Ok, but here's the question: critical thinking is the name of an attitude taken toward a subject matter. In application it consists in asking questions. What, exactly, are the questions that you think "critical thinking" should ask (of) the Bible?only that I think it is important to have the critical thinking skills that skepticism develops. — SnowyChainsaw
I am in possession of a Strong's Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible. It takes hebrew and greek words and lists which verses they occur in as well as containing a good dictionary (it lists approximate synonyms as well as what words the entry is derived from). It's a very large book. — yupamiralda
But there's two more general remarks I want to make. First of all, Christianity works. I mean seriously, do you think it would be so popular if it didn't? — yupamiralda
Tourists are not very reliable reporters. — yupamiralda
And I had to think, what if the christian god exists? what if all this is true? And I decided, that even if I'm going to hell for it, that that God (the Father as distinguished from the Son)is such an incomprehensibly bad motherfucker that I'm not going to lie to him out of fear. Out of respect, I'll be honest and say "I couldn't accept your Son". And that might get me punishment in this world and perhaps for all of eternity, but I'm gonna do it
But I take a more instrumentalist view..You can look at the wreckage of the West as a junkyard swarming with crack addicts and gangsters and figure out what parts you want to build with...An interesting thing about the Hebrew in Genesis is that "the tree of knowledge of good and evil" is not a good translation. Mine would be "the tree of knowledge of what's useful and what isn't"
The New Testament is one of the ugliest texts ever written, if you really think about it.
Exactly, questioning the concepts a person is exposed to is important. Not just The Bible, but everything.... My point is only that Religion is both very good at discouraging critical thinking and has an inherent interest in doing so. The specific questions are not relevant, only that questions are allowed, better yet encouraged, to be asked. — SnowyChainsaw
What, exactly, are the questions that you think "critical thinking" should ask (of) the Bible? — tim wood
Ten thousand years from now, after the destruction and rebuilding of civilization a couple of times, they might dig up a collection of Harry Potter books and decipher the unreadable scrawling on the page. — Sir2u
The problem with that is that you have no idea what the original books purpose were. It is fine and dandy to get a good translation of them, but what the actually mean we will probably never know. — Sir2u
The Jews never stopped reading and using their sacred writings. — Bitter Crank
The Old Testament contains at least a dozen creation “stories”. Two of these stories are told in Genesis 1 and 2, in addition to the creation story in Job 38 and the fragment in Job 26:7-13 among others. These stories are not always consistent with each other, so some will hold similarities to contemporary creation myths, while others contain contrasts.
Creation stories from the ancient Middle East:
Walter Reinhold Warttig Mattfeld y de la Torre writes that one of his articles:
"... is an attempt to briefly identify some of the Ancient Near Eastern Motifs and Myths from which the Hebrews apparently borrowed, adapted, and reworked in the Book of Genesis (more specifically Genesis 1-11).
It is my understanding that Genesis' motifs and characters, God, Adam, Eve, the Serpent, and Noah, are adaptations and transformations of characters and events occurring in earlier Near Eastern Myths. In some cases several characters and motifs from different myths have been brought together and amalgamated into Genesis' stories.
Books like the Bible - the Bible really is a special case - weren't just thrown together willy-nilly. Smart people wrote/compiled them - what they mean is not-so-easy to get. — tim wood
I grew up in a protestant christian congregation. — yupamiralda
A good part of it falls under the categories of exegesis and hermeneutics. — tim wood
In short, understanding the Bible is a lot of work. If you don't do the work, then you cannot really criticize it. The best you can do is criticize your own imperfect understanding of it. And this is true of any difficult text - the Bible is not special in this respect. — tim wood
For example, to dismiss the Bible because of its cosmology in Genesis ("In the beginning, God created...") is pretty much a demonstration of ignorance, and inability or unwillingness to read a book.
Btw, I have been such an ignorant person for most of my life.Now I just try to read books, including the Bible to see if I can understand what they say. Attitude can make a difference! — tim wood
But did the Jews actually write it directly from the source they claim or copy it from somewhere else?
There are plenty of creation myths about and some contain elements similar to the one in the bible. — Sir2u
Can anyone prove...? — Sir2u
Your right, I am talking in general terms. All I am trying to say is that Religion discourages critical thinking. It does this by claiming it already has all the answers.
But, to be more specific: personally I'd ask Religion whether or not they feel people are capable of creating an agreeable moral code without the need for a omnipotent, celestial deity laying one out for them and, if not, whether or not they think that contradicts the claim that people are created by said omnipotent deity in His image. — SnowyChainsaw
But that isn't the question I was addressing. I said "the Jews never stopped reading their sacred work". — Bitter Crank
But the ideas contained in them, where do they really come from? — Sir2u
My honest answer is that over time various creative people made the scripture up -- everything from "In the beginning..." down to the Apocryphal books. They sat there, composed in their heads, and then delivered well-honed texts at the appropriate time. — Bitter Crank
Just like people used to be able to find their way around the block before GPS devices were put in cars. — Bitter Crank
For rhetorical purpose, not an attack."It cannot be the text, because you don't know the text."
A rather bold assumption.... — SnowyChainsaw
I have to leave it, then. We're on different topics, and I have no argument with the proposition that some religions and their doctrines and practices are wrong-headed.My issue is with the applied principles of Religious doctrine in politics and the daily lives of its subscribers. That includes Organised Religion but is not necessarily limited to it. — SnowyChainsaw
What difference does it make? Granted it's a question that can be asked - you asked it! But it's not relevant to the meaning. Note that the same question is asked of the The Iliad, The Odyssey, the works of Shakespeare, etc.I am not talking about the books themselves, that is well documented in many cases. But the ideas contained in them, where do they really come from? — Sir2u
No. it's a book that lists all the words and their meanings in English. In a few cases the words are "back-defined" meaning that the original Greek meaning has not been brought forward, but rather an English word has been retro-fitted into the Greek. Porneia is one example. It's translated most often by "fornication," also by "sexual immorality." But it means prostitution, esp. temple prostitution, and it can be applied to both men and women. As it happens, this particular mistranslation makes a difference!Strong's Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible is a book that explains the bible, but what purpose did the people that wrote it have, can we ever be sure that it was not to try and convince everyone that the bible is true? — Sir2u
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