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Topic: I don't believe in the Devil or Hell  (Read 64190 times)

kezalter

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Re: I don't believe in the Devil or Hell
« Reply #90 on: January 19, 2011, 07:29:24 pm »
The Jewish holiday of Purim is based on Queen Esther's triumph for her people.  King David (who wrote a good portion of the Psalms) came from the bloodline of Ruth and Boaz. How about Passover, the celebration of deliverance of God and the Exodus of the Jews out of Egypt?  Every one of these happenings are written in Jewish transcripts and history.....and the Bible.

This part is just as fallacious as the earlier "look at all the buildings and monuments, there's your proof!" thing.  There are elements of current religions that have pagan roots, such as worshipping on Sunday or December 25.  Does this prove that pagans are right?

And I'm really unclear as to why you went on this tangent in the first place.  I never said anything about or against current Jewish traditions being borne out of earlier Jewish stories and teachings.

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How about the Dead Sea Scrolls found at Qumran near Engedi, and how they are exact replicas of some of the books in the Bible?

What about them?  Many different copies of Gilgamesh or other ancient texts are similar or exact to one another too.  I fail to see anything I said that would imply that I would dispute this.

Falconer02

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Re: I don't believe in the Devil or Hell
« Reply #91 on: January 19, 2011, 07:32:40 pm »
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And just what is walking the walk with you Falconer?  Since we live our life by the scriptures, we are living what God laid down as what is befitting a Christian.  No verse is "random" to us one bit.  The Bible in it's whole is provided for us.  If we choose a verse(s) that matches a situation that you are trying to beat us over the head with, and you don't like it?  Oh well.  However, I find it interesting that all of you who don't believe the Bible still refer to it to blatantly "bash" Christians that we are not living up to what a Christians should be in your eyes.  Just where does this Christian measuring stick come from if you don't believe in the Bible?

I'm just talking more of christians supporting an "american-conservative" philosophy where it's okay to go to war, support crooked political officials, hoard things and be insanely rich, bash gays, etc. etc. and still saying they're 100% christian. You know- not worshipping Jesus, but the Republican Jesus meme.

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You all have had a good time "bashing" Jcribb, and she gave excellent answers, but that's not good enough is it?

They were well-explained. But they were also very fallicious. That's what myself and others are commenting on.

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No, your not happy until you thoroughly insult her, and her walk with God, which is actually none of your business, but between her and God.  Falconer, you've gotten mean, and I don't know where that came from.  You used to have some courteousness to you.  Now

Why are you appealing to emotion constantly? Too many assumptions here. You act like I made derogatory comments about her *bleep* or something! lol this is a debate. I'd have a similar attitude if we were discussing politics or something else around those lines and things from the other side were not adding up. Look, if there's too much emotional stress circling with an individual while debating, the individual should have just kept it to themselves in the first place. Especially since 'it's none of Falconer's business, but I'll present it anyway'.
« Last Edit: January 19, 2011, 07:35:56 pm by Falconer02 »

Annella

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Re: I don't believe in the Devil or Hell
« Reply #92 on: January 19, 2011, 08:11:35 pm »
You're making a million assumptions.  I am ethnically Jewish, so don't get so condescending to me about how I might make "Jews on here pause."  Some books in the Bible are not reliable histories.  I have Jewish and Christian friends who agree with me that the Book of Job, which is taken very seriously by people of both faiths, was possibly or even probably meant to be allegorical.  You're assuming that everybody of the Jewish or Christian faiths is as fundamentalist as you are.  You would be wrong.

Notice I did not ever say Xerxes was not a real person.  You either missed this and made the incorrect assumption that I considered him fictional, or you deliberately injected that name in here in the hopes of putting me on the defensive because Xerxes, unlike Esther, has plenty of corraborating historical evidence that suggests he existed.

Before you go around telling me what the Jews believe about Queen Esther, consider this passage from the entry on Esther in the Jewish Encyclopedia:

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In view of all the evidence the authority of the Book of Esther as a historical record must be definitely rejected.

And this was written in the early 1900s.  But go right ahead and tell me I'm the one who needs to study further.  Go ahead and assume I don't know anything about the history of my own ethincity just because I have a different opinion than you do.

It's easy for me to say that Xerxes existed but Esther didn't entirely because I studied the issue beyond taking the Bible literally.  There are plenty of references to the historical Xerxes outside of the Book of Esther.  Some sources portray him one way, some sources portray him another.  You assume they're automatically inaccurate if they don't jibe perfectly with the Biblical account.  I don't make any such assumption.  Just because Xerxes existed doesn't mean that everything everybody ever wrote about him is reliable history.  There's plenty of evidence that the city of Troy(Ilium) existed.  That doesn't mean Homer's Iliad is a perfectly reliable historical source.

I injected the name because I've done the study.  Not to put you on the defensive, or be condescending, so get over yourself.  Okay your an ethnic Jew, which means nothing except you "might" consider the Old Testament, but not the New.  You also mentioned Ruth along with Esther as being fictional.  Do you have a problem with the women, but not the men of the Bible?  How about the fact that King David came from the bloodline of Ruth and Boaz?  There is historical evidence of him, is there not?  Or do you reject Ruth because she was a Moabite in the pure bloodline, so it's easy to throw her on the woodpile because she was a Gentile?

Okay, You may not be a practicing Jew.  So if your people don't believe in Esther, why celebrate Purim if you rejected her in the early 1099's?  And you did say the books of Ruth and Esther are just historical fiction.  Those are your words, not mine.  I'm sure you do know your own ethnic history, but that doesn't mean you accept it, which in fact sounds like your doing.  Troy?  Oh please, while Troy may have existed, Greek mythology loves to spin yarns.

Every race has its fiction stories of great conquest, warriors, loves, etc.  However, to place the Bible as a book of fiction goes beyond disrespect.  It's only your opinion, and say it all you want, but to pick and choose what you want out of the Bible as truth and not truth, shows a double minded person.  No, I don't think everybody is as I am.  I'd rather someone say they don't believe the Bible, then waffle on it's contents and truths, and call them fiction.

However, your opinion is just that.....your opinion.

Annella

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Re: I don't believe in the Devil or Hell
« Reply #93 on: January 19, 2011, 08:24:39 pm »
The Jewish holiday of Purim is based on Queen Esther's triumph for her people.  King David (who wrote a good portion of the Psalms) came from the bloodline of Ruth and Boaz. How about Passover, the celebration of deliverance of God and the Exodus of the Jews out of Egypt?  Every one of these happenings are written in Jewish transcripts and history.....and the Bible.

This part is just as fallacious as the earlier "look at all the buildings and monuments, there's your proof!" thing.  There are elements of current religions that have pagan roots, such as worshipping on Sunday or December 25.  Does this prove that pagans are right?

And I'm really unclear as to why you went on this tangent in the first place.  I never said anything about or against current Jewish traditions being borne out of earlier Jewish stories and teachings.

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How about the Dead Sea Scrolls found at Qumran near Engedi, and how they are exact replicas of some of the books in the Bible?

What about them?  Many different copies of Gilgamesh or other ancient texts are similar or exact to one another too.  I fail to see anything I said that would imply that I would dispute this.

A tangent?  All I said was if your going to reject the Bible, reject all of it, instead of calling the people in it fictional, but allowing that it might have some truth to it. What is that?  Falconer is agnostic, qon is atheist, etc.  At least they say who they are.

As far as my mention of the Dead Sea Scrolls were to lead credence to the Bible and it's authenticity, but you shot that down also.  Me thinks you just don't believe the Bible and leave it at that.

Oh, I know of the pagan roots.  Saturday actually is the Sabbath.  You don't believe in Jesus anyway so December 25th to you means nothing....pagan or otherwise.  While Dec. 25th may not be his birth date, (there is evidence pointing to that), the Bible doesn't say it is.  Your pulling out straws to lend credence to your argument, when I never mentioned these things.  What's your point?


Annella

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Re: I don't believe in the Devil or Hell
« Reply #94 on: January 19, 2011, 08:47:12 pm »
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And just what is walking the walk with you Falconer?  Since we live our life by the scriptures, we are living what God laid down as what is befitting a Christian.  No verse is "random" to us one bit.  The Bible in it's whole is provided for us.  If we choose a verse(s) that matches a situation that you are trying to beat us over the head with, and you don't like it?  Oh well.  However, I find it interesting that all of you who don't believe the Bible still refer to it to blatantly "bash" Christians that we are not living up to what a Christians should be in your eyes.  Just where does this Christian measuring stick come from if you don't believe in the Bible?

I'm just talking more of christians supporting an "american-conservative" philosophy where it's okay to go to war, support crooked political officials, hoard things and be insanely rich, bash gays, etc. etc. and still saying they're 100% christian. You know- not worshipping Jesus, but the Republican Jesus meme.

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You all have had a good time "bashing" Jcribb, and she gave excellent answers, but that's not good enough is it?

They were well-explained. But they were also very fallicious. That's what myself and others are commenting on.

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No, your not happy until you thoroughly insult her, and her walk with God, which is actually none of your business, but between her and God.  Falconer, you've gotten mean, and I don't know where that came from.  You used to have some courteousness to you.  Now

Why are you appealing to emotion constantly? Too many assumptions here. You act like I made derogatory comments about her *bleep* or something! lol this is a debate. I'd have a similar attitude if we were discussing politics or something else around those lines and things from the other side were not adding up. Look, if there's too much emotional stress circling with an individual while debating, the individual should have just kept it to themselves in the first place. Especially since 'it's none of Falconer's business, but I'll present it anyway'.

You have no idea what every Christian agenda is or what they support so stop putting all Christians into your mental "mode". And your answer does show a measuring stick that you think we should "measure up" to.  Your not our authority.  Oh, you don't like our "American Conservative" stance?  Too bad!  Rich?  LOLOLOLOL  Whoever I support, if Republican, Democrat, red, green, purple, has nothing to do with you, but my right as an American.  If my Christian morals and values have influence on who I support in Government, that also is my right as an American.

Keep to ourselves?????  Oh please, we don't go looking for you guys to start anything. I was talking to someone about a Biblical question that they asked me about, and before I could answer them, here is qon "bashing" on Christians and how deluded they are on and on.....same old tripe.

Yourself and others ganged up on her to "bash" her, and degrade her belief and walk as a Christian.  You haven't heard from me in months.  I came in here to support my sister from your hate and discontent.  Don't attempt to wipe your shoes on her, and then say "oh, we were just debating".

Emotional constancy?  Isn't that what you come down on us all the time about?  That we aren't acting like a Christian?  We aren't loving enough, mild enough, meek enough, agree with you enough?  Kind of a double standard don't you think?

« Last Edit: January 19, 2011, 08:50:24 pm by Annella »

jcribb16

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Re: I don't believe in the Devil or Hell
« Reply #95 on: January 19, 2011, 09:13:18 pm »
Quote from kezalter in response to Annella:
I never said anything about or against current Jewish traditions being borne out of earlier Jewish stories and teachings.

What Annella is trying to tell you here is that these events did take place. And the fact is God was involved in these events - that's why they carry on for each generation so that they know where God brought them from as a people, and how the 12 tribes are still that way today.  Which in turn, proves these people you listed as not real were actually very real in the history and in the Bible.  The Bible is literal and perfect as it is "God's Word." Yes, imperfect humans wrote and published this Book, but what's inside the Book is literal.
The only people that perhaps weren't real, as you say, were in some of the parables Jesus used to get His point across. Parables are stories with a heavenly meaning, as I am sure you know.  At the same time, some of the people in those parables may have been real  - we don't really know that, only He does. 

Falconer02

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Re: I don't believe in the Devil or Hell
« Reply #96 on: January 19, 2011, 09:23:17 pm »
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Oh, you don't like our "American Conservative" stance?  Too bad!  Rich?  LOLOLOLOL

During election periods, often times I ask myself "What would Republican Jesus do?" lol

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Keep to ourselves??  Oh please, we don't go looking for you guys to start anything.

Maybe you don't, but many here do. Especially in the past. Even in this thread, for instance. It has happened.

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Yourself and others ganged up on her to "bash" her, and degrade her belief and walk as a Christian.  You haven't heard from me in months.  I came in here to support my sister from your hate and discontent.  Don't attempt to wipe your shoes on her, and then say "oh, we were just debating".
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Emotional constancy?  Isn't that what you come down on us all the time about?  That we aren't acting like a Christian?  We aren't loving enough, mild enough, meek enough, agree with you enough?  Kind of a double standard don't you think?

We 'bashed' her example down and she kept saying we were missing the point. We weren't. We all just kept digging further into it. You, on the other hand, are just antagonizing for no reason at all-- calling me hateful and discontent. Personal attacks during a debate? How Christian and trite! Seriously, what is up with you? This is a debate. I argued against her religious viewpoint just as I would her ideal political candidate if I had major disagreements. People seem to think religious views automatically get placed on a golden pedestal so others may not criticize or be skeptical of. No, it's down here with the other argumentative material. Get over yourself and stop introducing your emotion-amplifier whenever something sounds a little mean or is taken the wrong way. Yeesh, lady. Your beliefs and characters have major inconsistencies and faults. That's all we're pointing out. Aside from your neat little historical argument here with Kez, most of our questions and evidences are just being avoided completely in favor of boxed reasonings.
« Last Edit: January 19, 2011, 09:31:24 pm by Falconer02 »

jcribb16

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Re: I don't believe in the Devil or Hell
« Reply #97 on: January 19, 2011, 09:33:24 pm »
Quote from Annella:
You all have had a good time "bashing" Jcribb, and she gave excellent answers, but that's not good enough is it?

Quote from Falconer:
They were well-explained. But they were also very fallicious. That's what myself and others are commenting on.



World English Dictionary
fallacious  (fəˈleɪʃəs) 
 
— adj   
1.  containing or involving a fallacy; illogical; erroneous 
2.  tending to mislead 
3.  delusive or disappointing: a fallacious hope


Let's make sure that the readers understand that it is of your opinion that my comments were fallacious. Opinion is what one feels or thinks about something, while fact is truth. That means that just because it is your opinion does not mean it is true.
It's my opinion that you and your good pal you mentioned are fallacious in cutting down Christians for what they believe and know about God.

reneabingham

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Re: I don't believe in the Devil or Hell
« Reply #98 on: January 19, 2011, 09:35:24 pm »
HELL IS HERE ON EARTH

kezalter

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Re: I don't believe in the Devil or Hell
« Reply #99 on: January 19, 2011, 09:57:21 pm »
Quote from: Annella
I injected the name because I've done the study. Not to put you on the defensive, or be condescending, so get over yourself.

You still jumped to a conclusion that wasn't at all based on what I wrote.  Your goal may not have been to be condescending but you definitely achieved it anyways.

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Do you have a problem with the women, but not the men of the Bible? How about the fact that King David came from the bloodline of Ruth and Boaz? There is historical evidence of him, is there not? Or do you reject Ruth because she was a Moabite in the pure bloodline, so it's easy to throw her on the woodpile because she was a Gentile?

Nice, you're implying I'm sexist and a bigot.  Cute.  For the record, I'm an ethnic Jew because my mother was Jewish and that's how the ethnicity is decided.  The other side of my family is 100% Gentile and I was raised Christian.  Does this mean that for your next trick you'll claim I hate racial minorities?  This, by the way, is a tactic used by people to put someone on the defensive--an ad hominem attack, where you imply certain things about me despite my not saying anything of the sort.  I said nothing against women and nothing against Gentiles, but you jumped to that anyways.  Pretend all you want that it's not what you were doing, but it's what you did.  I've seen it enough times to recognize it.

Actually I don't believe in the bloodline laid out in the book of Ruth, which means that I don't buy into Boaz's existence any more than Ruth's.  This bloodline question is also mentioned in the Jewish Encyclopedia and has been rejected by Christian scholars such as Julius Wellhausen.  So just because King David may have existed doesn't mean that everything written about him or his lineage is absolutely true and needs no further scrutiny.

I used the names of Ruth and Esther because those are the names of the books.  It had nothing to do with their gender or ethnicity.  If the books were called the Book of Boaz and the Book of Xerxes I would have said they were historical fiction, only that Xerxes is named after someone who probably existed.

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Okay, You may not be a practicing Jew. So if your people don't believe in Esther, why celebrate Purim if you rejected her in the early 1099's? And you did say the books of Ruth and Esther are just historical fiction. Those are your words, not mine.

Yes, they are my words, not the official words of the Jewish faith.  I'm not a rabbi or any sort of Jewish spokesperson.  If you want to learn more exact details about how Jews feel about Esther I suggest you study the issue.

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I'm sure you do know your own ethnic history, but that doesn't mean you accept it, which in fact sounds like your doing. Troy? Oh please, while Troy may have existed, Greek mythology loves to spin yarns.

I accept the parts that appear to be historically accurate as historically accurate, and the ones that appear to be folklore as folklore.

Your second sentence is exactly what people say about Christians that gets you upset--that they love to spin yarns, even ones based on people and places that may have existed.  That was my whole point, that because people love to "spin yarns" that I don't take everything that gets written down as absolutely true.

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Every race has its fiction stories of great conquest, warriors, loves, etc. However, to place the Bible as a book of fiction goes beyond disrespect. It's only your opinion, and say it all you want, but to pick and choose what you want out of the Bible as truth and not truth, shows a double minded person. No, I don't think everybody is as I am. I'd rather someone say they don't believe the Bible, then waffle on it's contents and truths, and call them fiction.

However, your opinion is just that.....your opinion.

What I was saying is that some parts of the Bible may not have even been intended for literal historic interpretation, or that they don't have to be viewed as such to still be useful.  They may have been works designed to tell a story and deliver a message, not be perfectly accurate.  Regardless of whether Ruth, Boaz or Esther existed the texts can still be studied by everybody based on what their stories teach us.  Other books of the Bible are intended to be historical and strive to be completely accurate.  The books were written by men across hundreds of years, they were not all motivated by the exact same things, they did not all have access to the exact same information, etc.  It's not about picking and choosing what I want, it's about learning the historicity of the writings, and interpreting them from there.

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A tangent? All I said was if your going to reject the Bible, reject all of it, instead of calling the people in it fictional, but allowing that it might have some truth to it. What is that?

If you really majored in history then you should recognize "that" as studying history.  When studying Greek history you can't assume that everything Herodotus wrote was 100% accurate or when studying Roman history you can't assume that everything Publius wrote was 100% accurate, because it may not have been.  Ah, but then the Greeks and Romans just loved to "spin yarns," right?  Well, when studying American history you can't take everything Parson Weems wrote down as literally accurate, because it wasn't.  The story of George Washington chopping down a cherry tree likely never happened, but Weems wrote it down because he felt it told a valuable lesson about Washington's honesty.

Even when reading the personal journals of historical figures you have to account for the fact that they may be biased or misleading or exaggerating or otherwise misrepresenting what they are recounting--because that is what humans do.  Parts may be true, parts may not be, the one thing you can't do is take the "all or nothing" approach.  Accepting anything as perfectly accurate without scrutiny or study is as lazy or sloppy a thing you can do as a historian, but rejecting it all could mean you end up rejecting something valuable.

The fact that you could major in history and not recognize that I was doing rather ordinary historical analysis is interesting.

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As far as my mention of the Dead Sea Scrolls were to lead credence to the Bible and it's authenticity, but you shot that down also. Me thinks you just don't believe the Bible and leave it at that.

Their existence proves that there were copies of the same text at the same time.  It proves that the Dead Sea Scrolls themselves have authenticity, but it doesn't prove that the words on them are 100% accurate, any more than discovering another copy of Gilgamesh or Iliad would prove their stories accurate.  It has nothing to do with whether I believe in the Bible or Gilgamesh, your reasoning is just flawed.

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You don't believe in Jesus anyway so December 25th to you means nothing....pagan or otherwise. While Dec. 25th may not be his birth date, (there is evidence pointing to that), the Bible doesn't say it is. Your pulling out straws to lend credence to your argument, when I never mentioned these things. What's your point?

Jesus is awesome, and I believe He existed, so don't tell me what I believe in or not.  And I celebrate Christmas so don't tell me it means nothing to me, either.  And I brought it up because you were talking about Jewish traditions being handed down from beliefs about Esther, and thus Esther and the Bible must be true.  So Pagan traditions being handed down through time must, by the logic you presented, mean that Pagan beliefs are true.  This isn't my argument, it was yours, I am only laying out the full implication of what you were saying.

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Falconer is agnostic, qon is atheist, etc. At least they say who they are.

Why does it matter so much to you what I am?  Nothing of what I'm saying is even all that relevant to whatever faith or lack thereof I may have--I'm talking exclusively from the angle of a historian.  Nothing of what I have said would be more or less true if I were Christian or atheist or Sikh.  You've been making this about me, but it's not about me personally, it's about what the evidence is and I'm giving my opinion of what it suggests.

Annella

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Re: I don't believe in the Devil or Hell
« Reply #100 on: January 19, 2011, 10:08:46 pm »
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Oh, you don't like our "American Conservative" stance?  Too bad!  Rich?  LOLOLOLOL

During election periods, often times I ask myself "What would Republican Jesus do?" lol

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Keep to ourselves??  Oh please, we don't go looking for you guys to start anything.

Maybe you don't, but many here do. Especially in the past. Even in this thread, for instance. It has happened.

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Yourself and others ganged up on her to "bash" her, and degrade her belief and walk as a Christian.  You haven't heard from me in months.  I came in here to support my sister from your hate and discontent.  Don't attempt to wipe your shoes on her, and then say "oh, we were just debating".
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Emotional constancy?  Isn't that what you come down on us all the time about?  That we aren't acting like a Christian?  We aren't loving enough, mild enough, meek enough, agree with you enough?  Kind of a double standard don't you think?

We 'bashed' her example down and she kept saying we were missing the point. We weren't. We all just kept digging further into it. You, on the other hand, are just antagonizing for no reason at all-- calling me hateful and discontent. Personal attacks during a debate? How Christian and trite! Seriously, what is up with you? This is a debate. I argued against her religious viewpoint just as I would her ideal political candidate if I had major disagreements. People seem to think religious views automatically get placed on a golden pedestal so others may not criticize or be skeptical of. No, it's down here with the other argumentative material. Get over yourself and stop introducing your emotion-amplifier whenever something sounds a little mean or is taken the wrong way. Yeesh, lady. Your beliefs and characters have major inconsistencies and faults. That's all we're pointing out. Aside from your neat little historical argument here with Kez, most of our questions and evidences are just being avoided completely in favor of boxed reasonings.

All I was saying is that I used to talk to you before on this site, and you were not mean as I've been reading lately. I don't care if my beliefs or character don't equal what standards you think I should adhere to.  You have an opinion about what you see as Christians inconsistencies and faults in our belief?  Fine, it can be done without "bashing". No, it is not boxed reasonings.  You just don't like what you hear, so you downgrade to personal attacks because we don't roll over and say "oh, how right you are".

Also, you were missing the point, or you just didn't care about anything but getting your point across. You guys are like a pack of snapping mutts ready to take down anyone that carries a Bible.  Oh, poor you.  I'm antagonizing you for no reason at all?  Oh, but what you do is just debate?  Another double standard.  Frankly, I have no desire to come into D&D and pretty much stay out.  However, you degrade and bash my sister, you will hear from me. That's what's "up" with me.



jcribb16

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Re: I don't believe in the Devil or Hell
« Reply #101 on: January 19, 2011, 10:55:47 pm »
Thank you, Annella. I appreciate what you are doing - I would do the same for you!

I sure don't mind debates - Actually I enjoy sparring with others with sparks back and forth.  There are several posters on here who really like to do the same.  There are also others who debate at one time with certain subjects, and then bash or lambast at other times.  I've noticed the lambasting is usually toward Christians that share their views, ask questions, chit-chat about their views on religion in general, and try to answer questions to those who want to know things about Christianity. It's kind of like they are fearful of God and what it means in their personal life choices. It seems that instead of actually discussing and delving deep, they can't handle that so they use the "cut-off" mode and resort to intimidation, name-calling, and sometimes, just out and out meanness. I am not talking about every non-Christian in this forum. There are several non-Christians just as nice as they can be and know how to debate and discuss without the cut-downs. They ask thought-provoking and challenging questions and in return they give sensible and great answers to our questions and comments.

At least, the agitators are firm in what they believe.  However, we as Christians, are firm in what we believe.  It's like they are trying to forge chinks into the armor of God that we have around us, and get frustrated when we don't budge. So they come back with answers that are ridiculous and hateful. That's great they have their opinion and I respect that. But I have my opinion as well, and would like the same respect in return. I will keep praying for their souls....

Falconer02

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Re: I don't believe in the Devil or Hell
« Reply #102 on: January 19, 2011, 11:02:42 pm »
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Let's make sure that the readers understand that it is of your opinion that my comments were fallacious. Opinion is what one feels or thinks about something, while fact is truth. That means that just because it is your opinion does not mean it is true.  It's my opinion that you and your good pal you mentioned are fallacious in cutting down Christians for what they believe and know about God.

1.) Your opinion of american buildings being proof of a deity being among us has been debunked due to historical significances of other cultures' creations with their deities being among them. This isn't an opinion. You asserted fallacious (omg got it rite) claim and we called you on it. Done. Sure it can still be opinion, but it's resistant to reason.

2.) You don't know. You think you know. If you knew, you would be able to present and share the metaphysical properties with us. But you can't. You rely on a frail argument of "You don't need physical means to believe in what I preach". Yes, we get it. But it's ultimately a really weak argument --if an argument at all-- because it has no logical form. From the start, it's invalid.

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You have an opinion about what you see as Christians inconsistencies and faults in our belief?
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No, it is not boxed reasonings.

It is only an opinion when put on the table with the deception of magic. Magical thinking in an argument should be prohibited because, with the impossible and unprovable, you can argue for anything and get away with it. It's a cop out. Kez has made some great and rational points on this.

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. You guys are like a pack of snapping mutts ready to take down anyone that carries a Bible.

Nah. Just the ones with airhorns and megaphones! lol

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I'm antagonizing you for no reason at all?  Oh, but what you do is just debate?  Another double standard.

I stay in the argument at hand. You stay on the outer rim of it and attack personally with name calling. But I vaguely recall you doing this before, so I should probably get used to it.

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However, you degrade and bash my sister, you will hear from me. That's what's "up" with me.

I'll attack and degrade her arguments and reasonings and introduce something new into the mix if I see faults, but I will never degrade her actual self. Especially for no reason at all. That would be mean. If this is way too personal of an issue with anyone, they shouldn't even be in the argument. Feel free to argue against my beliefs any time you want. I won't take it personally. I'm not telling anyone to leave. I'm just stating that so they can avoid any emotional drama that sprouts up and they don't want to deal with.
« Last Edit: January 19, 2011, 11:19:41 pm by Falconer02 »

Annella

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Re: I don't believe in the Devil or Hell
« Reply #103 on: January 19, 2011, 11:06:39 pm »
Quote from: Annella
I injected the name because I've done the study. Not to put you on the defensive, or be condescending, so get over yourself.

You still jumped to a conclusion that wasn't at all based on what I wrote.  Your goal may not have been to be condescending but you definitely achieved it anyways.

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Do you have a problem with the women, but not the men of the Bible? How about the fact that King David came from the bloodline of Ruth and Boaz? There is historical evidence of him, is there not? Or do you reject Ruth because she was a Moabite in the pure bloodline, so it's easy to throw her on the woodpile because she was a Gentile?

Nice, you're implying I'm sexist and a bigot.  Cute.  For the record, I'm an ethnic Jew because my mother was Jewish and that's how the ethnicity is decided.  The other side of my family is 100% Gentile and I was raised Christian.  Does this mean that for your next trick you'll claim I hate racial minorities?  This, by the way, is a tactic used by people to put someone on the defensive--an ad hominem attack, where you imply certain things about me despite my not saying anything of the sort.  I said nothing against women and nothing against Gentiles, but you jumped to that anyways.  Pretend all you want that it's not what you were doing, but it's what you did.  I've seen it enough times to recognize it.

Actually I don't believe in the bloodline laid out in the book of Ruth, which means that I don't buy into Boaz's existence any more than Ruth's.  This bloodline question is also mentioned in the Jewish Encyclopedia and has been rejected by Christian scholars such as Julius Wellhausen.  So just because King David may have existed doesn't mean that everything written about him or his lineage is absolutely true and needs no further scrutiny.

I used the names of Ruth and Esther because those are the names of the books.  It had nothing to do with their gender or ethnicity.  If the books were called the Book of Boaz and the Book of Xerxes I would have said they were historical fiction, only that Xerxes is named after someone who probably existed.

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Okay, You may not be a practicing Jew. So if your people don't believe in Esther, why celebrate Purim if you rejected her in the early 1099's? And you did say the books of Ruth and Esther are just historical fiction. Those are your words, not mine.

Yes, they are my words, not the official words of the Jewish faith.  I'm not a rabbi or any sort of Jewish spokesperson.  If you want to learn more exact details about how Jews feel about Esther I suggest you study the issue.

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I'm sure you do know your own ethnic history, but that doesn't mean you accept it, which in fact sounds like your doing. Troy? Oh please, while Troy may have existed, Greek mythology loves to spin yarns.

I accept the parts that appear to be historically accurate as historically accurate, and the ones that appear to be folklore as folklore.

Your second sentence is exactly what people say about Christians that gets you upset--that they love to spin yarns, even ones based on people and places that may have existed.  That was my whole point, that because people love to "spin yarns" that I don't take everything that gets written down as absolutely true.

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Every race has its fiction stories of great conquest, warriors, loves, etc. However, to place the Bible as a book of fiction goes beyond disrespect. It's only your opinion, and say it all you want, but to pick and choose what you want out of the Bible as truth and not truth, shows a double minded person. No, I don't think everybody is as I am. I'd rather someone say they don't believe the Bible, then waffle on it's contents and truths, and call them fiction.

However, your opinion is just that.....your opinion.

What I was saying is that some parts of the Bible may not have even been intended for literal historic interpretation, or that they don't have to be viewed as such to still be useful.  They may have been works designed to tell a story and deliver a message, not be perfectly accurate.  Regardless of whether Ruth, Boaz or Esther existed the texts can still be studied by everybody based on what their stories teach us.  Other books of the Bible are intended to be historical and strive to be completely accurate.  The books were written by men across hundreds of years, they were not all motivated by the exact same things, they did not all have access to the exact same information, etc.  It's not about picking and choosing what I want, it's about learning the historicity of the writings, and interpreting them from there.

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A tangent? All I said was if your going to reject the Bible, reject all of it, instead of calling the people in it fictional, but allowing that it might have some truth to it. What is that?

If you really majored in history then you should recognize "that" as studying history.  When studying Greek history you can't assume that everything Herodotus wrote was 100% accurate or when studying Roman history you can't assume that everything Publius wrote was 100% accurate, because it may not have been.  Ah, but then the Greeks and Romans just loved to "spin yarns," right?  Well, when studying American history you can't take everything Parson Weems wrote down as literally accurate, because it wasn't.  The story of George Washington chopping down a cherry tree likely never happened, but Weems wrote it down because he felt it told a valuable lesson about Washington's honesty.

Even when reading the personal journals of historical figures you have to account for the fact that they may be biased or misleading or exaggerating or otherwise misrepresenting what they are recounting--because that is what humans do.  Parts may be true, parts may not be, the one thing you can't do is take the "all or nothing" approach.  Accepting anything as perfectly accurate without scrutiny or study is as lazy or sloppy a thing you can do as a historian, but rejecting it all could mean you end up rejecting something valuable.

The fact that you could major in history and not recognize that I was doing rather ordinary historical analysis is interesting.

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As far as my mention of the Dead Sea Scrolls were to lead credence to the Bible and it's authenticity, but you shot that down also. Me thinks you just don't believe the Bible and leave it at that.

Their existence proves that there were copies of the same text at the same time.  It proves that the Dead Sea Scrolls themselves have authenticity, but it doesn't prove that the words on them are 100% accurate, any more than discovering another copy of Gilgamesh or Iliad would prove their stories accurate.  It has nothing to do with whether I believe in the Bible or Gilgamesh, your reasoning is just flawed.

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You don't believe in Jesus anyway so December 25th to you means nothing....pagan or otherwise. While Dec. 25th may not be his birth date, (there is evidence pointing to that), the Bible doesn't say it is. Your pulling out straws to lend credence to your argument, when I never mentioned these things. What's your point?

Jesus is awesome, and I believe He existed, so don't tell me what I believe in or not.  And I celebrate Christmas so don't tell me it means nothing to me, either.  And I brought it up because you were talking about Jewish traditions being handed down from beliefs about Esther, and thus Esther and the Bible must be true.  So Pagan traditions being handed down through time must, by the logic you presented, mean that Pagan beliefs are true.  This isn't my argument, it was yours, I am only laying out the full implication of what you were saying.

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Falconer is agnostic, qon is atheist, etc. At least they say who they are.

Why does it matter so much to you what I am?  Nothing of what I'm saying is even all that relevant to whatever faith or lack thereof I may have--I'm talking exclusively from the angle of a historian.  Nothing of what I have said would be more or less true if I were Christian or atheist or Sikh.  You've been making this about me, but it's not about me personally, it's about what the evidence is and I'm giving my opinion of what it suggests.

No, I'm not making this about you. You made this about you by saying well, well, well, I'm Jewish so I should know my history. I don't know anything about you except you called the Bible fiction, of which I'm commenting on. You are a person on the other side of a keyboard.  My summation is that you pick and choose what you want to believe out of the Bible, and your last post brings this out with crystal clarity.

I meant to throw in the gender card because it seemed that's the only people you were omitting.  Since I'm a female Evangelist, there is misconception that women are not called by God.....just men.  I was wondering if you were of that mindset.  I didn't accuse you of anything, so get off the soapbox.  I asked a logical question?  I have heard that Ruth has been rejected in some Jewish movements because they feel God would never have accepted a Gentile in the bloodline.

Okay, I do understand that history is the musings sometimes of the men writing it.  I also believe that some historians "pad" their information to make themselves look like they know something.  However, as much as I've studied the Bible and Biblical history, I've found no inconsistencies of note.  I love the Word of God, and have found it's promises are true.  I'll be studying in Jerusalem again this year (OT).  Yes, with a Rabbi, and I'm stoked!

The Greeks, Romans, Americans, Irish, and any other nationality likes to spin yarns.  We all have our tales of lore.  If not, then we have libraries with nothing but truth in them.  However, I see you twisting my words about the pagan holidays which you brought up.  Okay, so you celebrate Christmas, what has that got to do with the price of bread?  Most Jews do not.  So your different. You believe Jesus was real?  Most Jews do not.  They are still waiting for their Messiah.

I'm sorry you don't believe the Word of God is all Truth. The Jews really are the chosen people of God, and blessed accordingly.  We Gentiles can be grafted in, and become heirs to Salvation, but you are the pure vine.  However, everybody makes their own choices what they believe.


« Last Edit: January 19, 2011, 11:40:02 pm by Annella »

Falconer02

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Re: I don't believe in the Devil or Hell
« Reply #104 on: January 19, 2011, 11:10:54 pm »
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It's kind of like they are fearful of God and what it means in their personal life choices.

I can guarentee you we aren't fearful of any god out there. We're fearful of what the beliefs are doing to the real world. We've stated this various times. Take for instance Africa, the AIDS epidemic, and the Vatican. There's a big one. I'm not making an argument over this. I'm just correcting this mistake.

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At least, the agitators are firm in what they believe.  However, we as Christians, are firm in what we believe.  It's like they are trying to forge chinks into the armor of God that we have around us, and get frustrated when we don't budge.

Because you don't attempt to answer the questions presented.

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