rusmeister wrote:I'm a little confused. I'm not even trying to convince you that Jesus is God - only that He said He is.
Yes. I just wanted try to keep the conversation along those lines. Other readers might have tried to jump in, and jump ahead.
rusmeister wrote:"Before Abraham was, I AM" - the sacred name of God. (John 8:51-59)
OK, that's pretty good. That's quite a claim. Heh.
rusmeister wrote:"Are you, then, the Son of God? So he said to them, "You rightly say that I am."(Luke 22:67-71) Also Mark 154:61-64, Matthew 26:63-65
Well, who
isn't the son (or daughter) or God? And even if Jesus was saying something more - that he's
literally God's son, the way Danny is my son - that's not saying he
is God. Still, the first quote is good.
rusmeister wrote:As to the thing about Satan tempting Jesus, it helps to understand what it would mean for a being to have both a human and a divine nature. To be not "simply God" or "simply man". That makes the human side of Jesus comprehensible - and is the essence of the Incarnation - that God really did become Man - not just 'a God in man's clothing'.
That's certainly a good distinction. (Still, how successful could Satan have expected to be? Is he an idiot?)
rusmeister wrote:Your third point has a hole in it (as expressed) - rather the logical leap from "I have no reason to believe in anything supernatural" to the conclusion that anything supernatural about Christ is false. The most that you can say is "could be false", but unless you start from a premise that there is no (can be no) such thing as "supernatural - a statement that itself I find to be unsupportable, you cannot conclude that supernatural is false. Is it not curious that regarding the most influential figure in human history, you are ready to accept that He said the things attributed to Him, but not the deeds attributed to Him - a rather selective choice of what you will accept? For He was so influential for a reason, and it seems improbable that a mere collection of wise sayings - of which I can point to a number of such wise men and their sayings - really explains the extent of Christ's influence.
For me, it seems obvious that the universe is finite, and therefore limited, and that anything beyond those limits (outside of the closed system) would be literally super (or extra- if you like) natural. The existence of the supernatural is entirely reasonable - granted that it is not subject to empirical testing and you could argue that we do not or cannot know anything about it. But if you accept that you cannot exclude the possibility (I say probability) of the supernatural, I'll be happy enough.
Yes, of course. All you say is true. I do not say "There is no God." I do not say "There is nothing beyond the limits of our finite universe." I do not say "Humans are the highest/most advanced form of live in existence." I do not rule out the possibility of things without reason. But, neither do I
believe in them without reason. With no reason to believe the things you believe, I'm hardly likely to base my world-view on them.
rusmeister wrote:...you are ready to accept that He said the things attributed to Him, but not the deeds attributed to Him...
No, I'm not ready to accept that He said the things attributed to Him. I'm just trying to find out what actually
is attributed to Him. As opposed to what I sort of think I heard once, but don't know if I'm remembering it correctly.