I don't think the expectations are unreasonable. Why do you think it is unreasonable to expect a God to do for what I criticized Him for not doing?Ie. what justifies the unreasonable expectations set on deities by us mortals? — BlueBanana
"First of all, please explain on what ground you expect a mortal to do the job of a God"
— szardosszemagad
As I have stated, I don't. — BlueBanana
You implied that you did. You asked me if I could do a better job. That's a loaded question, not merely a simple inquiry. — szardosszemagad
Why do you think it is unreasonable to expect a God to do for what I criticized Him for not doing? — szardosszemagad
Historically, this just proves that the Bible and its interpretations have always been an evolving document. — schopenhauer1
I decided to close the argument at a point that we can both claim victory. If you don't like that, we can continue, but basically I find it pointless because now we are both saying the same thing, which is, the almighty could have done a better job, and I couldn't have, so what is the point of further arguing? To carry on an argumentative debate, the two parties have to disagree, which you and I don't.Uh? — BlueBanana
No, wasn't being disingenuous, flippant, ridiculous, or anything else. You tell me what you think it means. — Bitter Crank
↪Janus I suggest you give it up. I'm not arguing anything, I was asking what I thought was a simple question that would have a simple answer, and am astonished that you still haven't got it.
What's the question? It's in the OP and repeated a couple of times through the thread. — tim wood
And I have asked you to explain why you think the word of God should not be subject to interpretation. — Janus
We arrive at a question "What, exactly, is the standard by which to measure/establish the value of any interpretation of the Bible? Is there one, or many? Are they universal and necessary, or contingent? — tim wood
↪tim wood
But "reading" then according to you just refers to the act of reading. That act obviously involves skills including knowing the conventional meanings of words. Of course the possession of such reading skills and the act of reading itself must precede any interpretation, but so what? I still don't see how that rather obvious and mundane fact has any bearing on what you seem to have been trying to argue — Janus
No. — Agustino
The dream itself contains the message. — Agustino
I merely drew your attention to the fact that the Bible itself doesn't paint the picture of God that you have in your mind for the purposes of this conversation. This isn't about me or listening to me, it's about reading the Bible. — Agustino
Oh yeah, you're actually expected to think for yourself and relate it to your own experiences, wow, who would ever do that! — Agustino
You should get a room for yourself and put a sticker on the door reading "kids only" — Agustino
When I was a child, I talked like a child, I thought like a child, I reasoned like a child. When I became a man, I set aside childish ways. — 1 Corinthians 13:11
It seems fairly obvious that it is a prophecy of the coming of John the Baptist. — Janus
Interpretations could be nuanced in various ways but for me its central meaning is to live with humility keeping God in your heart and mind instead of being consumed by worldly concerns for their own sake or for your own ego's sake. This is a pretty standard message common to many religions, although couched variously in somewhat different forms. — Janus
I find it hard to believe you are not erudite enough to be well aware of that. You don't have to agree with it as a prescription for living, but it's not hard to understand its meaning, and understanding is not precluded by disagreement. — Janus
And I have asked you to explain why you think the word of God should not be subject to interpretation. If you can answer that, then do so. — Janus
My guess is that you think that in order to qualify as the word of God a text could have just one literal meaning. To me to think this would be absurd. If God is infinite, why would his Word not have infinite meaning? — Janus
I live with a great deal of humility, I am not consumed by world concerns for my own sake nor for my ego's sake. And I don't have to blame god for the way I am. — Sir2u
The meaning of it was well understood, the need for nuances in a holy work are what I do not understand. — Sir2u
Why should anyone even be allowed to try to decide what a god really means by his words. Unless there is doubt about them actually being his words. — Sir2u
If words can have infinite meanings, try to find out if I just insulted you. — Sir2u
If this is truly how you live, then you are already walking with God. — Janus
And no right thinking person would blame God for how they are. — Janus
The passage you are responding to was directed to BC. — Janus
In any case, why should a holy work not be nuanced, just as all good poetry, indeed literature, is? — Janus
Words are the Words of God when they speak to the open-hearted in ways that allow them to see, hear and feel God. — Janus
Is it my intelligence or your own that you have insulted? — Janus
No, I walk without him. He would not walk anywhere with me after the number of times I have denied his existence. — Sir2u
But so many do. I'll let you think about it. — Sir2u
If the bible is the word of good then it can contain nothing that is not the word of god. Human interpretations of his meanings would make a mockery of him. — Sir2u
But if the open-hearted need to have it spelled out for them by some authority then it does not fill its objective — Sir2u
But it is impossible for words to have infinite meanings — Sir2u
Can you explain what you think it could mean for a work to be the Word of God beyond that? — Janus
It's not a matter of being "spelled out for them by some authority" but rather of being seduced by the Word. This is something that must be experienced in order to be understood, just as the revelations of great literature must be experienced in order to be understood. — Janus
You have asked that question a few times now, could you answer it. — Sir2u
If humans are the work of god then anything written by man is the word of god, because we are all influenced by him. Why can't the Hobbits be treated with the same reverence as the bible? — Sir2u
That sounds like a commercial for cake mix. — Sir2u
Wow. Hold on. The words of the Bible do not change. Do you mean to say that previous interpretations were wrong, or that the interpretations were right for the time? — szardosszemagad
So the document is evolving, without changing... that's not a Darwinist evolution then. What kind of evolution are we talking about? — szardosszemagad
I think this conversation has run its course. — Janus
Do you think that they would be able to tell the difference between them? — Sir2u
I think they piece it together and Gandalf provides the sacred texts to Moses in the Shire and they go on a great adventure to Egypt where Sauron and his Orcs enslave the Israelites, and save them and lead them to the Lonely Sinai Mountain where Smaug lives. Meanwhile his Moses' nephew Mohammad finds some elves and angels and fights the return of Sauron brings with him dwarves in the battle of Mirkwood.. Aragorn comes back and reestablishes a kingdom and brings the Kingdom of Men together again with the elves and angels or something like that. — schopenhauer1
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