Even outside that, we have a tendency to do much of what we're doing here..."If you're a Christian then you have to X" or "If you're a Muslim then you have to Y". Personally, I tend to think if one claims to be a Christian (or Muslim or whatever) then that's what they are.
I completely agree. if someone claims to be a Christian, then they are a Christian. I just don't think that really means all that much, since "Christianity" is such an inclusive term that it gives you no additional information about the person.
Is it hypocritical to believe in Jesus without believing in the Bible? Possibly, but not necessarily. One could believe that Jesus existed, and was the divine incarnate, but also recognize that the Bible is the work of men, and distrust its accuracy. While this does take some mental gymnastics, to a degree, as long as one accepts that this is purely an article of faith, and not a logical belief...and as long as one does not allow this article of faith to take the place of logic in other decisions of import, I don't really see a problem. None of us are 100% skeptical or 100% logical in all our beliefs or actions. We're human
The bible is the only source for knowledge about Jesus. To believe in Jesus is to believe
some of the bible. The bible
is the ultimate and single authority for belief in Jesus as a divine entity. Therefore, since it is impossible to follow every jot and tittle of the bible, all christian faiths, whether personal or intitutional, involve a selection of which parts of the bible to believe in. To then claim that they "follow the bible" is strictly a lie, since they only follow
parts of the bible. To accept a single source as both an authority and not an authority is hypocrisy. There are far worse forms of hypocrisy, but it is still hypocrisy. (Actually, the Mormons may be excluded from this, since the book of Mormon apparently replaces the Old and New Testaments. I haven't read enough of it to determine whether it is internally consistent.)
The insistence that all Christians must believe the Bible or be hypocrits is, frankly, a strawman that we are throwing up. At best, it's simply a matter of categorization, at worst it's a strawman. Does it matter if we call valis a Christian or not? He could call himself a Neochristipatomian and it really doesn't change any part of the central argument he's making.
As I said above, being a Christian
implies believing
some of the bible. Pascal's Wager implies far more than merely believing in the divinity of Jesus, though. Very few, if any, Christians think that merely believing is sufficient to gain Pascal's "infinite reward".
This is analogous to those who make accusations against skeptics about what we must believe, or against those calling themselves atheists, or agnostics, or whatever. I think we really do aourselves a dis-service with this type of argument, as one the one hand it's somewhat strawish, and on the other it's primarily semantic.
I don't believe it is analogous. Christians claim to be part of a community of believers, claim that their beliefs bring them together. Atheists and skeptics make no such claims. Atheists claim
no belief in gods, which is entirely different to
communal belief.
On the other hand, I can say that anyone claiming to be a Humanists should agree with the entire Humanist Manifesto. The Humanist Manifesto is an internally consistent and complete document making clear moral statements. If a person accepts the Humanist credo, then they can accept the entire document.
The Apostolic Creed is a workable definition of beliefs, but it is an incomplete statement. It requires knowledge of the bible to define its terms, where the Humanist Manifesto only requires a dictionary.