rusmeister wrote:Fist and Faith wrote:
rusmeister wrote:I think that if someone you TRUSTED witnessed something that sounded improbable, you would give a lot more credence - UNLESS skepticism is your ultimate dogma. WHEN something is written is irrelevant next to that. It couyld've been written three years ago and be equally daft - or reliable, based on whether you know the witness, and how well, or not.
You argue my case. None of us can make any claim to have even slightly known anyone who died 2,000 years ago.
On the contrary. I argue the case that it is extremely probable that the claims made actually WERE witnessed, and believed by people who knew the character of the witnesses.
It's all quite a house of cards.
-The person who claims to have seen or experienced this or that could have been writing metaphorically about what s/he experienced, or contemplated. Those s/he told about it may have taken it as a real event
or a metaphor, but those who
they told are now farther removed from it.
-Even if s/he
did believe something supernatural that didn't happen
did happen those who knew that person cannot corroborate anything other than their assessment of that person's character. That they thought the person who reported it was honest does not come close to establishing that that person witnessed or experienced a miracle.
-Yes, there's the possibility of delusion. I imagine everybody knows what I mean when I say I've thought I heard someone say something, when, in fact, nobody was there. It happens. It happens to others much more frequently than it does to me. (Only a word or two several times in my life, and, coincidentally, the very words I was thinking at the time.) Some people develop mental illnesses later in life, so, one who was always of solid character is now in question.
-Lies. It could happen. Maybe one or another of the Bible's miracles were "witnessed" by someone who was feeling left out. Was every miracle in the Bible witnessed by someone who several people knew to be of unimpeachable character? Or is it possible that any of those people would have been willing to go along with the story for some reason?
That's just a few of the easiest problems I have with assuming a miracle witnessed 2,000 years ago actually happened.
On the flipside, I've never experienced, or known anyone who's experienced, anything that smacks even slightly of the supernatural. The explanation for the miracles you believe took place might be actual miracles, the existence of which can't be supported; or they might be errors of human judgement, misunderstandings, lies, or mental health issues, all of which I have experienced first hand or seen frequently.
rusmeister wrote:Fist and Faith wrote:rusmeister wrote:Exact words? I think you have a point - in some cases. But the general sense of the words? That's a different matter altogether. If you dare to accept ANY history AT ALL as true, then you must accept the general sense of what is reported as having been said. From there it is a short step to events. You can only reject them out of hand if you have an unreasoning dogma AGAINST them possibly - ever - happening. Which puts you in the place of the unreasoning person and the person who accepts the evidence of their senses or of authority that they trust as more reasonable.
I believe the writers of the Bible in the same way I believe Neale Donald Walsch. I don't believe he was writing "WHY! WHY!" out of frustration, and the pen in his hand began writing the words of God in response. I believe he did what he could to make sense of all that happened in his life, and in the world, and wrote of the answers he found and came up with in that particular format.
To believe the events of the Bible - to believe things that
can't happen actually
did, because of supernatural agents - I'd need a little evidence. I've never experienced anything that could remotely be confused for a miracle, and I've never heard anyone describe any miracle
they'd experienced that was at all convincing.
Here the thing that leaps out at me is that you write as if there were not a whole slew of events described in the Bible that historians agree actually happened. From the fall of the Assyrian state to Roman-occupied Jerusalem, Scripture is full of historical events that are agreed upon and confirmed. Mythology does not weave itself into historical record. It is prehistorical at best. What we have with Scripture is miraculous events described on a background of actual historical events. This strange fact does not in itself prove the miraculous, but it casts enormous doubt on the idea that the events described were simply made up.
It doesn't cast enormous doubt on the idea in
my mind. It only reaffirms my observations that many people very badly want to believe in the supernatural. How many people died in Japan recently? Certainly a verifiable event. How easy is it to claim to have seen someone who had been submerged, pinned under debris, for an hour living and talking when the waters receded?
rusmeister wrote:Now if you are speaking specifically of miracles, I still think Lewis's "Miracles" the best response. A person with a dogma that miracles CANNOT be will never see them, no matter what evidence is offered, for the dogma denies the evidence from the beginning.
Rubbish. Show me a miracle, and we'll see what I think of it. That "You wouldn't believe it even if you saw it" doesn't hold any water when you can't show it to me.
rusmeister wrote:I myself have experienced events which may be best classified as positive answer to prayer rather than miracle, although their improbable nature made them seem quite like miracles. If I did not believe in supernatural intervention, I COULD explain them naturally, although with a significant order of improbability. But being able to accept the supernatural, I find that more probable than the improbable explanations that natural explanations would require.
So how does it work? Does God give positive answers to those who believe and pray sufficiently and/or correctly? "God answered our prayers!" By letting someone live who was going to die? The Plan changed? And when the person
does die,
despite that same prayer? "*chuckle* God doesn't change His Plan just because we asked nicely."