T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1260.1 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Madison...5'2'' 95 lbs. | Thu Aug 15 1996 13:35 | 22 |
| Yes. I see the Song of Solomon for example and ask, "What possible
significance could such a romantic interlude have with our relationship
with the living God." It actually ties in well when one grasps its
intent...which may be why Jesus speak of the church as his bride.
Z would s/he produce a set of scripture that was puzzling and ambiguous
Z rather than more direct and clear?
I truly believe the ambiguities cause us to dig deeper in order to
obtain the treasure. An archeologist in the early 1900's spent much of
his adult life digging...digging...digging. He could only conjecture
as to whether or not he was digging in the right place. I can imagine
the pure elation in his heart when he finally found the prize...the
burial place of the Pharoah's. Something he had strived for his whole
life.
Jesus' parables also caused the disciples to ask questions. Jesus used
this techniques many times in order to spur believers to study the
scriptures...day and night. Well, actually it was Peter and Pauls
proclamations that did this.
-Jack
|
1260.2 | Supernaturally engineered | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Thu Aug 15 1996 14:33 | 21 |
| I think the scripture and gospel you are searching for is there. It is
spiritually discerned. "Let him who has ears to hear..."
The most important discovery of my life was the insight that the Bible
is a highly *integrated message system.* We possess 66 books, penned
by 40 authors over thousands of years, yet the more we investigate, the
more we discover that they are a unified whole. God's Holy Word is more
than just divinely-inspired and infallible. Every word, every detail,
every number, every place and name, every subtlety of the text: the
elemental structures within the text itself, even the implied punctuation
are clearly the result of intricate and skillful supernatural
'engineering.' The more we look, the more we realize that there is still
much more hidden and thus reserved for the diligent inquirer. The evidence
of design is clearly obvious even in the acrostics hidden throughout
the Bible. *ALL* Scripture is given by inspiration and is profitable for
doctrine, for reproof, and correction. We haven't begun to discover the
detail, the power, and the majesty of God's handiwork. Would you expect
anything less in the Word of God Himself? It is amazing how apparent
contradictions disappear when you realize what we hold in our hands.
Mike
|
1260.3 | | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Thu Aug 15 1996 14:46 | 1 |
| Gee... I hope it translates well.....
|
1260.4 | Why correct spelling is important | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Aug 15 1996 14:48 | 7 |
| > Eclessiastics
Are you referring to Ecclesiastes or Ecclesiasticus?
Which book?
/john
|
1260.5 | | DELNI::MCCAULEY | | Thu Aug 15 1996 15:02 | 14 |
| John,
I was hoping you would pipe in and help me with my spelling. I
remember you always as I struggle with Isaiah. I always have to think
about and even write it both ways. Is it an "a" surronded by two "i's"
or an "i" surronded by two "a's"
It is Ecclesiastes to which I refered. The book of the OT and not the
apaaocrapha.
|
1260.6 | | ALFSS1::BENSON | Eternal Weltanschauung | Thu Aug 15 1996 15:24 | 42 |
|
Hi Patricia,
>Eclessiastics gives new meaning to the question of why the
>contradictions or at least apparent contradictions within scripture.
>Even if we assume that God, masterminded the canonization process, why
>would s/he produce a set of scripture that was puzzling and ambiguous
>rather than more direct and clear?
I'm certain that I'm not up to date on discussion in other topics,
which I assume provides the context for why you think Ecc. is an
example of contradictions, so for my sake will you tell me to what you
allude above?
>why is there not just one Gospel with a more precise definition of
>Christ and a more precise description of his life.
> Patricia
If we stick with your assumption above, that God is the author of the
canonization of Scripture, then the question I have for you, is on what
basis do you indirectly declare that "one Gospel" is better than four?
Once one presupposes God as the author of the Bible and the definer of
the canon, then one must submit all thoughts to God, including what is
best in terms of revealing Christ.
I will suggest that the number of Gospels is directly related to the
value of witnesses as God has defined it broadly in reality (i.e. our
beliefs and understanding of facts, for example, are largely tied very
closely to processes related to witnessing/communication). I will also
suggest that God has provided His revelation of Himself in history, as
recorded in Scripture, through revealing Himself through prophetic
methods/statements then providing interpretation of those statements
thorugh subsequent revelation. We have this record which He has
chosen, in the Scriptures, and there would be no other reliable method
for witnessing throughout the ages.
jeff
|
1260.7 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Mon Aug 19 1996 10:34 | 28 |
| I was listening to a news spot on the radio the other day. The issue
was the management of forests in Maine. The environmentalists wanted
to legislate restrictrions on the tree harvest while the paper
companies did not want the restrictions. The paper companies said
that there are 35% more trees in Maine today than in 1959 thanks to
responsible management, implying that it's been steadily increasing
since then. The rebuttle mentioned that 1959 was chosen because there
were several unchecked forest fires in Maine that year, a great deal of
damage from insects all on top of unthrottles harvest of what was left...
an unusually bad year for trees in Maine. He went on to say that the
tree population has been declining of late and that it's headed for
disaster.
But what does all this have to do with the Bible?
The paper companies data mined the facts. They picked and chose the
particular pieces that would bolster their cause while conveniently
ignoring the rest. What they presented "worked" for their cause but
was in fact misleading. The potential for this sort of thing happening
increases with the richness of the data source. Beware of "data mining"
the Bible when finding hidden truths or reconcilling contradictions.
The Bible is rich in stories, metaphors, parables, fact and some may say
fiction. What you come up with may seem to meet your objective, but that
doesn't make it the truth. Remember Jimmy Jones and David Koresch.
-dave
|
1260.8 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Madison...5'2'' 95 lbs. | Mon Aug 19 1996 11:38 | 13 |
| Jim Jones and David Koresh both took hold to the claim of messiahship.
This is no great feat since there were about 25 or so proclaimed
messiahs roaming about Jerusalem during the life of Christ. The Koresh
and Jones incidents were bolstered because they appealled to
individuals who lacked the wisdom to understand scripture in its whole
text. This is why I cringe when people avoid understanding Revelations
and other books due to the hardness of such messages God brings forth.
Read scripture, grow in wisdom, understand who Satan is and how Satan
will come into the world. Subjectivism IS bible mining. Jesus was NOT
a martyr for his cause.
-Jack
|
1260.9 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Mon Aug 19 1996 14:12 | 12 |
| Interpreting anything, biblical or otherwise, is a practice in being
subjective. The more one "mines", the less accurate the results are
liable to be. My intent was to caution the interpreter in accepting
heavily mined "discovered truths" as being facts. They may be artifacts.
It seems like resolving biblical contradictions is an unenviable task.
The more you mine for answers, the less believable the explanation
becomes. When working in a system where contradiction is defined not
to exist, I guess you do the best you can.
|
1260.10 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Mon Aug 19 1996 14:25 | 4 |
| Re: -1
I don't see it that way at all. When you use the Bible in the way it
was intended to be used, the apparent contradictions disappear.
|
1260.11 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Mon Aug 19 1996 14:55 | 4 |
| I submit that from the perspective of the ardent believer, the
contradictions cannot, by definition, exist in the first place.
They don't "disappear" because they were never considered to be
contradictions, just puzzles.
|
1260.12 | | BIGQ::SILVA | quince.ljo.dec.com/www/decplus/ | Mon Aug 19 1996 17:15 | 9 |
| | <<< Note 1260.10 by PHXSS1::HEISER "watchman on the wall" >>>
| I don't see it that way at all. When you use the Bible in the way it
| was intended to be used, the apparent contradictions disappear.
Mike, you can only imagine how the inteded use of the Bible. Because
even you would agree I'm sure that no 2 people are ever going to agree 100% on
every little thing on the inteded use, on interpretations, etc. So what you
said above only holds true to one person... you.
|
1260.13 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Mon Aug 19 1996 17:24 | 3 |
| Not true, Glen. the size of the largest denominations around show that
many people can agree on everything the Bible presents. Especially
when it comes to the only matter that really counts: salvation.
|
1260.14 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Mon Aug 19 1996 18:01 | 6 |
| I know of many who belong to a large denomination and do not see
eye-to-eye with other members as well as established doctrine of their
church. Catholic gays/lesbians for example (not that I want to open
that can of worms in this string).
-dave
|
1260.15 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Mon Aug 19 1996 18:26 | 4 |
| Re: -1
that's a minority in Catholicism. More of them see eye-to-eye than
those who don't.
|
1260.16 | | BIGQ::SILVA | quince.ljo.dec.com/www/decplus/ | Mon Aug 19 1996 20:54 | 13 |
| | <<< Note 1260.13 by PHXSS1::HEISER "watchman on the wall" >>>
| Not true, Glen. the size of the largest denominations around show that
| many people can agree on everything the Bible presents. Especially
| when it comes to the only matter that really counts: salvation.
Mike, I may believe this is something you think, but don't fool
yourself. The ONLY one who knows what is right in every aspect is God Himself.
Therefor, everyone else can not agree 100% on everything. Because we all have
some sort of difference.
Glen
|
1260.17 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Every knee shall bow | Mon Aug 19 1996 21:48 | 13 |
|
And so we're back to "we're just left here to figure it out and we may
get it right, and we may get it wrong..we'll just find out in the end".
Let's see..we have standards for weights and measures, we have standards
for what is and what is not acceptable to pass from one grade to another,
standards for entry into college, standards for this job or that..but on
the question of where we spend eternity, of what is and what is not expected
of us by our Creator, we are just left here to guess, right?
Jim
|
1260.18 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Tue Aug 20 1996 09:56 | 24 |
| Re .15 (Mike)
>that's a minority in Catholicism. More of them see eye-to-eye than
> those who don't.
Not true at all. Believers disagree on issues of abortion, birth
control, women as priests, homosexuality, what the eucharist really is,
whether Noah's ark was fiction or not... a thousand things. I'd say
that you'd be hard pressed to find two people who think exactly alike
on all of the issues. Look at this conference.
Re .17 (Jim)
Yes. There doesn't seem to be a standard. That might be because things
like weights and measures are known to be something "created" by
people. There is no objective truth to find or know. The mundane
standards are whatever we define them to be. But searching for God!
Now that's another story.
-dave
|
1260.19 | | BIGQ::SILVA | quince.ljo.dec.com/www/decplus/ | Tue Aug 20 1996 10:25 | 44 |
| | <<< Note 1260.17 by CSLALL::HENDERSON "Every knee shall bow" >>>
| And so we're back to "we're just left here to figure it out and we may
| get it right, and we may get it wrong..we'll just find out in the end".
If you think about it, how can it be any other way, Jim? There is only
one absolute when it comes to knowledge, understanding, interpreting, right?
That's Him. Would you agree on that?
Let's just say the Bible is 100% innerant for arguments sake. That is
the standard. But is there any way we are going to fully understand the thing?
I don't think we can. And no matter what standard God has laid out, it would be
the same. Do you think the path He wants us to take is absolute? I do. Do you
think we follow it like an absolute? I don't. I think we, being humans, go off
on our own paths from time to time. And I think the same happens for those who
interpret the Bible.
| Let's see..we have standards for weights and measures,
Metric or inches?
| we have standards for what is and what is not acceptable to pass from one
| grade to another,
And how many pass on anyway? I mean, people graduate who can't read or
write.
| standards for entry into college,
And how many times are those bent for scholarships, etc?
| standards for this job or that..
Oh come on, Jim.... there are few jobs that have strict standards.
There is no ONE standard for a job.
What you have done is help me illustrate that what you may think is a
standard has so many other things involved to show they are far from an
absolute.
Glen
|
1260.20 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Every knee shall bow | Tue Aug 20 1996 10:32 | 49 |
|
>| Let's see..we have standards for weights and measures,
> Metric or inches?
The point, which apparently has eluded you, is that there is a standard
to which one can refer if there is any question as to the correct measurement,
be it inches, centimeters, feet, miles, furlongs, acres, quarts, pints,
gallons, litres, etc.
>| we have standards for what is and what is not acceptable to pass from one
>| grade to another,
> And how many pass on anyway? I mean, people graduate who can't read or
>write.
Is there, or is there not a standard? I didn't ask who adhered to it, I
stated that there is a standard.
> Oh come on, Jim.... there are few jobs that have strict standards.
>There is no ONE standard for a job.
Hot Dog! I can be an airline pilot? I've had no training, but since there
are no standards, I can be one anyway!
> What you have done is help me illustrate that what you may think is a
>standard has so many other things involved to show they are far from an
>absolute.
you have illustrated your refusal to accept the authenticity and authority
of the Word of God.
Jim
|
1260.21 | | BIGQ::SILVA | quince.ljo.dec.com/www/decplus/ | Tue Aug 20 1996 11:28 | 31 |
| | <<< Note 1260.20 by CSLALL::HENDERSON "Every knee shall bow" >>>
| The point, which apparently has eluded you, is that there is a standard
| to which one can refer if there is any question as to the correct measurement,
| be it inches, centimeters, feet, miles, furlongs, acres, quarts, pints,
| gallons, litres, etc.
But no ONE standard, which is what you are trying to say the Bible is.
And with the standards that MAN created, can not be compared to someone who is
perfect. How do we know our standards are correct? Because we say so. Will that
pass for a standard that God has? I don't think so.
| you have illustrated your refusal to accept the authenticity and authority
| of the Word of God.
No, I have shown that a human standard thought up by a human can not be
100% correct. Another example of this would be a car. It is designed. It is
approved. It is thought to be perfect. Then there are sometimes slight
deviations from the plans, sometimes there are problems due to mistakes that
weren't originally seen. There are so many different possibilities for these
things because humans are involved. We can't say a standard that WE developed
is absolute. And we can't say that if the Bible is ineerant, that we have it
down 100%. Only One can do anything absolute. Humans can not.
Glen
|
1260.22 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Tue Aug 20 1996 11:39 | 28 |
| There's a big difference between addressing human defined standards and
something like a search for the truth... God. Even though we may not
agree on what standard to use (e.g. inches or cm), we agree that both
are valid, workable and true. They're just artifacts we concocted as
tools.
There is no standard in the search for God. IMO, there's no evidence
that God (whatever (s)he is) has left anything to assist us in this
endevour. Look at the title of this string. It's true. The Bible
is ambiguous and confussing. The Koran is just as bad. Same for all
the rest.
If God REALLY wanted us to know him/her, you'd think he/she would
provide exceedingly clear evidence for everyone to tap into. If Jesus
was the messanger, then where is he for us here inthe 20th century?
No vague descriptions about how he's here "in spirit" or "in your
heart"... where is he? No vague accountings of a man who lived 2
millenia ago, accountings which can provide a flavor of the man only.
I mean God can do better than that! WHERE'S THE BEEF!!! If God just
can't manage to get Jesus here again in the flesh, then what about a
VCR tape or something. The Bible? Come On. From the standpoint of
responsible reporting, that paper gets... well, in the interest of not
offending any more than I already have, I'll keep the grade to myself.
Sorry for venting like that. It needed to be said.
-dave
|
1260.23 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Every knee shall bow | Tue Aug 20 1996 12:01 | 19 |
|
> If God REALLY wanted us to know him/her, you'd think he/she would
> provide exceedingly clear evidence for everyone to tap into. If Jesus
> was the messanger, then where is he for us here inthe 20th century?
God could step right into the 20th century world today, and He would
still be rejected, because most of humanity would refuse to accept
that they are sinners, and that their sin separates them from the God
who created them. That is the crux of the matter. It is clear that
even after the destruction described in Revelation, after God has
presented Himself, that people will continue to reject Him.
Jim
|
1260.24 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Tue Aug 20 1996 12:34 | 21 |
| I dunno Jim. People would be willing to follow if there were clear
signs. People followed Jim Jones, David Koresh and the rest of those
assholes. That's how desperate they are. They want something real.
They're tired of fighting over what the Bible might and might not say.
It's a quagmire or ancient verbage that's confussing, ambiguous,
unclear and just plain unacceptable by any means other than faith.
They're tired of living day to day with automobiles and computers while
being told that they should believe in Noah's Ark. They just don't
jive. And people are tired of trying to live double lives.
Lack of clear signs are evident in the the number of different religions
in the world, moreso when you look at how major religions are ferther
fragmented. Some regard the whole thing as being so pathetic they give
up and become atheists. Others go and build/create their own religion
because the existing ones are too many, too confussing, too
unbelievable and often too vague.
There's a serious lack of real leadership here. I'm talking about
leadership from above.
-dave
|
1260.25 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Every knee shall bow | Tue Aug 20 1996 13:08 | 33 |
|
> I dunno Jim. People would be willing to follow if there were clear
> signs. People followed Jim Jones, David Koresh and the rest of those
> assholes. That's how desperate they are. They want something real.
> They're tired of fighting over what the Bible might and might not say.
> It's a quagmire or ancient verbage that's confussing, ambiguous,
> unclear and just plain unacceptable by any means other than faith.
> They're tired of living day to day with automobiles and computers while
> being told that they should believe in Noah's Ark. They just don't
> jive. And people are tired of trying to live double lives.
Noah's Ark has much to say about society today..go back and read the
account of what was happening then, even as people were being warned
of impending destruction.
It begins with Romans 3:23 "for all have sinned and fall short of
the glory of God".
Dave, have you ever just prayed and said "God, I really don't know
if you are there or not. My heart is full of questions, and there
seem to be so many answers"? God is a rewarder of those who dilligently
seek Him. And I believe if you pray with an honest heart, He will answer
you.
Jim
|
1260.26 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Aug 20 1996 13:42 | 12 |
| | Not true at all. Believers disagree on issues of abortion, birth
| control, women as priests, homosexuality, what the eucharist really is,
| whether Noah's ark was fiction or not... a thousand things. I'd say
| that you'd be hard pressed to find two people who think exactly alike
| on all of the issues. Look at this conference.
Dave, you have examples of 2 or more right in this conference. For the
Catholics, you have John and Eric who agree on every topic I've
discussed with them. Others have said the same about Jim, Jack, Jeff,
and even myself and those over in CHRISTIAN.
Mike
|
1260.27 | Black & White in a Gray world | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Aug 20 1996 13:48 | 13 |
| | If you think about it, how can it be any other way, Jim? There is only
|one absolute when it comes to knowledge, understanding, interpreting, right?
|That's Him. Would you agree on that?
I think the real problem is how much of the world's gray areas we've
allowed to seep into our thought process. The more you see things as
black and white (i.e., wrong and right) the less problems you have with
the Bible. If you're into justifying and rationalizing everything in
life, introducing all sorts of gray areas, you are going to have a big
problem with the Bible. this falls back to the contrast of the
carnal/natural person vs. the spiritual person in 1 Corinthians 2.
Mike
|
1260.28 | | BIGQ::SILVA | quince.ljo.dec.com/www/decplus/ | Tue Aug 20 1996 13:58 | 10 |
|
Mike, anyone could see something as black and white. But guess what? It
doesn't make what one sees as black, really black. Same goes for white. A
perfect example of this would be the KKK. They feel they are correct in their
thinking. They see things as either right or wrong. If you're <insert white,
etc>, it's right. If you're anything else, it's wrong.
It still comes down to He has all the answers. We can't even come
close.
|
1260.29 | | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Tue Aug 20 1996 14:03 | 12 |
| > I think the real problem is how much of the world's gray areas we've
> allowed to seep into our thought process. The more you see things as
> black and white (i.e., wrong and right) the less problems you have with
> the Bible. If you're into justifying and rationalizing everything in
The only problem is, the world isn't just black and white.
And, yes. Life is a lot "simpler" if people choose to ignore
the reality of the world and see everything in black and white
terms.
Tom
|
1260.30 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Madison...5'2'' 95 lbs. | Tue Aug 20 1996 14:05 | 18 |
| Z They're tired of fighting over what the Bible might and might not say.
Z It's a quagmire or ancient verbage that's confussing, ambiguous,
Dave, since Jones and Koresh both made the claim to messiahship, (which
by the way brought them to horrible ends I might add), it leads me to
conclude that the members of these churches had absolutely no
understanding of the dispensations of the gospels and the end times.
One need only read Jesus words in Matthew 23 and 24 to avoid such
churches.
Dave, in all honesty, I believe you are making something easy very
complicated...I also find it interesting you keep pondering over the
credibility of the account of the ark...something that is quite
believable in relation to the many miracles the world takes for
granted...the resurrection which is something we commemorate every
year as an example.
-Jack
|
1260.31 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Aug 20 1996 14:07 | 17 |
| | provide exceedingly clear evidence for everyone to tap into. If Jesus
| was the messanger, then where is he for us here inthe 20th century?
He's in the hearts of His children, those who have called upon Him as
Lord and Savior.
| No vague descriptions about how he's here "in spirit" or "in your
| heart"... where is he? No vague accountings of a man who lived 2
| millenia ago, accountings which can provide a flavor of the man only.
| I mean God can do better than that! WHERE'S THE BEEF!!! If God just
| can't manage to get Jesus here again in the flesh, then what about a
| VCR tape or something. The Bible? Come On. From the standpoint of
| responsible reporting, that paper gets... well, in the interest of not
| offending any more than I already have, I'll keep the grade to myself.
Well according to God's Word, you may get your wish sooner than you
think.
|
1260.32 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Tue Aug 20 1996 14:12 | 32 |
| Re .26 (Mike)
So you're saying that these people see all religious doctrine, all
biblical interpretation, all religious moral issues in exactly that
same way? That can't be said for any individual from day to day, never
mind from person to person.
Re .25 (Jim)
With regard to Noah's Ark, I was referring to the physical aspects of
the story. For me it's tough to declare science as being wrong in
it's evaluation of the story while typing away on a computer. And if
the physical aspects are considered an exaggeration, then a precedent
has been set for selective acceptance of bible as fact. The floodgates
of doubt have just been opened.
>Dave, have you ever just prayed and said "God, I really don't know...
Ohhhhhhhhh..... have I prayed. For some 20 years now. It doesn't
work. I sincerely wish that it did, but it doesn't. Maybe it's not
supposed to, at least not for me. So I've come to consider other
sources. Maybe I can only see the truth through an eastern lens. To be
perfectly honest, that approach seems far more palletable. But I'm
still wide open to truth coming from any source... biblical, prayer,
churches, notes conferences... anything.
-dave
|
1260.33 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Every knee shall bow | Tue Aug 20 1996 14:18 | 19 |
|
> >Dave, have you ever just prayed and said "God, I really don't know...
> Ohhhhhhhhh..... have I prayed. For some 20 years now. It doesn't
> work. I sincerely wish that it did, but it doesn't. Maybe it's not
> supposed to, at least not for me. So I've come to consider other
Perhaps it has worked and you don't know it. There are plenty of folks
(Mike, Mr. Crews, etc) who have been sharing much about God with you.
Jim
|
1260.34 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Tue Aug 20 1996 14:31 | 27 |
| Re .30 (Jack)
Many of the followers of Jones/Koresh/Others were good, well meaning
people. They studied the Bible but might have failed to interpret the
particular passage you cited the way you did. They wanted a leader.
They were hungry for a leader. They followed someone who looked like a
leader. Were they wrong? Sure. So what was their real, living,
physical leader sent from heaven? One that they can related to
outside of reading a book? They followed who was available in lack of
a better alternative.
I'm not defending these people or their actions. I won't battle over
how to interpret the bible in this matter. I am citing the fact that
basically good people fell astray for lack of clear leadership. ANd
some of them were mere children.
Re .31 (Mike)
>Well according to God's Word, you may get your wish sooner than you
>think
Is that it? God saith "Believe in me or burn". Is fear the foundation
someone should build a belief in God on? Not to say that it doesn't
work. I mean that's the game Hitler played and almost won with.
-dave
|
1260.35 | but then i wonder about my own, too | RDVAX::ANDREWS | Miss Otis regrets.. | Tue Aug 20 1996 14:32 | 13 |
| re:26
while John and Eric may very well agree on the topics that you'd
discussed with them, Mike... i certainly don't and i consider myself
Catholic.
and while i most certainly respect John Covert's opinions, i know that
he is a member of a small minority within the Episcopal Church..for
example, the status of women within our Church and abortion. i have on
more than one occasion wondered why someone who holds the opinions that
he does remains rather than convert to Roman Catholicism.
peter
|
1260.36 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Aug 20 1996 15:37 | 16 |
| | Is that it? God saith "Believe in me or burn". Is fear the foundation
| someone should build a belief in God on? Not to say that it doesn't
| work. I mean that's the game Hitler played and almost won with.
I meant that you will get to see Him sooner than you think. Didn't say
anything about where you spend eternity. The signs will be there for
you to make a decision before His actual arrival. When Jim, Jack, and
myself are gone, and a world leader sets himself up in the 3rd Temple
of Jerusalem as god, that will be a major hint for you that the time is
near. Your best bet is to heed the words of Christ now:
John 20:29
"Jesus saith unto him, Thomas, because thou hast seen me, thou hast
believed: blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have believed."
Mike
|
1260.37 | | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Tue Aug 20 1996 15:59 | 12 |
| | Is that it? God saith "Believe in me or burn". Is fear the foundation
Well, from Mike's reply, I guess that *is* it.
Nothing about learning to love one another. Nothing about community
or communion or healthy living. It appears that some people have
one and only one goal in their life: to keep their respective
butts out of hell.
Is this a church that only thinks about death?
Tom
|
1260.38 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Aug 20 1996 16:05 | 17 |
| | Nothing about learning to love one another. Nothing about community
Love is sending your only Son to die for the world so that they might
be saved while knowing full well that the majority will reject Him
anyway.
Love is the fellowship among the community of believers who have chosen
to accept the Son. Before Christianity came along, the Greek language
didn't have a term for it. They do know, it's called "koinonia."
| Is this a church that only thinks about death?
Not at all. We rejoice in the assurance of eternal life and the
salvation the Son has brought us now that we've accepted Him. We
worship Him for paying a price that we could never pay.
Mike
|
1260.39 | | BIGQ::SILVA | quince.ljo.dec.com/www/decplus/ | Tue Aug 20 1996 16:21 | 8 |
| | <<< Note 1260.38 by PHXSS1::HEISER "watchman on the wall" >>>
| Love is sending your only Son to die for the world so that they might be
| saved while knowing full well that the majority will reject Him anyway.
Now put it into how humans can achieve this.
|
1260.40 | | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Tue Aug 20 1996 16:35 | 19 |
| > Love is sending your only Son to die for the world so that they might
> be saved while knowing full well that the majority will reject Him
> anyway.
What? So we shouldn't bother trying? If that's such a tough
act to follow then why should we bother?
> Not at all. We rejoice in the assurance of eternal life and the
> salvation the Son has brought us now that we've accepted Him. We
> worship Him for paying a price that we could never pay.
These seem like hollow words coming from you. All I've see from
you is how you're going to get out of here when/if the "stuff"
hits the fan.
That's not based on love. That's based on fear. No wonder it
bugs you when I talk about love.
Tom
|
1260.41 | you ask the impossible | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Aug 20 1996 16:35 | 3 |
| re: -1
you can't.
|
1260.42 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Aug 20 1996 16:53 | 37 |
| Tom,
| What? So we shouldn't bother trying? If that's such a tough
| act to follow then why should we bother?
the point is that there is nothing you can do, the price was paid for
you. All you have to do is accept Him into your life. It's too easy
for most people. People have been thinking for years that there is
something they must do. Most people can't relate to a God of love who
would die for His children and save them for just accepting Him into
their hearts.
| These seem like hollow words coming from you. All I've see from
| you is how you're going to get out of here when/if the "stuff"
| hits the fan.
Your words are even more hollow since you don't know anything about me.
You don't know of the testimonies of the Christians in here. You don't
know of their hurts, sufferings, sacrifices, harassment, and persecution
that Christians go through to serve Him. You don't know the
testimonies of how God has healed them, blessed them, and has had mercy
on them in the toughest of circumstances. You don't know of the
Christian joy and peace in the midst of any circumstance, the
incredible delight in helping to bring a lost soul to the full saving
knowledge of Jesus Christ, and the koinonia of all born again Christians.
God in His Word has stated that He has not destined His children to
wrath. If He wanted me to remain throughout the tribulation, I would,
even knowing that it would be painful as well as fatal. This isn't a
concern for someone who has a personal relationship with Christ. We
have a bigger perspective of what is temporal and what is eternal.
God's love for His children will keep them from Jacob's trouble.
| That's not based on love. That's based on fear. No wonder it
| bugs you when I talk about love.
Where do you get this stuff?!
|
1260.43 | | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Tue Aug 20 1996 17:14 | 31 |
| And the words go round and round....
First you say:
> the point is that there is nothing you can do, the price was paid for
> you. All you have to do is accept Him into your life. It's too easy
Then you say:
> You don't
> know of their hurts, sufferings, sacrifices, harassment, and persecution
> that Christians go through to serve Him. You don't know the
So which is it? Do you have to do work or don't you? Do you
have to actually "serve" Him, which implies *work* or do you
just kick back and hang out?
The parable of the master who gave his servents 10, 5 and 1 coin(s)
before he left comes to mind. He was really ticked at the last one
who didn't do anything with what he was given.
>| That's not based on love. That's based on fear. No wonder it
>| bugs you when I talk about love.
>
> Where do you get this stuff?!
Threats of enternal hell are the only thing I've seen you use to
bolster your position. It's not the gospel of life or of love.
It's hollow. It's fear. It's dead.
Tom
|
1260.44 | | ALFSS1::BENSON | Eternal Weltanschauung | Tue Aug 20 1996 17:16 | 26 |
| Hi Dave,
>Interpreting anything, biblical or otherwise, is a practice in being
>subjective. The more one "mines", the less accurate the results are
>liable to be. My intent was to caution the interpreter in accepting
>heavily mined "discovered truths" as being facts. They may be artifacts.
I disagree completely and so does science. There are objective
means for interpreting language. The whole discipline of linguistics,
for example, is based upon that premise.
>It seems like resolving biblical contradictions is an unenviable task.
>The more you mine for answers, the less believable the explanation
>becomes. When working in a system where contradiction is defined not
>to exist, I guess you do the best you can.
Are you referring to internal contradictions or external
contradictions? Will you give me some examples? Also, your assertion
that the system used to interpret the Bible denies the concept of
contradiction or the possibility of contradiction in the Scriptures is
patently false. On what basis do you make such an assertion?
jeff
|
1260.45 | | PHXSS1::HEISER | watchman on the wall | Tue Aug 20 1996 17:17 | 5 |
| Salvation is a free gift. You serve Him out of gratitude. Love is
what saved us, not fear of death. I felt no fear when I asked Him into
my life. I felt overwhelming joy and gratitude.
Mike
|
1260.46 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Every knee shall bow | Tue Aug 20 1996 17:19 | 26 |
|
>| Is that it? God saith "Believe in me or burn". Is fear the foundation
> Well, from Mike's reply, I guess that *is* it.
> Nothing about learning to love one another. Nothing about community
> or communion or healthy living. It appears that some people have
> one and only one goal in their life: to keep their respective
> butts out of hell.
> Is this a church that only thinks about death?
What you don't seem to understand, is, according to the Bible the
first step is being saved. Once that is accomplished, what you
alude to above becomes part of one's life as they grow.
Perhaps it would help if you were to visit a good New Testament, Bible
preaching church, that teaches salvation, that teaches serving, that teaches
growth in the love and knowledge of the saviour, rather than pontificating
such as what you mention above.
Jim
|
1260.47 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Tue Aug 20 1996 21:54 | 5 |
| re .35
Because I couldn't stood it ifn we left all the good music to da debbil.
/john
|
1260.48 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Wed Aug 21 1996 12:24 | 73 |
| Re .44 (Jeff)
It's against my better judgement, but here goes...
>I disagree completely and so does science.
I'm sure you disagree. I'm sure science doesn't. Reducing subjectivism
is one focus of science. It's understood that it can never be
eliminated.
>There are objective means for interpreting language.
The means may be objective but the interpretations are subjective. It's
unavoidable.
>Are you referring to internal contradictions or external
Internal. If everyting in the Bible is declared as being true, then
internal contradictions cannot exist. Note that I'm talking about
objective contradictions, not subjective "apparent" contradictions.
>Also, your assertion that the system used to interpret the Bible denies
>the concept of contradiction or the possibility of contradiction in the
>Scriptures is patently false.
Not sure what you're talking about. I'm asserting that the ferther you
move away from direct interpretation (the more "cross referencing",
"tapping other sources inside the bible", "linking stories via
keywords", etc...) then the less probable the explanation represents the
truth. Let me restate (cuz I know we have a problem with interpreting
each other). The more complicated and indirect one's explanation, the
less likely it's true. This applies to matters inside and outside the
Bible.
>On what basis do you make such an assertion?
Common sense and common experience.
>Will you give me some examples?
Correct me on the details to follow if you feel it necessary...
Matthew ans Mark describe the story of the ressurection as the two
Marys going to the tomb, seeing a single angel, bumping into Jesus on
their way to the disciples, telling the disciples, disciples visited by
Jesus once. Luke's description has Peter and a couple others going to
tht tomb and finding it empty, them the Marys stop in and see two
angels, bump into Jesus, go to the disciples who visits them once.
John's version has the two Marys being the first to arrive, seeing two
angels, bumping into Jesus, telling the disciples, Peter and a couple
others go to the tomb after that, and Jesus spends days with the disciples.
One angel or two?
Who got there first, the Marys or Peter and friends?
Did Jesus visit with the disciples once then vanish (I think vanish was
in Luke's account) or did he come and go over the course of many days?
I seem to remember in another string, there were even more
discrepencies cited. Jesus as spirit, walking through walls vs Jesus
as man eating food. Jesus appearing only to the disciples once vs
roaming around Jeruselem over the course of days. Not sure of where
those folks got their info.
WHen you address this, remember that the more elaborate your
explanation, the less believable it becomes.
-dave
|