Evidence for why we know the New Testament writers told the truth.

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The fact is no one knows where Jesus was buried [assuming there actually was a historical Jesus] But let us pretend they find a skeleton with crucifixion marks,


Scars from battle with Bengali pirates.


a sign that read ''King of The Jews'' and any other evidence that points to the skeleton couldn't be anyone else but Jesus, think that will curb people like DOC?


Mistranslation. According to the great historian, Lee Falk, the sign actually read "Ghost who Walks".


They will paint from the same tub of paint they use to gloss over evolution, nothing is surer.


As long as it's purple.


So, what's this cave thing all about? Pretty obvious isn't it?


SkullCave.jpg
 
Posted by DOC:

Sir William Mitchell Ramsay called gospel writer Luke a great historian,

Posted by X:

LIAR!

You see, it is a lie of omission.

So skeptics have invented a new way of thinking -- a truth becomes a lie if you don't mention another truth. So if you say Jesus condones slavery and you don't mention that only two translations use the word slave and around 9 translations use the word servant according to your belief you are committing the lie of omission because you fail to inform people that the great majority of translations don't translate it as slave.

So according to your belief you have lied to us many times for several months.

You are intentionally using the quote as proof why we should trust Luke's writings,

No, I am intentionally using the quote as "some evidence" for the argument that Luke's writings should be considered truthful. You still don't seem to have totally grasped the difference between evidence and proof.


including why we should trust his accounts of the resurrection.

I have never said we should use Ramsay's statement praising Luke's historical skills as proof as to why we should trust his accounts of the resurrection. But once again it is "some evidence" that Luke is considered a very skilled historian by several academics and this gives us some additional evidence for the argument that the NT writers told the truth. It is not proof the NT writers told the truth but it helps my case more so than if this famous academic did not say anything about Luke's academic skills. If something helps my argument then if fits the definition of evidence from post #13.

A thing of things helpful in forming a conclusion or judgement.


Yet, Ramsay explicitly excluded religious elements from his analysis of Luke's accuracy. You know this, yet continue to make the claim, which makes it a lie.

No, it doesn't because I never have said that Ramsay's statement calling Luke one of the world's great historians proves that the religious elements are true.


Your URL is not working but even if it did it wouldn't matter because I have never said that Ramsay's statement praising Luke's historical skills proves that the religious elements are true.
 
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No, I am intentionally using the quote as "some evidence" for the argument that Luke's writings should be considered truthful. You still don't seem to have totally grasped the difference between evidence and proof.

When the part of the quote you are omitting goes on to specifically exclude the supernatural parts of the bible, which is what you are using the quote to support, then you cannot claim the quote supports your position. When you have had that pointed out to you several times, if you persist, then, yes, it is lying.
 
I'm not calling you a liar,
Just don't lie to me.
And I'll love you so much,
I'm gonna let you . . .

I'm not calling you a thief,
Just stop,
And I'll love you so much,
I'm gonna let you . . .

Oh,

I'm not calling you a ghost,
Just stop. . .


There's a ghost in my mouth
Who talks in my sleep,
Wraps itself around my tongue
As it softly speaks,
Then it walks,
Then it walks,
Then it walks with my legs,
To fall
To fall, at your feet.

- Florence and the Machine​
 
No, it doesn't because I never have said that Ramsay's statement calling Luke one of the world's great historians proves that the religious elements are true.
thank you for proving that you've been lying all along.

But in the thread of "why we know the writers told the truth", you use the quote. You intentionally mislead people into thinking that Ramsay thinks Luke is equally reliable on religious elements as with none religious elements. this is false.

You may attempt to pretend that you don't intend to be missleading, but then you would have admitted that Ramsay didn't think Luke was reliable on matters of miracles. You didn't. you avoided such admissions, demonstrating your dishonesty.

Your current attempt of limiting the scope of your use of the quote (and your failure to limit it previously) is proof that your omission was intentional and a Lie.


------
*Example of lies of omission:
If I said, "I hate people who say I eat babies."
and you said,
Joobz says, "I eat babies."
That is also a lie of omission.

Stating that dolous = slave is simply accurate and not a lie.
 
I'm not omitting a part of a quote. You need to rephrase this.
How about
1) "there is cherry picking going on. In other words you don't want people to read his statement in context." or
2) "regarding Ramsay .... it could argued there is cherry picking occurring" or
3) "how come you don't give the url. What url are you getting this from so we can read it in context. By not giving the URL it gives the impression of cherry picking." or
4) "Talk about cherry picking at its worst"

You have mentioned Ramsay 83 times yet you have never linked to his original words. You cherry pick out the part about Luke's historical knowledge when you know the full quote says the trust in Luke can not be extended to the supernatural claims. You accept that Luke's historical knowledge says nothing about the topic of this thread; the supernatural claims in the N.T..

If not actually lying your behaviour is dishonest.
 
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DOC:


Victor Hugo wrote stories.
In these stories, he included actual people, actual historical events, actual cities, actual countries, actual religions, and so-on.
The fact that his books accurately describe these things is not evidence that the stories he wrote are true.
The accuracy of the accounts of the argot, the sewers, the Battle of Waterloo, the Republican Insurrection in Paris are not in any way evidence that Hugo was writing a factual tale.

Alexandre Dumas wrote stories.
In these stories, he included actual people, actual historical events, actual cities, actual countries, actual religions, and so-on.
The fact that his books accurately describe these things is not evidence that the stories he wrote are true.
His accounts of Napoleon, Paris, the religious institutions, kings, technology and shipping are not in any way evidence that Dumas was writing a factual tale.

The same could be said for many many authors.


You are attempting to argue that because the author of Luke (there is NO evidence it was the apostle Luke, as you so fondly believe, and plenty of evidence it was not) got some historical details accurate, it is evidence that he was writing a factual tale.

This is not the case.

I've pointed out the above problem with that logic before (and again at the top of this post). Other people have pointed it out.
The caveats on Ramsay's quote, which you constantly take out of context (read: quote-mining) which would cast doubt on the idea that the author of Luke wrote the truth, have been pointed out to you.

Therefore, the argument that "Luke was a great historian" as evidence that the author of Luke was writing factual events is not only incorrect, but is indeed a lie, because the flows in that argument have been shown to you repeatedly.

Thus, you are LYING when you make that argument.
It has been shown repeatedly to be wrong on multiple levels, yet you still use it, knowing that it is wrong. Which is intellectually dishonest.

You are lying, and that makes you a liar.

As such, I will continue to call you a liar every time you broach that argument, for lying is what you are doing.
 
thank you for proving that you've been lying all along.

But in the thread of "why we know the writers told the truth", you use the quote.

Well you know because of the post below (that you responded to) that the title of this thread was a spur of the moment thing (using some of Geisler's language of his chapter 11 title), and I have said at least twice in this thread that I would use a different title if I could. I have said I would change the title to "Evidence that the New Testament writers told the truth".

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=5459104#post5459104

You intentionally mislead people into thinking that Ramsay thinks Luke is equally reliable on religious elements as with none religious elements. this is false.

People might get misled by their own false thinking, but I have never said Ramsay's praising of Luke as being one of the world's greatest historians proves the miracle elements of the bible. If that is someones own false thinking so be it. People are trying to make apples oranges by saying my truthful statements about Ramsay are a lie.

Skeptics hate someone of Ramsay's prestige saying Luke was one of the world's greatest historians and some will twist logic by trying to turn truths into lies.

You may attempt to pretend that you don't intend to be missleading, but then you would have admitted that Ramsay didn't think Luke was reliable on matters of miracles.

I never would have admitted it because it is not true. Ramsay never said or implied that he didn't think Luke was reliable on matters of miracles.

You didn't. you avoided such admissions, demonstrating your dishonesty...

Since your previous sentence is false, the above statement means nothing


...Stating that dolous = slave is simply accurate and not a lie.
But you're omitting that this Greek word can also mean servant, and the wording of "servant" especially applies to the culture of Palestine at that time which was shown in a website that was brought into this or the slavery thread. You say I'm a liar for omitting things but you constantly do the same thing. That is a double standard.
 
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...I have said at least twice in this thread that I would use a different title if I could. I have said I would change the title to "Evidence that the New Testament writers told the truth".
OK...

Have you got any "evidence that the New Testament writers told the truth"?
 
People might get misled by their own false thinking, but I have never said Ramsay's praising of Luke as being one of the world's greatest historians proves the miracle elements of the bible. If that is someones own false thinking so be it. People are trying to make apples oranges by saying my truthful statements about Ramsay are a lie.

Skeptics hate someone of Ramsay's prestige saying Luke was one of the world's greatest historians and some will twist logic by trying to turn truths into lies.

Why would you be so insistent on Luke's being "one of the world's greatest historians" unless you wanted to at least imply that his reliability on factual matters shows that his statements on other matters are at least as authoritative?

In other words, if you don't want to use Luke's reliability as a historian as evidence that the other things he wrote are also true, why are you bringing it up at all?
 
Why would you be so insistent on Luke's being "one of the world's greatest historians" unless you wanted to at least imply that his reliability on factual matters shows that his statements on other matters are at least as authoritative?

In other words, if you don't want to use Luke's reliability as a historian as evidence that the other things he wrote are also true, why <insert> - other than tergiversating®©™ - </insert> are you bringing it up at all?
FTFY, 'Liz :)
 
Well you know because of the post below (that you responded to) that the title of this thread was a spur of the moment thing (using some of Geisler's language of his chapter 11 title), and I have said at least twice in this thread that I would use a different title if I could. I have said I would change the title to "Evidence that the New Testament writers told the truth".
Doesn't change the fact that your quote mine is a lie.



People might get misled by their own false thinking, but I have never said Ramsay's praising of Luke as being one of the world's greatest historians proves the miracle elements of the bible.
But you intentionally conflate the two. You are trying to provide evidence that the bible is true. Meaning 100% true. What you are attempting to do is give evidence that the miracles are true. Ramsay's quote ONLY extends to extraneous historical points NOT to matters regarding religious significance (E.g., miracles, Jesus begin god...)

Skeptics hate someone of Ramsay's prestige saying Luke was one of the world's greatest historians and some will twist logic by trying to turn truths into lies.
No. I hate people who lie about what others say. You are lying about when you quote Ramsay.


I never would have admitted it because it is not true. Ramsay never said or implied that he didn't think Luke was reliable on matters of miracles.
Yes he did. He clearly stated that miracles are not a matter of historical accuracy. That's effectively saying that Luke isn't reliable on the subject. In other words, attempting to increase Luke's reputation as a historian is meaningless when discussing the truthfulness of the bible's miracle accounts.
Ramsay knew this, you intentionally ignore this.


Since your previous sentence is false, the above statement means nothing
Nope, you lied and are only digging deeper into the lie.

But you're omitting that this Greek word can also mean servant, and the wording of "servant" especially applies to the culture of Palestine at that time which was shown in a website that was brought into this or the slavery thread. You say I'm a liar for omitting things but you constantly do the same thing. That is a double standard.
No double standard.
You quote mined. You intentionally mislead what Ramsay said, and you never once admitted that Ramsay was not referring to the miracles or religious aspects of the bible when making his statement.

I gave a clear definition of what Dolous means.
Slave, in particular "Bond-servant" Which can often be shortened to mean Servant. However, it IS most often a slave. So my definition is solid. But, I had even for sake of argument, allowed the use of servant. By explaining that I find it evil that Jesus condones the beating of servants. Regardless of which way you look at it, jesus is (by modern definitions) immoral.
 
Scars from battle with Bengali pirates.





Mistranslation. According to the great historian, Lee Falk, the sign actually read "Ghost who Walks".





As long as it's purple.


So, what's this cave thing all about? Pretty obvious isn't it?


[qimg]http://www.yvonneclaireadams.com/HostedStuff/SkullCave.jpg[/qimg]

Think the mighty historian Lee Falk forged the story from the N/T about the ''Place Of The Skull'' and about a ''Ghost Who Walks''? :p:)
 
OK...

Have you got any "evidence that the New Testament writers told the truth"?

I''l answer for DOC. Yes they are telling the truth concerning the city of Jerusalem. No doubt that city was there in the first century. As for the rest, NO.
 
People might get misled by their own false thinking, but I have never said Ramsay's praising of Luke as being one of the world's greatest historians proves the miracle elements of the bible. If that is someones own false thinking so be it.
If you are trying to say that you are using Ramsay to support the truth of the non-supernatural elements of the bible, then that in itself is dishonest. You are not making that clear when you keep referring to him, and it is notable that you do not refer to his own disclaimers about his view of the reliability of the author of Luke. It is also misleading, if that is what you are doing, because it is largely the supernatural aspects which are significant; it does not add a great deal if the mundane aspects are shown not to be false (although it would clearly hurt the credibility of the bible if those were discredited).
People are trying to make apples oranges by saying my truthful statements about Ramsay are a lie.
No, they're pointing out your false and misleading statements.

Such as this one:
Ramsay never said or implied that he didn't think Luke was reliable on matters of miracles.
That's exactly what he did do. If you are not able to understand this, which has been pointed out numerous times, then you are simply not capable of a rational debate.

Here is the complete post that Lothian made, since you seem incapable of following a link to it:

Where exactly did he say there is no evidence of any supernatural events.
The Bearing of Recent Discovery on the Trustworthiness of the New Testament (1915) page 235
"The truth of the historical surroundings in which Luke's narrative places the birth of Jesus does not prove the supreme facts, which give human and divine value to the birth are true."

and

page 89
"You may press the words of Luke in a degree beyond any other historian’s, and they stand the keenest scrutiny and the hardest treatment, provided always that the critic knows the subject and does not go beyond the limits of science and of justice"

and

Page 254
"We know that Luke was right in the external facts, because the records have disclosed the whole system of the census ; but as to the inner facts, the birth and the divine nature of Jesus, there can (as said above) be no historical reasoning, for those are a matter of faith, of intuition, and of the individual human being's experience and inner life."


and page 236
The surrounding facts are matter of history, and can be discussed and proved by historical evidence. The essential facts of the narrative are not susceptible of discussion on historical principles, and do not condescend to be tested by historical evidence

Which post did you show this.
5464;5469;5472;5535;5559;5585;

And for the record, Ramsay did become a Christian.
I never disputed he was a Christian. You can be a Christian without evidence, as you would know if you had read his work.

And even if he did say this there is historical evidence for the resurrection

http://www.leaderu.com/everystudent/easter/articles/josh2.html
That is not evidence it simply retells the bible story.

Also, I find it interesting that you and Elizabeth are in such a hurry to end this thread when there is new information related to the topic continuing to come out. Why don't you just let the thread run its course and continue to receive new information. Or if your tired of thread just block it.
We have not only run the course we are on the third lap. You have not provided any evidence that the New Testament writers told the truth in the essential elements of the bible story.
 
In the "Do Most Atheists know that Science..." thread I mentioned Norman Geisler and Frank Turek's book called "I Don't Have Enough Faith to Be an Atheist" a few times because of its clear explanations of scientific theories. But, yes, they did talk about more than science.

In chapter 11 of their book they give the top 10 reasons we know the New Testament writers told the truth. I'll mention some of those reasons and maybe expound on them as time permits.


Reason #9

The New Testament Writers Describe Miracles Like Other Historical Events: With Simple, Unembellished Accounts.

If they made them up it would be likely that they would have used grandiose and extravagant images. The book says the gospels talk about the Resurrection in a matter of fact almost bland way.

Reason #10

The New Testament Writers Abandoned Their Long Held Sacred Beliefs and Practices, Adopted New Ones, And Did Not Deny Their Testimony Under Persecution Or Threat Of Death

I think I'm hearing goalposts creaking...
 
No double standard.
You quote mined. You intentionally mislead what Ramsay said, and you never once admitted that Ramsay was not referring to the miracles or religious aspects of the bible when making his statement.

I didn't have to because any 8th grader who read the website below that I have brought into this thread at least 4 times would see that none of the 84 highly detailed facts that Luke gets right is a miracle.

Scroll down this website a few seconds and you will see the 84 facts:

http://www.theologyweb.com/campus/showthread.php?t=51643

All this DOC your a liar crap (which of course I deny) is much ado about nothing. You're trying to make a big deal out of some point that would be obvious to anyone who spent 5 minutes doing further research on Ramsay. And many people would probably assume it anyway.

Bottom line is that Ramsay said Luke is one of the world's great historians and saying that once, saying that 10 times, saying that 1000 times is not a lie no matter how hard skeptics try to make it one.

And in a way I'm glad you keep trying to say it is a lie because it seriously hurts your credibility to do so
. So keep it up, all the hoopla might distract a few people, but I seriously do believe it is going to hurt some skeptics credibility to keep calling a true fact a lie.
 
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