Well, if I were a god, I'd try. But I am not. So... why do you ask Sir2u to perform a task which only gods are required to do? This is like asking a sea mollusk to solve a second degree equation system with five unknowns. You simply can't ask a mortal to perform the job of a god. That is not fair. — szardosszemagad
A revelation has nothing to do with who it is coming from. You seem to think that if someone hears the voice of God, and the other reads the same thing in the Bible, for the latter it is not revelation. It absolutely is, if what is revealed is not known before.So you claim. Like I (or rather, Mr Paine) said, hearsay. — andrewk
His claim was that the Bible was written by stupid and uneducated men and women. That claim, given the text, is absurd, and not even worth debating. It's like claiming that the works of Shakespeare were written by an analphabet.This sounds similar to the claims in the preface of my Quran, which say that the numerological patterns in the surahs, the language etc, are so intricate that they could not have been constructed by any human - hence they must have been written by Allah. — andrewk
Yes, of course it is my position that the former can be revelation and the latter cannot. There's no 'seems' about it. I stated that position already, and furthermore it's the only reasonable one.You seem to think that if someone hears the voice of God, and the other reads the same thing in the Bible, for the latter it is not revelation. It absolutely is, if what is revealed is not known before. — Agustino
Right, I expect you to then renounce all scientific truths, because you just read them in some books and don't hear them directly from God. Therefore you have no reason to believe them.In the latter case, all they know is that somebody wrote down a claim about something. They have no reason to believe it is true, so they don't know something that they did not know before. Whereas if they hear the voice of God, and they know that it is God speaking, it is reasonable for them to assume that what the voice says is true, so they can learn something new. — andrewk
In my private opinion the bible was written by uneducated, stupid men and women, and there is nothing godly about it. It is a badly written book for guidance and knowledge, and that's about the size of it. — szardosszemagad
Exactly my point. You admit you couldn't do any better, so how is it fair to ask a god to do the same thing just because of their title? — BlueBanana
No, I verify them for myself, and if they survive the verification process, I (provisionally, being a sceptic) believe them. Admittedly, that does make me a slow reader. But when I read something, it stays read.Right, I expect you to then renounce all scientific truths, because you just read them in some books and don't hear them directly from God. Therefore you have no reason to believe them. — Agustino
The Bible, on the other hand, is qualified as the “Word of God.” Now it’s a simple question: how does the word of God come to fall under any interpretation at all? If the words in a given sequence of words are intelligible - understandable – how do you get past that to something else and preserve the qualification? — tim wood
Then where does meaning come from? I agree that there is something called "interpretation," but in order to interpret, you need something to interpret. And if it's all interpretation, then what is meaning? — tim wood
God itself is the title I'm referring to. Did you purposefully dodge my point? — BlueBanana
Your reputation as an educated intelligent man or woman would have been better served by keeping your private opinion private. — Bitter Crank
Then where does meaning come from? I agree that there is something called "interpretation," but in order to interpret, you need something to interpret. And if it's all interpretation, then what is meaning?
— tim wood
The Bible contains an enormous wealth of stories, historical accounts, mythological accounts, anecdotes, parables, prophecies. So it's not only a matter of interpretation, you're interpreting all of that material. — Wayfarer
You asked me if I were dodging your point. I ask you: Do you get most of your reading comprehension and language skills honed by reading the Gospel and/or the Old Testament? — szardosszemagad
First, that answers neither of my questions. Second, no. — BlueBanana
First of all, please explain on what ground you expect a mortal to do the job of a God — szardosszemagad
Second of all, you asked why I defer the quality of workmanship expected in thought to God's title, and I replied there is no title that God uses. — szardosszemagad
You admit you couldn't do any better, so how is it fair to ask a god to do the same thing — BlueBanana
My point still holds, something being a revelation has nothing to do with whether you believe it or not.No, I verify them for myself, and if they survive the verification process, I (provisionally, being a sceptic) believe them. Admittedly, that does make me a slow reader. But when I read something, it stays read. — andrewk
Okay, but it's not "only" my opinion as you said ;)I was not addressing the rest of the christians or I would have included them as well. And as far as I know there is no such thing as a group opinion, only a group with the same opinion. — Sir2u
Because no text is understood just by reading the words.And just how do you know this not to be true? — Sir2u
Here:Just where does it say anywhere that the bible has hidden things or ways to interpret the writings of long dead people? — Sir2u
So was fulfilled what was spoken through the prophet: “I will open My mouth in parables; I will utter things hidden since the foundation of the world.” — Matthew 13:35
Let's recap. Your problem seems to be the literal/non-literal reading (I'm intentionally avoiding the word "interpretation" here) and the notion that God's Word or the Word of God or whatever can't have a non-literal reading because anything non-literal is "interpretation" and interpretation adds to the text. — Πετροκότσυφας
What is that belief/claim? That the Bible is the word of God. How do they begin to start to know that? Well, they read it. So far so good. Then quite a few of them undertake to be sources of information on what it says, the content often departing from the plain meaning of the words. This new content I call interpretation. The question I am asking is, when you re-present meaning beyond the scope of the words of a text and that text is supposed to be the word of God, then have you not turned the text into something that is not the word of God? And at the same time invalidated the claim that the text is the word of God? — tim wood
That use of the word 'revelation' is completely different from how I have ever seen it used. You are free to define the word however you want, but with that definition it becomes a weak and trivial word that is of no interest to philosophical discussion. It cannot convey anything of the power and significance of what the stories say happened to Saul on the road to Damascus.something being a revelation has nothing to do with whether you believe it or not. — Agustino
First they believe it is the word of God, rich with spiritual meaning. And then they endeavour to interpret it in the right spirit, knowing that no human interpretation can be perfect, but that some will be closer to the truth than others. — Janus
It cannot convey anything of the power and significance of what the stories say happened to Saul on the road to Damascus — andrewk
Doesn't anyone here recognize a distinction between reading and interpreting? — tim wood
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