Thoughts on this?....Edit - Actually, it appears to be complete bullshit. I should check sources before posting things.
Yeah, the 'authorities in Terhan' and 'predicted the prohpet muhammad' sort of gave it away (did that prohecy fool you Raas?

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although it did ring a bell with the descriptions of 'The Liar' and 'The Wicked Priest' which were mentioned lots in the dead sea scrolls; some people think the Liar is a reference to paul (some also think the dead sea scrolls community was called Damascus, which would provide a plausible reason why Paul was 'going to damascus' when he worked for jerusalem authorities) - (this was remembered from a michael baigent book so would probably collapse under googling).
@Raas - no, a claim based on faith doesn't really fit in a rational or logic-based argument by definition, becasue faith isn't rational (the non-religious meaning of the word faith is different as it's usually more like a judgement call or probability based on past experience - not a blind leap like religion asks for (faith's more like hope in religion really)). I'm certainly not using irrational in the pejorative sense of being worthless, as i see plenty of value in irrational mindstates (including faith), but it's a category confusion in my view. You can certainly make a theological argument with faith in it (and this is the place to do it), but it won't make any headway when arguing against people who perfer logic to theologic. I'm not into much chritstain theology, but i was under the impression that awareness of these aspects of faith was pretty fundamental.
There's definitely mileage in the slippery epistemiology of logic and science being similar to theology/religion in it's nebulousness when you focus really (really) hard on it, but the big difference which makes science/logic more valid imv is falsifiability. If a religion can accept new discoveries (theological textual or otherwise) and adjust it's world view with the same willingness as science (which itself could be more willing), i'll give it's explanatory powers equal respect.
For this reason the religions or sects i like the best are usually 'mystical' ones which are more like practical/experimental religion, relying on direct communication with 'god'(s) rather than some dubious historical idiosyncracy (eg buddhists hindus sufis pagans gospel music-ists shamans ravers psychonauts etc)
Oh, and you can answer the 'would jesus turn away paedophiles' one any time
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EDIT: i just reread my post and noticed i didn't really address the main bit of yours (instead went off one patronising you with definitions of faith and such (in the spirit of waffle rather than straw man)). Anyway:
...if Jesus is to have some credibility behind his claim that "he is the son of God", a history of prophesising texts is a necessity. Now, you may interpret this as the working of God... or some kind of political motive... depending on the bias of your faith... But to take the more cynical depiction, in no way negates the possibility of the former...
This seems to me like circular logic. That, added to the workings of occams razor, certainly gives a massive weight to the latter over the former explanation if using logic - and we must use logic if we're going to argue (faith tips the scale obviously, but only your scales).
Modern philosophy of science famously can never say never technically about anything, but in practice, some things are understood to be as good as certain, with just details to argue about (like the theory of evolution) - not saying there's that certainty in this instance (and this isn't really science), just saying that possibility doesn't tell you about probability.
and it's not cynical to want to be empirical about what you believe, or even just weigh the probabilities (i'm not a cynic, except we're it's earned (eg in politics)). ((sorry it's more waffle - don't answer and i'll shut up

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