I also deny the historical accuracy of the Old Testament. That is, that didn't actually happen. — Hanover
The problem is that Christianity is presented here as to have a "privilege" in intolerance compared to other religions — dimosthenis9
One of the best "vehicles"(especially in global scale) for that are religions. All kind of religions. To claim that Christianity is to blame for that, it's ridiculous. As if its teaching is more oppressive, intolerant than others. — dimosthenis9
Christianity comes up here most often because that's the dominant and priviledged religion of the West and the one that's crashed into us (often to our cost) the most. — Tom Storm
But the difference with religion is it makes unverifiable claims about bettering the world. It persistently makes claims that belief in god is somehow a positive, transformative power and the evidence for this never stacks up. — Tom Storm
Religions should stop playing the morality card and recognize that they have nothing to offer that any social club can't offer too. Although not all that many social clubs seem to institutionalize child abuse and misogyny to the same high levels... but you get my point. — Tom Storm
...John Chrysostom.. — Ciceronianus
I prefer the non-literal approach, where Amelek represents evil and the reminder that such actually exists. — Hanover
The problem is that Christianity is presented here as to have a "privilege" in intolerance compared to other religions. Or that its teaching is worse than other religions. — dimosthenis9
But insufficiently so. I can't help but see parallels between these historical events and the stolen generations, the children in Canadian schools, and religious pedophilia. The claims to moral authority are bankrupt.I think you're right. — Tom Storm
AH. So adhering to the OP. It's not meant to be factually correct, because we found out that it doesn't match the facts.
What would one think if we had an independent account of their destruction? Then it would be factual? — Banno
That our myths are fictional does not impact their truth — Hanover
Those who smugly prove that Washington never chopped down a cherry tree really miss the point. — Hanover
We use myths to advance ideals. — Hanover
If we learned there were no actual Ebenezer Scrooge or Tiny Tim, would the moral that even the coldest souls are capable of redemption be impacted? That there was no talking fox means his sour grapes story is bullshit? — Hanover
To my eye, and I suppose you will agree, the dive into darkness that followed the destruction of classical culture was tragic. — Banno
If we lose Jesus, the cost is considerably higher (for most believers). — Tom Storm
He's the fellow who was ecstatic that the writings "of the Greeks have all but perished and been obliterated... Where is Plato? nowhere! Where Paul? In the mouths of all". — Banno
There's nothing to keep someone from opening a church today that worships the Greek and Roman gods. — Hanover
Well, they probably won't open a church, but there are people who worship the ancient Greek and Roman gods even today. — Ciceronianus
It's not meant to be factually correct, because we found out that it doesn't match the facts. — Banno
Thus erasing the tragedy brought about by the Christians by resurrecting the demolished ancient Roman culture. — Hanover
especially when it comes to religious practices, as in most case the only sources we have are the writings of Christians who obviously had an enormous axe to grind. — Ciceronianus
The destruction of 90% of classical literature is swept away, denied, and those who point to it castigated. — Banno
What do you need me to say? — Hanover
If one allows religion not to be factually correct, to consist in metaphor and allegory, for the betterment of mankind, then does that mean it need not be honest? — Banno
The Abrahamic apologists on this thread have shown themselves to lack intellectual honesty and integrity on par with Holocaust, (US) systemic racism, anthrogenic climate change & pandemic deniers. — 180 Proof
F. Fundamentalist Interpretation
Fundamentalist interpretation starts from the principle that the Bible, being the word of God, inspired and free from error, should be read and interpreted literally in all its details. But by "literal interpretation" it understands a naively literalist interpretation, one, that is to say, which excludes every effort at understanding the Bible that takes account of its historical origins and development. It is opposed, therefore, to the use of the historical- critical method, as indeed to the use of any other scientific method for the interpretation of Scripture.
The fundamentalist interpretation had its origin at the time of the Reformation, arising out of a concern for fidelity to the literal meaning of Scripture. After the century of the Enlightenment it emerged in Protestantism as a bulwark against liberal exegesis.
The actual term fundamentalist is connected directly with the American Biblical Congress held at Niagara, N.Y., in 1895. At this meeting, conservative Protestant exegetes defined "five points of fundamentalism": the verbal inerrancy of Scripture, the divinity of Christ, his virginal birth, the doctrine of vicarious expiation and the bodily resurrection at the time of the second coming of Christ. As the fundamentalist way of reading the Bible spread to other parts of the world, it gave rise to other ways of interpretation, equally "literalist," in Europe, Asia, Africa and South America. As the 20th century comes to an end, this kind of interpretation is winning more and more adherents, in religious groups and sects, as also among Catholics.
Fundamentalism is right to insist on the divine inspiration of the Bible, the inerrancy of the word of God and other biblical truths included in its five fundamental points. But its way of presenting these truths is rooted in an ideology which is not biblical, whatever the proponents of this approach might say. For it demands an unshakable adherence to rigid doctrinal points of view and imposes, as the only source of teaching for Christian life and salvation, a reading of the Bible which rejects all questioning and any kind of critical research.
The basic problem with fundamentalist interpretation of this kind is that, refusing to take into account the historical character of biblical revelation, it makes itself incapable of accepting the full truth of the incarnation itself. As regards relationships with God, fundamentalism seeks to escape any closeness of the divine and the human. It refuses to admit that the inspired word of God has been expressed in human language and that this word has been expressed, under divine inspiration, by human authors possessed of limited capacities and resources. For this reason, it tends to treat the biblical text as if it had been dictated word for word by the Spirit. It fails to recognize that the word of God has been formulated in language and expression conditioned by various periods. It pays no attention to the literary forms and to the human ways of thinking to be found in the biblical texts, many of which are the result of a process extending over long periods of time and bearing the mark of very diverse historical situations.
. . .
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.