seekandlisten, i really am unable to comprehend what you actually believe in - you seem to be taking too many stances at once. I hope you'd help my confusion here -
1) In some cases, you consider absolutely accepted scientific facts that are observable even now as insufficient.
In these cases, you are willing to accept the religious view in faith while rejecting what the scientific intelligentsia have to say about it. Eg: Your belief in Jesus Christ's resurrection. I think people staying dead after passing away is accepted as fact and observable evidence today and yet you choose to ignore it.
2) In some other cases, you choose to embrace the scientific evidences and rail against faith or rather 'blind faith' as you would call it.
Is there a reasoning behind this that I don't see now?
I've read of your tolerance for other's beliefs in your posts elsewhere. So I'm assuming you wouldn't be against any beliefs that I choose to have and wouldn't impose your faith or beliefs on me.
Now, Principle is defined as any basic truth or proposition. These principles may range from truths revealed by God to specific purposed ordinances. Doctrine is any such principle or set of principles that are presented for acceptance and belief. Religion is a combination of such sets of doctrines. That's the pure simple meaning of religion - at least that's the way i perceive it.
So, one could possibly choose to believe in the doctrine of total depravity of human nature, or the doctrine of regeneration or in salvation by grace through faith. It may simply be the belief in Jesus as God (I think it's the doctrine of God-man). It may also range from the belief in holy wars to belief in faith evidenced by good works. Any combination of doctrines that seems complete, internally non-contradictory and externally consistent leads to being defined as a religion.
The hindus believe in the doctrine of rebirth, while the Christians believe in the doctrine of resurrection. And so on and so forth goes the various acceptance of sets of beliefs.
Therefore, when you ask me not to put my faith in religion, to me it sounds like - 'do not put your faith in your set of beliefs'. I don't know if that's what you intended but that's how i perceive it. And this crossing into other's beliefs is what we agreed not to do earlier. So, i believe in certain doctrines that I wholly accept and put my faith in and since these doctrines are what the Christian religion puts forth, I claim to be a Christian who puts his faith in Christianity. If you adopt a different set of doctrines, then you too have a 'religion' in your hands - it just cannot be called Christianity. So your believing in the doctrine of resurrection but not the doctrine of Holy Trinity makes you accept a different set of beliefs apart from what the Christian religion's set of beliefs consists of, thereby making you a non-Christian.
Your argument seems to be about why mere mortal men should decide what set of beliefs are to be compiled together. But that's the very point - mere mortal men didn't pull out these doctrines from mid-air. These were laid out in the written Word of God - the Bible - and all these doctrines are derived only from God-breathed Scripture.
This takes us to your next argument about the Bible not being the Word of God but rather only ordinary writings of men which contains some truths but not perfectly true in itself.
1. Do you believe Jesus was sent by God? Yes/No.
(I read of your belief in His divinity somewhere - so I'd assume this to be a Yes)
2. Do you believe that Jesus knew the Old Testament Scripture thoroughly and even quoted it many times? Yes/No.
3. If yes, then do you believe that if Jesus had doubted the veracity or authenticity of the Scriptures, He would have derided it instead of hailing it? Yes/No.
4. If yes, then how was the Old Testament Scripture perfectly written and compiled - by mere mortal men or by the guidance and inspiration of God?
5. If the OT truth could be preserved perfectly by God, then can't the same happen in the NT Scriptures?
With regard to Jesus quoting OT Scripture -
Joh 5:46 For if you had believed Moses, you would have believed Me, for he wrote of Me.
Joh 5:47 But if you do not believe his writings, how shall you believe My Words?
If we are to believe the writings of Moses, then Genesis is the first of those and creation happens to be the first of Genesis. So yes, I would believe God's account of creation to any other theory/'fact'.
As in Romans 3:4, " But let God be true, and every man a liar "
I hope you don't imagine the account of Jesus Christ to have been manufactured. If so, then how can anyone trust any other teaching of Christ? How can anyone even believe in the resurrection of Jesus?
I'll continue in the next post...
You seem to be holding a dual standard of what 'fact' or 'observable evidence' is.The flood and creation are stories not history and people should be encouraged to find the 'meaning' in these stories rather than take them as 'literal history' when we have evidence that contradicts these as 'facts'.
1) In some cases, you consider absolutely accepted scientific facts that are observable even now as insufficient.
In these cases, you are willing to accept the religious view in faith while rejecting what the scientific intelligentsia have to say about it. Eg: Your belief in Jesus Christ's resurrection. I think people staying dead after passing away is accepted as fact and observable evidence today and yet you choose to ignore it.
2) In some other cases, you choose to embrace the scientific evidences and rail against faith or rather 'blind faith' as you would call it.
Is there a reasoning behind this that I don't see now?
I somehow feel you're misinterpreting what 'religion' actually means.Faith should be put in your 'God', not religion, the bible, or anything else that comes from our world.
I've read of your tolerance for other's beliefs in your posts elsewhere. So I'm assuming you wouldn't be against any beliefs that I choose to have and wouldn't impose your faith or beliefs on me.
Now, Principle is defined as any basic truth or proposition. These principles may range from truths revealed by God to specific purposed ordinances. Doctrine is any such principle or set of principles that are presented for acceptance and belief. Religion is a combination of such sets of doctrines. That's the pure simple meaning of religion - at least that's the way i perceive it.
So, one could possibly choose to believe in the doctrine of total depravity of human nature, or the doctrine of regeneration or in salvation by grace through faith. It may simply be the belief in Jesus as God (I think it's the doctrine of God-man). It may also range from the belief in holy wars to belief in faith evidenced by good works. Any combination of doctrines that seems complete, internally non-contradictory and externally consistent leads to being defined as a religion.
The hindus believe in the doctrine of rebirth, while the Christians believe in the doctrine of resurrection. And so on and so forth goes the various acceptance of sets of beliefs.
Therefore, when you ask me not to put my faith in religion, to me it sounds like - 'do not put your faith in your set of beliefs'. I don't know if that's what you intended but that's how i perceive it. And this crossing into other's beliefs is what we agreed not to do earlier. So, i believe in certain doctrines that I wholly accept and put my faith in and since these doctrines are what the Christian religion puts forth, I claim to be a Christian who puts his faith in Christianity. If you adopt a different set of doctrines, then you too have a 'religion' in your hands - it just cannot be called Christianity. So your believing in the doctrine of resurrection but not the doctrine of Holy Trinity makes you accept a different set of beliefs apart from what the Christian religion's set of beliefs consists of, thereby making you a non-Christian.
Your argument seems to be about why mere mortal men should decide what set of beliefs are to be compiled together. But that's the very point - mere mortal men didn't pull out these doctrines from mid-air. These were laid out in the written Word of God - the Bible - and all these doctrines are derived only from God-breathed Scripture.
This takes us to your next argument about the Bible not being the Word of God but rather only ordinary writings of men which contains some truths but not perfectly true in itself.
All i get as response for what i'd written is a sarcastic opinionated remark - so very unlike you. You've ignored all the reasoning that I put forth and have simply stuck to your beliefs. So let me put forth my reasoning again in a direct format.Yeah, men were 'inspired' by 'God' to write scripture. I'm pretty sure it wasn't referring only to Constantine's council approved bible though.
1. Do you believe Jesus was sent by God? Yes/No.
(I read of your belief in His divinity somewhere - so I'd assume this to be a Yes)
2. Do you believe that Jesus knew the Old Testament Scripture thoroughly and even quoted it many times? Yes/No.
3. If yes, then do you believe that if Jesus had doubted the veracity or authenticity of the Scriptures, He would have derided it instead of hailing it? Yes/No.
4. If yes, then how was the Old Testament Scripture perfectly written and compiled - by mere mortal men or by the guidance and inspiration of God?
5. If the OT truth could be preserved perfectly by God, then can't the same happen in the NT Scriptures?
With regard to Jesus quoting OT Scripture -
Joh 5:46 For if you had believed Moses, you would have believed Me, for he wrote of Me.
Joh 5:47 But if you do not believe his writings, how shall you believe My Words?
If we are to believe the writings of Moses, then Genesis is the first of those and creation happens to be the first of Genesis. So yes, I would believe God's account of creation to any other theory/'fact'.
As in Romans 3:4, " But let God be true, and every man a liar "
I hope you don't imagine the account of Jesus Christ to have been manufactured. If so, then how can anyone trust any other teaching of Christ? How can anyone even believe in the resurrection of Jesus?
I'll continue in the next post...