PureX
Well-known member
Yes. It's believing that God defied the nature of reality and made these human writers "inerrant".Where is the magical thinking? Believing God has actually written something to mankind?
Yes. It's believing that God defied the nature of reality and made these human writers "inerrant".Where is the magical thinking? Believing God has actually written something to mankind?
Yes. It's believing that God defied the nature of reality and made these human writers "inerrant".
So … love is NOT love? :shocked:Love is love? That makes no sense.
We register that same effect when we feel anything. When we think, anything. That electro-chemical activity is a part of the phenomena of thought.Love is an electromagnetic field. There are medical devices to measure magnetic fields produced by electrical activity in the brain. Basically, when you feel love, you are feeling a magnetic field and the effects of that field on your body.
Because humans are not intellectually inerrant.What is "the nature of reality" being defied?
Because humans are not intellectually inerrant.
So … love is NOT love? :shocked:
We register that same effect when we feel anything. When we think, anything.
That electro-chemical activity is a part of the phenomena of thought.
All you're identifying is an effect. And you think the effect is "love".Different emotions produce different effects. Love causes the release of oxytocin--fear doesn't.
My point is that God and love are ideals, not objects: they are paradigms through which we perceive and understand ourselves and the world around us (if we so choose). They are ideals that need to be experienced to be validated, and evaluated. They are NOT aspects of objective reality that can be proven to exist by science, or by supernatural feats.I don't deny that. You don't divorce God from that phenomena or from love, so what on earth is your point?
All you're identifying is an effect. And you think the effect is "love".
That's just weak-minded.
My point is that God and love are ideals, not objects: they are paradigms through which we perceive and understand ourselves and the world around us (if we so choose). They are ideals that need to be experienced to be validated, and evaluated. They are NOT aspects of objective reality that can be proven to exist by supernatural feats.
There is no need for anyone to believe in supernatural feats, to believe in God.
Do you expect scientific research publications to use instances of the word prove or its derivatives in order for people to claim that research demonstrates the truth or existence of something? If a person claims measles vaccination prevents measles infection, what proof does he have? You're not going to find the word prove or its derivatives in vaccine research, yet people claim the research proves something.
I can't describe "God" any more than I already have.How would you describe the god you believe in?
Where is the magical thinking? Believing God has actually written something to mankind?
Scientific researchers avoid using words like "prove," which is why I didn't expect to see it in the research paper, and why it wasn't there.
You said the archaeologists "proved" the site was the Biblical Sodom, and in doing so, you stepped across a line that good researchers don't cross.
I never claimed the word "prove" would be in the document, and I don't understand why you would have spent the time searching for that word instead of reading about the archaeological findings. You seem more interesting in nitpicking at my comment than discussing whether or not the evidence found at Tall el Hammam proves it is the ancient city of Sodom.
Has anyone proven that vaccines are safe and effective? You can't answer affirmatively now without stepping "across a line that good researchers don't cross."
Has anyone proven that vaccines are safe and effective? You can't answer affirmatively now without stepping "across a line that good researchers don't cross."
I am insane enough!While I am a far cry from a conservative evangelical, I do believe that the church needs to maintain some idea of revelation. The reason I would claim that some idea of the revelation of who God is is so central to Christianity is the cross. To claim that God, the wellspring of existence itself, revealed himself in self-emptying love on the cross is not an idea typically associated with divinity before Christianity. To be in the ancient world and point to crucified peasant and say that it was the revelation of God, most people would think you were out of your mind. Of course, Christians believed that because they believed in the resurrection. Whether that resurrection was a 'walk out of the cave' bodily resurrection, a spiritual resurrection or something in between isn't really very relevant. What is important is that Christians believed that Christ was once again present as a living agent.
As the theologian Robert Jenson puts it, paraphrased, Jesus Christ was the self-identifying word of God, confirmed in the resurrection. The life of Jesus up until the resurrection a proposal of who God was, the resurrection a confirmation that this was God. Which means that God is one who eats and drinks with sinners and forgives even his own executioners.
To define God as mere 'mystery' seems to me to be pretty much the same as saying nothing, it very quickly becomes an empty label. So what?
The problem I see with that is that it often becomes an empty vessel for Feuerbachian projection. That is, an empty vessel we can always just fill by projecting our current ideals onto eternity. Biblically (I dont mean that in a fundamentalist sense that the Bible is inerrant or even a collection of books with just one theological voice) that is very close to idolatry, the chief of all sins. And it is not the idolatry of worshipping Baal, Zeus or some such nonsense, it can become the idolatry of self-worship, we end up worshipping the very subject that projects the values we want onto eternity.
Of course, you can claim that the content of the Christian revelation that I just described is projection a well. That is of course possible, but it would not be a Feuerbachian projection, it would be a Nietzschean projection, resentiment. The God of the prophets and the God portrayed by Jesus Christ is no bourgeoisie projection, He does not have the tepid values of the middle class, it is rather the roaring fire of insurrection.
All this being said, and this is the ironical part. Much of fundamentalist evangelicalism really just is Feuerbachian projection as well. The grotesque idolatry of projecting 'American values and common decency' onto the Son of God: We are saved and no we just carry on, saved from and to what exactly? Some bland ticket stamp to some completely discontinuous disembodied existence after death?
Will continue this later, will try to present some counterpoints to what I've claimed here. Obviously this is a rather complex topic. Just in case someone is insane enough to be interested.
No, you merely claimed that archaeologists "proved" the site was Sodom...
... when they made no such statement.
Your quote is right there in the thread, and you seem more interested in my "nitpicking" than you are acknowledging your misrepresentation.
:freak: I'm not interested in your vaccine tangent.
I agree that the church needs to be able to offer some sort of divine (transcendent) revelation. And I believe that it does. I also agree that Jesus' death on the cross is significant in part because he is characterized as having transcended it. Without that part of the story, he's just another dead preacher, and his message and example gets sort of stuck in his time and place.While I am a far cry from a conservative evangelical, I do believe that the church needs to maintain some idea of revelation. The reason I would claim that some idea of the revelation of who God is is so central to Christianity is the cross. To claim that God, the wellspring of existence itself, revealed himself in self-emptying love on the cross is not an idea typically associated with divinity before Christianity. To be in the ancient world and point to crucified peasant and say that it was the revelation of God, most people would think you were out of your mind. Of course, Christians believed that because they believed in the resurrection. Whether that resurrection was a 'walk out of the cave' bodily resurrection, a spiritual resurrection or something in between isn't really very relevant. What is important is that Christians believed that Christ was once again present as a living agent.
Yes; the Divine Spirit being expressed in a human form, and through human experiences. This is the true revelation of Christ. A revelation that can save humanity from itself, as it ultimately saved Jesus, from us.As the theologian Robert Jenson puts it, paraphrased, Jesus Christ was the self-identifying word of God, confirmed in the resurrection. The life of Jesus up until the resurrection a proposal of who God was, the resurrection a confirmation that this was God. Which means that God is one who eats and drinks with sinners and forgives even his own executioners.
Who is defining God as "mere mystery"? Seems to me we error in the other direction, by defining God as reflections of ourselves, complete with all our character defects and flawed desires. I truly wish more of humanity would allow God to be more of a mystery, so as hopefully to engender some humility in us.To define God as mere 'mystery' seems to me to be pretty much the same as saying nothing, it very quickly becomes an empty label. So what?
So in the end, how DO we refrain from creating God in our own image?The problem I see with that is that it often becomes an empty vessel for Feuerbachian projection. That is, an empty vessel we can always just fill by projecting our current ideals onto eternity. Biblically (I dont mean that in a fundamentalist sense that the Bible is inerrant or even a collection of books with just one theological voice) that is very close to idolatry, the chief of all sins. And it is not the idolatry of worshipping Baal, Zeus or some such nonsense, it can become the idolatry of self-worship, we end up worshipping the very subject that projects the values we want onto eternity.
Of course, you can claim that the content of the Christian revelation that I just described is projection a well. That is of course possible, but it would not be a Feuerbachian projection, it would be a Nietzschean projection, resentiment. The God of the prophets and the God portrayed by Jesus Christ is no bourgeoisie projection, He does not have the tepid values of the middle class, it is rather the roaring fire of insurrection.
All this being said, and this is the ironical part. Much of fundamentalist evangelicalism really just is Feuerbachian projection as well. The grotesque idolatry of projecting 'American values and common decency' onto the Son of God: We are saved and no we just carry on, saved from and to what exactly? Some bland ticket stamp to some completely discontinuous disembodied existence after death?