It is a fact that the United States of America is not in the Bible. — Arcane Sandwich
Does it matter, in any meaningful way, for ordinary citizens, that none of the aforementioned countries are not in the Bible? — Arcane Sandwich
Did you know that the Mormon religion, founded in the United States, actually believes that Jesus Christ visited America on a spiritual plane? — Wayfarer
According to the Book of Mormon, Jesus appeared to a group of Nephites in the Americas in 33 AD. That the Nephites were descendants of ancient Israelites who traveled to the Americas around 600 BC.
That Jesus visited the Americas to establish his church, as he did in Jerusalem. That when Jesus returns to Earth, he will first go to Jerusalem and then to Missouri. So the Mormons kind of retro-fit America into the Biblical myth. — Wayfarer
There was also a myth that Jesus visited England, subject of the poem, and later the hymn Jerusalem, Oh Did Those Feet In Ancient Times. (Rather a stirring hymn, too.) — Wayfarer
Does it matter, in any meaningful way, for ordinary citizens, that none of the aforementioned countries are not in the Bible? — Arcane Sandwich
It never seemed to matter to me, although clearly it does to others. I suppose it depends on whether you believe the facts related in the Biblical texts are significant due to matters of geography and history, or whether the symbolic and spiritual truths they are intended to convey are meaningful outside that context. — Wayfarer
One can still interpret that his/her country somehow appears in the Bible. Not straightforward, obviously, as there is no direct mention of Argentina. Yet, he/she can argue that Argentina is mentioned in the Bible metaphorically. — Zebeden
For example, maybe someone believes that his/her country is Babylon from the Book of Revelation. — Zebeden
It is, instead just a brute fact. And that brute fact, by itself, refutes Nietzsche's aforementioned famous phrase. — Arcane Sandwich
↪Arcane Sandwich
I don't understand your point. Is is about refuting one of Nietzsche's points or something to do with the meaning of Christianity for other lands. Or both? — Tom Storm
Are there not many brute facts that undermine FN's observation? — Tom Storm
Pretty sure that he would have accepted as a brute fact that if we were to kill a writer he would write no more books. — Tom Storm
It is a fact that Argentina is not in the Bible. And if someone interprets that Argentina is metaphorically mentioned in the Bible, then I would say that facts matter more than mere interpretations. — Arcane Sandwich
This works as long as there is a clear distinction between a fact and an interpretation. If interpretations are taken as facts ("There are no facts, there are only interpretations"), then one can say that "Argentina is Babylon from the Bible. Therefore, Argentina is in the Bible!" — Zebeden
Is that a fact or an interpretation? — Arcane Sandwich
Why does it matter what countries are mentioned in the Bible? — Tom Storm
It matters in international politics — Arcane Sandwich
It matters in international politics — Arcane Sandwich
Step this out in dot points by way of an example. I am assuming you mean Israel? — Tom Storm
One of the consequences of the Thesis upheld in the OP is that facts should matter more than mere opinions in matters of international politics. — Arcane Sandwich
he example provided in the OP is relevant here: it is a fact that Argentina is not in the Bible. Is it a Biblical country, in a metaphorical sense? That would mean nothing to me, even if it were true. — Arcane Sandwich
Up until recently, abortion was illegal in Argentina. Unlike the USA, we never had legal abortion clinics here. Women used to die during clandestine abortions. And one of the main reasons why it took so long to legalize abortion, was because of the opposition of the Catholic Church. They oppose abortion on religious, ethical and political grounds, and they make their case by way of philosophical and biblical arguments. — Arcane Sandwich
The question here is probably should one particular interpretation of one bronze age myth be used by a country to enforce values on its citizens? — Tom Storm
What does Argentina have to do with Catholicism specifically, or with Christianity in general? Nothing, because Argentina is not in the Bible to begin with — Arcane Sandwich
Argentina's policy, from the entire country to every city and town, should not be based on one bronze age myth be used by a country to enforce values on its citizens. It should be based on secular, Enlightenment thought instead. In other words, it should be based on science, not religion. — Arcane Sandwich
So what? Christianity is not a map, it is based on spreading the message to all nations. The goal is for the entire world to become Christian. Hence missionaries and conversions. — Tom Storm
Well as an atheist I would largely agree with this. But a country becomes Christian by conversions and by cultural practices. It is not a geographic matter, it's built out of axioms not mountains and floodplains. I think that's the nub of our differences.
Jesus specifically asks his followers to take his message and establish his word in all nations. — Tom Storm
since 70-90% of Argentinians are Catholics the ideas brought over by the Spanish and the missionaries stuck in the minds of the people. Why do you think this is? Is it just European brainwashing or is there something else at play? — BitconnectCarlos
Why does the government have to favor Catholicism? — Arcane Sandwich
Argentina is a modern Nation-State. And, as all modern Nation-States, it is not Biblical. Hence, it is not subjected to Biblical Law. — Arcane Sandwich
In Matthew 28:19-20 Jesus is recorded as saying - Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. — Tom Storm
↪Arcane Sandwich
Yoru questions seem pretty easy to answer.
Why does the government have to favor Catholicism? — Arcane Sandwich
History and culture. Once a system of values is established it sticks. It becomes culture. Look at all the people on this site who are convinced that the religion of their family and culture is true. — Tom Storm
A state becomes Biblical if the dominant culture says it is. You have not addressed this:
In Matthew 28:19-20 Jesus is recorded as saying - Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. — Tom Storm
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.