Barth Jones
Member
The Bible does not contradict itself.
There are certain doctrinal, theological, and other types of conclusions folks everywhere arrive at, that are completely questionable. There are those that clearly contradict Scripture, and also those against which there is no valid argument.
I'd like to discuss those Scriptures having several viable interpretations, especially those cited by "intelligent" church-antagonists as "contradictions"--within--the Bible.
Here, we understand that Scripture is God-breathed. But there are two vital mistakes we tend to make as Christians. First, we dismiss the passages other Christians cite that appear to contradict ours or our church's theology or doctrines. Second, we answer proud unbelievers as they fancy we will--circularly ("the Bible is true and integrated because it says so"). Or worse, we answer honest skeptics unfairly. The default answer isn't circular to believers, because we also have the Holy Spirit who testifies. But it's not a valid argument against the more truly circular, solely human logic.
The bullseye here is to reconcile apparent contradictions as evidenced by internal church segmentation, and by exploitation by church-antagonists. I would like to recommend with emphasis the best means I know of to reconcile apparent contradictions--find the passages that reconcile them (not those "proving" one's own view).
Please, if you hold very "strange" views by the standard of most reputable Christian leadership, as evidenced by their communications with you, refrain here.
And remember, the flow is to reconcile; arguments build dams against the flow.
There are certain doctrinal, theological, and other types of conclusions folks everywhere arrive at, that are completely questionable. There are those that clearly contradict Scripture, and also those against which there is no valid argument.
I'd like to discuss those Scriptures having several viable interpretations, especially those cited by "intelligent" church-antagonists as "contradictions"--within--the Bible.
Here, we understand that Scripture is God-breathed. But there are two vital mistakes we tend to make as Christians. First, we dismiss the passages other Christians cite that appear to contradict ours or our church's theology or doctrines. Second, we answer proud unbelievers as they fancy we will--circularly ("the Bible is true and integrated because it says so"). Or worse, we answer honest skeptics unfairly. The default answer isn't circular to believers, because we also have the Holy Spirit who testifies. But it's not a valid argument against the more truly circular, solely human logic.
The bullseye here is to reconcile apparent contradictions as evidenced by internal church segmentation, and by exploitation by church-antagonists. I would like to recommend with emphasis the best means I know of to reconcile apparent contradictions--find the passages that reconcile them (not those "proving" one's own view).
Please, if you hold very "strange" views by the standard of most reputable Christian leadership, as evidenced by their communications with you, refrain here.
And remember, the flow is to reconcile; arguments build dams against the flow.
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