... and they obeyed the "thou shalt not suffer a witch to live".
To be fair, though, that's not really enforcable today since she's the odds-on favourite to be the next President and that would make it kind of gauche to kill her.
... and they obeyed the "thou shalt not suffer a witch to live".
... and they obeyed the "thou shalt not suffer a witch to live".
To be fair, though, that's not really enforcable today since she's the odds-on favourite to be the next President and that would make it kind of gauche to kill her.
Abraham Lincoln did not write the declaration; so I fail to see why one would cite him as a source on its inspirations. Incidentally, it seems odd for you to keep appealing to Lincoln; given that Lincoln does not appear to have been particularly christian. He often criticized christianity. Indeed, some of his closest friends described him as an atheist. Not that it particularly matters what, if anything, he believed.
It provided inspiration to numerous national declarations of independence throughout the world. Historian David Armitage, after examining the influence of the American "Declaration" on over 100 other declarations of independence, says:
The American Revolution was the first outbreak of the contagion of sovereignty that has swept the world in the centuries since 1776. Its influence spread first to the Low Countries and then to the Caribbean, Spanish America, the Balkans, West Africa, and Central Europe in the decades up to 1848.... Declarations of independence were among the primary symptoms of this contagion of sovereignty.[10][/Snip]
This is a rather incomplete and wrong view of history. The American revolution was most certainly *not* the "first" modern outbreak of 'sovereignty' or democracy. And indeed, the US Declaration of Independence was directly inspired by a very similar declaration of independence of a country that in many respects served as the model for the early US government; namely my own. The declaration of independence has often been compared to the 1581 Act of Abjuration; and it is quite evident by reading the act that the US declaration was inspired by it. Indeed, Jefferson was quite familiar with the Act and the Dutch republic.
Of the two, the Act of Abjuration is the only one to include explicitly christian language (by referring to God instead of a creator, and referring to bishops); though like the declaration, it does nothing to establish christianity as the basis for the new country. The Act of Abjuration, and not the declaration, was the first time in known history that a people deposed a ruler on the basis of him having violated the social contract with his subjects. It is a shame that just as with the pilgrims, we see you choosing ignorance of your own history and the ways in which it has been influenced so that you can hold fast to an idealized (and christianized) fairytale. After all, if the declaration was just inspired by the declaration of independence of another country instead of being divinely inspired and the first of its kind, it loses its 'mystical authority', doesn't it?
Compare the preamble of the Declaration of Independence (1776):
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.
That to secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed, That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient causes; and accordingly all experience hath shewn, that mankind are more disposed to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.
With the preamble of the Act of Abjuration (1581):
As it is apparent to all that a prince is constituted by God to be ruler of a people, to defend them from oppression and violence as the shepherd his sheep; and whereas God did not create the people slaves to their prince, to obey his commands, whether right or wrong, but rather the prince for the sake of the subjects (without which he could be no prince), to govern them according to equity, to love and support them as a father his children or a shepherd his flock, and even at the hazard of life to defend and preserve them. And when he does not behave thus, but, on the contrary, oppresses them, seeking opportunities to infringe their ancient customs and privileges, exacting from them slavish compliance, then he is no longer a prince, but a tyrant, and the subjects are to consider him in no other view. And particularly when this is done deliberately, unauthorized by the states, they may not only disallow his authority, but legally proceed to the choice of another prince for their defense. This is the only method left for subjects whose humble petitions and remonstrances could never soften their prince or dissuade him from his tyrannical proceedings; and this is what the law of nature dictates for the defense of liberty, which we ought to transmit to posterity, even at the hazard of our lives.
Those moral standards were based on Judea-Christian beliefs, no matter how much you would like to you can not change that.
Forgetting that neither Christianity, nor Judaism, came up with these moral standards.
I know comprehension is killing you, this from the first quote in that reply. It explains the question you seem to be asking.
[Snip]
Abraham Lincoln made it the centerpiece of his rhetoric (as in the Gettysburg Address of 1863), and his policies
[/Snip]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Act_of_Abjuration
Act of Abjuration
This, however, presented a problem: the magistrates of the cities and rural areas, and the provincial states themselves, had sworn allegiance to Philip. Oaths of allegiance were taken very seriously during this era. As long as the conflict with Philip could be glossed over these magistrates could pretend to remain loyal to the king, but if a new sovereign was recognized, they had to make a choice. The rebellious States General decided on 14 June 1581 to officially declare the throne vacant,[3] because of Philip's behavior, hence the Dutch name for the Act of Abjuration: "Plakkaat van Verlatinghe", which may be translated as "Placard[4] of Desertion." This referred not to desertion of Philip by his subjects, but rather, to a suggested desertion of the Dutch "flock" by their malevolent "shepherd," Philip.
A committee of four members – Andries Hessels, greffier (secretary) of the States of Brabant; Jacques Tayaert, pensionary of the city of Ghent; Jacob Valcke, pensionary of the city of Ter Goes (now Goes); and Pieter van Dieven (also known as Petrus Divaeus), pensionary of the city of Mechelen – was charged with drafting what was to become the Act of Abjuration.[3] The Act prohibited the use of the name and seal of Philip in all legal matters, and of his name or arms in minting coins. It gave authority to the Councils of the provinces to henceforth issue the commissions of magistrates. The Act relieved all magistrates of their previous oaths of allegiance to Philip, and prescribed a new oath of allegiance to the States of the province in which they served, according to a form prescribed by the States General.[5] The actual draft seems to have been written by the audiencier[6] of the States General, Jan van Asseliers[7]
So your notion is that a document termed in English as "Placard of Desertion" which is a rebels laundry list of grievances compares to the DOI??
Dude. The US Declaration of Independence is a "rebels laundry list of grievances". It has a nice preamble but the meat of the document is a simple laundry list of grievances. Below is the section of that document that you have apparently never read........................
So your notion is that a document termed in English as "Placard of Desertion" which is a rebels laundry list of grievances compares to the DOI??
From the US Declaration of Independence:
.................
He has refused his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good.
He has forbidden his Governors to pass Laws of immediate and pressing importance, unless suspended in their operation till his Assent should be obtained; and when so suspended, he has utterly neglected to attend to them.
He has refused to pass other Laws for the accommodation of large districts of people, unless those people would relinquish the right of Representation in the Legislature, a right inestimable to them and formidable to tyrants only.
He has called together legislative bodies at places unusual, uncomfortable, and distant from the depository of their public Records, for the sole purpose of fatiguing them into compliance with his measures.
He has dissolved Representative Houses repeatedly, for opposing with manly firmness his invasions on the rights of the people.
He has refused for a long time, after such dissolutions, to cause others to be elected; whereby the Legislative powers, incapable of Annihilation, have returned to the People at large for their exercise; the State remaining in the mean time exposed to all the dangers of invasion from without, and convulsions within.
He has endeavoured to prevent the population of these States; for that purpose obstructing the Laws for Naturalization of Foreigners; refusing to pass others to encourage their migrations hither, and raising the conditions of new Appropriations of Lands.
He has obstructed the Administration of Justice, by refusing his Assent to Laws for establishing Judiciary powers.
He has made Judges dependent on his Will alone, for the tenure of their offices, and the amount and payment of their salaries.
He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harrass our people, and eat out their substance.
He has kept among us, in times of peace, Standing Armies without the Consent of our legislatures.
He has affected to render the Military independent of and superior to the Civil power.
He has combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution, and unacknowledged by our laws; giving his Assent to their Acts of pretended Legislation:
For Quartering large bodies of armed troops among us:
For protecting them, by a mock Trial, from punishment for any Murders which they should commit on the Inhabitants of these States:
For cutting off our Trade with all parts of the world:
For imposing Taxes on us without our Consent:
For depriving us in many cases, of the benefits of Trial by Jury:
For transporting us beyond Seas to be tried for pretended offences
For abolishing the free System of English Laws in a neighbouring Province, establishing therein an Arbitrary government, and enlarging its Boundaries so as to render it at once an example and fit instrument for introducing the same absolute rule into these Colonies:
For taking away our Charters, abolishing our most valuable Laws, and altering fundamentally the Forms of our Governments:
For suspending our own Legislatures, and declaring themselves invested with power to legislate for us in all cases whatsoever.
He has abdicated Government here, by declaring us out of his Protection and waging War against us.
He has plundered our seas, ravaged our Coasts, burnt our towns, and destroyed the lives of our people.
He is at this time transporting large Armies of foreign Mercenaries to compleat the works of death, desolation and tyranny, already begun with circumstances of Cruelty & perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally unworthy the Head of a civilized nation.
He has constrained our fellow Citizens taken Captive on the high Seas to bear Arms against their Country, to become the executioners of their friends and Brethren, or to fall themselves by their Hands.
He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us, and has endeavoured to bring on the inhabitants of our frontiers, the merciless Indian Savages, whose known rule of warfare, is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes and conditions.
In every stage of these Oppressions We have Petitioned for Redress in the most humble terms: Our repeated Petitions have been answered only by repeated injury. A Prince whose character is thus marked by every act which may define a Tyrant, is unfit to be the ruler of a free people.
Nor have We been wanting in attentions to our Brittish brethren. We have warned them from time to time of attempts by their legislature to extend an unwarrantable jurisdiction over us. We have reminded them of the circumstances of our emigration and settlement here. We have appealed to their native justice and magnanimity, and we have conjured them by the ties of our common kindred to disavow these usurpations, which, would inevitably interrupt our connections and correspondence. They too have been deaf to the voice of justice and of consanguinity. We must, therefore, acquiesce in the necessity, which denounces our Separation, and hold them, as we hold the rest of mankind, Enemies in War, in Peace Friends.
...................
Why do the Jesus miracle events have to be put into a separate category that requires a different quality of evidence than what is required for other historical events?
A few years back, there was a big hullabaloo about cattle mutilations.
The reports people were getting was that organs were excised from cattle 'with surgical precision.'
The problem was, no surgeons were examining the dead cattle and saying, 'Yep. That's surgical precision.'
What actually happened was that the soft tissues would bloat after the creatures died, and expanded out the . . .
. . . mouth and anus of the dead body. Scavengers would come along and devour the bloated organs during the night. By the time the cattle were discovered, the tissues had shrunk back down, so the animal bite marks were largely invisible to the naked eye.
Non-experts were offering opinions and throwing around descriptions that ended up not standing up to expert scrutiny.
If you want Jesus' (or Rasputin's) (or anyone's) magic healing act to be taken seriously as science, we'd need actual evidence of the medical condition before the healing.
Make sure that there was actually something that needed to be healed, not a symptom of their hypochondria.
We'd need another professional examination after the healing, to make sure the condition was healed, not just the symptoms.
Witch doctors can treat symptoms with a placebo effect, convincing their patient that he's chased away the demon causing their pain or discomfort.
That's what would be needed for science to have to rewrite science and say people can just heal other people.
That kind of evidence, performed consistently.
Without that, science would look for explanations that don't require rewriting the science textbooks.
If the story never happened, then that's well within modern understanding of medical science: People make shit up.
If it's exaggerated, that's also very possible. Maybe he cured an ache with deep tissue massage or acupressure and that tale grew into a more powerful healing in the retelling.
Maybe the patient was 'in on' the hoax and only pretended to be blind, deaf, lame, sick or halt.
The problem is, we can't isolate what parts were exaggerated, if any were.
If it happened, really happened, that's great. But there's no evidence beyond 'someone wrote it down' that would force science to accept that it happened.
There are non-magical explanations, so science would accept those faster than having to accept the supernatural explanations.
Which is how science works.
It can change, and it will. But only when it's forced to.
Not at the first opportunity.
It is a distortion and abuse of science to use it as a club to bash the Jesus miracle accounts as contrary to science and impossible. The Jesus-debunking crusade is not based on science but on ideology.
Some unusual reported events were hoaxes, or delusions, etc., but others really did happen and simply cannot be explained by science. It is not true that science dogmatically rejects everything as false which it cannot explain.
What if finding salvation is like finding a way to safety when there is a danger, like from an electric shock. You find it by touching the right kind of non-metallic material, e.g. That safety measure says nothing about anything other than making that one escape action, i.e., of touching that one safe material. You could be the worst blood-thirsty monster that ever lived, but if you follow that one safety measure, you are saved, whereas if you're the kindest and most upright pillar of your community but fail to follow the safety measure, you get killed.
Is there something wrong with that safety measure because it doesn't require you to be an upright citizen or does not contain an exclusion clause for bad people?
Why couldn't pleasing God, or finding salvation, be of the same nature as a safety measure to escape harm? Even if it's counter-intuitive, why couldn't the way to eternal life be something that is like a safety measure, as opposed to a rule about upright living or good behavior?
Although very few christian representatives would outright say "It's not important how you behave, it's only important how you think" that is the net result of this core doctrine.
The fact is that people who claim to be some variant of christian do not behave in a more moral or ethical fashion than people who are skeptics. That was exactly my point.
There are many christians in prison for murder, rape and other violent crimes. But because they happen to believe an absurd myth they end up in heaven.
All the while a skeptic who is a good citizen, never does anything to harm or defraud his fellow man ends up in an eternal state of torture for no other crime than his skepticism.
It doesn't matter how these two individuals behaved, it only matters what they believed.
But there is no Absolute Scientific Decree that a "miracle" event cannot ever happen. It is OK to consider the possibility of such events, based on the evidence. . . .
I know most Christians believe it [virgin birth], but this is not an absolute requirement to believe in Christ. The Bethlehem stories are not credible. But the miracle healing acts by Jesus are believable, because there is good evidence that they happened.
Okay, so you agree with me then that the virgin birth narrative is bogus.
Please present the evidence that the miraculous healing acts by Jesus happened. What is the difference in the nature of the evidence between the one and the other?
It's very simple: Extraordinary claims require equally extraordinary evidence. What is so hard to understand about that simple principle?
The alien abduction stories of Betty and Barney Hill are extraordinary claims that are considerably more plausible than the story of an itinerant preacher . . .
. . . 2000 years ago literally turning water to wine, instantly healing incurable conditions such as blindness, walking on top of a storm tossed sea or levitating unassisted off into the sky. Yet most intelligent and rational people dismiss the Hill story as a hoax.
The irony of the situation is that the evidence in favor of Betty and Barney Hill's story is considerably better than the evidence for any of the miracle claims in the "Jesus" story.
Yet millions of otherwise sane people just believe the Jesus myths uncritically.
I was once one myself, so I'm not trying to judge, just trying to understand why. I searched desperately for many years for this evidence of which you speak. If it exists I was never able to find it.
Yes, that belief was the safety escape to eternal life. But this doesn't mean that their behavior generally didn't matter. It's for the specific need to get rescued that their belief was the safety escape or the way to escape. If you're drowning, that lifesaver may be all that matters for getting to safety. Being an upright morally superior citizen doesn't help you escape if the lifesaver is thrown to you. Why should the lifesaver not be sufficient? Why should the drowning victim also have to have good moral behavior before the lifesaver can function?
Should the producers of lifesavers for boats add an extra feature to the lifesaver that would make it malfunction for anyone who did not live an upright morally superior life? Suppose this feature could somehow be added at no extra production cost? Should it be a required extra feature?
If those producers should not add such a required feature to lifesavers for boats, then why should God impose such a feature in providing a way of salvation to humans? Why shouldn't God just toss the lifesavers out to those drowning, regardless of their deeds, just as we would toss lifesavers to victims who fell overboard regardless of their deeds?
This is a very strange argument to make your purported tri-headed god seem less bizarre.
Why couldn’t the “producers of lifesavers” just make it have one feature, just pop those that aren’t evil into this 5th dimension of kumbaya eternity?
That way the tired old god wouldn’t have to work any harder.
Besides, this is purportedly the omnipresent god who created everything, and knew from the moment it created it, that most of its human creation would fail the Lumpy theological test.
Would a just and uber powerful entity let most of his creation just fall to the way side of eternal torment, because he created failures that couldn’t figure out its meager bread crumb trail?
And what kind of substitution is having one of its heads knowingly spending only 3 days in hell, as substitutionary atonement, for the sins of roughly 2 billion people, as a sacrifice to itself?
Faith vs. Merit -- Livesaver Analogy
Part 1
Although very few christian representatives would outright say "It's not important how you behave, it's only important how you think" that is the net result of this core doctrine.
It doesn't matter what the "net result" is. All that matters is whether Christ had life-giving power or not, and whether we can connect to it. If we can connect to it, like through "faith," and thus gain eternal life, that's what matters. Just like reaching the lifesaver is what matters.
The fact is that people who claim to be some variant of christian do not behave in a more moral or ethical fashion than people who are skeptics. That was exactly my point.
Maybe you're right. But it doesn't matter. Though it's always good for people to behave better, and Christians preach this, it's not the basic salvation message. I.e., the "good news" or euangelion.
There are many christians in prison for murder, rape and other violent crimes. But because they happen to believe an absurd myth they end up in heaven.
No, if they end up in heaven, then what they believe is not an absurd myth. If it's absurd what they believed, it means there isn't any heaven. It's the UNTRUTH of what they believed that makes it an absurd myth. But if it turns out to be true, then it's not the absurd myth after all.
All the while a skeptic who is a good citizen, never does anything to harm or defraud his fellow man ends up in an eternal state of torture for no other crime than his skepticism.
No, his "skepticism" is not a crime, and if there is this eternal state of torture, it's not a result of his being skeptical.
We can pick it apart analytically, but one way to put it is simply that the lifesaver is tossed out there to whoever finds it, i.e., the good news, the euangelion, the report about Christ's life-giving power, and those who find this good news and place their hope in this, hoping it's true, find salvation. Even a skeptic might see this as a possibility, and become a believer, even though still having doubts, or still being skeptical.
Being skeptical does not mean one has no beliefs at all. So when one "ends up in an eternal state of torture," it's not his "skepticism" that is to blame. He just missed that lifesaver, for whatever reason.
It doesn't matter how these two individuals behaved, it only matters what they believed.
For finding salvation, yes, it's the faith in Christ's power that matters, not their moral behavior. Like finding the lifesaver is what matters to be saved from drowning.
Regarding point # 1, I find it laughable if you can make this claim with a straight face. Hundreds of years before the Jesus myths surfaced there were myths of gods (and god-men) performing miraculous acts. The similarities were so obvious that Justin Martyr pointed them out in his 1st apology. You've been presented with this rejoinder many times in this thread and your propensity to ignore this damning evidence and continue to simply parrot this demonstrably false claim has grown quite tiresome.But there is no Absolute Scientific Decree that a "miracle" event cannot ever happen. It is OK to consider the possibility of such events, based on the evidence. . . .
I know most Christians believe it [virgin birth], but this is not an absolute requirement to believe in Christ. The Bethlehem stories are not credible. But the miracle healing acts by Jesus are believable, because there is good evidence that they happened.
Okay, so you agree with me then that the virgin birth narrative is bogus.
A better way to put it is that there is virtually no credible evidence for it. And it's very easy to explain how the Bethlehem/virgin birth stories emerged even if they are totally fictitious. But the explanation requires that there must be something else that was very important about Jesus which caused him to become mythologized.
There must be something special about him that caused people to start believing he was God or a Cosmic figure, or Savior or Messiah. And then, AFTER they had this thought about him, then they created the virgin birth story. And the Bethlehem story also could easily be created, because this was thought to be a prerequisite for the Jewish Messiah. This story came about AFTER they started believing he was the promised Messiah.
Whereas the miracle healing stories cannot be explained this way. I.e., how they originated.
Please present the evidence that the miraculous healing acts by Jesus happened. What is the difference in the nature of the evidence between the one and the other?
There are at least two major differences:
1) the miracle healings do not fit into any pattern (as the virgin birth does), but rather pop up suddenly in history without any precedent. So we cannot explain how they came about by any normal mythologizing process; and
2) we have at least 4 sources for the miracle healings, with only minor discrepancies between them, but only 2 for the virgin birth/Bethlehem stories, and these 2 do not harmonize at all. Plus, the writer of the 4th Gospel believed Jesus was NOT born in Bethlehem but in Galilee (John 7:41-42).
Further, we need an explanation why Jesus became mythologized into a god. That he did miracle healings easily explains this. But that he was virgin-born? How would this impact on people such that they would start worshiping him and make him into a god? How would they know he was virgin-born? How would they come to believe it or know of it even if it were true?
Such an event as a virgin birth is not a public event that large numbers of people would witness, whereas the miracle healing acts, done publicly, would obviously cause a stir and arouse the mythologizing.
It's very simple: Extraordinary claims require equally extraordinary evidence. What is so hard to understand about that simple principle?
But it's just a slogan that doesn't mean anything. What a miracle story requires is EXTRA evidence -- the same kind of evidence as for any other events, but simply a greater quantity of it. Extra witnesses, extra accounts rather than only 1 or 2.
The alien abduction stories of Betty and Barney Hill are extraordinary claims that are considerably more plausible than the story of an itinerant preacher . . .
What is more plausible about those abductions stories?
. . . 2000 years ago literally turning water to wine, instantly healing incurable conditions such as blindness, walking on top of a storm tossed sea or levitating unassisted off into the sky. Yet most intelligent and rational people dismiss the Hill story as a hoax.
But if the Hill story is really as plausible as you say, then it would not be dismissed as a hoax. I suggest it's not so plausible, and this is why it's dismissed as a hoax. So, to prove your point, you'll have to explain why it's "considerably more plausible" than the Jesus miracle stories.
Or, on the other hand, maybe it's not really dismissed as a hoax by everyone, and maybe the story is really true, or mostly true. Many weird events have really happened. In at least some cases, something strange or unexplainable really did happen, and then subsequently the story became enlarged or exaggerated, so that it eventually develops into something mostly fictional.
Just because you can produce a story that turned out to be a hoax does not mean that all other stories of something weird are also hoaxes. If there's evidence that some strange phenomenon really happened, then maybe it's true. Or even if some part of it is fictional, maybe there was a real event that caused it to get started in the first place, and so this original part of the story is genuine.
So just citing one case of a supposed hoax somewhere doesn't prove anything.
You're giving a "hoax" story example, but you're not taking it seriously. To take it seriously you have to quote from the witnesses, or from the nearest evidence we have of it, and subject that report to criticism.
The irony of the situation is that the evidence in favor of Betty and Barney Hill's story is considerably better than the evidence for any of the miracle claims in the "Jesus" story.
If the evidence (for the Hill story) is really that good, then the story is probably true. But also, you should be providing us with that evidence instead of just expecting us to take your word for it that the evidence is as good as you're saying.
What you're doing is throwing out an example of a supposed hoax and insisting that we must agree that this is a hoax, like it's an absolute proven fact that it's false, but then you're telling us that there is strong evidence to support this hoax story -- which is inconsistent, because if it's proven that it's a hoax, how can you claim there's strong evidence to support it? If the evidence is really so strong, then it's probably true and not a hoax at all.
So you need to make up your mind: is this story really supported by the evidence, or is it a proven hoax? You can't claim it's a hoax unless you disprove the evidence for it, or show us how poor this evidence is.
You might be partly right -- maybe there's some convincing evidence, and yet the story is false. Or, maybe it's true, and we really don't know. The evidence for the Jesus miracles is sufficient that the reported events might be true. And a "believer" is one who considers this evidence and hopes that it's true. By contrast, the alien abduction stories may or may not be true, and I don't really care if they are or not.
It is not vitally important for people to either believe or DISbelieve most stories of paranormal events, like alien abductions. Probably some of these stories are true, or partly true, and perhaps most of them false.
Yet millions of otherwise sane people just believe the Jesus myths uncritically.
No, they believe it on the superiority of the evidence, because we have at least four sources attesting to the miracles of Jesus, and this evidence, or these sources, are totally unique for that time, as accounts of miracle events, being relatively close to the time of the reported events.
This sets the Jesus miracle accounts apart from other miracle legends for which there is no such evidence, i.e., no similar evidence attesting to such events elsewhere, or at other times, making these reported events, i.e., the Gospel accounts, totally unexplainable as being part of the normal mythologizing process, so that the best plausible explanation for the accounts is that the reported events actually did take place.
This is not uncritical belief. If it were UNcritical, there should be many more cases of such belief, i.e., belief in other fictional miracle characters, recorded in documents near to the time of the alleged events. So this is critical, not uncritical, belief. I.e., this is the kind of belief that is reserved only for cases where there is extra evidence.
I was once one myself, so I'm not trying to judge, just trying to understand why. I searched desperately for many years for this evidence of which you speak. If it exists I was never able to find it.
You had and still have the evidence. These accounts are evidence. Documents which claim something happened are evidence that the something did happen. In this case we have at least four such documents, not only one. This is not proof, but it is extra evidence that the alleged events did in fact happen. This evidence offers reason to believe, even if one still has doubts. It is a basis for reasonable hope.
(to be continued)
Your continued baseless assertion of points that have been demonstrated over and over in this thread to be false will continue to be rebutted. This is because we skeptics are far more interested in truth than fairy tales.
Lumpenproletariat said:But if the Hill story is really as plausible as you say, then it would not be dismissed as a hoax. I suggest it's not so plausible, and this is why it's dismissed as a hoax. So, to prove your point, you'll have to explain why it's "considerably more plausible" than the Jesus miracle stories.
... considerably more plausible than the story of an itinerant preacher 2000 years ago literally turning water to wine, instantly healing incurable conditions such as blindness, walking on top of a storm tossed sea or levitating unassisted off into the sky.
If the evidence (for the Hill story) is really that good, then the story is probably true. But also, you should be providing us with that evidence instead of just expecting us to take your word for it that the evidence is as good as you're saying.
Even if you've really divined the Absolute Truth about the cattle mutilations, which isn't clear, this doesn't explain or debunk all paranormal claims. Debunking one hoax doesn't prove that all other claims of something unusual must also be hoaxes.
One Million Dollar Paranormal Challenge
The One Million Dollar Paranormal Challenge is an offer by the James Randi Educational Foundation (JREF) to pay out one million U.S. dollars to anyone who can demonstrate a supernatural or paranormal ability under agreed-upon scientific testing criteria. A version of challenge was first issued in 1964, and over a thousand people have applied to take it since then, but none have yet been successful.
As I said when this subject first came up, once again: Penises are not just for sex & peeing. It is only because man is evil that he thinks of penises exclusively in those terms.
Man is made in the image of God the Father. That is the primary reason why man has a penis.
Overall the accounts were preserved accurately with no significant change. During copying some minor changes happen with no change of substance.
You have absolutely no way to show this to be true.
But if it were not true, someone would give an example of such a significant change or change of substance.
No.
This is still not demonstrating that the accounts were preserved over time.
You would need to have two accounts to compare, from known times of authorship, in order to see if major error were or were not introduced.
You do not have any evidence of the original story to show what the resulting story was, whether it was loyal to the event or if it was exaggerated.
There's "absolutely no way to show" that there are no major changes in the writings of Tacitus or Suetonius or Livy or Polybius etc. interjected between the time of the original writing and the time of the physical copies or manuscripts which we now possess.
A fact which does nothing to make your claim any more credible.
Are the writings of Tacitus that we have now really his original writings?
Doesn't matter. YOU are claiming that the gospels were preserved accurately.
You have bupkes for evidence of that claim.
What is it you're saying about the gospel account text that casts doubt on the reliability, anymore than the same also applies to any other writings of the period?
I'm not saying anything about the gospel accounts right now.
I'm saying you've got fuck all to support the claim I quoted.
There's no recently unearthed eyewitness account that matches the later-created gospels. So you have no way to establish that there were no substantive changes.
Where there's a disruption in the literary style, like the ending of Mark, this is obvious, and it's accounted for.
What do you mean 'accounted for?'
Are there some other examples of this that cause a problem? How does it undermine reliability?
Well, when you make a claim that is not possible to support, one has to wonder why you'd do that?
How come you have to tell lies about your superstition?
Isn't there sufficient evidence aside from the need to tell lies?
What matters here are the accounts of the miracle events, suggesting Jesus had super-human power.
Yeah, that's what matters.
And there's no good evidence to believe the accounts.
And for these, there is no basis for any judgment that they were added later,
Except for the fact that Paul never mentioned anything about the events.
Except for the fact that the Jewish Messiah prophecies never predicted such powers.
. . . as some kind of disruption in the text that must have been surreptitiously slipped in decades or centuries later, after the original writing.
you don't HAVE the 'original writing.'
You can't even show a date for the 'original
IF the gospel accounts were written decades later, and made up in part or entirely, then there won't be a sudden disruption.
Why is there so little trace of what surely was a John-the-Baptist cabal that was trying to make him the new miracle-working messiah?
There's no need in Jewish tradition for the messiah to work miracles. So the 'cabal' would not have tried to sell a miracle-working messiah to the Jews.
How did the Jesus cabal succeed so efficiently in wiping the record clean of all his [John the Baptist's] miracles?
Fire is the cleanser.
We have RECORDS of the Early Christains stamping out heresies.
Letters to each other about what gospels to burn, which were being burnt, and so on.
This is why we have so little of the gnostic gospels available today.
It's quite possible that such a conspiracy was pulled off.
They just didn't call it a conspiracy, they called it The Truth.
I'm convinced Saul/Paul was delusional and his followers mimic the delusionThere is the same evidence as for any other historical events.