The NT wasn't edited into its current form until several hundred years after the event. People only lived for that sort of length of time in the OT.
Huh?
The NT wasn't edited into its current form until several hundred years after the event. People only lived for that sort of length of time in the OT.
Yes and they tell the truth about those historical figures don't they. They wouldn't dare make up lies about them.
This lie of yours is out there for all to see, DOC.Which specific post that talks of a fallacy do you want me to address the most and I will address it.
Huh?
You what?Yes, but how many works of fiction have 30 actually present day or recent history historical people (many famous and powerful) in them (like the NT did -- verified by secular sources or archaeology). Nowadays they can sue the pants off you if you tell falsehoods about them, but at that time they or their relatives would simply deny the story hurting the authors credibility, or possibly if they had power like the Herodian line maybe put you in prison or worse if you told falsehoods about them.
Yes and they tell the truth about those historical figures don't they. They wouldn't dare make up lies about them.
So you believe none of the 30 historical figures in the NT (verified by non-Christian writers or archaeology) had relatives or friends still alive. Would you say John and Robert Kennedy who were killed 47 and 42 years ago have any relatives or friends alive today.
For one it doesn't make sense to assign a gospel to a tax collector like Mathew.
It makes every bit as much sense as naming him as an apostle.
RoboTimbo said:DOC, so this:
was simply another one of your lies? Nice Christian ethics you display there.Which specific post that talks of a fallacy do you want me to address the most and I will address it.
RoboTimbo said:This lie of yours is out there for all to see, DOC.Which specific post that talks of a fallacy do you want me to address the most and I will address it.
carlitos said:I never said there were 19. There were 9 separate writers of NT books. And 40 separate writers of the entire bible. Interesting how it all seems to have a similar theme and come together nicely in spite of having 40 separate writers and being written over many centuries.
Sorry, I could have sworn that you said 19 somewhere. 40 authors of the bible? Interesting claim.
So, Paul, Luke, John, Mark, James, Jude, Peter, Matthew, Silas, Timothy? Is that your 9? What about Q?
Also, you asked for specific references to logical fallacies.
Several people responded to you with references. If you ignore those, may we conclude that your request was dishonest, since you weren't going to reply? If not, why did you ask?DOC said:Which specific post that talks of a fallacy do you want me to address the most and I will address it.
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wollery said:DOC, you asked for a specific post which points out a supposed logical fallacy, which you said you would address.
Several have been suggested, but my personal preference from those is this one by CarlitosSo, are you going to address this post, another of those suggested, or ignore all the responses to your request?
- Your use of "Sir Ramsay" and Thomas Jefferson as evidence is an appeal to authority.
- Your use of the bible as evidence to prove the bible (Jesus appeared to Paul) is circular reasoning.
- Your lack of acceptance for the exact same arguments to provide evidence of Hinduism is special pleading.
- Your intimation that there was no fiction in the ancient Greek world (which included Judea) is ignorance, a lie, or both.
<snipped irrelevant stuff>
SO no names of the 500 people, eh?If you don't believe Paul when he implied or named 14 people, you're not going to believe him if he named some of the more than 250 other witnesses Paul claimed were still alive.
So no names for the 500 or where they live?In his letter to the Corinthians, written 51-53 AD, 18 - 20 years after the crucifixion, Paul named or indicated the following people as seeing the Resurrected Christ:
From the article: EYEWITNESSES OF THE RESURRECTION
"Simon Peter, James the son of Zebedee, John the brother of James, Andrew, Philip, Bartholomew, Matthew, Thomas, James the son of Alphaeus, Thaddaeus, Simon the Zealot, Mark 3:16-18, John 20:24-31.," {mentioned later: Cephas, and another James}
And there were people who supposedly saw the risen Christ who Paul did not name but were named by other Gospel writers (including Luke).
From the same article:
"Mary Magdalene, Salome, Mary the mother of James, Mark 16:1, Matthew 28:1-10. Cleopas Luke 24:13-34 and Joseph and Matthias, Acts 1:16-26."
http://reasonableanswers.org/12-Eyewitnesses-of-the-resurrection.html
Not at all. people lie all the time to support belief. They may even believe the lies.We know Peter and John were alive at this time and possibly James. Joobz don't you find it odd that Paul would lie in a letter about all of these people, some of whom we know were alive and then go out and risk his life almost daily for something he knew was a lie.
because the gospels are "pro-jesus" texts. Why would you think stories of jesus written 30+ years later would contain anti-jesus stories?So there were at least 20 named people being written about who supposedly saw the risen Christ but there is no record of them or their friends or relatives saying, hey, this never happened to me or to my friend, or my relative.
again, why would that exist in the bible?Also there is no record of the friends or relatives of Pontius Pilate or the high priest Caiaphus saying, hey, Pontius Pilate and Caiaphus did not do the things the many manuscripts said they did, hey, quit writing all those manuscripts about my well known relative/friend (and arguably the 2 most powerful men in Judea at the time).
Wow. As so many others have pointed out, here you are saying that what is in the New Testament is true, and you can use it as evidence that the New Testament is true, because at the time the different sections were written they had not yet been compiled into a single volume called the New Testament. Even for you, this is a piece of idiocy of staggering proportions.The historical figure Paul, who helped drastically change the mighty Roman Empire never heard the word bible or New Testament as he was writing his works. And his writings and those of his companion Luke are "historical" evidence -- ask any historian or archaeologist who use their writings as part of their work.
But Sir William M. Ramsay's assertion is based on historical evidence. For example let's look at some of Luke's writings.
From the article "I Don't Have Enough Faith to Be an Atheist"
by Frank Turek Chapter 10
Luke accurately records:
1. the natural crossing between correctly named ports (Acts 13:4-5)
2. the proper port (Perga) along the direct destination of a ship crossing from Cyprus (13:13)
3. the proper location of Lycaonia (14:6)
4. the unusual but correct declension of the name Lystra (14:6)
5. the correct language spoken in LystraCLycaonian (14:11)
6. two gods known to be so associatedCZeus and Hermes (14:12)
7. the proper port, Attalia, which returning travelers would use (14:25)
8. the correct order of approach to Derbe and then Lystra from the Cilician Gates (16:1; cf. 15:41)
9. the proper form of the name Troas (16:8)
10. the place of a conspicuous sailors' landmark, Samothrace (16:11)
11. the proper description of Philippi as a Roman colony (16:12)
12. the right location for the river (Gangites) near Philippi (16:13)
13. the proper association of Thyatira as a center of dyeing (16:14)
14. correct designations for the magistrates of the colony (16:22)
15. the proper locations (Amphipolis and Apollonia) where travelers would spend successive nights on this journey (17:1)
16. the presence of a synagogue in Thessalonica (17:1)
17. the proper term (Apolitarchs') used of the magistrates there (17:6)
18. the correct implication that sea travel is the most convenient way of reaching Athens, with the favoring east winds of summer sailing (17:14-15)
19. the abundant presence of images in Athens (17:16)
20. the reference to a synagogue in Athens (17:17)
There are 64 more such detailed facts written by Luke on this link, scroll down about a quarter of the way to see them.
You...you know what this means, don't you? Forrest Gump is a documentary!Oh? So Harry Flashman really did meet Queen Victoria, and Richard Sharpe really was given a commision by Wellesley?
Huh?
And modern scholarship has shown the bible to be very unreliable as a history text.But Sir William M. Ramsay's assertion is based on historical evidence. For example let's look at some of Luke's writings.
Jerusalem in Bible and archaeology: the First Temple period
Check out this book.
On page 1:
In other words: The bible ain't a reliable account of history.This situation changed dramatically, however, during the last three decades of the twentieth century. Scholars trained specifically as archaeologists dominated archaeological fieldwork in the modern nation-states of the ancient biblical world, and many of their discoveries, the result of a more systematic approach to archaeological fieldwork, raised difficult questions regarding the historicity of biblical texts. At times the results even seemed to contradict events described in the Bible. Whearas the early generation saw some hope in finding an "essential continuity" between the events that were deemed factual and the biblical narratives, the results of recent research have tended to conclude that such continuity is unlikely to emerge.
Oh sorry, I didn't realise you hadn't read it. I hope we haven't already given away too much of the plot.
On the plus side, Matt knew simply everybody...It makes every bit as much sense as naming him as an apostle.
If you don't believe Paul when he implied or named 14 people, you're not going to believe him if he named some of the more than 250 other witnesses Paul claimed were still alive.
In his letter to the Corinthians, written 51-53 AD, 18 - 20 years after the crucifixion, Paul named or indicated the following people as seeing the Resurrected Christ:
From the article: EYEWITNESSES OF THE RESURRECTION
"Simon Peter, James the son of Zebedee, John the brother of James, Andrew, Philip, Bartholomew, Matthew, Thomas, James the son of Alphaeus, Thaddaeus, Simon the Zealot, Mark 3:16-18, John 20:24-31.," {mentioned later: Cephas, and another James}
And there were people who supposedly saw the risen Christ who Paul did not name but were named by other Gospel writers (including Luke).
From the same article:
"Mary Magdalene, Salome, Mary the mother of James, Mark 16:1, Matthew 28:1-10. Cleopas Luke 24:13-34 and Joseph and Matthias, Acts 1:16-26."
http://reasonableanswers.org/12-Eyewitnesses-of-the-resurrection.html
We know Peter and John were alive at this time and possibly James. Joobz don't you find it odd that Paul would lie in a letter about all of these people, some of whom we know were alive and then go out and risk his life almost daily for something he knew was a lie.
So there were at least 20 named people being written about who supposedly saw the risen Christ but there is no record of them or their friends or relatives saying, hey, this never happened to me or to my friend, or my relative.
Also there is no record of the friends or relatives of Pontius Pilate or the high priest Caiaphus saying, hey, Pontius Pilate and Caiaphus did not do the things the many manuscripts said they did, hey, quit writing all those manuscripts about my well known relative/friend (and arguably the 2 most powerful men in Judea at the time).