Sunday, December 11, 2011

On the Question of Are There Any Christians: My Conversation with Jim Part 2

In this particular conversation with Jim, we will see, if we follow Jim's logic, that on the question of are there any Christians, the answer is, NO. When Christians try to hide the fact that Christianity promotes moral laxity, they often times resort to the claim that if a person is committing a sin, then they are not Christian. But this leads to the absurd position that there are no Christians, as they also claim they are born sinners, and no one is perfect, which would mean that they are always sinning!  And if they are always sinning, then there would be no Christians!  Otherwise, we have empirical evidence that shows that Christians commit a higher amount of "sins"  in the form of murder, rape, and so on, than people of other faiths and atheists.  For example, we can the statistics from the federal bureau of prisons shows this to be the case, and as Jesus would say, we know a tree by the fruit it bears.  Jim follows this path, which leads to the absurd position that there are no Christians.

In one of his responses to my previous post, Jim wrote the following:


As I said before, anything that is done that is immoral or against God’s law, even if it is done in “Christ’s name” and regardless of the justification for it, is not Christianity. The Koukl quote I mentioned before covers this. Plenty of people have done things in Christ’s name that are wrong. They’re called false prophets and heretics and make life difficult for people who sincerely love God. No Christian, regardless of status, doing an un-Christian act, can make it okay morally by claiming to do it in the name of God or Jesus. The guy who walked around with a sandwich board and megaphone condemning us all to hell at my undergrad school was wrong, though he would claim to be a Christian doing Christian things for Christ. What he was doing didn’t line up with scripture. If it doesn’t match what Jesus taught, it doesn’t matter what someone calls themselves or what he or she does. If what they are doing is immoral and anti-Christian, it’s wrong. It wouldn’t matter if it is one of the original apostles was saying this. You can’t do something that is counter to God’s teaching and by virtue of your “rank” or standing in Christianity, call it good. It isn’t and God isn’t fooled or blind to it. I’ll talk about that in exactly 6 paragraphs from here.

Luther was wrong about the Jews, despite his contributions in other areas of scholarship. Look at some of the brands of Christianity that have spawned from him. There are synods who believe that if you’re not a member of theirs, you are going to hell regardless of your otherwise doctrinal belief in Jesus Christ. In the end, I know Luther contributed, but his contribution in that vain was not true to Jesus’ teachings about the Jews. Jesus’ teaching was a completion of what God revealed to the Jews first. Jesus himself was a Jew and never condemned their Jewish-ness. He only got mad at Jews who were distorting God’s word and taking advantage of it for their own benefit. Sound familiar? Not to mention, the Jews were God’s chosen people.

In addition, Hitler was heavily influenced by pagan religions, believing that German soil and blood were somehow sacred, amongst other issues that he had. Hitler may have used Luther’s writings to justify aspects of his ideology, but if truth and accuracy are of any importance to us, Hitler was far more heavily influenced by social Darwinism than by Luther’s writings. It’s easy to see this even in the manner in which he spoke. The language he used was not that of Christianity at all. All of what he spoke was anti-semitic, to be sure, but that is surely not all drawn from Luther’s mistaken viewpoint.


Below is my response to Jim.

Dear Jim,

You need to be more clear in your writing, but I know it is difficult when you are attempting to apply Humpty Dumpty semantics and logic. The problem is, either way, you cannot get out of your dilemma.

If only the actions are not Christian, that would mean that the person committing the acts ARE still Christian. Now, as I have already pointed out, the Christian doctrine promotes the belief that they are evil sinners that cannot help but to sin, as they are born evil sinners--which is why Christians continue to sin, repent, sin, repent--and repeat when necessary. We see this result for instance, with priests and pastors who molest children, and are just moved to another parish/jurisdiction and are allowed to continue to be priests and pastors--because after all, they are still Christian! I once asked a preacher in front of an audience if a Christian captain of a slave ship who fed a few African babies to the sharks to set an example for the rest of the Africans was still a Christian, he said "Of course--if he still believed in Jesus, as we are all sinners, and no sin is greater than another." Now, we often times hear this, like in the case of Jimmy Swaggart and the likes, when they have been busted with prostitutes that they are, after all, "just human" and they are "sinners"--but they believe in, and love Jesus!! So, as I have said before, Christianity allows for this, given its doctrine of original sin, and salvation, which promotes moral laxity and the process of sin, repent, sin, repent--repeat when necessary.

If you claim that neither the actions nor the person committing the sinful actions, are Christian, then there are no Christians, because according to Christianity, ALL fall short, and are dirty, filthy sinners, as none of them are perfect--except for Jesus.

You have studied far too long under Humpty. Your application of Humpty Dumpty semantics and logic is pathetic. Your oxymoronic attempt to save Christianity only shows its impotence. It only makes sense in Humpty's world, where you can make words mean whatever you want them to mean. For what sense does it make to say that, "No Christian, regardless of status, doing an un-Christian act, can make it okay morally by claiming to do it in the name of God or Jesus." How can a person be a Christian, if they are committing an un-Christian act? For as you say, such a person does not love God, and is therefore not a Christian! But that would include ALL Christians, as according to Christianity, ALL fall short, and no one is perfect but Jesus! Therefore, according to what you have said, there are no Christians except for Jesus!

But wait!! Perhaps Jesus was not a Christian either!!--following your Humpty Dumpty semantics and logic. For Jesus was actually not perfect, because he did not keep Yahweh's commandments--and in fact, he preached against them! For instance, he preached against Yahweh's kosher food laws; he had the disciples pick corn on the Sabbath; he stopped the mob from stoning the woman to death for committing adultery, which was one of Yahweh's laws; he had his disciples steal a donkey; he became angry at a fig tree!! Now, this anger cannot be considered "righteous" anger, as the fig tree cannot commit a sin!! Furthermore, it was out of seasons for figs, and the fig tree was doing exactly what it was supposed to do--it was being a "perfect" fig tree! So, using your logic, Jesus did not love Yahweh, or himself, and therefore, was not a Christian too. Therefore, there never have been, nor are there any Christians in the world.

You said:

"He only got mad at Jews who were distorting God’s word and taking advantage of it for their own benefit. Sound familiar?"

Demonstrate to me how the Jews were distorting God's word. In fact, the Jews that Jesus got angry at were keeping Yahweh's commandments. They were supposed to collect taxes and tithes, as the bible instructed them to.

"This they shall give, every one that passeth among them that are numbered, half a shekel after the shekel of the sanctuary: (a shekel is twenty gerahs:) a half shekel shall be the offering of Yahweh (the LORD). Every one that passeth among them that are numbered, from twenty years old and above, shall give an offering unto Yahweh (the LORD, Ex. 31:12-14)."

Now, the money changers were exchanging foreign currency for shekels, so that Yahweh's laws could be carried out. So, again, we have Jesus going against Yahweh's laws. When Jesus was confronted by the disciples on this issue, he later asked Peter "From whom do the kings of the earth collect duty and taxes-from their own sons or from others (Mt. 17:25-26)?" Peter answered that the taxes were collected from others. Jesus said the sons were exempt (Mt. 17:26). The point Jesus was making here was that the taxes were not collected by the tax collectors from the sons (i.e. of spiritual Israel) but for "others."

Here, we have Jesus using Humpty Dumpty semantics and logic! For the aforementioned passage said EVERYONE has to pay taxes. It did not say everyone but the kings and the sons have to pay--it says EVERYONE has to pay taxes. So again, using your Humpty Dumpty semantics and logic, Jesus himself was not a Christian!!

Now, I have spoken on this issue before. Christians have tried to say the Christian god and Jesus are perfect even though they exhibit vices, such as anger and jealousy, of which I have already argued about and discussed. Here, I will point out another dangerous aspect of the "Christian solution" which is to say that when they get angry and jealous it is "righteous." As you said "Jesus himself was a Jew and never condemned their Jewish-ness. He only got mad at Jews who were distorting God’s word and taking advantage of it for their own benefit. Sound familiar? " YES, that does sound familiar!! The so-called "righteous" anger and jealousy has resulted in millions of innocent people being tortured and murdered. After all, since the Native Americans were not following the laws of Yahweh, torturing them and murdering them was "righteous" according to Christianity--as they were not followers and lovers of Yahweh and/or Jesus. This is another example of how Christianity promotes moral laxity. In this case, genocide of those who do not believe like they do. Absolute laws are not absolute, for when one is supposed to never be angry or jealous, but then it is okay to be angry and jealous in this case because it is "righteous"; or when murder is not murder when you murder innocent children because neither they nor their people believe in your god. This is a great lapse in ethics and morality, and promotes moral laxity. No wonder it was so easy for Christians to slaughter so many millions of Africans, Native Americans, Muslims, Asians, Jews etc. who did not believe like them, as it would be considered "righteous" to kill unbelievers of Yahweh and son. This is no ethical standard at all. In comparison to Buddha, and Lao Tzu who was consistent in their teachings on anger, hate, murder, and so forth. As such, their teachings do not promote moral laxity, as the Christian teachings do.

When a religion like Christianity promotes the idea of believing that somehow their soil and their blood is somehow sacred, and that their way is the only way, it leads to moral laxity, such as genocide of groups that are "different." Thus, we see a difference in religions such as Christianity and religions such as Buddhism and Taoism. Empirical evidence supports this. That evidence would be the millions of people who have died horrible tortuous deaths in the name of the gods of such religions as Christianity, Islam, and Judaism.

Jim's logic, leads to the absurd position that there are no Christians.

Wednesday, November 30, 2011

My Conversations with Jim, Part 1. Why Christianity Promotes Moral Laxity; Why Their God is not Worthy of Worship, and Why Pride and Hate Can Be Virtues

I am beginning a series of posts here in reference to comments made on another one of my blogs titled, "A is for Atheist" by a commenter named Jim (aka anonymous)  I have chosen not to post them there, but here instead, as they are in the format of a conversation, and therefore, would be easier to follow along with as I answer each comment one at a time.  Enjoy.



This is one of Jim's replies to my post titled " On The Question Of Yahweh And The Slaughter of The Canaanite Unborn Fetuses: Dear Anonymous - Part One. My Response to a Recent Commenter on This Blog"


I am held accountable for my actions. My failings are held against me. My imperfections count. That’s why it’s said that Jesus came, to fill the gap between the standard God has set and how close or far away I am from it. Jesus is not a “Get Out of Jail Free” card, as some have used it. That only works if God isn’t all-knowing and seeing and it isn’t true to the Christian message. God claims to know the actual hearts and minds of his creation. Nothing, no cover-up, no ingenuine repentance is fooling God. The temporal consequences of sin do not go away either, just because we are forgiven. Sin costs us here. Some people, Christian, atheist, agnostic, Buddhist, Muslim, Mormon, etc., may “get away” with sin on earth, like I “got away” with my shoplifting. God saw it and will deal with me justly for anything I do. You can’t honestly suggest that Christianity promotes moral laxity even if some Christians are morally lax. That’s just not so. Ideologies that ignore or reject the existence of God are responsible for more deaths than all the religions of the world combined. You can just check an older copy of the Guinness Book of World Records (Judicial section under Mass Killings) to find that out. Social Darwinism fueled the Holocaust. Communism was responsible for 66 million deaths under Stalin, Lenin and Khrushchev. Dennis Prager writes “more innocent people have been murdered, tortured and enslaved by secular ideologies – Nazism and communism – than by all religions in history.” Genocides in Africa, communism in China, ad nauseum. No, God is not the root of evil, it is His hand that stays evil’s full force.

Look, you claim that your "job" is to educate, but you are presupposing the answer and backfilling the argument with things you don't like and then twisting some of it from its original meaning, (or possibly you just don’t know you’re doing it) when I would put it to you that you don't fully comprehend what you're doing. "Most people who have rejected God have rejected a really bad interpretation (and I would add, presentation) of him." I think that's pretty apparent in general, but maybe more so with you. Have you ever spent time with something like "Evidence That Demands a Verdict"? Have you ever tried to consider that when Jesus says that his disciples need to be willing to leave families, etc., that maybe he means something different than how you're choosing to take it? There ARE other parts of speech that Jesus employed at various times in his teaching, opening the doorway to more than one possible reading of some of the passages you object most to. I obviously don’t want you to read it to be more “effective” at what you do, but maybe if you better understood what we believe, you’d be fairer and less angry about it. I don’t know.

You also said that hatred and pride were virtues, but the way you described it sounded more like defense mechanisms to me. I’ll have another look just the same. By and large though, most psychotherapists will tell you that hate is really just the eventual result of deep-seeded (or is it seated? I think both actually work here) fear, as is pride. If you want to know what I think on that topic, I might go into it more, but my diatribe is long enough this time. Thanks for posting my responses and for taking the time to read them. I'd appreciate if you wouldn't insult me by calling them fodder. That's just disrespectful and patronizing.

J

My response:

Dear Jim,

You tell me that as a Christian your "failings" are held against you, and your imperfections count, and God will, as you say, "deal with me (you) justly for anything I (you) do." I am interesting in knowing just how you think your god will "deal with you"-- unless of course you believe your god will be sending you to hell for your failings. Repenting is not a just way of "dealing with your failings"--but that is all Christians claim they must do to be "saved" and go to heaven. If there was real justice within the Christian matrix, you would not be able to get away with merely "repenting" of your sins--so please, tell me how your god deals with you "justly". To say "sorry to Jesus" and then being allowed to walk away scott free is not a just and fair method of "dealing with you." (Your sins, i.e. your offenses against your fellow man/woman). As I said before, repenting does nothing for the victims of the "sins" Christians commit. The only real justice for victims and society comes from secular laws--not your god. The Christian matrix is a system that leads to moral laxity, as there are not consequences for believers in this life for the transgressions they commit. Yes, in this life, Christians believe they have a "get out of jail free" card--as long as they do not get caught. If they get caught, it is only secular laws that mete out justice--not their god. According to the Christian belief system, their god does not care if the little children that are atheists are raped and murdered--they will go to hell--but if the priest who committed those crimes repents, well, he will find paradise in heaven, while the children he raped and murdered burn in hell! It is difficult to fathom anything more unjust than that.

I am not the first that came to the conclusion that this version of Christianity is unjust and leads to "moral laxity." Pelagius pointed this out long ago--we see the results of this version of Christianity via the actions of Christian society as a whole--so his analysis was quite correct. The other version of Christianity believes humans are judged solely by their works, and everything they have done is written in the Book of Life, and this is what they are judge by--as the Bible says. Furthermore, according to Hebrews 10:26-27, there is no repentance for your sins, as once you have been "saved" and have the laws written on your heart, and you willfully sin--you go to the pit of fire--NO REPENTANCE.

You also claim that atheist ideologies are responsible for more deaths than all of the religions combined--which is not the case at all. Let me give you a short history lesson to illustrate why.

The anti-Semitism and atrocities committed by Hitler's Nazi's, was influence heavily by the works of Martin Luther, including his "On the Jews and Their Lies" in which Luther called for all Jewish rights, including rights to their own religious writings be eliminated; their properties razed; their monies confiscated; and to use Jews as forced agricultural labour. The Jews were scapegoated, and also blamed for the death of Jesus, so it was easy to incite hatred against them and blame them for the economic hardships they faced--not because the Jews were the money changers--but because of the economic sanctions placed on them after the Treaty of Versailles, where they were made to pay restitution for starting WWI. The reasons for the atrocities committed in Germany have a very, very heavy Christian influence. On an even deeper level, it makes one wonder how Christians can trust their own bible (half of which consists of the Jewish Tanakh) when as Luther claimed, the Jews are "untrustworthy"-- this is a non-sequitur of epic proportions.

The tyrannical governments of many of the so-called "atheist regimes,"and their totalitarianism could be attributed to other factors, and were not created to impose atheism on others. For instance, in Russia before the Russian Revolution (1917), the Russian Orthodox Church and the czarist autocracy controlled the country and the wealth, while peasants and the working class suffered in poverty. Nothing could be done to influence the Czar to change his policies, which then resulted in worker strikes, culminating in actual revolution. Their revolutions were anti-Imperialistic, and directed towards removing Imperialism (which works hand in hand with the church) in order to establish socialism and a more even distribution of wealth within the country. As church and state worked hand in hand in oppressing their nation, it would therefore be a natural progression for the socialists to eliminate religion along with the Czarist government.

Just as was in the case of Russia, China too, was a feudal society where the few elite controlled the wealth and power, while the majority barely survived, resulting in many peasant uprisings. Their revolution and the communism that followed was an effort to elevate the living conditions of the poor and oppressed workers. In the case of China, Christianity had been in practice since the 7th century, and although it waned between the 10th and 14th centuries, it reestablished itself the 18th and 19th centuries. This "western influence" then led to the Taiping Rebellion from 1850-1864--a civil war launched by a heterodox Christian who believed he was the younger brother of Jesus Christ. This rebellion is considered one of the deadliest in history, and resulted in the deaths of approximately 20 to 47 million people.(Revolutionary armies in the modern era: a revisionist approach By S. P. Mackenzie p. 78) We can see then, that just as it was in the case with Russia, when the Communist Party of China came to power in 1949, China viewed Western religions such as Christianity as the tool of Western colonialism. Therefore, In an effort to separate themselves from Western Colonial influence, Mao, in a similar move to Jefferson's, aimed for the separation of church and state. This move had nothing to do with forcing atheism onto the people, and everything to do with removing Imperialistic regimes. So you see, many of the so-called "atheist regimes" were heavily influence by Christianity. Even if they were atheists, and had committed the above atrocities, that would not make Christianity or their god, if he existed, anymore worthy of worship, as two wrongs do not make a right.

As a final note, you claim my view of hate and pride is a defense mechanism. Well, if you consider that hating someone that hurts me--which saves me from further hurt, then yes, you are right. I am defending myself against further hurt by hating those that hurt me. Also, hate can be a great motivator. There are many instances where hate has motivated either a person or a whole group of people to great accomplishments, such as when the Haitians rose up against their French oppressors.

If my pride saves me from being meek and humble and willing to follow anyone's "advice," then yes, my pride is a defense mechanism against those who would use and abuse me to their own end. Defense mechanisms can come in handy in life. The Army, the Navy, and the United States in general employ many defense mechanisms in order to defend themselves. However, defending something that is indefensible does not help society progress--and Christianity, in the face of logic and reason--has proven itself to be quite indefensible. On the other hand, pride as I said before, is merely the proper amount of self respect and is a virtue. If you have self respect, then you are morel likely to hold up all the rest of the virtues--which for me, makes pride perhaps the primary virtue.




Monday, July 11, 2011

Atheists and Unicorns, NOT An Emotional Appeal--A Rebuttal of JW Wartick's Argument

Recently, I successfully rebutted JW Wartick's claim that the unicorn argument is merely an appeal to emotion--which it is not. I demonstrated that there is as much evidence for unicorns (Actually, there is more, as the Greeks, the Chinese, and even the bible mention unicorns!) as there is for his god. In the course of my rebuttal, Wartick offered the cosmological argument against the unicorn, which I showed that if we accepted his argument, that it would be a proof that Jesus is not divine! It was at that point that he refused to post my last two comments, even though they did not violate his TOS.



This is a clear illustration of how disingenuous and dishonest "Christians" can be. It is no surprise however, as their doctrine tells them they are "born sinners" and can't help themselves from lying, cheating, stealing, raping, killing, etc. It's their "nature" after all--according to their religion. (I disagree however, as we can choose to do right or wrong, or in this case, to be a legitimate scholar.) His argument and our conversation follows:



Wartick's Argument:


"You may have heard it before. “I’m an a-unicornist, just like I’m an atheist.” “I don’t believe in unicorns, nor do I believe in God.” “There’s as much evidence for unicorns as for God.”
What are these statements supposed to show?
Whether intended or not, these kinds of statements are simply emotional appeals. The atheist is attempting to psychologically discredit Christianity without ever engaging any kind of logical reasoning.
Think about it, when you hear these phrases, what rational process goes on? There is no rational link between unicorns and theism. There is no reason to correlate the two.
Theists could just as easily use psychological appeals, but there is no need to do so. Such pejorative language doesn’t serve to foster discussion. It’s preaching to the choir. It is useful only for increasing dogmatism. So why do atheists use it so frequently?
Again, the key is to note that those who use this phrase are not doing so in the interest of academic honesty or discussion, but in the interest of psychologically weighting the discussion in their favor before it even begins. Rather than looking at the evidence, they dismiss it.
But what about another common use of the unicorn within atheism? Namely “I can’t prove there is no God, just like I can’t prove there are no unicorns.”
While this initially seems plausible, it only remains plausible if one assumes positivism. We can actually prove there is no God. If the Christian’s account of God was found to be incoherent, then God would not exist. It would, in fact, be impossible for God to exist were his nature contradictory.
So even in this use of the phrase we find that the atheist is committed to a dogmatic assumption of positivism. By assuming that God can only be disproven by empirical evidence, they uncritically advance a philosophical enterprise which has largely been abandoned within modern philosophy.
A word of advice: focus on the arguments at hand, not pejorative language."



My reponse: I read your blog post today, and posted a counter argument (It can be found here.) on my blog to your claim that atheists make an “appeal to emotion” when stating that there is as much evidence for god as there is for unicorns.



JW: I appreciate your interest in my post. I think the whole case really boils down to this statement you make in your response:
“The correlation between the two [God and unicorns] is the fact that there is no evidence for either.”
This is a completely unsubstantiated claim. Have you examined every piece of evidence brought to the table to defend theism? Have you explored every corner of the galaxy? Have you read every philosophical work presenting logical evidence for the existence of God?
You’re making an assertion of a universal negative. You must support that claim somehow, yet in the whole post you don’t. And that’s the problem with statements like the ‘unicorn’ phrase: they are mere assumptions.



My response: Exactly! That’s my whole point! Christians claim to “know” god exists, is not a claim of knowledge, it is a mere assumption. How does a Christian know that Brahman is not god, or Zeus is not god, or that unicorns do not exist? Have they been to every corner of the galaxy? Now do you see the correlation?
The theist is the one that is making the claim they know something exists. Where is the evidence? Just like the unicorn may actually exist, but where is the evidence? The fact that you cannot present evidence, does not mean that the unicorn does not exist. Likewise, with Brahman, Zeus, or any other god or goddess.



JW: You’ve made use of an interesting tactic, trying to shift the burden of proof. You have made the claim “There is no evidence for God’s existence.” I’m asking you to support that claim rather than present red herrings.



My response: To continue, first, let me remind you that I am an Ignostic Atheist. By Ignosticsm, I mean we use the physical sciences to explain the world around us, and there is no need to posit the hypotheses of gods/goddesses. We have better hypotheses to explain events in our physical world. I have no need to assert that god does not exist. However, I do refute arguments for god’s existence, and show that such hypotheses do not do a better job.
I stand by my negative claim, with regards to the lack of evidence for God’s existence.
A person is justified in believing that X does not exist if all of these conditions are met:
1. the area where evidence would appear, if there were any, has been comprehensively examined, and
2. all of the available evidence that X exists is inadequate, and
3. X is the sort of thing or entity that, if X exists, then it would show.
In this case, “X” is the evidence for god’s existence. On the above grounds, I am justified in claiming there is no evidence for god’s existence. If anyone provides me with any new evidence, I will weigh it accordingly.
However, for the sake of argument, let’s assume that there is some evidence for the existence of a god. The strength of the unicorn argument is that the evidence for god’s existence, if it exists, is no stronger than the evidence for unicorns, or leprechauns, or Zeus, or Brahman, or Diana, or……..thousands upon thousands of other posited gods and goddesses.
Note, that the above fact undermines the Christians claim that Yahweh is the one and only god. So again, the strength of the unicorn correlation is to remind Christians that there is as much evidence for their god, as there is for unicorns, and that their lofty claims of “knowing” god exists, has no foundation or support.



JW: What kind of evidence is the referent? It seems that throughout the past several thousand years many philosophers have been convinced by evidence for God’s existence.



My response: Yes, and plenty of philosophers and others were convinced the world was flat–but that too turned out to be false.



JW: You didn’t answer my question.



My response: My referent is any kind of evidence. In the end I believe all the “evidence” fails, or is inferior to other, better hypotheses and explanations.
But again, for the sake of argument, let’s assume you can provide some evidence. This is another strength of the unicorn argument. Can someone provide evidence for god, that doesn’t also apply to the unicorn? And if so, for the Christian, does it apply (the SAME or similar kind of evidence) to Brahman, Zeus, Jupiter, Diana, and so on? This presents a dilemma for Christians who claim there is only
one god, and that god is Yahweh–as that evidence would also prove Brahman, Zeus, Jupiter, Diana, and so on.–Reductio ad absurdum.
As stated above, the strength of the unicorn argument is that the evidence for god’s existence, if it exists, is no stronger than the evidence for unicorns, or leprechauns, or Zeus, or Brahman, or Diana, or……..thousands upon thousands of other posited gods and goddesses.
Note, that the above fact undermines the Christians claim that Yahweh is the one and only god. So again, the strength of the unicorn correlation is to remind Christians that there is as much evidence for their god, as there is for unicorns, and that their lofty claims of “knowing” god exists, has no foundation or support.



JW: You wrote, ” In the end I believe all the ‘evidence’ fails, or is inferior to other, better hypotheses and explanations.”
Again, as has happened before, you’re equivocating. This sentence implies there is evidence, but that it fails. That is not the same as the universal negative, “There is no evidence.”
You wrote, ” Can someone provide evidence for god, that doesn’t also apply to the unicorn?”
Not sure if this is even a serious question, but obviously the cosmological argument (both Leibniz and Kalam) along with teleological, ontological, moral, etc. are evidence that would not apply to the unicorn. A unicorn cannot even fulfill the requirements of them.
You went on to say, basically, that the evidence could be used for other gods. This is simply false. Show me manuscript evidence that says Zeus is a maximally great being–the “form” of the good. Show me manuscript evidence that states that Brahman transcends the world and is not the world itself, etc, etc. As usual with atheists when they talk about gods, you have made them all the same. Maybe that makes it easier to reject them, but it’s not based upon facts.



My response: No, I am not equivocating. I am assuming that there is evidence for the sake of argument in order to do a reductio ad absurdum.
My argument has two prongs. The first prong says that if you provide evidence for the Christian god, the same type of evidence can be given for the unicorn. If it does not apply to the unicorn, it will apply to many other gods. So if the Christian is not skewered by one prong of the fork, he is skewered by the other. Note, the arguments you mentioned (cosmological, etc.) can be applied to many other gods and goddesses. Even WL Craig admits such arguments do not prove the Christian god, as they can be applied to many other gods.
Furthermore, note that I said “same or similar” type of evidence. In this case, the type of evidence would be “manuscriptural.” I am not committed to any particular statement that it says, as the same then could be turned around and used against the Christian. In other words, I could pick any characteristic that a manuscript says about any god or goddess, or a unicorn that Yahweh and Jesus do not have, and then argue that that proves that that particular god, goddess or unicorn is true, and the Christian god is not.
Your claim that the Christian manuscript says that Yahweh/Jesus is good seems to rest on the notion, the hidden premise, that if a manuscript says something, Y, about a god, X, then that god, X, must be Y! And if so, then that god must exist! Note, that this then could be applied to all of the religions that have manuscripts, and any manuscript that mentions unicorns.
Worse yet, the particular claims that Christians make often times apply to other gods and goddesses and unicorns. Now, we have some manuscripts that say that god “X” is good. For example, the Bhagavad Gita says that Krishna is the “infallible one” (18:73) and is perfect. If Krishna is infallible, then he is perfect and all good, as he would be totally virtuous. Therefore, if we accepted this type of argument, that is, if a manuscript says it is so, then it is so–which we don’t–then we can say that there is as much evidence for Yahweh as there is for Krishna, based on the manuscript argument. Thus, the Christian would be skewed by the other prong of the fork, and my argument holds.
Lastly, you have underestimated the power of the unicorn. “In China, the unicorn is believed to rule the heavens along with three other immortals: the dragon, the phoenix, and the turtle. Together, these creatures rule the heavens as well as parts of the earth. Unicorns rule the land animals. The Chinese unicorn, is gentle and kind and good, and refuses to use his horn as a weapon.”*
An early written account of the Unicorn appeared about 5,000 years ago in Chinese manuscripts where the Unicorn can appear in many different physical forms but is most commonly described as having the body of a deer, the tail of an ox, the hooves of a horse and of course a single short horn growing out of the middle of its forehead. The emperor Fu Hsi became one of the most revered of all Chinese rulers, and there is a record in the Bamboo Books of the appearance of a unicorn at his palace in 2697 BC, shortly before his death. Therefore, according to the “manuscript argument” unicorns must be true!
“Manuscriptural” evidence has to meet the conditions and criteria for good evidence. We have many manuscripts, and just because a particular manuscript states something, it does not necessarily make it so. Manuscripts must also meet the conditions of what counts as good evidence.



C. Rodrigues: (His "point" refers to Wartick's comment below.) J. W. Wartick will surely respond to this post. Anyway, when you say:
“My argument has two prongs. The first prong says that if you provide evidence for the Christian god, the same type of evidence can be given for the unicorn. If it does not apply to the unicorn, it will apply to many other gods.”
You are mistaken. The arguments for God’s existence (Kalam, contingency, etc.) apply not to many gods as you say but to *very few ones*, and surely not to unicorns. Claiming otherwise, just betrays a gross misunderstanding of the arguments. In fact, I can only recall 3 to which all the arguments apply. Since two of them are the same God, you can drop the count to 2.



JW: Again, I can’t really improve on this comment so I’ll let it speak for me.



My response: According to Christians, there is only ONE god, and for a counter example to this, it would only take 2. As you said, you can think of at least 2!–thank you very much for proving my point.
If we are to accept JW Wartick’s argument in favor of manuscripts, then he himself has proven the unicorn exists.
Just for fun, let us see how many gods would be proven if we accept the cosmological, teleological, ontological, and moral arguments for god.
The cosmological argument is basically the “first cause” argument, and would apply to the Greek god of creation, Zeus; the Indian Brahma, from a Trimurti of three gods also including Vishnu and Shiva, is described as performing the act of creation; an African god of creation named Amma, and to almost every supreme being conceived by various cultures around the world.
As for the teleological argument, it goes without saying that the above gods would also have “designed” the universe as they created the universe.
Again as for the ontological argument, the above gods were also conceived as the greatest possible being, so, according to the ontological argument, they must also exist.
As far as the moral argument goes, we know that the aforementioned cultures and gods also had moral values, and ethical codes. So, the moral argument would apply to all those gods as well as most of the other cultures and gods.
Therefore, in fact, the cosmological, teleological, ontological, and moral arguments would apply to the majority of supreme beings, if not all the supreme beings of all the various cultures.



JW: You wrote, “My argument has two prongs. The first prong says that if you provide evidence for the Christian god, the same type of evidence can be given for the unicorn. The second prong states that IF IT DOES NOT APPLY TO THE UNICORN, IT WILL APPLY TO MANY OTHER GODS.–and so far, this has held up.”
Suppose for the moment, I grant your argument (I do think it’s terribly wrong, but I’ll grant it for the following). Why should this negatively affect the case for the existence of God in any way? I could equally provide parallel arguments for any belief by simply picking two things which would fit evidence on either side of an issue. For example, we could look at the various interpretations of quantum mechanics, the debate between the Minkowskian and Lorentzian interpretations of relativity theory, etc.
The core assumption that you’ve left out of your argument is that somehow a diversity of opinions about a topic is supposed to undermine it’s truth. Why should it undermine belief in a specific God that someone can say the evidence for that God applies to other gods or a (arbitrarily chosen, because you could choose any number of other examples) unicorn any more than the idea that evidence for relativity theory can serve as evidence either for the Minkowskian or Lorentzian interpretation of relativity theory?
The argument makes an assumption which is highly contentious, and you’ve successfully hidden it by dancing around the issue thus far. Again that assumption is that having more than one interpretation of evidence means the thing evidenced is undermined. Yet again, for almost any belief we have, we could illustrate a huge number of scenarios that could alternatively explain the situation.
Perhaps it is supposed to be the mythic nature of the unicorn which leads us to be incredulous about belief in God.
Very well, let’s consider my belief that my experience is real.
Well the evidence that my belief is real can be evidence either for the supposition that my experiences are real or evidence that I am a brain in a vat. Yet surely I am justified in taking it as a given that what I experience is real. But look! There is something mythical (and silly!) to believe in that could equally match the evidence! According to the way you’ve utilized your argument, Cathy, we shouldn’t believe that our experience is real. (This may be a relief for some!)
So I see no reason to be perturbed in the slightest by your argument.
But then let’s look at another supposition which you have not argued to support whatsoever. Namely, that similarity in types of evidence means that the evidence is the same. Your argument about other Gods and arguments like the Kalam is that this “type” of evidence can support (certain) other gods. But here again we’ve seen a gross ignorance of an implicit premise in your arguments. You’ve been assuming that you can take individual arguments for the existence of a (theistic) God and by showing they can each match other gods, you have sufficiently rebutted them. I see no reason to see this to be the case (see above). Not only that, but you’ve assumed that types of evidence mean the evidence is equivalent. How much archaelogical/historical evidence do we have for the truth of the Upanishads verses the Bible? You’re making the claim they are highly similar. Back up that claim! Not only that, but do the Upanishads rely upon historical evidence or do they rely on their philosophical exposition of reality. I admit to being only vaguely familiar with these writings, but because of your willingness to act as though you know them front and back, I assume you know them very well. So tell me, does the philosophical nature of the Upanishads and Vedas (of which I’ve read only portions) parallel the historical nature of Judaism and Christianity? Note that the historical claim in the manuscripts about Jesus is the central core of Christianity. Does Hinduism rely upon a single historical truth claim in the Upanishads as deeply as the “people of the Book” do?
I sincerely doubt it, but I leave it to you to do the work here, you’re making these impressive claims, after all.
So we see there are some serious, gaping holes in your argument. I see no reason to accept it as anything but trivial.



My response: As I mentioned before, I am an Ignostic Atheist, and a Peircian pragmatist, but I am not a relativist. While there may be many hypotheses and interpretations, and while everything may be seen from different perspectives, and everything is theory laden, some hypotheses and interpretations are better than others.
The fact that there are competing or contrary hypotheses and interpretations does not mean there is no objectivity. Let me illustrate how this works by explaining to you the Hypothetico-Deductive Method:
The Best Explanation Move is a scientific move.  It is founded on having a hypothesis, which makes predictions, which are confirmed by observations. This is known as the scientific method or the “Hypothetico-Deductive” method. We pose a series of hypotheses and then see if the predicted consequences actually follow. If they do, we conclude that a hypothesis is confirmed. Two conditions must be met for the best explanation move: 1. The first condition to be met is that you must  have a hypothesis, which makes predictions, which are confirmed by observations, and 2. The second condition is that a hypothesis has to do a better job than any of its existing rivals.  I will use two examples to illustrate:
For example, we now think that infectious diseases are the result of microorganisms.  In the past, people used to think that disease was the result of bad air, usually the night air–or the result of being inhabited by evil spirits.  A simplified discussion of this is revealed in the following argument, with:
h = germ theory of disease
O1 = when we examine the blood and lungs of those who have an infectious disease (such as tuberculosis) we find a microorganism ( in the case of tuberculosis, the mycobacterium tubuerculosis)
O2 = the observation that when this microorganism is injected into animals who can contract the disease, and they do contract
O3= those who have never been exposed to the disease do not have the microorganism
h’ = infectious disease is caused either by bad night air or by evil spirits.
P1.  If h, then O1, O2, O3
P2. O1, O2, O3
P3. h does a better job in explaining the disease phenomena than h’.
P4. h fits in with other related h’s that are themselves confirmed.
C. Therefore, h.

These premises are ones we have greater confidence in because the battle between the germ theory and its major rivals is one that is over.  Now, there may be some groups, for example, Christian Scientists, who still think that diseases are a result of not being in the proper relation to God, and there will always be disagreements among people.  Nevertheless, the fact of disagreement does not show that we are not justified in asserting with great confidence that we are correct.  However, we must be prepared to look at new evidence and admit, however unlikely we now think this is, that our theory was mistaken.
The requirement of P3– that a hypothesis has to do a better job than its existing rivals–is the key to what makes an acceptable hypothesis.  The germ theory accounts for such phenomena as transmission of disease, and gives a theoretical foundation for vaccination.
Let us look at another example; human reproduction.  One hypothesis is that sperm contains a complete human being–a homunculus–and that the egg contains the nutrients for the growth of this homunculus.  The hypothesis we think is correct is that half of a newborn’s genetic material is supplied by the sperm, and half by the egg, and there is no homonculus.  While both explain human reproduction, the contemporary genetic account is better, as it explains heredity as well as the fact of reproduction.  It fits with other biological findings, and allows us to develop crops and animals suitable for certain environments.  This is generally true of competing hypotheses: We choose the one that does a better job in explaining the phenomena, not the one that simply does a job in explaining the phenomena.
With reference to whether a god exists, or what types of gods exist, or whether unicorns exist, we have competing hypotheses and interpretations. The Christian claim is that there is only one true god, and that god happens to be Yahweh. However, when Christians try to provide proof of this, they are better scientific explanations that can explain the phenomena rather than positing a supernatural entity, as the supernatural is always going to be the least likely explanation.
Now, back to the power of the unicorn argument. In the case of Christians trying to prove Yahweh exists, they cannot do a better job than a unicornist trying to prove unicorns exist!
So again, the strength of the unicorn correlation is to remind Christians that there is as much evidence for their god, as there is for unicorns, and that their lofty claims of “knowing” god exists, has no foundation or support. Likewise, the fact that there are competing gods and goddesses and hypotheses and interpretations, is again to illustrate to the Christians, that they can offer no more proof for Yahweh, than a unicornist can for unicorns, or the Greeks can for Zeus, or the Hindus can for Brahman, etc. This does not mean that no god exists, it just means that the Christians have not made their case that a god exists, and that god is their god, Yahweh.
As an Ignostic Atheist and pragmatist, I will go with the best explanation, which just happens to be the scientific explanation, because they do a better job in explaining the phenomena.



JW: I find it interesting you immediately dropped the argument about the Upanishads. Perhaps its another instance of sweeping assertions I’ve seen you make throughout your comments here (i.e. unable to back claims up, but perfectly willing to make them).
Your rebuttal here utterly misses the point of my own argument. As I pointed out, your “dilemma” is spurious at best, even were it true. I could parallel anything in the world with a similar argument. Yet by your reasoning we should therefore distrust everything. Should we therefore trust the reasoning that lead us to this point?
Finally, you keep saying that there is manuscript evidence for unicorns. Again, suppose I grant this rather silly claim (unicorns, after all, are a species of rhinoceros [check your dictionary/zoology]). Suppose I grant it in the case of the mythical creature.
Well now we’ve exposed yet another serious implicit assumption you’ve made without argument or evidence! Namely, you’ve assumed without argument that the Christian manuscripts match reality no more than the unicorn manuscripts! But that’s exactly what’s at issue in arguments like these. Simply quote mining from google books, as appears to be your methodology, doesn’t help much when we’re talking about real historical events. Those events recorded in the Bible either are or not real historical events. Yet we have archaeological evidence for many of the places, people, and even events in the Bible. Please present your own archaeological, paleontological, etc. evidence for the unicorn.
The bottom line is you’re making your argument with a bevvy of assumptions. This type of argumentation may work for internet atheists, but I intend to be more careful with my sources and argumentation. I already pointed out the fallacious nature of your dilemma in a previous comment. You’ve failed to even attempt to salvage it. I already pointed out an assumption you made regarding the Upanishads and Vedas, you failed to even mention that I’d dealt with it. I pointed out that your argument would undermine all experience. You simply ignored that.
I see little reason to let you keep using this as a platform to promote dogmatic, anti-intellectual atheism.



My response: One last note. Since you brought up the experience argument, we can use that in another example to illustrate what I just argued above. According to the experience argument, if I experience god, then god must exist. I experience god, therefore god exists. Now the Christian argues that they experience Yahweh and Jesus and therefore Yahweh and Jesus exists. But wait! The Hindus have experienced Brahman, and they claim via the experience argument, that Brahman is the supreme being–god. And so on…
Likewise, some people like the Emperor Fu Hsi, have experience unicorns, so via the experience argument, they too must exist! Some people have experienced pink flying elephants, so via the experience argument, they too must exist! This is the weakness of the experience argument, for a person may or may not have had an experience. They may have certain sensations of a phenomenon, even if that phenomenon does not exist. The main problem with the experience argument for Christians, if it were accepted, is that it would prove too much! i.e. that Brahman exists, unicorns exist, pink elephants exist, etc.



Your threat by stating that you have “little reason to let you (me) keep using this as a platform to promote dogmatic, anti-intellectual atheism.” is to be expected, since you cannot prove your case. It illustrates lack of honesty and how poor your scholarship really is. If you were a true scholar you would admit your mistake in regards to the unicorn argument. But your ego won’t let you.
To say that the Christian version is better, means that you would have to show that it is the best, and not just parallel to them. The Upanishads, the Chinese manuscript stand up to the same type of scrutiny that the bible does–if not better.
You said: “So tell me, does the philosophical nature of the Upanishads and Vedas (of which I’ve read only portions) parallel the historical nature of Judaism and Christianity? Note that the historical claim in the manuscripts about Jesus is the central core of Christianity. Does Hinduism rely upon a single historical truth claim in the Upanishads as deeply as the “people of the Book” do? ”
I did not think this was even worth responding to. As I pointed out, your claims are biased and prejudicial against other religions, without offering any evidence or support. Look up the historicity of the Upanishads and Vedic scriptures for yourself–it’s easy to do. Or are you afraid? The people mentioned, the places, the battles that took place in the Vedic scriptures, have as much or more historicity than the Judeo-Christian claims. I make no distinction between philosophy and religion. As a matter of fact, a religion that is more philosophically based would have a tendency to be better at explaining phenomena than the ones that are less philosophically based. But it is all “philosophy.” To try to distinguish Christianity as somehow non-philosophical shows how stupid it is in that you need to make the distinction to try to make it sound better.



JW: Cathy, I’ve already rebutted your claims. You’re making positive assertions like “all faiths have the same evidence.” Please provide evidence rather than saying “Go look it up! It’s there!” We both know that is not an argument, but an escape route.



My response: Saying that you rebutted the argument is not the same a rebutting the argument. You rebutted nothing. You said the unicorn argument had no reason behind it. I provided you with the plausible reason behind the unicorn argument. I also went further when you tried to ignore the argument by citing the use of “manuscripts” and showed that the unicorn even answers to your manuscript contention. Next I further showed that you can provide no better argument for the Christian god that can be given in similar fashion for the unicorn, and if not for the unicorn, then for other religions–none of which you rebutted.
If it were not for your bias and prejudice, you would not have listed the arguments for god’s existence as if they were for the Christian god exclusively, and I had to show you that they also apply to the gods of other religions. As a side note, the ontological argument even applies to the unicorn!
So in fact, your argument against the unicorn argument was rebutted. I provided a plausible reason, and similarly showed that the unicorn argument is a good correlation to the argument for god’s existence.



JW: Given that we’re just talking past each other at this point, I’ll let the reader decide for themselves which argument is better. We’ve seen that Cathy’s argument, as she says explicitly, is a dilemma which has two horns. To use her words: “The first prong says that if you provide evidence for the Christian god, the same type of evidence can be given for the unicorn. If it does not apply to the unicorn, it will apply to many other gods.”
To support the first horn of the dilemma, she searched google books and pointed out an instance in which unicorns are said to be good. This, she asserted, was equivalent to saying that God is good in the Bible.
To support the second horn, she argued that arguments for the existence of God can apply to many different gods.
My response to the first horn was to ask her to support what she called “manuscript evidence” for unicorns with any kind of historical, archaeological, scientific, etc. data. She failed to do anything, and literally her source for her argument was a search in google books. Contrast this with what I pointed out about the Christian Bible: it’s statements are corroborated by evidence found in archaeological digs which support names, persons, events, etc. (I never argued this was comprehensive–no picture of history would be comprehensive). Yet Cathy continued to insist that her Google books searches provided evidence for her argument. I leave it to the reader to decide whether they side with random searches on the internet, or with archaeological research over the past several hundred years.
In response to the second horn, I pointed out that most of the arguments for the existence of God could only support specific types of God. The cosmological argument (of the Leibnizian variety) could only support a necessarily existent deity. Anyone who does any kind of research about gods of the past would know many would not be ontologically necessary (they could be killed, for example). Other arguments could be brought forth to multiply problems with Cathy’s claims. Yet, in Cathy’s own words, her counter to my objection is, “If it were not for your bias and prejudice, you would not have listed the arguments for god’s existence as if they were for the Christian god exclusively, and I had to show you that they also apply to the gods of other religions.”
Further, I pointed out that I could grant Cathy’s dilemma and it would not undermine belief in God. The reason I provided was because we could make exactly parallel arguments about anything in experience. Cathy’s rebuttal to my counter-argument was “You rebutted nothing” along with some random argument against religious experience–which I never brought up.
So again I leave it to readers to decide. They can side with Cathy and simply use an ad hominem attack combined with a blatant misrepresentation of my view (I never argued that theistic arguments applied exclusively to other gods. I never denied that they could be used for other gods. I denied that this mattered whatsoever, given that I could parallel this type of argument with many others).
Or they can side with the arguments I’ve presented and not undermine belief in anything.



My response: First of all, I cited a legitimate manuscript that makes reference to historical and archeological “facts” Whether it is on “google” or not is neither here nor there. Even the bible is on google! I put the reference in the post, so that it readers could easily read a little background information themselves. The manuscript is an ancient Chinese text.
The name of the manuscript is the “Bamboo Annals,” a manuscript found in a Chinese prince’s grave in A.D. 281, and the emperor Fu Hsi became one of the most revered of all Chinese rulers, and there is a record in the Bamboo Books of the appearance of a unicorn at his palace in 2697 BC, shortly before his death.
Fu Hsi was the emperor that saw a Yellow dragon-horse, a kind of Qilin (unicorn) that emerged from the Luo He which is a tributary of the Huang He. This was around the year 2852 BCE. In that year, there was an eclipse of the sun which was also recorded, perhaps for the very first time, on April 23rd.
On the animal’s coat, Fu Hsi saw markings which he perceived as symbols of a written language.Some say this was the origin of Chinese calligraphy. However, he is at least credited with the discovery of the trigrams and invention of knotted cord records which led to written script.
The invention of the Qin (lyre) to Fu Hsi. who wished to harmonize mind-heart with the universe. By the late period iritual music. Its seven strings were tuned to the five pitches of the natural pentatonic scale.
It’s statements are corroborated by evidence found in archaeological digs which support names, persons, events, etc., and astrology.
Archaeologists have uncovered urban sites, bronze implements, and tombs that point to the possible existence of the Xia dynasty at locations cited in the Bamboo Annals, and other ancient Chinese texts. In 1959, a site located in the city of Yanshi was excavated containing large palaces which some archaeologists have identified as the capital of the Xia dynasty. Unlike the oracle bones of the Shang dynasty, there are no written records from the period to help confirm the Xia dynasty’s existence. Through the 1960s and 1970s, archaeologists have continued to uncovered urban sites, bronze implements, and tombs at locations linked to the Xia in ancient Chinese historical texts. At a minimum, the Xia dynasty seems to have marked an evolutionary stage between the late neolithic cultures and the later Chinese urban civilization of the Shang dynasty.
I hope that the majority of readers on your site are familiar with the issues and problems related to the questionable historicity of the bible.–so let’s just forgo that. Such questions can be raised for both manuscripts.
Religious prejudice is a terrible thing….and as Buddha would say, “The fool who thinks he is wise is just a fool. The fool who knows he is a fool is wise indeed.”
Religious prejudice also makes one blind. Wartick, in his prejudicial religious zeal, has provided us with an ontological argument against the trinity, and Jesus being god. Wartick wrote:
“In response to the second horn, I pointed out that most of the arguments for the existence of God could only support specific types of God. The cosmological argument (of the Leibnizian variety) could only support a necessarily existent deity. Anyone who does any kind of research about gods of the past would know many would not be ontologically necessary (they could be killed, for example). Other arguments could be brought forth to multiply problems with Cathy’s claims.”
Wartick points out the cosmological argument (of the Leibnizian variety) could only support a necessarily existent deity, in which case, such a deity would be immortal, Which Wartick seems to think goes against non-Christian gods that could be killed. But note, according to Christianity, Jesus was “killed” on the cross! So let’s set out Wartick’s claim logically.
Let us assume the cosmological argument from contingency (of the Leibnizian variety) is valid and sound and that Wartick is correct that it could only support a necessarily existent deity if and only if that deity is ontologically necessary (could not be killed).
If Jesus was killed on the cross, then he would not be ontologically necessary.
Jesus was killed on the cross.
Therefore, Jesus is not ontologically necessary.
If Jesus is not ontologically necessary (He was killed on the cross), then the cosmological argument of the Leibnizian variety proves that Jesus is not God.
This is absurd for Wartick, since he claims that Jesus is God. The only move open for Wartick is to reply that Jesus was resurrected–but so was Dionysius, Quetzalcoatl, Krishna, and others.
So if we accept the cosmological argument from contingency of the Leibnizian variety, then Jesus is not god. If we accept the resurrection move, then the cosmological argument would not only work for Jesus, it would work for Dionysius, Quetzalcoatl, Krishna, and others.
So, Wartick’s attempt with the cosmological argument from contingency (of the Leibnizian variety) fails to show that most of the arguments for the existence of God could only support specific types of God, and we know he means the Abrahamic gods, because if he doesn’t, it would be a refutation of the claim that their god is the only god in the first place, which would be a moot point–Foiled again–you are welcome to try again though.
Wartick went on to say:
“Further, I pointed out that I could grant Cathy’s dilemma and it would not undermine belief in God. The reason I provided was because we could make exactly parallel arguments about anything in experience.”
I already pointed out above that I made no such claim:
“As I mentioned before, I am an Ignostic Atheist, and a Peircian pragmatist, but I am not a relativist. While there may be many hypotheses and interpretations, and while everything may be seen from different perspectives, and everything is theory laden, some hypotheses and interpretations are better than others.
The fact that there are competing or contrary hypotheses and interpretations does not mean there is no objectivity.” –I have provided a better interpretation and explanation of the unicorn argument than you.
You can not grant my dilemma , as to do so would mean that it does not undermine belief in the Christian God, or the Hindu God, or many other Gods and Goddesses, and/or the unicorn.–all of which would undermine the Christian claim that their God in the one and only God.
Here is Wartick’s actual argument from experience, as stated from above:
“Very well, let’s consider my belief that my experience is real.
Well the evidence that my belief is real can be evidence either for the supposition that my experiences are real or evidence that I am a brain in a vat. Yet surely I am justified in taking it as a given that what I experience is real.”
Likewise, Fu Hsi is surely justified in taking it as a given that what he experienced is real, i.e., his experience of the unicorn was real; the Hindu’s experiences of Krishna are real, the Greek experiences of Dionysus are real, etc.–foiled again. Your experience argument does no work.
This post concerns whether or not the unicorn argument provides reasons, as opposed to just an emotional appeal. I have argued successfully and I provided a plausible reason, and similarly showed that the unicorn argument is a good correlation to the argument for god’s existence. The strength of the unicorn correlation is to remind Christians that there is as much evidence for their god, as there is for unicorns, and that their lofty claims of “knowing” god exists, has no foundation or support. Likewise, the fact that there are competing gods and goddesses and hypotheses and interpretations, is again to illustrate to the Christians, that they can offer no more proof for Yahweh, than a unicornist can for unicorns, or the Greeks can for Zeus, or the Hindus can for Brahman, etc. This does not mean that no god exists, it just means that the Christians have not made their case that a god exists, and that god is their god, Yahweh.



JW: I often have difficulty figuring out if you are intentionally misreading my arguments or just oblivious. For example, you wrote that I argued against Jesus because of my counter example of gods who could be killed. I hesitate to point out the obvious, but I feel your argument forces me to do so: these other gods literally stopped existing. Nowhere in Christian orthodoxy does anyone suggest Jesus’ death means his nonexistence. I summarily dismiss your wrongheaded argument.
Again, a mispotrayal of my argument occurs in the argument from experience. I was not making an argument for theism based on that (though I do elsewhere). I was pointing out that your own arguments undermine experience. I therefore summarily dismiss that wrongheaded argument.
I’m going to ignore your other arguments because they’re just repetitions of previous ones. I already made my conclusion above, in which I showed readers the logical errors in your argument, which you continue to make. Your dilemma proves too much. It can be used against everything. Therefore, I dismiss it.
As far as unicorns go. I hope that my readers can mostly figure this out for themselves, but unicorn is literally a variety of rhinoceros. Look it up in your dictionary (rhinoceros unicornis).
You utilize caps lock to make points, repeat points to absurdity, and then claim that you’ve defeated my arguments. I specifically showed the flaw in your dilemma (namely that it undermines all belief) and you’ve not even attempted to answer it. This demonstrates once more that there is an immunity to rational arguments built in to your style.
Readers, look through the comments and note Cathy’s argument. I provided a lengthy response to it in which I broke the dilemma down. I granted her points, and then I showed that they lead to absurdity. Has she responded to this, at all? No. She’s merely repeated the arguments. This will be the end of her repetitions.



MY RESPONSE THAT HE DID NOT POST:
I gather that you know that I set your argument out correctly and showed how ridiculous your claims are, which is why you did not post my last response, which I have repeated below. You want your readers to think that you are correct, instead of just "manning up" and admitting your mistake. Your intellectual dishonesty is pathetic. If you want to redeem yourself, post this, and answer to it. Your best answer would be to admit that you made a mistake. At any rate, I will be writing a post related to our conversation (yes, I take pictures of everything--even the things I write that you do not post out of fear--and for no other reason!) I am making reference to your claim about the consmological argument and what you claimed about it someone dies, they cannot be god.



Here is my last posting, that you refused to post.--Post it if you dare....;)
The other gods I mentioned (Dionysus, Quetzalcoatl, Krishna) died and were resurrected. According to the bible and Christianity, Jesus DIED on the cross. Either he was dead or he was NOT dead. If Jesus could be killed, then according to what you wrote, he could not be a god. If he could not be killed, and he did not die on the cross, then his pretend "death" would have been meaningless. If you do not think that Jesus' death meant his nonexistence, what makes you think the death of Krishna, Dionysus and Quetzalcoatl means their nonexistence?--oh yes, that's right, your religious prejudice.

I won't repeat my pragmatic position again, but nothing I said undermines experiences, and what you said about experiences applies to Hindus who experienced Krishna, Greeks who experienced Dionysus, and Mexicans who experienced Quetzalcoatl.

You cannot just "dismiss" arguments. You must show that they are invalid, not sound, provide a counter argument, or show that they are weak (in the case of inductive arguments) You have failed on all accounts. Your "mere assertions" do not change the fact that your arguments hold no water.

You cannot just "ignore" arguments and hope they disappear like magic. You have not shown any logical errors in my arguments, and my dilemma arguments cannot be used against everything. It can be used to do what it was intended to do--to show the strength of the unicorn argument, and shows that you cannot provide any more proof for the Christian god, than the Greeks can for Dionysus, and the Hindus for Krisha, and many other gods. It cannot be used against the claim that Obama is the president of the United States right now--see how easily your claim is refuted. I didn't just dismiss your argument, I provided you with a legitimate counter argument.

According to Fu Hsi, in the Bamboo Annals, unicorns are not rhinoceroses, and they rule from heaven, and they never use their horn for evil, and they bring good to humans.

My dilemma argument does not undermine all beliefs--just the ones implied by your arguments, which I have already refuted. It does not for instance, undermine the fact that Obama is the president of the United States right now.

Lastly, your emotional appeal to your readers is neither here nor there. I say to all--reread the above arguments carefully. If you do not understand logic and argumentation, please read and study an Intro to Logic text. Take each argument and set them out on paper and go over the pros and cons.

It ought to be clear to you that Wartick's claim that the unicorn argument provides no reason, and is just an emotional appeal, was refuted. This is why over the past post, he has stayed away from the conclusion he drew in his original unicorn argument. He has not mentioned it in his postings against me in quite some time. That is because he knows his argument has been refuted, and that is why he keeps trying to put forth weak red herrings, and stays away from his original conclusion. I have argued successfully and I provided a plausible reason, and similarly showed that the unicorn argument is a good correlation to the argument for god’s existence. The strength of the unicorn correlation is to remind Christians that there is as much evidence for their god, as there is for unicorns, and that their lofty claims of “knowing” god exists, has no foundation or support. Likewise, the fact that there are competing gods and goddesses and hypotheses and interpretations, is again to illustrate to the Christians, that they can offer no more proof for Yahweh, than a unicornist can for unicorns, or the Greeks can for Zeus, or the Hindus can for Brahman, etc. 

In conclusion, JW Wartick has a lot to learn--about honesty, integrity, and how to argue effectively.

























Monday, April 25, 2011

Humpty Dumpty Semantics--What This Means, and how Christians Use It

 If you have ever read "Through the Looking Glass, by Lewis Carroll, you might recall Humpty Dumpty discussing semantics and pragmatics with Alice:

    “I don’t know what you mean by ‘glory,’ ” Alice said.
Humpty Dumpty smiled contemptuously. “Of course you don’t—till I tell you. I meant ‘there’s a nice knock-down argument for you!’ ”
    “But ‘glory’ doesn’t mean ‘a nice knock-down argument’,” Alice objected.
    “When I use a word,” Humpty Dumpty said, in a rather a scornful tone, “it means just what I choose it to mean—neither more nor less.”
    “The question is,” said Alice, “whether you can make words mean so many different things.”
    “The question is,” said Humpty Dumpty, “which is to be master      that’s all.”
    Alice was too much puzzled to say anything, so after a minute Humpty Dumpty began again. “They’ve a temper, some of them—particularly verbs, they’re the proudest—adjectives you can do anything with, but not verbs—however, I can manage the whole lot! Impenetrability! That’s what I say!”

Yes, Humpty Dumpty was master over the meaning of his words--which is a tactic Christians attempt to use as well.  Forget the meaning of words, all that matters to them is to be "masters" over their words.

I am going to illustrate this with a examples of a conversation I was having on a Christian blog. I stated that the "sons of god" in Genesis 6, were the "sons of god", and Satan is one of the "sons of god" and comes in the entourage of "sons of god" in the book of Job. They were not idols or angels or nephilim. And then the fun started....

I was told that I was "wrong again on multiple counts" when I said:
"Now, your god did not say “Put no other idols before me.”–he said “Put no other gods before me.”(Deuteronomy 5:7)–which implies there were multiple gods."
My Christian friend said:
"Your false conclusion here results from your misunderstanding of the text. “Before” does not imply a long line of gods from which the God of the Bible is requiring allegiance “before.” It is more properly understood to be “besides,” which is an edict to NOT believe in other [false] gods. False is implied here because the people knew the context very well, which you failed to consider. No Jewish person of the time in their right mind would mistake this to mean that Moses is supposedly calling the people to believe in YWHY, (Notice how he got the tetragrammaton almost completely wrong--it is supposed to be YHWH or and I can verify this as I took a webshot) instead of a panoply of other earnestly believed “authentic” gods from which the people had the prerogative to choose from.

This is me again:
"Also, Genesis 6 tells us the “sons of god” took the women and had children with them.  Idols CANNOT have children. They were not nephilim, as they were the sons OF the sons of gods, and the women on earth–similar to a Herculean type of being."
 
And my Christian friend:
"I’m not sure what exactly you are trying to say with this, but I think you’re trying to again make the point that the Jews had other false gods. This passage does have various interpretations, but your highly selective choice of interpretations to include is very telling. You’ve chosen the ones that will further your argument and avoided the ones that may be detrimental. The other and arguably better interpretation of the passage equates the “sons of God” with godly men (probably from the noble line of Abel). In contrast (as the context affords and even entails), “daughters of men” is understood to be the sinful women (probably from the wicked line of Cain). This intermarriage of the “Sethites” (ch.5) and the “Cainites” (ch.4) indicates the breakdown in the separation of the two distinct groups.
 
This is me again:
"If they were angels, it would have said angels, as there is a Hebrew word for ‘angel.’"


This is my Christian friend:
This is pure conjecture that carries very little weight."

This is me:
"Therefore, they were gods, just as the Jews tell us they were–as they had MANY gods and goddesses."


This is my Christian friend:
"This is a false conclusion based on false premises."

This is me:
"And they had MANY gods and goddesses."


This is my Christian friend:
"Yes, this is true. They had many FALSE gods and goddesses. Does this argue that there is no TRUE God? Absolute Not! To argue that it does is to commit a non sequitur logical fallacy. I can just as easily make the claim that since there were many false gods then there must be one TRUE God. You see the problem with this line of thinking? The conclusion does NOT follow from the arguments!"



Now for the good part.



He was getting frustrated with me, and said:
"I’m continually utterly amazed at your lack of willingness to concede any of your failed points. Since humility must precede discernment I can only conclude that you do not really care to know the truth, but are intent on simply spreading a fictional tale that caters to your comfortable cocoon of unbelief. Good luck with that. Your arguments full of logical fallacies of various kinds have all failed masterfully."

Now, this is me:
"My points are not failed, I can back them, as well as my arguments up.
Your repeated use of Humpty Dumpty semantics to make the text mean whatever you want it to mean is pathetic. As you point out, the writers of the Old Testament can’t get their facts straight about gods that you claim are false gods. For example, they tell the story about how the sons of gods came down and took the women of earth as wives and had children.
Again, as you point out, they talk about lots of gods in the bible, that you are saying are false–illustrating that they can’t get their stories straight, and they made up lots of stories about gods and goddesses! If this is the case, then we should not trust their claims about Yahweh, as they are prone to just making up stories about “false gods”
One last point–since the Hebrew word ‘god’ in “sons of god” means ‘angels’, I guess any reference to Yahweh being a god, just means he is an ‘angel’ And when it says, “put no other gods before me,” it means “put no other angels before me.”
See how your Humpty Dumpty semantics work.
Let me show you the actual Hebrew:
וַיִּרְא֤וּ בְנֵי־ הָֽאֱלֹהִים֙ אֶת־ בְּנֹ֣ות הָֽאָדָ֔ם כִּ֥י טֹבֹ֖ת הֵ֑נָּה וַיִּקְח֤וּ לָהֶם֙ נָשִׁ֔ים מִכֹּ֖ל אֲשֶׁ֥ר בָּחָֽרוּ׃
In particular the Hebrew word–הָֽאֱלֹהִים֙ ha·’e·lo·him meaning ‘of god.
Note, it does not say sons of “angels”–it says sons of god (actually, in the original Hebrew it says GODS–but scholars have been hiding this for centuries)"



He then told everyone on the thread that I was not worth wasting time on. Why? Because they have no argument, and they resort to red herrings and ad hominem. It is typical in my experience with Christians.



Lewis Carroll was a logician, and wrote his stories to teach logic to children. Logic tells me that we cannot make words mean whatever we want them to mean, as then they become meaningless. There must be criteria for a definition, and if we cannot meet that criteria, our arguments just fall and break--much like Humpty did.








Wednesday, March 16, 2011

What biblical, or scriptural, evidence is there of the rapture?

  This conversation began with a question about the so-called "rapture" and evolved into explaining how many Christian beliefs are a result of using "Humpty Dumpty semantics" in order to make words mean whatever they want them to mean.  It's a little long, but the conversation is interesting and illustrates that the "rapture," according to the bible, should have happened within the lifetimes of the apostles.....


Atheist: If there was a rapture, it was supposed to have happened in Paul's generation, as it states in the Bible. A generation is a generation; NOT 1000 years or 2000 years or whatever the spin doctors make up. It is a generation, and it passed long ago, and everything has already been determined by Yahweh. Read the passages below carefully:

(NIV Matthew 10:23) When you are persecuted in one place, flee to another. I tell you the truth, you will not finish going through the cities of Israel before the Son of Man comes.

(NIV Matthew 16:27-28) For the Son of Man is going to come in his Father’s glory with his angels, and then he will reward each person according to what he has done. I tell you the truth, some who are standing here will not taste death before they see the Son of Man coming in his kingdom.”

(NIV Matthew 24:34) I tell you the truth, this generation will certainly not pass away until all these things have happened.

A generation is a generation, and all of those people are now dead. So everything has already happened that is supposed to have happened, according to the bible.


Christian: “If you had studied the Bible extensively you would understand the philosophies there in, and the “contradictions” would fade! 
The point of the "1=1000=1" is to show that God is not bound by time and furthermore neither are his predictions. This is a mistake the Pharisees and Sadducees along with other various sects made.”


Atheist: “ANY "mistakes" in the bible, which is touted as the "word of a perfect god" makes ALL of it unreliable.

When you say “1=1000=1”, you are confusing 'like' with 'is', and they are two different things altogether. When they are speaking of the return of the son of man in the passages I cited, they are speaking in THEIR terms of time, not god's. (THEIR generation)

I do hope you understand that. Do you also understand what "Humpty Dumpty" semantics are? This where you make words and sentences mean whatever you want them to mean, and this is why there are so many different interpretations for everything written in the bible. This is the dialogue between Humpty Dumpty and Alice in “Through The Looking Glass”, by Lewis Carroll. It should explain it for you:

"I don't know what you mean by 'glory,'" Alice said.
Humpty Dumpty smiled contemptuously. "Of course you don't – till I tell you. I meant 'there's a nice knock-down argument for you!'"
"But 'glory' doesn't mean 'a nice knock-down argument,'" Alice objected.
"When I use a word," Humpty Dumpty said in a rather a scornful tone, "it means just what I choose it to mean – neither more nor less."
"The question is," said Alice, "whether you can make words mean different things."
"The question is," said Humpty Dumpty, "which is to be master – that's all."
Alice was too much puzzled to say anything, so after a minute Humpty Dumpty began again.
"They've a temper, some of them – particularly verbs, they're the proudest – adjectives you can do anything with, but not verbs – however, I can manage the whole lot! Impenetrability! That's what I say!"

Anyone who studies Christianity in seminary, and in many other universities, is given multiple explanations for passages in the bible. I know clergy that are in reality atheists/agnostic as they know the same things I do, but continue in the profession, as it is a nice life, if you can ignore the contradictions, and outright lies. Once, I even asked a bishop why he didn't tell his "flock" the whole truth, and he told me, "The ignorant peasants don't need to know too much." This says it all, as religion is nothing but a tool to control and take money from the masses...nothing more. I was once offered a "position" in the church, but I chose to teach instead, as I could not bring myself to becoming a hypocrite and a liar for sake of the almighty dollar.


Christian: “Isaiah 9:6-7 What does this passage mean? I selected it specifically because it is a messianic passage. 



”For to us a child is born, to us a son is given, and the government will be on his shoulders. 
And he will be called 
Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. 
Of the increase of his government and peace 
there will be no end. He will reign on David's throne 
and over his kingdom, establishing and upholding it with justice and righteousness from that time on and forever. The zeal of the LORD Almighty will accomplish this.”


You would think that the messiah would over throw the government and rule for ever correct? Not the case! 
 I have read these "contradictions" and they can be explained internally or if you go to the root language. Some require a hermeneutics , some are not dealt with directly however fallacious attempts to discredit Biblical inerrancy can be dismissed with philosophies internal of scripture! 
 

Atheist: “As I stated before, the rapture did not happen as predicted by NT scripture. It did not happen in the time frame stated in those passages. The passage that you just now sent me, does not change that fact. This is known as a "red herring"

Now, in reference to this new topic, I must point out to you that the word "Messiah" is but the word for "king", as in ANY king. Many scholars regard these passages as being in reference to King Hezekiah, who was a descendant of David, and who tried to make Jerusalem into a holy city.

If you did not know this already, the Jews admit to embellishments when it came to the writings of the OT, and much of what is there, was written AFTER the fact. Also, Josephus, the so-called "historian" is known to be a forger....and we do not take his writings as being factual.”

Christian: “My intent was by no means a distraction. It was simply to show that a strict adherence instead of an interpretive reading of scripture is at times a flawed. The particular scripture made a direct reference to a child being born residing as God over the government. The Jews at the time believed it was the physical earthly government. Just the same, you assume the generation CHRIST or GOD spoke of was a literal generation! When the fact is that no one is dead to God and God is unrestricted by time. Moreover, premise: God exists. Who is to say all the people of that generation are dead? Of course you don't believe in such things so lets stick to the former.”
 

Atheist: “You say: "It was simply to show that a strict adherence instead of an interpretive reading of scripture is at times a flawed."

Now, who has the authority to say what is flawed, and what is not? I find that interesting, in that christians take the bible literally when it fits their agenda (ie going against homosexuality) yet claim it to be metaphorical/allegorical when it does not. Again, as I stated before, this is why there are so many different denominations of christianity on the planet. They ALL have their own agendas. It is also a reason for a great deal of problems in our society, but that is an entirely different topic.

You should also realize that the Jews who wrote the Tanakh/OT, had no notion of Jesus, and to this day they have nothing to do with him. In fact, one of the reasons he was crucified was because he did not have "a large following" to save him. The Jews actually hated him because they knew he was a fraud, and his real father was a soldier by the name of Panthera. ( Immaculate conception and virgin birth are attributes for the births of other gods such as Mithras, Dionysus, Krishna, etc. and these gods came BEFORE the time of Christ) If the Jews loved him, there would have been so many more witnesses to the event...but there were only a few.

I wonder what you could possible mean by the statement: "Who is to say all the people of that generation are dead"

These are the definitions for the word generation from dictionary.com:

1. the entire body of individuals born and living at about the same time: the postwar generation.

2. the term of years, roughly 30 among human beings, accepted as the average period between the birth of parents and the birth of their offspring.

3. a group of individuals, most of whom are the same approximate age, having similar ideas, problems, attitudes, etc.Compare Beat Generation, Lost Generation.

4. a group of individuals belonging to a specific category at the same time: Chaplin belonged to the generation of silent-screen stars.

I could find no definition which fits your claim for what a generation means. That was a very poor attempt at using “Humpty Dumpty” semantics to try to support your claim that a generation is longer than “a term of roughly 30 years”.”


Christian: “Neither do they oppose the idea!” (concerning 1=100=1 as a definition of generation)


Atheist: “When you say: "Neither do they oppose the idea!", this implies that you can make up definitions as you go along, just as Humpty Dumpty does. That would mean that just because the definition of "ape" is the following:

“any of a group of anthropoid primates characterized by long arms, a broad chest, and the absence of a tail, comprising the family Pongidae (great ape), which includes the chimpanzee, gorilla, and orangutan, and the family Hylobatidae (lesser ape), which includes the gibbon and siamang.”

I could say that hey, I can call humanity a bunch of apes, and that would be ok, because I said so. It doesn't say otherwise.

Do you see how ridiculous that sounds??


Christian: “The Bible is the authority on matters concerning itself! I take it you didn’t watch the movie link I sent you? http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fO17bVoiYd0&feature=fvw 

I believe homosexuality is wrong just as lust is, I would be just as much a law breaker as any. However I don’t actively lust and live constantly in that sin with a total disregard to the law. I however cannot judge anyone for their sin as I would be judging myself!”


Atheist: “I did not receive the link in your previous messages, but I did just now watch it, as I have watched many videos produced by ICHTHUS. (The video claims that Rabbi Yitzhak Kaduri claimed to have seen the Messiah and wrote a coded message to be opened a year after his death which would reveal his name. The coded name was revealed as “Yeshua, or Jesus”)

Now, as for the video, if what the Rabbi said was true, and he believed it to be true, why did he not convert to Christianity, so he could be "raptured" with the rest of them? Does that not sound strange to you? If it were true, would he not want to convert and spend eternity with this Messiah? Because as a Jew, that would not be possible. For the Jews, heaven is on earth.

And also I must point out that Jesus (or Yeshua, or whatever name you would like to give him) said that you must follow ALL of Yahweh's laws if you plan on going to heaven. Read the passages below carefully. It states ANYONE which is universal for EVERYONE must obey the laws; all of them.

"Do not think that I have come to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I have not come to abolish them but to fulfill them. I tell you the truth, until heaven and earth disappear, not the smallest letter, not the least stroke of a pen, will by any means disappear from the Law until everything is accomplished. ANYONE who breaks one of the least of these commandments and teaches others to do the same will be called least in the kingdom of heaven, but whoever practices and teaches these commands will be called great in the kingdom of heaven. For I tell you that unless your righteousness surpasses that of the Pharisees and the teachers of the law, you will certainly not enter the kingdom of heaven." Mat 5:17- 20 
 

Christian: “You do not have to be a Christian to believe Christ is Lord! The passage you provided makes no mention of my condemnation! Furthermore, not only do I try my best to avoid such sin… I do my best to teach others to do the same! Salvation is a gift for everyone… Christ calls us brothers not slaves, slaves work because they have to, brothers because they want to. No one deserves salvation. It is given freely for those who are faithful! Inherently those who are faithful will follow the law!”
 

Atheist:To say the Rabbi does not have to be a christian to believe Christ is the Lord”, is ridiculous. Jews do not believe in Jesus....so if he believed Jesus was the Messiah, he would have converted on the spot! Every religion has adherents who make the same types of "claims through experience". This is nothing new.

And as for Christ--he said nothing against slavery. If he disagreed with it, I'm sure he would have said something about it in the bible, but he doesn't. You are a slave to many things in life, including your religion.

So, to gain your so called "salvation", you must follow ALL of Yahweh's archaic laws stated in the OT, as Jesus said you must. Good luck with that.”


Christian: “ Once again you are imposing, trying to dictate to God what he can and cannot do. Scripture clearly says no one is dead to God! And again time is a non-issue. That being understood those people have not tasted death and as far as I am concerned some of them may very well be alive in the flesh.”
 

Atheist: “Scripture says no one is dead to god...does NOT mean we are not physically dead...and a generation is STILL a generation!

Your reasoning skills are abominable, and you are showing your ignorance. And if the words can mean whatever I want them to mean as you say they are god's words, and therefore they don't abide by the rules of language, then you can't tell me what they mean! If that is the case, then when it says jesus died on the cross, that means he had a wild homosexual orgy with the disciples, and his heterosexual self died, and his new homosexual self was resurrected. I know this because I know god's language, and what he means in the bible. The words don't mean what they seem to mean, and you cannot put restrictions on gods words. If YOU don't believe what I just wrote, that is too bad, because you can't put restrictions on god's words! See, I can play "Humpty Dumpty" semantics too...:)


Christian: “Once again the words don’t mean what you want them to, that, is the point! The words mean what the Bible dictates not you!”


Atheist: “I am a professor of religion and philosophy, and I have read the bible from beginning to end, and in various versions, including the Mormon bible. I have studied with JW, Quakers, muslims, Jews, etc. I taught at a Christian university for 4 years, and also taught their seminary students, as they were required to take my classes to get their theological degree. I KNOW that I know more than you do.

Again, what you said amused me...:) You say: "The words mean what the Bible dictates not you". EVERY book and every written word, including the bible has to be interpreted. That is how we are made, and that is how we play the language game. Some interpretations are better than others. Yours however, make no sense at all.

For example: if I say "The Apache's rode in on their mustangs to attack the cavalry." There are several interpretations that could be given. One is, that they could have gone out and bought some Ford Mustangs. The other however, is that they rode on mustang horses, as there was no Ford company in those days, and hence no Ford Mustangs. The first interpretation sucks.

Furthermore, if the bible talks, it does a very poor job of it, as many christians themselves disagree about the meanings of the various passages. Also, the majority of Jews who's ancestors wrote the Torah/Tanakh must be deaf and dumb not to hear the same thing the bible says you claim it says, because they believe the opposite!


Christian: “You apparently haven’t read the Bible!



John 15:1
”You are my friends if you do what I command. I no longer call you servants, because a servant does not know his master's business. Instead, I have called you friends, for everything that I learned from my Father I have made known to you.”


Matthew 12:49-50 “Pointing to his disciples, he said, "Here are my mother and my brothers. 50For whoever does the will of my Father in heaven is my brother and sister and mother."


Atheist: “This is why cherry picking passages is so ineffective when you are talking to someone like me. You quoted the passages from Matthew 12:49-50:

“Pointing to his disciples, he said, "Here are my mother and my brothers. For whoever does the will of my Father in heaven is my brother and sister and mother."

But if you read it in its entirety, Jesus tells his disciples to abandon their families in favor of him. That doesn't say much for family values. One had to bury his father, (Matt 8:21) but Jesus said, no, leave him, and follow me. What about the families that needed support etc? Jesus did not care. Just as he did not care about the poor when he had his feet anointed with the oil, as he said they would always have the poor!! (Matt 14:7) I guess that meant to him that they didn't matter! That money could have been used for a more worthwhile cause, and I believe that Judas betrayed him because he saw that Jesus was nothing but a hypocrite.

Mat 12:46-50
“While he yet talked to the people, behold, his mother and his brethren stood without, desiring to speak with him. Then one said unto him, Behold, thy mother and thy brethren stand without, desiring to speak with thee. But he answered and said unto him that told him, Who is my mother? and who are my brethren? And he stretched forth his hand toward his disciples, and said, Behold my mother and my brethren! For whosoever shall do the will of my Father which is in heaven, the same is my brother, and sister, and mother.”

And for your other passage, when Jesus says: "You are my friends if you do what I command, " I ask you, what kind of a friend makes someone do as they "command"? That is not a friend, that is a MASTER. Slaves and sheeple do as they are commanded. Don't think, don't interpret for yourself, just follow blindly and do as you are COMMANDED to do.

BTW--you are NOT following the words of Jesus. You are following the words of Constantine, Athanasius, and Paul. If you used your OWN mind to think about what was written, you might have a different interpretation.” There are other books that were considered valid at the Nicene Council, but were left out because they didn't fit in with Athanasius's view of the “divine Jesus”. The Book of Barnabas for instance, quotes Jesus as saying he “Is not God”


Christian: “Yes I have read the some of the Gnostic Gospels as well and several versions of the Bible. At one point I owned 5 or 6 for cross reference, concordances… etc

What would you give up for the truth? Nothing obviously! If your family is not allowing you to grow in the Lord it is better for all of you to leave them! You are manipulating scripture or you honestly don’t know it. Christ’s family are those who are in him. 

Once again, if you do what Christ commands under your own will you are his friend, and brother. A faimly will be there for each other! In truth, in Love! 

John 15:20
Remember the words I spoke to you: 'No servant is greater than his master.'[b] If they persecuted me, they will persecute you also. If they obeyed my teaching, ***they will obey yours also.”



Atheist: “Once again, if you do what anyone COMMANDS you to do, you are their slave, or their serf, or their employee, as friends do not COMMAND their friends to do anything and threaten them with burning hell fire if they disobeyed.
What would you give up for the truth? Nothing obviously, as I am sure if you had a "vision" and god "commanded" you to leave your family to preach to the masses, you would do so. Faith is only good if it is faith in the right thing. Yes, sometimes family life isn't so good, and we leave. The example in the bible of Jesus commanding his followers to leave their families did not say anything about their families being bad, which does not set a good example for family values. And the case of following someone blindly, that is dangerous, as per the example below.

Hypothetically, would you have allowed your daughter (if you have one) to join the cult of David Koresh? He too said that he was the "Messiah", so by your logic, I assume you would have gladly let her go! If you had, well, we know what would have happened.

Charles Manson is another one that comes to mind. He too claimed to be Jesus, and had his "followers" kill for him. Would you let your child follow him? I don't think so.

There is no real proof for the existence of Jesus, and even less that he was anything more than a man. The words in the bible do not count for anything, as almost all biblical scholars do not consider it to be a historical document. It is hearsay.”
-----------
This was the end of our conversation, as he had no further reply. I often wonder if my reasoning made him think more deeply as to why he held to his beliefs, and why he interprets the bible the way he does, when it is all so ambiguous, anyone can interpret it any way they want, and make similar claims that he did. These are the consequences of herd mentality, and in order to overcome it, we need to free ourselves from following anything blindly, whether it be religious spin doctors, or any of the propaganda we are inundated with on a daily basis.