Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
Mods, note that I am and have been totally struggling with all of this for several years now.
I just realized that I was typing my replies quickly and not taking extra care to make sure this did not have the feel of a debate.
Anyhow what I am fundamentally struggling with is a LACK OF EVIDENCE.
And then secondary within this context, I have to figure out how to work through all of this with my Christian family.
I am in the closet and am silent and I hate this.
First, congratulations on being an ORU graduate. We lived in Tulsa, OK for many years. While I have not taken any courses at ORU, the graduates I have talked with through the years before leaving Tulsa all seemed to have a "God in box" theology. That is to say:-This is how God works;- This is what I have been taught to believe; and- I am not interested in information/ideas which run counter to what I have been taught.This is not to say all ORU gradutes are like the above description, nor is it meant to insult any ORU graduates who are reading this. It is my observation based on conversations with various ORU graduates over a period of years. So, I am willing to concede my observation may be incorrect but please note that arguing about ORU really should be a new thread.
Now that I have sucessfully alienated all ORU alums, I will continue.
Short of building a time machine that will take one back in time, there is probably no evidence available that will be of any use. You have done your research well and are quite capable of raising excellent counter arguments to the information so far presented.
Having wrestled with this issue a great deal myself,
I will share the only 2 pieces of evidence I have. While both are personal and are subject to interpretation, for me they are sufficient for my faith and walk with God.
First, regarding the resurrection of Jesus the Christ in the New Testament. The event can be summed up by the phrase "something happened".
(Bear with me, please, before pointing out my grasp of the obvious).
While the details of the various resurrection stories can seem to conflict,
whatever happened was sufficient enough for a group of followers to preach and tell others about their experience with Jesus the Christ.
It has been my observation that throughout history, when the founder or key person in a movement dies, the movement also tends to die.
Maybe not immediately, but it dies. Yet, Christianity has been around for almost 2,000 years now.
Therefore, whatever happened to the followers after His death was sufficient for them to risk stoning and/or social rejection and tell others what it was like to experience Him.
The other piece of subjective evidence is that I have had a number of "coincidental occurrences" (large and small) with family and friends through the years.
So many, that for me to chalk up these various serendipitous events to statistics working in my favor seems unrealistic.
Granted, it is a subjective observation on my part, but when I have tried to allow that it is statistical chance working in my favor, I feel hollow and empty.
Believing in a God who is gently watching over me and being of help even when I am too dense to realize it, is far more comforting than ascribing my life solely to random chance.
Changing the subject, you mentioned in an earlier post about miracles happening in other religions. Could it be that since so many religions seem to have similar threads to them (love one another, respect others, help widows and orphans, etc.) that they are all describing the same God?
The analogy would be a circle of people sorrounding the base of a mountain and each one describing the mountain. Each description is accurate from where that person stands, but another person (say 40 or 50 people away) sees the mountain from a different perspective.
Enough preaching.
I told you what Jesus offers you (post #11), do you want to go to his door, or carry on debating in the market-place ?. . .
Anyhow what I am fundamentally struggling with is a LACK OF EVIDENCE.
I told you what Jesus offers you (post #11), do you want to go to his door, or carry on debating in the market-place ?
Any rational ORU alum would have known all that already. Anyhow, I'm not too sure I ever did fit into that box so well. I was young and I didn't know so much. I wanted to go to a Christian university. It was a time in my life where I need to get my act together. This was the only way I knew how then. It was really the only Christian university which I seriously considered.
I have done my homework. This has been practically a part-time job over the last few years. I honestly don't know many people who have invested so much effort into honest pursuit of truth.
Kind of frustrating because my issues are REAL and the rules of this forum almost see to prohibit me from getting the answers to my VERY, VERY REAL questions.
My struggle is NOT about oh-how-do-I-work-through-this-petty-self-destructive-selfish-carnal-sin-in-my-life issue.
Indeed. That's fear and trembling. That I respect.
I wonder if there are many who haven't come across the following scriptures.
And that I respect too. I know all "evidence" goes through a filter of personal experience and a degree of subjectivity.
Otherwise, it would not have taken me years smack in the middle of a life time.
Could be so. There could have been a historical Jesus. That could have had a a controversial message. That did get killed by the Romans for it.
No worries.
Man do I have a lot of respect for a Christian who actually knows about this Biblical scholarship.
Yes. But aren't you about to step on the logical fallacy of an appeal to popularity.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argumentum_ad_populum
Indeed. However all major religions seem to have survived this test. Just because something is popular doesn't make it right. I learned that one in Sunday School long ago.
But so have other religions. Even longer. Even paganism. Yikes.
Also, isn't this almost like the application of the anthropic principle to religious belief? I wonder if there would be a memetic equivalent.
Just because someone will die for something doesn't necessarily make it right.
I thought we were all made acutely aware of this 9/11/2001.
Anyhow, isn't this getting close to affirming the consequent or possibly a red herring?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Affirming_the_consequent
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_herring
I apologize for bringing these up and that this may appear like "debate" but I would like to emphasize that there isn't really a proposition I'm supporting.
I'm fundamentally struggling with a lack of evidence for supporting my former Christian faith clearly at the exclusion of all others with an ability to confirm a faith as true and all the others as false teaching.
Me too. However so have nearly all devout believers of nearly all faiths though.
I envy you.
But isn't this supporting the benefit of the belief, not the validity of the belief.
A parable: A man has cancer. We don't tell him. We tell him he is fine. He has more peace of mind. Perhaps knowing you have cancer might even give feelings of hollowness and emptiness. But simply the truth is the truth.
Again, back in Sunday School I learned we *must* follow the truth even if it is hard and not always the easy way.
Just because something doesn't "feel" "hollow" or "empty" doesn't necessarily make it true does it? I fear some could even rationalize self-satisfying and self-gratifying behaviour this way.
Sometimes being on a diet makes me feel a bit "empty." Literally. But personally, I think it's a good thing to be healthy and in shape.
I believe I've seen this verse quoted many times to encourage one to physically take care of one's body.
Yes it easy. It "feels good." Does that mean "do it?"
Also, "random chance" is a bit of a red herring isn't it? With what I've read, often those two words get used together by YECs when the don't yet really understand the principles of evolutionary biology. Is this what you're referring to or are you referring more to existence at all?
Very possible.
But then again, what about Saul meeting the witch of Endor?
Also many do indeed believe demons can work miracles. St. Augustine included.
Do you attribute those same miracles to the same God?
But haven't many almost considered such a point of view heretical?
No worries. I'm enjoying the conversation. This struggle has been and remains to be very, very painful.
Sometimes it feels like my best (albeit I do indeed seriously wonder if imaginary) friend has died and I can't really talk to anybody about it.
In addition to the general lack of evidence supporting the certainty and exclusivity of a Christian faith, I simply also struggle with verses such as this.
I have no idea how verses like that fit into my modern, democratic, compassionate life.
I struggle with this stuff still.
I told you what Jesus actually says and I can introduce you to many living people who have the miracles he promises.In post #11 you told me what you believe Jesus offers me.
Well, I know you can pray to God to help you with your faith, or to give you some faith. That helped me during a low period. It really worked.
It is good you are asking questions, and inquiring and wanting more than a superficial "faith" or "belief" because the deeper your knowledge of the things of God, the better your faith will be. I was once upon a time (way when I was 20) belonged to a Pentecostal style church. Never did I feel so empty, but as I reached out and learned about other churches and another side of what they believed from Scripture, then I began to realize no one church had all of the answers. I prayed to find a church that did have everything. I believe I have found it.
I told you what Jesus actually says and I can introduce you to many living people who have the miracles he promises.
The Queen of the South travelled to see Solomon, now greater than Solomon's glory is available for you to see.
If you visit a meeting you will hear testimonies, and the orderly operation of the gifts of God's Spirit. In these things God will be speaking directly to you showing he knows your heart and providing the evidence you need. Then if you are prepared to be humble you can receive the same.
www.revivalusa.org
First, I am glad you didn't feel insulted about my observations on ORU.
Thanks for the link about the resurrection debate. It is most interesting once I was able to get to the website. (The link may be a bit off compared to the website path)
Regarding my attempt at logic regarding the resurrection, your points are well made. My mistake for not researching other faiths more thoroughly and thinking a little more deeply.
Regarding my observation about random chance and statistics, the reply was:But isn't this supporting the benefit of the belief, not the validity of the belief.Possibly. The above question/response appears to be a gray area to me. Is that emptiness when I attempt to turn away from theism a validation that turning away from theism a mistake? I like to think so, but cannot prove that it is the benefit of the belief. Like the Bible, this may be a matter of interpretation.
Regarding the verse in Deuteronomy, it is my understanding the reason the wife would be punished so extremely is that she is disgracing her husband either by exposing his nakedness (definitely a concern in ancient Judaism) or finishing the fight prematurely and thus disgracing him by hurting him rather than the assailant. Either way she is seen as bringing disgrace upon her husband.
My guess is that this passage in Deuteronomy came about after a real life incident that was not addressed by the law. No doubt there are other interpretations.
There is another subjective observation I neglected to mention previously that helps me with my faith. Until the entire known universe is fully explained by science, I believe there is room for God. Purely a subjective belief on my part and I freely admit it.
I'm not sure I have been of any help in this challenge, but I have truly enjoyed the exchange. I will, of course, be glad to respond to any questions you may have from this post.
If you would like to continue a discussion via private e-mail, please feel free to contact a moderator about it. I would greatly appreciate continuing the conversation if you are willing.
Regardless, I wish you the best as you continue to raise the hard questions and explore the answers. May you find that peace which passes understanding as you continue on this journey of discovery.
So I guess my question is, what do you do with stuff you don't have evidence for? How can you believe something as truth when it just as easily (perhaps even moreso per Occam's Razor) have been just made up a really long time again and incrementally added to and adjusted to suit the times at hand?
Whether or not this little addition is "part of the Bible" or "inspired by God" is another little discussion, but I did my homework (like always...) and saw the following passages related to
- the origins and the context of the eye-for-an-eye
- an example of how God treats those who curse him (for reconciling "bless those who curse you" and "be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect."
Here's an interesting passage on the heavenly Father handling those who curse Him...
10 Now the son of an Israelite mother and an Egyptian father went out among the Israelites, and a fight broke out in the camp between him and an Israelite. 11 The son of the Israelite woman blasphemed the Name with a curse; so they brought him to Moses. (His mother's name was Shelomith, the daughter of Dibri the Danite.) 12 They put him in custody until the will of the LORD should be made clear to them.
13 Then the LORD said to Moses: 14 "Take the blasphemer outside the camp. All those who heard him are to lay their hands on his head, and the entire assembly is to stone him. 15 Say to the Israelites: 'If anyone curses his God, he will be held responsible; 16 anyone who blasphemes the name of the LORD must be put to death. The entire assembly must stone him. Whether an alien or native-born, when he blasphemes the Name, he must be put to death.
17 " 'If anyone takes the life of a human being, he must be put to death. 18 Anyone who takes the life of someone's animal must make restitutionlife for life. 19 If anyone injures his neighbor, whatever he has done must be done to him: 20 fracture for fracture, eye for eye, tooth for tooth. As he has injured the other, so he is to be injured. 21 Whoever kills an animal must make restitution, but whoever kills a man must be put to death. 22 You are to have the same law for the alien and the native-born. I am the LORD your God.' " 23 Then Moses spoke to the Israelites, and they took the blasphemer outside the camp and stoned him. The Israelites did as the LORD commanded Moses.
Back to the evidence question. What is this evidence of? Evidence of an unchanging God? Of moral absolutes? Or of human imaginations and authorship?
Help me out here guys. I'm reading the Bible like never before.
If anybody else new wants to join in here, please do.
I would like to believe. I would like to go back to the old comfortable life.
I still fully intend to live the same life, to live by the same morality. The issue is fundamentally one of disbelief.
Is it good or useful or profitable in any way?
There is a way which seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death. ~ Proverbs 14:12
At risk of having my Christian icon subject to a heresy trial . . .
I don't think the Faith is about affirming a series of impossible propositions. The Faith is about being faithful. As Real Live Preacher points out:
Likewise, we think having faith means being convinced God exists in the same way we are convinced a chair exists. People who cannot be completely convinced of God's existence think faith is impossible for them.
Not so. People who doubt can have great faith because faith is something you do, not something you think. In fact, the greater your doubt the more heroic your faith.
I learned that it doesn't matter in the least that I be convinced of God's existence. Whether or not God exists is none of my business, really. What do I know of existence? I don't even know how the VCR works.
What does matter is whether or not I am faithful. I think faithful is a hell of a good word. It still has some of its original shine. It still calls us to action.
Proof-texting. You wouldn't accept it from anybody else, so why do you do it?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?