SKL
Bluelight Crew
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2007
- Messages
- 14,632
part I
Our textual sources are in their textual aspects, i.e. the occasional scribal error, this is inevitable. The claims of the Jewish and Islamic traditions, however, are quite different in they both claim that a text. In the Jewish tradition, the greater part of the Pentateuch in the Jewish tradition, along with, in the more modern rabbinical tradition, is passed along directly from God via Moses and is preserved textually, literally every "jot and tittle," and in the case of the Oral Torah, the font and origin of what is today the Talmud and other scriptures, the spiritual content of the teachings. In Islam, even more strongly, every letter of the Qu'ran was dictated to the illiterate Muhammad inerrantly and then from him to scribes, then later, by a rather complex process of redaction from various sources, to our Qu'ran. This goes somewhat beyond our purposes here, but this itself is a fascinating topic in Islamic history: during Muhammad's life not much thought was given to recording the text for posterity, or as a written text at all—the transmission of the Qu'ran down to modern days has always rested upon memorization as well as writing. Redacting required traveling around the Muslim world collecitng fragments of parchment, palm leaves, etc. and yielded a text that is found in beautiful poetry, but a bit fragmeneted and, as admitted by even the most conservative Islamic scholars, in no particular chronological order. Modern fundamentalist Protestants who believe in "biblical inerrancy" tend to believe something along the Jewish lines, that the text that we today call a "Bible" was guided by the Holy Spirit from it's inceptions to be the current text that it is and thereby protected from any sort of error. This is demonstrably untrue, in the strict sense of "protect from error," textually speaking. The number of variant readings of Scriptural texts are many.
The Catholic interpretation, as is so often the case, is more complex. The Bible is held up, along with Church Tradition, as an infallible source of doctrine. Catholic tradition holds, however, that the Bible is infallabile only when interpreted by due authority. This is where many of the problems of Protestant Biblican interpreations arise—there are, then, as many interpreters of Scripture as there are Protestants, or at least Protestant pastors. This is why there are over 30,000 Protestant denominations, the most conservative of which believe in Biblical inerrancy and, in cruel irony, mutually condemn one another for misinterpreting the perfectly inerrant Scripture. The Greek text of the New Testament is particularly controversial. Many of the most conservative Protestant sects give various reasons for defending the texts which support the King James Bible, giving a variety of reasons, much of which winds up being circularly dependant upon their familiarity with this English translation. There are even, in a manifestation of Poe's Law, sects that hold that the King James Version is itself divinely inspired and other texts are not (what options there are for the non-English speaking world are often left undiscussed.)
If this was all directed by God then what does history have to do with it? You're still basing things on faith not logic and reason.[/QUOTE]
Again, the Catholic understanding is that Church Tradition is infallabile and has evolved over the years with Divine guidance. This includes the canon of Scripture. The definitive promulgation of the canon at the Council of Nicaea, however, is myth. By 367 Athanasius (who had attended the Council,) in his capacity as Bishop of Alexandria, on of the centers of learning of that era, gave a list that corresponds with our current canon, but not in terms of being charged with doing so in an official capacity. His promulgation of this list is an indication of the widespread acceptance of these documents, rather than a cause. This canon was more or less uncontroversial down to the present day. There was no single council or individual who set it in stone, so to speak.
The development of this tradition is guided by God, and yes, I am aware that this is basing things on faith, but accepting that God does have the capacity to intervene in human affairs and cause the dissemination of an authoritative text, He could conceivably select between, inter alia, the Jewish, Islamic, and Catholic options as outlined above.
(The Protestant approach to the canon, incidentally, is almost universally to accept the Catholic one, which is rather consistent with the ahistoricity of Protestantism - the only way in which Protestantism could find a historical continuity to find their Scriptural canon was to turn to Catholicism.)
An interesting question. In Catholicism, prayers are offered to God directly, to Jesus, and to various saints, who are not prayed to as they were "gods," but as intermediaries from a person praying to God. Prayers to God of course come in many different types and with many different purposes:
Tradition teaches us four different types of prayer:
Adoration, in which we praise God and His glory, for His works, His creation of us and the world, and the blessings that we enjoy in life thanks to Him.
Petition, "praying for ..." some favor asked for from God.
Intercession, prayer for others.
Thanksgiving. prayers offering thanks to God for blessings He has given us, in response to other prayers, or in general, blessings both spiritual and physical.
This is a very rough outline and there is obviously considerable overlap between these cathegories.
One of the most important things to understand about prayer is that it is not done for the benefit of God, as if He needed benefits, or praise for His greatness and glory (His inherent attributes), or for what He does for us. It is incredibly presumptuous to assume that we give God glory to add to his Glory, we do so only because it has an impact on us and gets us closer to Him.
Likewise, God is not a genie in a bottle who we can ask favors and have them granted. A lot of the more pernicious heresies in modern Protestantism (the Prosperity Gospel, a/k/a "name it and claim it" or "blab it and grab it") evolve from misunderstanidng this point.
Catholicism has a lot of different pre-written, one might say formulaic, prayers that are provided us by tradition (small 't') as well as things like the Rosary (small 'T' Tradition) and the Lord's Prayer. These can be spiritually powerful, but so can the honest petitions of a seeking soul without formula or direction.
Prayers "to whoever's out there" are "heard" by God in the sense that He is aware of them, as He is aware of everything, but absolutely they could be "heard" and "answered."
It's an argument with serious issues, I don't use it for that reason.
This is a very selective reading of the avaiable texts.
These difficulties with the seeming contradictions of the text and of different perspectives in the Jewish-Roman milieu of the first few centuries (from which came various contradictory "gnostic" and other Gospels which were rejected by the Church) provide a rather succint example of the problems that I believe are solved by reliance upon the Church as a source of authority, which goes back to the issue that I am perenially returning during the course of this thread: Christianity and the variety of interpretations thereof that are necessitated by 2,000 years worth of different perspectives and literature, etc. are very complex, and need interpretation. This is one aspect of the authority of the Church.
The other aspect is soteriological, i.e. having to do with salvation, which involves Jesus's transmission of the power to forgive sins to his disciples in John 20, etc. This is probably something that could be useful to discuss later on, but is not our topic here.
More on the trilemma and madman/moral teacher stuff later. It takes me quite a while to think and type these out.
Skipping over the back and forth about credentials
I'm still interested to see what your answer is to the "historicity" of Catholicism. It's a fact that what we have are copies of copies of copies altered by scribes through both accident and bias.
Our textual sources are in their textual aspects, i.e. the occasional scribal error, this is inevitable. The claims of the Jewish and Islamic traditions, however, are quite different in they both claim that a text. In the Jewish tradition, the greater part of the Pentateuch in the Jewish tradition, along with, in the more modern rabbinical tradition, is passed along directly from God via Moses and is preserved textually, literally every "jot and tittle," and in the case of the Oral Torah, the font and origin of what is today the Talmud and other scriptures, the spiritual content of the teachings. In Islam, even more strongly, every letter of the Qu'ran was dictated to the illiterate Muhammad inerrantly and then from him to scribes, then later, by a rather complex process of redaction from various sources, to our Qu'ran. This goes somewhat beyond our purposes here, but this itself is a fascinating topic in Islamic history: during Muhammad's life not much thought was given to recording the text for posterity, or as a written text at all—the transmission of the Qu'ran down to modern days has always rested upon memorization as well as writing. Redacting required traveling around the Muslim world collecitng fragments of parchment, palm leaves, etc. and yielded a text that is found in beautiful poetry, but a bit fragmeneted and, as admitted by even the most conservative Islamic scholars, in no particular chronological order. Modern fundamentalist Protestants who believe in "biblical inerrancy" tend to believe something along the Jewish lines, that the text that we today call a "Bible" was guided by the Holy Spirit from it's inceptions to be the current text that it is and thereby protected from any sort of error. This is demonstrably untrue, in the strict sense of "protect from error," textually speaking. The number of variant readings of Scriptural texts are many.
The Catholic interpretation, as is so often the case, is more complex. The Bible is held up, along with Church Tradition, as an infallible source of doctrine. Catholic tradition holds, however, that the Bible is infallabile only when interpreted by due authority. This is where many of the problems of Protestant Biblican interpreations arise—there are, then, as many interpreters of Scripture as there are Protestants, or at least Protestant pastors. This is why there are over 30,000 Protestant denominations, the most conservative of which believe in Biblical inerrancy and, in cruel irony, mutually condemn one another for misinterpreting the perfectly inerrant Scripture. The Greek text of the New Testament is particularly controversial. Many of the most conservative Protestant sects give various reasons for defending the texts which support the King James Bible, giving a variety of reasons, much of which winds up being circularly dependant upon their familiarity with this English translation. There are even, in a manifestation of Poe's Law, sects that hold that the King James Version is itself divinely inspired and other texts are not (what options there are for the non-English speaking world are often left undiscussed.)
Not even getting into the council of nicea and how so many texts where expunged and chosen.
If this was all directed by God then what does history have to do with it? You're still basing things on faith not logic and reason.[/QUOTE]
Again, the Catholic understanding is that Church Tradition is infallabile and has evolved over the years with Divine guidance. This includes the canon of Scripture. The definitive promulgation of the canon at the Council of Nicaea, however, is myth. By 367 Athanasius (who had attended the Council,) in his capacity as Bishop of Alexandria, on of the centers of learning of that era, gave a list that corresponds with our current canon, but not in terms of being charged with doing so in an official capacity. His promulgation of this list is an indication of the widespread acceptance of these documents, rather than a cause. This canon was more or less uncontroversial down to the present day. There was no single council or individual who set it in stone, so to speak.
The development of this tradition is guided by God, and yes, I am aware that this is basing things on faith, but accepting that God does have the capacity to intervene in human affairs and cause the dissemination of an authoritative text, He could conceivably select between, inter alia, the Jewish, Islamic, and Catholic options as outlined above.
(The Protestant approach to the canon, incidentally, is almost universally to accept the Catholic one, which is rather consistent with the ahistoricity of Protestantism - the only way in which Protestantism could find a historical continuity to find their Scriptural canon was to turn to Catholicism.)
I don't know if you want to continue this thread or not, but one question that did come to mind is one of prayer. Oftentimes when people are confused about religion they pray to "whoever or whatever is listening" and not to the specific god of any religion. In Catholic theology, when someone prays like that (basically sending out a signal to see if anyone responds) does the Christian god hear that prayer and respond or does the prayer have to be directed specifically at Jesus or Yahweh to be valid?
An interesting question. In Catholicism, prayers are offered to God directly, to Jesus, and to various saints, who are not prayed to as they were "gods," but as intermediaries from a person praying to God. Prayers to God of course come in many different types and with many different purposes:
Tradition teaches us four different types of prayer:
Adoration, in which we praise God and His glory, for His works, His creation of us and the world, and the blessings that we enjoy in life thanks to Him.
Petition, "praying for ..." some favor asked for from God.
Intercession, prayer for others.
Thanksgiving. prayers offering thanks to God for blessings He has given us, in response to other prayers, or in general, blessings both spiritual and physical.
This is a very rough outline and there is obviously considerable overlap between these cathegories.
One of the most important things to understand about prayer is that it is not done for the benefit of God, as if He needed benefits, or praise for His greatness and glory (His inherent attributes), or for what He does for us. It is incredibly presumptuous to assume that we give God glory to add to his Glory, we do so only because it has an impact on us and gets us closer to Him.
Likewise, God is not a genie in a bottle who we can ask favors and have them granted. A lot of the more pernicious heresies in modern Protestantism (the Prosperity Gospel, a/k/a "name it and claim it" or "blab it and grab it") evolve from misunderstanidng this point.
Catholicism has a lot of different pre-written, one might say formulaic, prayers that are provided us by tradition (small 't') as well as things like the Rosary (small 'T' Tradition) and the Lord's Prayer. These can be spiritually powerful, but so can the honest petitions of a seeking soul without formula or direction.
Prayers "to whoever's out there" are "heard" by God in the sense that He is aware of them, as He is aware of everything, but absolutely they could be "heard" and "answered."
various said:Lewis's trilemma
It's an argument with serious issues, I don't use it for that reason.
I think that particular message was distorted for social control purposes. My belief is that Jesus was saying that we're all god and all we need to do is treat each other right and work together and we can have paradise.
This is a very selective reading of the avaiable texts.
Of course I don't really know that. It just seems to me, from reading the NT through multiple times when I was much younger and struggling with the whole concept of Christianity, that the messages are too contradictory. Then when I found out that they were written well after his death, as much as one hundred or more years, and that many books were omitted (including ones written closer to his life that have quite a different tone), I just stopped believing that the words in the NT are actually the unadulterated words of the actual person.
These difficulties with the seeming contradictions of the text and of different perspectives in the Jewish-Roman milieu of the first few centuries (from which came various contradictory "gnostic" and other Gospels which were rejected by the Church) provide a rather succint example of the problems that I believe are solved by reliance upon the Church as a source of authority, which goes back to the issue that I am perenially returning during the course of this thread: Christianity and the variety of interpretations thereof that are necessitated by 2,000 years worth of different perspectives and literature, etc. are very complex, and need interpretation. This is one aspect of the authority of the Church.
The other aspect is soteriological, i.e. having to do with salvation, which involves Jesus's transmission of the power to forgive sins to his disciples in John 20, etc. This is probably something that could be useful to discuss later on, but is not our topic here.
More on the trilemma and madman/moral teacher stuff later. It takes me quite a while to think and type these out.
Skipping over the back and forth about credentials

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