steve_bank
Diabetic retinopathy and poor eyesight. Typos ...
If I were an apologist I would say god inspired Paul to use Greek philosophy...after all hos god.
Paul makes a public origin claim—“not of human origin”—about the message he preached.
to trump them. In Galatia, Paul is opposing emissaries pressing Gentile circumcision and fuller Torah observance as conditions for belonging. Their warrant was human authority from Jerusalem and continuity with Moses; Paul counters with a non-human warrant, saying he received his gospel “through revelation of Jesus,” then pronounces a curse on any contrary “gospel.”
Ethical importance is not evidential weight.
the moment you try to cash “not of human origin” as something more than a personal article of faith, the account is empty.
Romans 2:12–16—The Conscience of the Pagans In the first three chapters of Romans, Paul establishes the fact that all individuals stand condemned before a righteous God. Even though the pagan Gentiles did not have the Law, they were still guilty because they transgressed their God-given sense of morality.
Paul claims to have been divinely inspired. Not even Paul thought his understanding was caused by God. The understanding and its expression as message were produced by Paul and not by God.
It has already been established that the validity or veracity of the message - the understanding - which Paul preached in no way hinges on the matter of whether or not Paul was divinely inspired.
It has already been established that the understanding expressed is not affected by the divinely inspired condition.
It has already been established that the understanding expressed is not affected by either the not-divinely-inspired condition or by the not-at-all-inspired condition.
This means that the divine inspiration - even if there actually was such an experience - is immaterial to the message which itself remains invariant in and across all possible inspiration contexts.
This means that there is no inspiration condition which is necessary in order for the message preached to be the valid or veritable.
If you ever understand the points above, then you will understand that there is something very much wrong with your insistence that there be evidence produced sufficient to establish that one of the inspiration contexts is more likely than the others. There is no inspiration context which makes a difference to the understanding expressed as the message preached.
This means that what has also been established is that the proper focus would be that upon the understanding expressed as the message preached. That is the focus which you avoid as if it were a plague.
In an attempt to avoid the issue about the understanding expressed you seek to rescue the inspiration issue from the necessity of its irrelevance. You do this by insisting that Paul uses the inspiration story against rivals -
Whether you are averse to or incapable of taking account of possibilities, the fact is that you have not considered the alternative possibilities relevant to your personal and reflexive blinkered preference for regarding Paul's reference to his having been inspired as a mere appeal to authority - and an inappropriate such appeal at that. (By the way, your reference to RCTs and like jargon is so very far removed from the taking into account of possibilities which is the discovery heart of science that I will not further bother with your trans-contextual disinterest in contingency; I will focus solely on that disinterest as it relates to the Paul context.)
It has already been established that a mere appeal to authority is always deficient but that it can also sometimes be appropriate.
This means that, in addition to the question of whether Galatians is a mere appeal to authority for the purpose of demanding deference, there is the matter of whether such a mere appeal (if actual) could have been appropriate.You ignore that issue even though by ignoring that issue you fail to achieve rational belief.
It is too bad for you that Paul's pronouncing a curse hurts your modern sensibilities. Rid yourself of that bias by noting that such a manner of expression was quite common in - and long before - Paul's context, as Paul makes evident himself in Galatians.
For that matter, Paul bringing up the story about his inspiration could be considered as an appropriate appeal to authority inasmuch as that way of speaking might have been expected for being not at all unusual in the context at hand.
But, as it turns out, his apparent appeal to authority was NOT a mere appeal to authority, because Paul fairly adeptly presents reasons explaining why the Galatians should turn away from Paul's rivals.
The fact of Paul even seeming to present reasoning in addition to what can appear to be an appeal to authority is sufficient basis for doubting that Paul's reference to his being divinely inspired was – and was intended – as an appeal to authority at all.
The fact that the reasoning Paul presented was itself not dependent on Paul's inspiration is sufficient basis for concluding as fact that Paul's reference to his inspiration experience was not an appeal to authority at all.
Maybe because of laziness, aversion, inability, or devotion to narrow-mindedness in service to a simplistic apologetics, you take no account of any possibilities other than that of your prejudiced preference, and you merely snip out a phrase to make it appear to be something that it is not.
You snip out a phrase to make it look like Paul was guilty of an inappropriate appeal to authority for the purpose of demanding deference when readily available to you was evidence and reasons for considering Paul differently.
But, before we get to the evidence that was available to you but which you chose to ignore, let us make believe that Paul's letter to the Galatians said nothing more than: I was inspired by God; therefore, you should do as I say.
Why would anyone respond to such a proclamation by demanding evidence that Paul was inspired? That would make no sense in any context, and, yet, that is your response.
Well, come to think of it, I can think of one context in which such a response makes almost a smidgen of sense. If Paul were addressing himself to someone ignorant of the message Paul had preached or someone who did not understand the message Paul had preached, then that person might demand proof of Paul's having been divinely inspired.
But even granting that almost a smidgen of sense is a characterization which is too generous. That response on the part of the ignorant or uncomprehending person doesn't really make even a smidgen of sense, because the only way it would be sensible at all for that person to demand such evidence would be if that person allowed it as right and proper to be thoughtless and freed from all responsibility for being.
That would require an allowance for it to be right and proper for a person to want only to take orders, and that would be to think that a person is justified by the fulfillment of orders given. If that is the only way that some person can be, that is one thing. Such a person is not at issue here. Instead, it is presumed that such a person is not to be regarded as typical of humans.
In terms of what is being presumed as most typical of human persons, from the perspective of Paul's understanding expressed as his message preached, anyone would be anathema who allows for it to be right and proper for a person to want only to take orders such that a person is to be justified by the fulfillment of orders given. Likewise, Paul's understanding would be anathema from the perspective of any person who allowed for adherence to rules/orders as the fully proper condition for being.
In Galatians, Paul establishes a perspective from which righteousness has always been the proper condition for being. He goes on to note that righteousness follows from faith and that neither law not its fulfillment can impart righteousness. Law is not necessarily incompatible with righteousness, but law by itself does not provide or generate the sort of freedom necessary for there to be righteousness.
Paul argues that those who insist that gentiles must be circumcised in order to be righteous mislead the Galatians with regards to the nature of righteousness. Nothing imposed or demanded can ever effect righteousness, and that is why Paul describes his rivals as wanting to enslave the Galatians to law. Those trying to be justified by the law are alienated from the sort of freedom from imposition that is necessary for there to be righteousness: “neither circumcision nor uncircumcision has any value. The only thing that counts is faith expressing itself through love.”
Paul is not there appealing to authority. And he is not demanding deference.
Admit it.
What you are referring to as “ethical importance” was not intended as that “evidential weight” which you insistently and irrationally desire.
Your insistent desire is rationally deficient as a result of you having failed to consider alternative possibilities with regards to the matter of Paul's inspiration. There is no rational reason for you to think of Paul's inspiration only in terms of “cause” rather than as a factor that itself was insufficient (and necessarily so) to produce Paul's understanding. What is necessary for the sake of achieving rational belief is that you additionally think of Paul's inspiration in terms other than “cause” alone.
One point about what you are referring to as “ethical importance” is that it is an aspect of righteousness which itself is a condition which it is impossible to encapsulate within or generate by rules.
Righteousness exceeds the determinateness of rules. Righteousness achieved exceeds all determinateness because righteousness achieved is always only the context for that righteousness which has yet to be created.
This righteousness – of necessity – originates from the individual person's subjectivity without imposition. Righteousness originates without there being dispositive or probabilistic evidence for righteousness. Righteousness originates without there being a reason for being righteous other than a person's choosing to discover (more about) righteousness in seeking to create instantiations of righteousness.
A person loves the neighbor/stranger for the sake of that other person and for no reason other than for the sake of love for the sake of that other person so that righteousness can be further created in instantiations made manifest.
This is why righteousness is a matter of - and a product of - faith.
Your obsessive insistence that there be evidence against the ultimate irrelevance of Paul's inspiration serves no purpose other than as a way to avoid (by ignoring) the nature of
Your interpretation does not fit with Paul's emphasis on the importance of understanding as an always personal development.Paul explicitly grounds his message in revelation “not from man” and “through Jesus Christ,” which is a causal-source claim about origin
False. It is talk in terms of what contributes to what became determinate. If a factor is itself not sufficient for what follows, then that factor is unnecessarily referred to as a cause, and it is thereby erroneous to insist on referring to it as a cause.Calling inspiration a “factor” is already causal talk.
Think of all that however you wish, but the only matter which is relevant is Paul's understanding which might have had divine inspiration as a factor, but Paul's understanding is invariant across the inspiration contexts.A factor is evidentially relevant only if it changes what we should expect to observe.
Thomas Aquinas used ancient Greek philosophy, especially the metaphysics of Aristotle, to provide a rational basis for Christian theology. He synthesized Aristotle's concepts of matter and form, potential and act, with Christian doctrine to create a unified worldview. His major contributions, informed by Greek thought, include the concepts of natural law, just war theory, and arguments for God's existence (The Five Ways).
1. The First Way: Motion.
2. The Second Way: Efficient Cause.
3. The Third Way: Possibility and Necessity.
4. The Fourth Way: Gradation.
5. The Fifth Way: Design.
Moses Maimonides, a central figure of medieval Judaism, synthesized Jewish thought with ancient Greek philosophy, primarily Aristotle and Neoplatonism, to create a philosophical framework for understanding God and the world. His magnum opus, The Guide for the Perplexed, attempts to reconcile Jewish scripture with Aristotelian logic, presenting God as a pure, simple, and incorporeal intellect and proposing that human spiritual perfection is achieved through intellectual contemplation and philosophical inquiry.
And that is unmitigated non-sense which you seek to veil with what is merely the seeming of a response.
Your obsessive insistence that there be evidence against the ultimate irrelevance of Paul's inspiration is itself an insistence that your remarks be irrelevant. And your remarks are irrelevant. You succeeded in achieving irrelevance for your remarks and your argument. That sort of irrelevance is not an achievement, but you can be proud of it if you must.
Paul knew that his personal experience was merely personally significant and of no ultimate importance to anyone – including not even of ultimate importance to himself. Paul knew that if there were to be any ultimate importance it was to be found only through his understanding and his expression of that understanding and what followed from his understanding.
In Galatians, Paul did not appeal to some authority supposedly emanating from his having had the experience he reportedly had. What Paul did was give reasons for why his rivals' understanding(s) should be rejected. And those reasons he gave regarded the nature of righteousness and love as presented in an understanding which was and is timelessly incompatible with the notions insisted upon by all those in adoration of rules (whether or not they are aware of and acknowledge that adoration).
Do you reject the idea that it is right to act with love for the neighbor/stranger for the sake of the neighbor/stranger without reason other than for the sake of love to be made manifest in that love done for the sake of the neighbor/stranger?
There is no need of an answer to this version of the “Who has this faith?” question. Because the answer is obvious. There is only one possibility which can accommodate your remarks.
You reject that faith – a faith which, by the way, is prima facie apart from any faith regarding whether God is or not.
That rejection sufficiently explains why you have no interest in seeking an understanding about the understanding had by others. There is no love for an other person if there is no interest in understanding the understanding of the other person.
Thinking in terms of possibilities is absolutely necessary for seeking such understanding, and you choose to ignore possibilities to settle on the alleged and so-called “plain meaning” to be had from the manner in which others express their understandings as if that alleged “plain meaning” eliminates the burden of needing to think in terms of possibilities.
But you feel a need to justify yourself; so, you seek cover by searching out pre-chewed formalisms (rules) which you try to pitch as sufficient for understanding what a person means without the bother of identifying and pursuing alternative possibilities regarding what that person means.
Your in effect insistence on the sufficiency of rules in no way establishes objectivity; rather, what it effects is a pseudo-objectivity that you imagine as a substitute for and a displacement of any need for thinking on your own part. After all, there is always one's own subjectivity in one's own thinking, but one's own subjectivity cannot be said to exist in the thinking of others. Therefore, or so you imagine, your remarks avoid being subjective. The problem is, of course, that subjectivity has not thereby been avoided even if you have managed to achieve the void of not having your own subjectivity.
For example, when you were told previously that divine inspiration is not divine authorship, you responded by resorting to what “[m]odern psychological research shows” instead of presenting your own thinking in terms of the concepts divine and inspiration.
Of course, and has been repeatedly demonstrated, your own thinking in terms of those concepts was, is, and necessarily would be utterly irrelevant since the matter of inspiration itself is irrelevant. You resort to the “research” of others as a way of distracting from the irrelevance of the preference called your thinking in the hope that reference to the “research” of others would not be noticed as being every bit as irrelevant as is your own preference which itself is less thinking on your part than it is a matter of a thought happening to you.
Your argument about needing extraordinary evidence is built of dander from Hume’s thoughts about miracles.
Your argument from that dander - were it to be made valid - would beg the question against divine inspiration by casting that inspiration as a violation of some so-called law of nature despite the fact that Paul could describe his experience as miraculous but not a miracle in the sense of being a relatively rare sort of experience while not being a violation of some so-called law of nature.
Paul’s experience would be miraculous in the sense of an occurrence rather rare even in his own experience, and unique even in that rarity.
At the same time, it would not be a miracle in the sense of a violation of any so-called law of nature inasmuch as there are enough reports of similar sorts of experiences for Paul’s own experience to be regarded as rare (even if at all unique) rather than a miracle.
Well, there is all that plus the fact that Paul’s inspiration - whether it was rare or whether it was unique or whether it was a supernatural miracle - is totally, wholly, absolutely irrelevant to the understanding which Paul eventually developed and expressed himself.
The point that Paul’s understanding is the issue, and the fact that his inspiration is irrelevant is highlighted by the additional fact of there having been other reports of divine inspiration. Analytical comparisons of conceptualizations can be done without imagining – and especially without insisting - that something extraordinary is needed before there can be analysis of Paul's understanding as expressed in the message he preached.
Your argument from Humean dander is intended to camouflage the fact of your holding that empiricism alone is necessary and sufficient. You resort to camouflage since it is impossible to establish empiricism as sufficient, and, were you to acknowledge the fact of that insufficiency, you would have to admit to the inadequacy of the approach upon which you insist and rely. This means you lack that foundation which your heart desires.
No one who is acting from faith in the righteousness of love done for the sake of the neighbor/stranger thinks that love is a matter of “observable criteria at the level of outcomes” where “observable” means “publicly observable” because that love is never done for the sake of public display and, therefore, that love can be actual without being publicly observed or observable. Even so, other persons might observe circumstances and discern that there had been an act of that love.
No one who is acting from faith in the righteousness of love done for the sake of the neighbor/stranger thinks that love “is empirically tractable” although the manner in which that love is made manifest is always dependent upon subjective experience, including subjective empirical experience.
No one who is acting from faith in the righteousness of love done for the sake of the neighbor/stranger thinks that love is a matter of “observable criteria at the level of outcomes” and “is empirically tractable” except as in the manners explicated above, because such a person realizes love as “empirically underdetermined” for its being indeterminate rather than exhibiting the determinateness characteristically sought with – and presumed for the sake of - empiricism.
For one who is acting from faith in the righteousness of love done for the sake of the neighbor/stranger, love is not calculable or comparable in any manner that could result in satisfaction. That is because, for such a person, even though there is always a joyousness with love, love always entails some doubt that love has been done well enough – even if that person must acknowledge that love was done as well as that person could so do under the circumstances. This love is also not calculable because, for a person acting from faith in the righteousness of love, love is never without the sense of there being still immeasurably more to be done. In this sense, love is always comparably less for there being more yet to be done.
That indeterminateness of love is itself sufficient to put love beyond empiricism. That indeterminateness renders empiricism insufficient for accommodating faith in the righteousness of love. That indeterminateness goes a long way towards explaining the “unworldliness” of that love for which empiricism by itself is insufficient. Furthermore, that indeterminateness goes a long way towards explaining the rarity of that love being made manifest inasmuch as humans, in general, are in thrall to the desire for the settledness of determinateness – a desire for which indeterminateness is anathema.
Why are you so reticent to admit that you reject the idea that it is right to act with love for the neighbor/stranger for the sake of the neighbor/stranger without reason other than for the sake of love to be made manifest in that love done for the sake of the neighbor/stranger?
Your interpretation does not fit with Paul's emphasis on the importance of understanding as an always personal development.
Therefore, you have warrant for thinking that your interpretation of snippets selected entirely for the purpose of defending your prejudice is defective.
An alternative perspective which is compatible with both divine inspiration and understanding as an always personal development has been presented repeatedly.
That alternative perspective is more rational than your preferred perspective by virtue of the fact that the alternative perspective demonstrates greater breadth of compatibility and applicability than does your prejudiced perspective.
That alternative perspective is incompatible with your preferred perspective.
Your preferred perspective is discarded for the inherent and irremediable flaws which render your preferred perspective unavoidably less rational.
That leaves you to consider as a possibility that Paul did not emphasize the importance of understanding as an always personal development.
Do not waste my time with that, because Paul's position on speaking in tongues is sufficient for removing whatever minuscule amount of credence there might have been with some notion that Paul did not emphasize the importance of understanding as an always personal development.
Therefore, for the sake of achieving a more rational belief than that which is your preferred prejudice, you must first discard your preferred perspective for being inherently and irremediably flawed.
This matter is the keystone for everything else you say. Being irremediable, your argument is collapsed, and this part of the discussion is concluded.
False. It is talk in terms of what contributes to what became determinate. If a factor is itself not sufficient for what follows, then that factor is unnecessarily referred to as a cause, and it is thereby erroneous to insist on referring to it as a cause.
Think of all that however you wish, but the only matter which is relevant is Paul's understanding which might have had divine inspiration as a factor, but Paul's understanding is invariant across the inspiration contexts.
Therefore, even if Paul mistakenly identified as a divine inspiration the inspiration which he experienced, the understanding he subsequently developed remains unaffected by whether he was inspired by God or not.
The inspiration is irrelevant, and you only keep trying to revive the inspiration in the hope of defending your erroneous because unjustifiably narrow interpretation.
Your interpretation is still collapsed and dead.
Religious commentators with ties to Donald Trump and his evangelical supporters claimed he was "anointed by God" after a bullet grazed his ear during an assassination attempt in July 2024
. They interpreted his survival as a sign of divine favor and compared his injury to the biblical practice of consecration with blood on the ear.
Biblical reference: Some figures, such as pastor Jentezen Franklin, likened the bullet graze and Trump's handling of his wound to the ritual described in Leviticus 8, where priests were consecrated by having blood put on their right ear, thumb, and toe. In this view, the injury was not a mere accident but a spiritual act of anointing.
Uh, that is not the most famous Bible passage about a rising politician being wounded in the face and miraculously "recovering".Trump anointed by god. Trump invoked god after it happened, god sawed him. The old divijne authority scam. There are Christians who think Trump was sent by god to save them.
Wind it back to the OT days and the beginnings of Christianity and here you have it. Always clais of divine authority. Moses and god speaking through the burning bush,
Religious commentators with ties to Donald Trump and his evangelical supporters claimed he was "anointed by God" after a bullet grazed his ear during an assassination attempt in July 2024
. They interpreted his survival as a sign of divine favor and compared his injury to the biblical practice of consecration with blood on the ear.
It goes deeper. Heard this on Christian radio today.
Biblical reference: Some figures, such as pastor Jentezen Franklin, likened the bullet graze and Trump's handling of his wound to the ritual described in Leviticus 8, where priests were consecrated by having blood put on their right ear, thumb, and toe. In this view, the injury was not a mere accident but a spiritual act of anointing.
Christianity grows and grows as it always has. Always invoking some kind of divine authority linked to scripture.
Your notion is both unsupported and illogical.when someone makes a public origin claim (“not of human origin”), that claim needs public discriminators
False.you also grant that Paul publicly used “not of human origin” as warrant against rivals.
Logically, it has been indubitably established that Paul's reference to his reported experience of divine inspiration was not necessarily intended as an appeal to authority.I reject treating an unfalsifiable origin claim as public warrant.
Oct. 20 -- Former President Carter, a longtime Sunday school teacher, is walking away from the Southern Baptists because of the church’s stance on equality for women.
In an interview with the Atlanta Journal-Constitution published today, Carter says Southern Baptist leaders reading the Bible out of context led to the adoption of increasingly “rigid” views.