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#61 |
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And no, im not looking for any pat on the back. However, im glad that you accept my reasoning and getting back to the original topic, why that particular doctrine of transubstantiation is not legitimate. Biblically speaking.
I can go on about many others as well. Last edited by Philpwnsyou; 07-18-2007 at 08:25 PM.. |
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#62 | |
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Very Grave Indeed
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You have a sarcasm detector? Holy crap, that's the coolest thing ever!
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#63 | |
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FFR Player
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The fall of Babylon was prophesied from two books, Jeremiah and Isaiah. Some 200 years before this event took place, the prophet Isaiah predicted in a detailed and accurate way the overthrow of Babylon by Medo-Persia. The prophecy disclosed that the conqueror would bear the name Cyrus, and it revealed the very strategy of drying up a moatlike river defense and entering a fortified city through open gates. All of this was accurately fulfilled. (Isaiah 44:27–45:2) It was also correctly prophesied that Babylon would eventually like Jeremiah says, be totally uninhabited.—Isaiah 13:17-22. Does it need to say anymore? Last edited by Philpwnsyou; 07-18-2007 at 08:44 PM.. |
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#64 |
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Very Grave Indeed
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And like I said to you last time you tried this argument: I can -easily- provide you a book that accurately describes any number of historical events, and prophecies many others, and at the same time, fill it with ludicrous claims that are pure nonsense. Just because it got some, or even most things correct doesn't mean it is infallibly correct.
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#65 | |
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is against custom titles
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Sorry if I don't buy the method of twisting Jesus' words (please count the times he says "this IS my body" and compare that to the times he says "this is symbolic of my body") and ignoring what the apostles taught as a valid proof of your statement. And that's aside from the fact that reading all of his words with a figurative mindset just doesn't make any sense (regarding why the apostles had a hard time understanding Jesus and what Paul says in 1 Cor 11:27 and :29). I mean, do you really think that two little paragraphs are going to refute thousands of years of a tradition that Jesus himself started and has been upheld by scholars since then? I realize the appeal to history here, but I'm also certain that Phil just can't claim victory like that. --Guido http://andy.mikee385.com |
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#66 |
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FFR Player
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Michigan
Age: 35
Posts: 754
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I haven't been following this thread whatsoever, so I'm sorry that this is a page late. However, one of the most well-known is the sign posted at Jesus' crucifixion. It's 5 AM right now and I don't feel like searching through the Bible, but the gist of it is that each of the four Gospels [Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John] have a different version of the sign. For example, one Gospel reported that it said "Jesus, the King of the Jews." Another would say something slightly different. However, when you put them all together, you realize that it is indeed one sign, but different people are recalling different parts that they seemed to be more important. Since the sign was a minor detail, they forgot some details about it.
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#67 |
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Very Grave Indeed
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I'd hardly call "The subjectivity of observation" a contradiction. Honestly, anyone who tried presenting that to you as "proof" that there are contradictions in the bible ought to just be laughed at.
Generally when I consider "contradictions" they need to be a little more significant than "4 people wrote down stories, and got a couple small details wrong" |
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#68 | |
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Last edited by Philpwnsyou; 07-19-2007 at 11:21 AM.. |
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#69 |
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Also, in regards to not actually saying "this means my body" at Matthew26 (although some translations do state this, I'll look them up when i get home from class) your Jerusalem Bible Reads.
Matt. 26:26-29, JB: “Now as they were eating, Jesus took some bread, and when he had said the blessing he broke it and gave it to the disciples. ‘Take it and eat;’ he said ‘this is my body.’ Then he took a cup, and when he had returned thanks he gave it to them. ‘Drink all of you from this,’ he said ‘for this is my blood, the blood of the covenant, which is to be poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins. From now on, I tell you, I shall not drink wine until the day I drink the new wine with you in the kingdom of my Father.’” Consider the expressions “this is my body” and “this is my blood” in the light of other vivid language used in the Scriptures. Jesus also said, “I am the light of the world,” “I am the gate of the sheepfold,” “I am the true vine.” (John 8:12; 10:7; 15:1, JB) None of these expressions implied a miraculous transformation, did they? At 1 Corinthians 11:25 (JB), the apostle Paul wrote concerning the Last Supper and expressed the same ideas in slightly different words. Instead of quoting Jesus as saying regarding the cup, “Drink all of you from this . . . for this is my blood, the blood of the covenant,” he worded it in this way: “This cup is the new covenant in my blood.” Surely that did not mean that the cup was somehow miraculously transformed into the new covenant. Is it not more reasonable to conclude that what was in the cup represented Jesus’ blood by means of which the new covenant was validated? The same principle applies, you simply have to observe the context. |
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#70 | |
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That doesn't change the fact that the accident happened and they were all witnesses to it. |
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#71 | ||
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Ahem:
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Last edited by Relambrien; 07-19-2007 at 11:25 AM.. |
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#72 |
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Very Grave Indeed
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When it is the difference between "The bread and wine symbolize the body and blood of Jesus" and "A miracle occurs in which the bread and wine -ACTUALLY ARE- the body and blood of Jesus" You can see where people would have a vested interest in ensuring they have interpreted correctly.
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#73 | |
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Not to mention, the bits of scientific information it mentions that are hundreds and in some cases thousands of years in advance. For example, the earliest known non-Biblical reference to physical laws was made by Pythagoras, who believed that the universe could be explained by numbers. Two thousand years later, Galileo, Kepler, and Newton finally proved that matter is governed by rational laws. The earliest Biblical reference to natural law is contained in the book of Job. About 1600 B.C.E., God asked Job: “Have you come to know the statutes [or, laws] of the heavens?” (Job 38:33) Recorded in the seventh century B.C.E., the book of Jeremiah refers to YHWH as the Creator of “the statutes of the moon and the stars” and “the statutes of heaven and earth.” (Jeremiah 31:35; 33:25) In view of these statements, Bible commentator G. Rawlinson observed: “The general prevalence of law in the material world is quite as strongly asserted by the sacred writers as by modern science.” If we use Pythagoras as a point of reference, the statement in Job was about a thousand years ahead of its time. Keep in mind that the Bible’s objective is not simply to reveal physical facts but primarily to impress upon us that YHWH is the Creator of all things—the one who can create physical laws.—Job 38:4, 12; 42:1, 2. Another example is the water cycle. The oldest surviving non-Biblical references to this cycle are from the fourth century B.C.E. However, Biblical statements predate that by hundreds of years. For example, in the 11th century B.C.E., King Solomon of Israel wrote: “All the rivers run into the sea, yet the sea is not full. To the place from which the rivers come, to there and from there they return again.”—Ecclesiastes 1:7, The Amplified Bible. Likewise, about 800 B.C.E. the prophet Amos, a humble shepherd and farmworker, wrote that GOD is “the One calling for the waters of the sea, that he may pour them out upon the surface of the earth.” (Amos 5:8) Without using complex, technical language, both Solomon and Amos accurately described the water cycle, each from a slightly different perspective. The Bible also speaks of God as “hanging the earth upon nothing,” or he “suspends earth in the void,” according to The New English Bible. (Job 26:7) In view of the knowledge available in 1600 B.C.E., roughly when those words were spoken, it would have taken a remarkable man to assert that a solid object can remain suspended in space without any physical support. Aristotle rejected the concept of a void, and he lived over 1,200 years later! There are more examples I can bring out, in every instance the Bible is Always correct. Last edited by Philpwnsyou; 07-19-2007 at 01:02 PM.. |
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#74 | |
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(The Fat's Sabobah)
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The original Jesus Followers movement was a Jewish movement, and they followed the teacher Jesus, not the Son of God (that concept comes from the Gnostic depiction of Jesus, which was later misinterpreted by the Catholic Church as being literal...like everything else in the Bible). Whether Jesus was divine or not doesn't matter. What matters is that his teachings, to this day, are relevant. You know, and maybe if we all were a bit more like Jesus, we wouldn't get caught up on petty issues. Also, all of Jesus' teachings can be found in the Old Testament. |
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#75 | |
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Eh, I'm probably totally wrong, but I don't wish to derail this thread further. Please continue with the other topic at hand; don't waste your time on someone like me who really doesn't care about religion. I just wanted to know the reason behind needing to know a specific interpretation, but it seems that that won't be possible without delving into deeper religious matters. So please, just continue on with what you were doing. |
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#76 | |
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Commenting on this, John 17:3 Reads: "This means everlasting life, their taking in knowledge of you, the only true God, and of the one whom you sent forth, Jesus Christ" |
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#77 | ||
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Very Grave Indeed
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Further...-EVERYTHING- is attributed to God. A passage that says "God knows how the universe works" isn't advanced scientific thinking that is somehow involving people being actually consciously aware of the fact that the universe operates according to exact scientific principles. It is people saying "God knows everything" As for the water cycle, my goodness do you have a low standard for what qualifies as understanding. "The water flows to the sea, but the sea doesn't overflow" Please explain to me how -OBSERVATION- of a fact in any way communicates an understanding of the underlying processes? He didn't say "The rivers flow to the sea, then the water leaves the sea, ascending to the heavens to fall again as rain" That might give you -some- ground to stand on to claim that these people had some highly advanced insights into the world. They neither of them "accurately described" the water cycle at all, they merely observed something that they clearly didn't understand, seeing as they attributed the process to -GOD- and not a naturally occuring phenomenon. What you're saying is that if I took a television back to the ancient world, and someone wrote of it "For there are small men inside the box, putting on plays for our entertainment" that you would feel justified in saying that those people "understood television" thousands of years before its time. |
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#78 | |
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-Water cycle argument- "To the place from which the rivers come, to there and from there they return again" Where does the water come from to form the river? The Sky, obviously, and as it says "from there it returns again" Rain falls into river-which leads into sea-which returns to the place where rivers come from (sky). Again, the Bible is not a scientific textbook, however when it touches on events that occur in nature, such as this, you can see that it is correct. -Television argument- No, but because of your direct action, they would have knowledge of something they otherwise would never naturally encounter or even imagine. The same applies to my point, they did not have to understand the precise details of any of the events, but they came to conclusions and penned the verses based on divine inspiration. Last edited by Philpwnsyou; 07-19-2007 at 05:21 PM.. |
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#79 | |
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Very Grave Indeed
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"There are rules" != "Here are the rules" |
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#80 | ||
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(The Fat's Sabobah)
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For the rest of us, we can go on living our own lives, with our own personal relationship with God...well, except for me. I'm an atheist. |
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