T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
175.1 | | WILLEE::FRETTS | Thru our bodies we heal the Earth | Thu Mar 07 1991 12:21 | 7 |
|
Just as a point of information, I caught the end of a CNN segment
on this. They were interviewing Matthew Fox, who is a member of
this panel. Didn't catch what he had to say. They showed some of
his books. Did anyone else see the whole interview?
Carole
|
175.2 | | DELNI::MEYER | Dave Meyer | Fri Mar 08 1991 18:27 | 10 |
| Interesting. I was home with the family bug for a couple of days
and started to browse through a tome titled "The Book of J". It
purports to be an attempt to extract the original writtings that the
first books of the Bible are based upon. The authors claimed that "J"
was a female, not religious, of literary stature equal to Shakespeare,
and wrote her works with great doses of irony. They further claim that
there were several revisions, the last by "R", the Redactor. The
pre-textual material - all I managed to get through - suggested that
the authors were scholars enough to attempt this work. Has anyone read
it ?
|
175.3 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | bread and roses | Fri Mar 08 1991 18:37 | 5 |
| No, but i'd love to borrow your copy!
;-)
Bonnie
|
175.4 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Les notes, c'est moi. | Fri Mar 08 1991 18:47 | 13 |
| I haven't read it yet, although it is on my list of books to read. "J"
is the subject of a lot of interest because it is believed to be the
first of the four main sources of the Pentateuch that are defined by
the Documentary Hypothesis (the other ones being P, E, and D, in
addition to the Redactor).
The idea that J was female is rather interesting; I seem to recall that
Richard Friedman hinted at that possibility in his wonderful book "Who
Wrote the Bible" (which I heartily recommend to anyone interested in
the Documentary Hypothesis). I don't know what to make of the claims
of female authorship, but it is definitely interesting to consider.
-- Mike
|
175.5 | | DELNI::MEYER | Dave Meyer | Fri Mar 08 1991 18:55 | 4 |
| Sorry, Bonnie, would if I could. Our library had to get it on loan from
another library just so my sweetie could get her hands on it. I might
never have seen it if I hadn't had to rescue it from her grandson - how
I love to babysit when I'd rather be babied. :-(
|
175.6 | Yawn | FAVAX::NSMITH | Passionate commitment/reasoned faith | Sat Mar 09 1991 09:38 | 24 |
| I heard a review of "The Book of J" on NPR months ago and was very
excited by it -- at first. However, by the end of the review, which
I believe quoted both the author and critics, I lost my excitement and
came to two conclusions: (1) The author took a lot of liberties in his
translations of the J sections and (2) J may or may not have been female;
the author doesn't have enough to go on to make a serious hypothesis
but it's probably good PR and marketing.
Note that I do ascribe to the J, P, etc., understandings of how the
Bible was written and that I came to those rather disapponting
conclusions by the end of the review.
As to the base note on what Jesus actually said and didn't say, their
conclusions are not drastically different from those arrived at by
serious Biblical study of the documents and the times they were
written.
I mean, I heard this stuff in college in the late 50's!! So they
voted. Big deal. Why not spend six years preparing -- or updating --
a serious scholarly commentary that we can *use*? (Or did they really
do that and the voting is all that catches the press's attention?)
Nancy
|
175.7 | | XLIB::JACKSON | Collis Jackson | Mon Mar 11 1991 11:12 | 6 |
| Indeed, the undermining of the Scriptures has been in vogue for almost
200 years. The main purpose it serves, that I see, is to divide
Christians trying to follow Jesus. (It also does provide plenty of
fodder for books, magazine articles, etc.)
Collis
|
175.8 | | RAVEN1::WATKINS | | Mon Mar 11 1991 20:30 | 6 |
| It also shows who's faith is in God and not in scholarship.
In Christ,
Marshall
|
175.9 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | bread and roses | Mon Mar 11 1991 20:36 | 8 |
| Marshall,
Why do you think that people who are inerested in scholarship
don't have faith in God. God gave me the mind I have and the
curiosity I have about the world around me and about the
past, I believe He did so for a reason.
Bonnie
|
175.10 | pah! | GAZERS::NOONAN | FRIVOL ATTACK!!!! wheeeeeeeeeee | Tue Mar 12 1991 10:04 | 8 |
| I find the recent level of religious and faith and human intolerance
in this file to be totally unacceptable to me. I think I'll bow out
for a while.
E Grace
...a lack of faith in God, simply because I don't hold the bible to be
inerrant! INDEED!!!
|
175.11 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | bread and roses | Tue Mar 12 1991 10:34 | 7 |
| E Grace,
Please don't let the occasional negative voice drive you away...
I'd miss you if you left.
Bonnie
|
175.12 | | DELNI::MEYER | Dave Meyer | Tue Mar 12 1991 16:14 | 20 |
| I think there are some folks who would call GOD a liar if that
worthy were to impugn the accuracy of their favorite version of the
Bible.
A couple hundred scriptural authorities, people who know even more
about the Bible than the best in this conference (who are quite
knowledgeable in their own right) get together and combine their
accumulated knowledge of that scripture and someone here has the total
lack of humility to write them off as without merit ? To write off
their scholarship after basing arguments upon their own ? It might be
reasonable/sensible/acceptable, were this a one-on-one dispute, but a
couple vs a couple of hundred ? More pointedly, a couple with LOCAL
credentials vs a couple of hundred with NATIONAL credentials ? I'm not
trying to say that those couple should just cave in to this mass of
scholarship, but to simply dismiss it would seem, on the surface, to be
a rather brazen act.
I would like to point out, also, that the question posed was not
"is this The Word of God", but "was this something Christ said". Most
of what John passed off as stuff Christ said seems, to these many
scholars, to be not words Christ uttered. That does not mean that they
are not "the Word of God", although it casts some doubt on them.
|
175.13 | | JURAN::SILVA | A word to ya MUTHA! | Tue Mar 12 1991 16:46 | 75 |
| E Grace! Don't leave! I like having you here! :-)
Hi Dave!
| I think there are some folks who would call GOD a liar if that
| worthy were to impugn the accuracy of their favorite version of the
| Bible.
Would you care to name names?
| A couple hundred scriptural authorities, people who know even more
| about the Bible than the best in this conference (who are quite
| knowledgeable in their own right)
| get together and combine their
| accumulated knowledge of that Scripture and someone here has the total
| lack of humility to write them off as without merit ? To write off
| their scholarship after basing arguments upon their own ? It might be
| reasonable/sensible/acceptable, were this a one-on-one dispute, but a
| couple vs a couple of hundred ? More pointedly, a couple with LOCAL
| credentials vs a couple of hundred with NATIONAL credentials ?
You seem to forget that there are many people with the same credentials
that you have stated up above that have some serious questions about some of
the areas of the Bible. Do you just disgard them as extremists?
Remember all of the times the Bible was wrongly interpreted by
such people and then were used against the very people it was supposed to
help? Let's look at a couple. The Spanish Inquisitions. Now there was a class
act. Slavery. My, how that was so God like. Women being treated like second
class citizens. That's always a good one. Did anyone notice how it could
contradict the love thy neighbor scenario? If I loved my neighbor the way
people were treating women back then, during slavery and anything else the
Bible was WRONGLY interpreted, I'd have no neighbors, would I? One thing
to think about, remember when the movements went on during these "sad events"?
Remember how they started off as being small and built up over time? Remember
how in time, it was discovered that what the scholars and such actually
believed in were wrong? My, I wonder what would happen if we applied this
scenario to homosexuality? We have some Christians (the extremists as some call
them, others may use radicals, please insert the word that best fits your
situation) who believe that what we are doing may not be wrong, only because
people wonder just who wrote the Bible or they may have other reasons as well
(many churches wouldn't open their doors for us if this were not true, right?).
True, they are a small percentage of Christians, but they exist. I would
imagine this is similar to how it started for the people who were against the
"sad events" that I have mentioned.
| I'm not
| trying to say that those couple should just cave in to this mass of
| scholarship, but to simply dismiss it would seem, on the surface, to be
| a rather brazen act.
Well, you have based your whole defense on these people with their
scholarships and such. That was ALL you put. How could we think you weren't
basing your whole defense on this?
| I would like to point out, also, that the question posed was not
| "is this The Word of God", but "was this something Christ said". Most
| of what John passed off as stuff Christ said seems, to these many
| scholars, to be not words Christ uttered. That does not mean that they
| are not "the Word of God", although it casts some doubt on them.
Hmmmm.... interesting. So, John has passed words off that some might
not feel came from Christ Himself. Gee, that would mean the human side of John
inspired the words. It would also mean that if one book can have doubts that it
was Christ inspired, others could have used the same "free will" that John
used. Wouldn't you think so? You see, I've been told that either the whole
Bible is to be true, or the whole thing is false. My honest opinion on this is
that yes, God, Christ and the Holy Spirit did talk with the authors about the
things they wrote. It is also my belief that the authors, being human, could
have written in their own interpretations of what God actually said. If there
is doubt in the book of John, then we will also have to doubt the other books
as well. After all, Christians keep saying, all or nothing!
Glen
|
175.14 | | DELNI::MEYER | Dave Meyer | Tue Mar 12 1991 21:24 | 20 |
| Hi, Glen.
Guess what, you misunderstood what I was saying. At least that's
what I THINK happened. Or did I misunderstand YOU ?
Let me make my position clear. Again. I do not place a great deal
of belief in the Bible. My belief is in the spirit of the teachings of
the philosopher we know of as Jesus Christ. This belief makes me a very
different breed of christian than, oh, Collis - for example. I try to
discuss things using terms and frameworks used by those I'm debating,
but that's all.
My .12 (I think that's the number) was intended to point out to
some of the more conservative members here that they might well
dispute, on a point by point basis, any or all of the findings of the
Conference (.0) but that they should not simply try to dismiss the
findings as they might if someone with my level of scholarship
presented them. Belief is all well and good, faith is perhaps required,
but total suspension of disbelief - beyond a willingness to find
resaonable explanations (as I offered) - is what a con man seeks. I
don't view Christ as a con man.
And no, I would not care to name any of those I think might fight
even God over the specific and special validity of, say, the KJV.
|
175.15 | Re: .10 | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Accessory to truth | Tue Mar 12 1991 22:34 | 7 |
| E Grace,
In this conference, your Christian perspective need not be based
on a foundation entirely congruent with another Christian's perspective.
Praying you remain,
Richard
|
175.16 | Understanding my reasoning | XLIB::JACKSON | Collis Jackson | Wed Mar 13 1991 11:28 | 15 |
| It is true that I dismiss their claims because their claims are contradicted
by the Bible itself which claims to be the inerrant Word of God.
It is not that I have no respect for the scholars, but it is that I have
no respect for work that takes as a basic premise that the Biblical
claims are wrong. No matter how excellent the work, the logic, the
reason, the research, the devotion to finding the answer, it is all
useless if it starts out foundationally on an incorrect premise.
The premise I am talking about has been accepted and supported ever
since Scripture was first written. It is not a premise to be dismissed
and flatly contradicted lightly. In fact, it is a premise which I am
convinced is true and has been proven true time and time again.
Collis
|
175.17 | Just my opinion | CARTUN::BERGGREN | What's another word for Thesaurus? | Wed Mar 13 1991 12:29 | 12 |
| Collis,
> It is not that I have no respect for the scholars, but it is that I
have no respect for work that takes as a basic premise that the
Biblical claims are wrong. <
I believe these scholars, by and large, are people who are interested in
finding out the truth about Bible authorship, Collis. I don't believe
that the basic premise of their study was that Bible claims are wrong.
I think it was more objective study than what you imply.
Karen
|
175.18 | | JURAN::SILVA | A word to ya MUTHA! | Wed Mar 13 1991 13:52 | 14 |
|
| It is not that I have no respect for the scholars, but it is that I have
| no respect for work that takes as a basic premise that the Biblical
| claims are wrong. No matter how excellent the work, the logic, the
| reason, the research, the devotion to finding the answer, it is all
| useless if it starts out foundationally on an incorrect premise.
But the only correct premise is of those who went out to use the same
methods that the scholars of today used, but they were out to seek the truth. I
wonder if maybe they only put in what they thought might be true when they
studied and translated the Bible? Gee Collis, you may have stumbled onto
something.
Glen
|
175.19 | | DELNI::MEYER | Dave Meyer | Wed Mar 13 1991 15:46 | 16 |
| "The premise I am talking about has been accepted and supported since
scripture was first written."
Is that a fact ? Seems to me that a lot of stuff that was once
accepted and supported as scripture has been tossed out. And not all
Christian sects use the same texts as scripture. Care to discuss
scripture according to the Eastern (Greek, Russian) Orthodoxies ? What
about the supposed "Book of J" which is theorized to have been the
original manuscript (and lost for millenia) from which ancient
scripture was derived ? If that hypothesis is correct then everything
you revere in the OT is nothing but a re-write of earlier works.
Are you not willing to grant even the possibility that "John" may
not be textual quotes from Christ ? Not even while maintaining that it
is the words of God erroneously or falsely attributed to Christ ? The
fact is, Collis, that refusing to consider - not to accept, but just to
consider - the implications of the Conference ties you to a past that
never existed except in the minds of like-minded people.
|
175.20 | Further explanation | XLIB::JACKSON | Collis Jackson | Thu Mar 14 1991 17:23 | 6 |
| It is quite true, Dave, that people have denied the claims of the Bible
for as long as the claims have been made. What I was trying to say
(and perhaps said it poorly) is that many, often most believers (and
organizations of believers) have accepted this claim.
Collis
|
175.21 | | LEDS::LOPEZ | He showed me a river... | Tue Mar 19 1991 17:03 | 13 |
|
Dave,
> Let me make my position clear. Again. I do not place a great deal
> of belief in the Bible.
So why do you make such a fuss over it?
Have you accepted everything that this group (.0) concluded?
Really.
ace
|
175.22 | | DELNI::MEYER | Dave Meyer | Tue Mar 19 1991 18:43 | 19 |
| ace,
the question has little to do with what I have or have not
accepted. Someone commented that the people in .0 were wrong, that
their scholarship was unacceptable and that they had done nothing worth
considering. I countered with the argument that the group in .0 MIGHT
be all those things but that their scholarship demanded that their work
be considered, if only to be rejected. Then it seemed that my comment
was understood to support those who would reject the work out of hand.
My response, which you quoted, tried to set that straight.
Why make a fuss over what ? Making my position clear ? Because I
would not want to be misunderstood. Over the accuracy of the Bible ?
Because it is my best source for learning the teachings of Christ, whom
I consider to be a great teacher and philosopher. About the rejecting
of a scholarly work without studying it because it might force you to
re-evaluate your framework ? Because that is a sign of weakness and
lack of faith. If your belief is true then it can only be improved by
such a challenge - even if you accept the challenge as correct, because
then your faith has an even stronger base.
What business is it of yours to challenge an attempt at clarity ?
|
175.23 | perspective | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Brother Richard (:-}>+- | Tue Mar 19 1991 20:39 | 18 |
| Note 175.21
ace,
Dave is responding legitimately when expressing his perspective.
Personally, I'm surprised at how little the findings of the Jesus
Seminar bother me. Even if every one of the findings were true, it hasn't
affected my faith, which, not unlike Dave's, is not heavily anchored in the
Bible.
I've always been curious about why the author of the Gospel of John
deviated so profoundly from the Synoptic Gospels. All I ever got for an
answer was a plank from the party platform. ;-}
According to a Noter in ::RELIGION, it's all self-delusion, anyway.
;-}
Richard
|
175.24 | | LEDS::LOPEZ | He showed me a river... | Wed Mar 20 1991 08:58 | 33 |
| Dave,
>I countered with the argument that the group in .0 MIGHT
> be all those things but that their scholarship demanded that their work
> be considered, if only to be rejected.
Demanded huh?
There are several important items here I would like to check with you. Exactly
what are the credentials of the scholars involved? Anyone can claim to be a
scholar, but since you insist that their scholarship "demands" that we consider
their work, we must then understand their "scholarship". So, help us understand
why you consider them scholars. Secondly, what is the motivation of these folks?
This too is important to understand in order to determine why they "voted" the
way they did. What was the composition of the group? What percentage male and
female, ethnicity, education, where educated? What religious affilation did
they represent? Also, how were the questions developed? Can we be certain that
the questions themselves are free from bias and slant? How were the questions
posed? A raise of hands? A secret ballot? These all matter very much to the
outcome. Did the scholars receive payment for their labor? Did this influence
their voting? There are many questions like this that must answered before
any serious consideration of the work could be undertaken.
I seriously doubt that you or I could answer these questions without a great
deal of research. Have you conducted such a research? If not, why do you suggest
that the "work" must be considered because their "scholarship demands" it? Why
should anyone accept a "work" under claim of "scholarship" without first being
certain of the "scholarship".
If I present to you a list of scholars, will you consider their work too?
ace
|
175.25 | | LEDS::LOPEZ | He showed me a river... | Wed Mar 20 1991 09:03 | 16 |
| re.23
Richard,
> Dave is responding legitimately when expressing his perspective.
Of course he is! That's what this notes conference is about, right?
I'm merely seeking clarity on his perspective.
Actually, the findings of these folks bother none at all. There are too
may unanswered questions before the "work" can be taken seriously.
regards,
ace
|
175.26 | | DELNI::MEYER | Dave Meyer | Wed Mar 20 1991 16:08 | 12 |
| ace,
I asked a couple of "religious" about the group. Their attitudes
varied. Common to each was the agreement that a number of those
involved were well respected in the field, that they came from various
denominations and that they were not being paid to discredit the NT.
I did not say that their scholarship demands that you, or anyone,
agree with them. Only that you consider their work before disregarding
it. You have someone you want me to consider before I disregard ?
Fine. No problem.
Funny, you seem intent on discrediting the work of the Seminar yet
your questions in .24 suggest that you don't know anything about it
beyond what you read here.
|
175.27 | | LEDS::LOPEZ | He showed me a river... | Wed Mar 20 1991 18:06 | 22 |
| re.26
Dave,
> Funny, you seem intent on discrediting the work of the Seminar yet
> your questions in .24 suggest that you don't know anything about it
> beyond what you read here.
Let see if I understand you clearly. You think that I am discrediting
the Seminar because I ask basic research questions about the people involved or
the process used to derive their conclusions?
> I did not say that their scholarship demands that you, or anyone,
> agree with them. Only that you consider their work before disregarding
> it.
Right, I know. And why should I consider their work seriously, without
understanding the basis, paradigms, and circumstances upon which they developed
their conclusions? I'm wondering, why do you? Or do you? Or at least, why do you
suggest to others that they should?
ace
|
175.28 | | DELNI::MEYER | Dave Meyer | Wed Mar 20 1991 21:21 | 11 |
| ace,
perhaps it only SOUNDED like you felt the work of no value before
you asked those valid questions. Perhaps you did not intend to sound
that way. But you did. Before making any inquiry into the
qualifications of those involved.
No, I do not feel that I have adequately presented the credentials
of the group. Why not mention the project to a religious leader of your
own choosing as that person should be better versed than I and would
certainly be someone you consider a greater authority than I. Ditto for
Collis, Marshall and any other who feels the need to know, ask someone
YOU trust.
|
175.29 | | LEDS::LOPEZ | He showed me a river... | Thu Mar 21 1991 10:44 | 28 |
| Dave,
> No, I do not feel that I have adequately presented the credentials
> of the group.
Presenting the qualifications of the group adequately and knowing them
adequately are two different things. You can know for yourself the credentials
of the group and then you may able to present the information to others. But
it is less likely that you could effectively (perhaps to influence) present
something that you yourself do not know.
Case before us. You seem to be intent on influencing others to accept the "work"
of this group of people, but I doubt that you yourself know their
qualifications or the process of the proceedings (ref .24). Right? If that is
right, then why do you suggest that others should "consider their work before
disregarding it" when you yourself do not know the elements upon which the
work is based?
>Why not mention the project to a religious leader of your
> own choosing as that person should be better versed than I and would
> certainly be someone you consider a greater authority than I.
Why should I? Really. I want to know, why it seems that you keep insisting on
others investing their time and resources and the energy of others (i.e.
religious leaders) in consideration of this "work".
ace
|
175.30 | | DELNI::MEYER | Dave Meyer | Thu Mar 21 1991 14:08 | 12 |
| ace,
I have not advocated that anyone accept the findings of this group.
Re-read my entries. My argument has been aimed at the need for a
minimal understanding of that which you would reject. Religious people
that I respect - my minister, among others - has vouched for the
essential qualifications of the group. Neither they nor I have read the
entire findings and I don't know that I accept them, but I have not
rejected them.
Why should you inquire of your minister regarding the
qualifications of the group ? Why not ? It is possible that this
group has helped refine the truth, to purify that which we know as "the
word of God". Or maybe not.
|
175.31 | | LEDS::LOPEZ | He showed me a river... | Thu Mar 21 1991 17:13 | 22 |
| Dave,
>Neither they nor I have read the
> entire findings and I don't know that I accept them, but I have not
> rejected them.
I think I understand. You would not accept or reject a "work" without having
considered the "work" enough to satisfactory yourself. There is some
level of understanding that will give you a comfort level to form your own
opinion about the group and its findings.
Do you respect others right to the same? Do you think it is alright for me to
accept or reject something to my satisfaction?
> Why should you inquire of your minister regarding the
> qualifications of the group ? Why not ?
Because human life is measured, and I do not wish to spend my time or others
time researching this one. There is not enough information for me to get
interested.
ace
|
175.32 | | LEDS::LOPEZ | He showed me a river... | Fri Mar 22 1991 11:13 | 32 |
| Dave,
Thanks for your "cordial" off line message 8*) 8*).
I respect your right to engage or not in this discussion. Understanding where
other people are coming from is like peeling an onion. Eventually you deal with
core beliefs and not everybody is comfortable with that.
I don't have enough information to draw conclusions, but enough to float a
hypothesis... You have not accepted or rejected the work of this seminar. And
you will not do so until you have more information. You know what information
you need to make a conclusion. You object to others accepting or rejecting
the seminar work on their own information. For instance, Collis rejected the
seminar work based upon his belief that the seminar forum had a basic premise
that the Biblical claims are wrong (.16). You objected to this in .19, but
apparently it was enough for Collis to decide. Also Marshall (.8) takes a basis
for rejection that is apparently foreign to your paradigm (faith not
scholarship). It's not clear that your response in .12 and .14 were targeted for
Marshall but from the statement "Belief is all well and good, faith is perhaps
required but total suspension of disbelief..." I infer that you were objecting
to his basis of rejection. As for me, I was willing to "consider" the seminar
work based upon your vehement recommendation (.19) only if you as the
recommendor know what you are recommending. But since you weren't certain of the
of the most basic of questions about the seminar, then I'm remain unconvinced
and am unwilling to waste time researching the matter.
I did consider it important to gain clarity on your thought process and you
mine, but I recognize that not everyone is comfortable with that and I respect
your right to bow out.
ace
|
175.33 | | DECWIN::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Fri Mar 22 1991 11:54 | 13 |
| Re: .32 Ace
>As for me, I was willing to "consider" the seminar
>work based upon your vehement recommendation (.19) only if you as the
>recommendor know what you are recommending. But since you weren't certain of the
>of the most basic of questions about the seminar, then I'm remain unconvinced
>and am unwilling to waste time researching the matter.
"The most basic of questions"? Come on, Ace. For Dave to have answered your
questions about the seminar he would have practically had to have been one of
the participants.
-- Bob
|
175.34 | | LEDS::LOPEZ | He showed me a river... | Fri Mar 22 1991 12:33 | 8 |
|
re.33
Not really. He could find out most of those answers from the
coordinators, or perhaps there are proceedings notes. And they are the most
basic of questions.
ace
|
175.35 | | GOODEN::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Fri Mar 22 1991 13:42 | 9 |
| Ace,
I think most people reading your reply .24 would not agree that they are
"the most basic of questions". Many of your questions go beyond the kinds of
things that would be covered in the conference procedings.
However, far be it from me to pick a quarrel. ;^)
-- Bob
|
175.36 | | LEDS::LOPEZ | He showed me a river... | Fri Mar 22 1991 13:54 | 12 |
| re.35
>I think most people reading your reply .24 would not agree that they are
>"the most basic of questions".
Which "most people"? 8*)
>However, far be it from me to pick a quarrel. ;^)
You? Quarrel? Why the thought barely crossed my mind! 8*)
ace
|
175.37 | ace, for the love of ... | DELNI::MEYER | Dave Meyer | Fri Mar 22 1991 16:14 | 91 |
| Gee, ace, *I* wouldn't have described it as "cordial". "Civil",
perhaps. Yes, "civil" would be a nice, politic term which accurately
describes it.
OK, let's start at the very beginning, just one more time.
On 7-Mar "Mike" entered a news item from a computer news feed. It said,
in part, that a CONTROVERSIAL group of BIBLICAL SCHOLARS has concluded
six years of voting by ruling that about 80% of the words attributed in
the Gospels to Jesus were probably made up by later authors. The group,
the Jesus Seminar, is described as being a 200-member group of MAINLINE
BIBLICAL SCHOLARS from around the country.
On 11-Mar Collis remarked that the undermining of the Scriptures has
been in vogue for almost 200 years and that the main purpose it serves,
in his opinion, is to divide Christians trying to follow Jesus.
Same day Marshall said "It also shows who's faith is in God and not in
scholarship.
On 12-Mar I entered a 175.12 which advocated giving the report a chance
before dismissing it. Collis has pretty good credentials for a lay
person and has not kept them a secret. Having those credentials yet
discrediting those of others seemed inappropriate - "a rather brazen
act".
Same day Glen came back with a long challenging message which seems to
have been based on misunderstanding.
SAME day I got back to him (175.14) and seem to have answered him.
On 13-Mar Collis brought up inerrancy and claimed that it had been
accepted and supported since Scripture was first written.
Same day I challenged this, pointing out that there have been various
shifts in what constitutes "Scripture" over the centuries and that even
today not all Christians agree on the same texts.
On 14-Mar Collis accepted my comment with a re-phrase that I let stand.
Then, on 19-Mar, you challenged my 12-Mar entry to Glen. You asked why
I made such a fuss over "it". You asked if I accepted everything the
Seminar concluded. Then you said "Really."
It took you a week to respond ? Could you not have defined "it" a
little more completely ?
SAME day I responded. I restated that my position was only that the
work deserved to be examined before being disregarded. I attempted to
find out what "it" was that I was making a fuss over.
20-Mar you came back and requested the credentials of the study
members. All 200 of them. You suggested that it was MY judgement that
they were scholars. You wanted to know their motivation. How am I to
know that ? You wanted a statistical breakdown by gender, ethnic
origin, education and religious affiliation. You even wanted to know
how the voting took place ! A question answered in .0 ! Then you ask
if I would consider the works of a list of scholars you would present
to me. Nice "red herring", that one.
Same day I replied that I had asked some "religious" about the group
and recieved confirmation of their credentials. "Religious" is a term
Catholics and some others apply to priests, nuns, ministers and the
like. I restated that all I was suggesting was consideration, not
agreement. I also commented on your obvious intent to discredit the
seminar, knowing nothing about it.
Same day you replied, restating your earlier message in general terms.
Again, same day I replied and admitted that I had not fully answered
your detailed question regarding the statistical breakdown of the
members of the Seminar.
21-Mar you suggested that I SHOULD know those details and accused me of
attempting to influence others to accept the findings of the Seminar.
You also accused me of insisting that others invest "time and resources
and energy" in consideration of this "work"(the quotes on "work" yours)
Same day I replied that you were mistaken and wondered why you should
not expend some of your time etc on information that might have major
importance to you, if accurate.
21-Mar you came back yet again to accost me on checking sources for
you. This might not be so silly except that I have not the slightest
reason to believe that my providing the credentials you requested would
do any more than change your mode of denial. Worse, I believe that my
acceptance of any part of the results of the Seminar would convince you
of its inauthenticity. However, THEN you have the absolute GALL to tell
me that you don't have the time to ask your minister about the group,
briefly and in passing, "because human life is measured,". You do
realize, I hope, that you have wasted more of your time and my time in
this pointless discussion than it would have taken for you to call your
minister and ask "These guys, are they for real ? What should I think
about their results ?".
So, stop yanking my chain over this. Find yourself another hobby to
beat to insensibility. If you are going to ask question, try to follow
the chain of discussion at least well enough that you don't make silly
accusations that can be easily refuted by referencing the previous
three notes. Try not to ask dumb questions that are obviously covered
in the base note. I'm tired of trying to be reasonable with you about
this. Let's move on to another topic.
|
175.38 | | LEDS::LOPEZ | He showed me a river... | Fri Mar 22 1991 16:55 | 16 |
|
re.37
Dave,
>So, stop yanking my chain over this.
Define "yanking my chain"... 8*)
Seriously though. You have misunderstood me. Understanding where one is coming
from is sometimes more important than the words themselves. That requires that
we think about the way we think (no typo). I hope you understand, that this is
my perspective.
relax,
ace
|
175.39 | | DECWIN::MESSENGER | Bob Messenger | Fri Mar 22 1991 17:00 | 12 |
| Re: .36 Ace
>>I think most people reading your reply .24 would not agree that they are
>>"the most basic of questions".
>
>Which "most people"? 8*)
I suppose you'd like me to give you their credentials, motivation, composition
by sex, ethnicity, education, and religious affiliation, and whether they made
their opinions known by a show of the hands or by a secret ballot... :-)
-- Bob
|
175.40 | | LEDS::LOPEZ | He showed me a river... | Fri Mar 22 1991 17:04 | 10 |
| re.39 Bob
>I suppose you'd like me to give you their credentials, motivation, composition
>by sex, ethnicity, education, and religious affiliation, and whether they made
>their opinions known by a show of the hands or by a secret ballot... :-)
For openers... 8*) 8*)
ace
|
175.41 | Only a comment on their work based on their presuppositions | XLIB::JACKSON | Collis Jackson | Mon Mar 25 1991 09:48 | 16 |
| Just for the record,
I have heard of this group over the years as they have persued their
work. I do not question either their credentials or their "scholarship".
What I question is their presupposition.
There is not a single scholar out of the 200 who accepts the Biblical
claim of the inerrency of Scripture (to the best of my knowledge).
They have presupposed (in my opinion) that God did not breathe Scripture
and, because of this, I dismiss their conclusions.
I have no comment on their work given that their presupposition should
stand (for example, in a hypothetical case :-) ).
Collis
|
175.42 | I hear you, Collis | DELNI::MEYER | Dave Meyer | Mon Mar 25 1991 16:43 | 11 |
| Collis,
yes, I understood this. However, when you are re-capping a
discussion you need to recap the whole thing, not just this or that
conclusion. When I understood your position, I quit the debate. It only
came up again because of ace.
I still think you ought to consider that the Seminar was
considering whether the reported words were uttered by Christ or not.
They were NOT considering if they were "the word of God". But you are
most certainly correct in your belief that, at least at the end of the
effort, none of the participants believed in the inerrancy of the Bible
in the same way you do.
|
175.43 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | bread and roses | Mon Mar 25 1991 16:47 | 7 |
| Collis
If some of the researchers started out believing in the inerancy
of the Bible but as they studied the subject came to believe that
it was not, would that invalidate them as authorities for you?
Bonnie
|
175.44 | They are authorities, for sure - just not accurate :-) | XLIB::JACKSON | Collis Jackson | Fri Mar 29 1991 11:06 | 26 |
| Bonnie,
I would not claim that they are not "authorities", only that they are
not accurate in the field that they have authority over (if you're willing
to make that distinction with me).
There are many authorities I disagree completely with in a number of
fields. There are many others that I agree with. I would define someone
as an authority not based on the validity of their conclusions, but rather
based on their knowledge and work in their field.
By the way, I think this is worth mentioning at this point. The framework
that I have accepted (for now) as true is foundational to whether or not
I believe what others claim. This, in general, is not only true for me
but for all people. It is exactly because of their framework (modified
to some extent by the most recent evidence and discussions that have had)
that these scholars have reached their decision. It is not, as I see
it, that one of us is more close-minded than the other (theirs in their
belief and mine in my belief), rather it is that I freely bring up the
cause of our disagreement (which is a different framework) and they left
their framework relatively unstated in proposing their conclusions.
As in most issues, the truth of our framework is foundational to reaching
the truth in a particular issue.
Collis
|