- Jan 28, 2003
- 9,969
- 2,521
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Humanist
- Marital Status
- Married
- Politics
- US-Democrat
What John may or may not have been referring to is only of secondary importance, at best. Moses and Isaiah certainly had little idea of the meaning of much of what they wrote.
And does the same assertion apply to your posts? Is it OK if we search your posts for hidden meanings that have nothing to do with what you intended? I cannot see how that would be helpful. If I am going to read your posts (or the Bible) then I would think my primary concern should be to understand what the author intended the words to mean.
For there are serious doubts that any of the books in the New Testament are the works of the apostles other than 10 of the epistles of Paul. All other books of the New Testament are either anonymous or highly doubtful in authorship.You a funny guy! Have you ever looked into this? I mean, seriously? If you want to remove a virus from your PC, don't call a plumber.
Yes, I have seriously looked into the authorship of the NT. The gospels, Acts, Hebrews, 1 John, 2 John, and 3 John are all anonymous. 1 Tim, 2 Tim, Titus, and 2 Peter are widely regarded to be 2nd century forgeries. Revelation is by a John--a common name--but there is no indication it is John the apostle. Jude and James don't even claim to be apostles, and it is doubtful that Jude was a brother of Jesus as claimed. I Peter is also far from being confirmed by Peter.
So that leaves only 10 books of Paul, who may have been an apostle, but he was certainly not one of the 12 disciples.
I think this is actually a better question than you give it credit for. You can find the Truth of G-d in a rainstorm, (just as one random example) lists are not such a primary concern.Why must I select your list, if accuracy of the list is not imporant?
If you are claiming that that Bible is just another set of books to find God, even as the Epistle of Barnabas or a rainstorm are places to find God, then it is not a big deal which books are selected.
But some claim every book in the Bible is the inerrant Word of God--or at least the original copies were. If that is the claim, then it would be very wrong to include books in that list that did not meet that criteria. In that case, accuracy would be very important.
Last edited:
Upvote
0