there is a very slight chance that we might have a meaningful discussion.
ebia said:Say's who? The RCC and the Eastern Orthodox churches have always treated them as inspired, although (in the case of the RCC) of lesser inspiration. Pick up a decent Catholic bible and you'd be hard pressed to pick them out - they aren't stuck together in the middle - and that's how a lot of bibles have been for roughly three-quarters of Christian history. The were in the bible St Paul quoted from (the LXX) and have been since.
But this is drifting off the point - you claim that God has preserved the bible, when he actually seems to have preserved at least 3 slighly different bibles - the "Catholic" bible, the "Protestant" bible and the "Eastern Orthodox" bible, and that's without delving into some of the "not quite orthodox" eastern churches.
The apocraphal "gospels" are a completely different kettle of fish to the deuterocanonical books, although the are sometimes confused with them because of the tendency to call the deuterocanonicals "The Apocrypha" in non-Catholic traditions. I'm not aware of any remotely orthodox church that includes them in their canon.
Critias said:.....just keep on with those personal attacks, I praise God for everyone of them!
Are you suggesting that the 'bible God has preserved' is the minimial set of books that every Christian church agrees on? On what basis would you think that?Critias said:When looking at the three various Bibles you present, what books are in all three?
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