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Ginger Tea
01-07-2011, 01:43 PM
I don't really read this section, so I have no idea if this has been brought up before, appologies if it has.



I'm not a bleiever in the bibles god or any other for that matter, s/he/it/they may exist, but I find a few things about the bibles god to be odd and this is one of them.

Why should the deciples be the ones spreading the old testamant as well as new to the world at large?
We have missionaries spreading the word of god in the Amazon and once Africa, surely if he was omnipotent and all powerful, he would have contacted all sorts of cultures who wern't believing in him at that time, Mayan's never heard of god, Europeans never heard of him either till the Roman's accepted him over their own multiple gods and goddesses and spread the word whilst conquring Europe.

I'm not even sure when the Norse gods died out, but they held out the longest compared to Greek and Roman ones.

I've likened god to be AFK from a Civ/Sim game before (but afaik not here), perhaps s/he does exist but has walked away for 5 minutes of his time and centuries have passed 'in game'.

Perhaps it realy was like a giant game of Risk and after conquring the faith of Rome, the rest of the Roman empire fell into line?

Gravekeeper
01-07-2011, 01:50 PM
Why should the deciples be the ones spreading the old testamant as well as new to the world at large?


You're working from the perspective that God A) Exists and B) Exists in the literal Christian sense.

It's actually more that Conversion = Control = Power. Missionary work has shit and all to do with anything except power and/or arrogance ( Look how many misguided primitives I've saved! 3 more and I get a free foot long ).


I've likened god to be AFK from a Civ/Sim game before (but afaik not here), perhaps s/he does exist but has walked away for 5 minutes of his time and centuries have passed 'in game'.


I think its more like something simply turned the computer on and left it in the closet for eternity. ;p

Ginger Tea
01-07-2011, 01:55 PM
Well I'd have more faith in his existance that when America was discovered they were found to believe in the old testement just like 'we' do.

As it stands I've never read the bible but watched the Charton Heston movie, and we all know how book to movie adaptations work out ;)

joe hx
01-08-2011, 02:00 AM
surely if he was omnipotent and all powerful, he would have contacted all sorts of cultures who wern't believing in him at that time, Mayan's never heard of god, Europeans never heard of him either till the Roman's accepted him over their own multiple gods and goddesses and spread the word whilst conquring Europe.

Well, the Mormons believe Jesus visited the Native Americans...

Anyways, you're trying to make sense of God and religion. Religion rarely makes (common) sense. Most believers would just some it up as "God works in mysterious ways!"

Mytical
01-08-2011, 05:36 AM
Sorry, but .. who said 'god' hasn't. One reason I personally do not subscribe to any one religion is..I don't see god as limited as most see him/her. Yes..most religions see him as way too limited. They swear up and down that he can take any form, be anywhere .. even multiple places at the same time..but for some reason he has only been in the form they say he is in.

Could it be, however, that being all wise..that he has visited MANY cultures, in many different forms..the forms BEST suited to get HIS(Her/its) message across?

I've read up on a few religions, and you would be surprised how similar they are. A good number mention a world devastating flood, have a good place and a bad place, and other similarities. Which is a heck of a coincidence. Yet..how they get to each is different, so HOW can that be you ask?

I believe it is the 'human' translation that gets in the way. HE (she or it) has to communicate with humans, and unfortunately with 'free will' and all..sometimes those humans garble the TRUE message for their own personal gain. Just as they would with anything else given the chance.

Then what is the TRUE message? I am not sure we can understand it yet, even if HE (she or it) told us directly. Heck HE (she or it) could be trying right now to explain the true message, and they might as well be talking to brick walls. No..the walls might better be able to receive the message. *shrugs*

Edit : It would be like us trying to communicate with ants..even if we COULD get them to understand (which is doubtful) .. how long before the message got 'garbled'?

Hyena Dandy
01-08-2011, 07:23 AM
I have an idea, and this is not me spreading any sort of doctrine, sort of just... Speculating.

What if the reason God doesn't spread the word is because its a sort of test of humanity to have to spread the word of God? I mean, that human beings have to tell it to each-other. God COULD come down and tell it to us, but He doesn't because... I dunno, maybe that's not fair? I don't quite know, and please don't say I'm trying to weasel out of answering, I'm just speculating here. Perhaps, if God exists, He needs faith. And if faith is different from knowledge, then perhaps if God came down and proved He existed, He wouldn't have faith, he would have knowledge.

Rageaholic
01-08-2011, 05:20 PM
I believe it is the 'human' translation that gets in the way. HE (she or it) has to communicate with humans, and unfortunately with 'free will' and all..sometimes those humans garble the TRUE message for their own personal gain. Just as they would with anything else given the chance.

Then what is the TRUE message? I am not sure we can understand it yet, even if HE (she or it) told us directly. Heck HE (she or it) could be trying right now to explain the true message, and they might as well be talking to brick walls. No..the walls might better be able to receive the message. *shrugs*

That's my problem with organized religion (well one of them). No matter what, you're basing your beliefs on human interpretation. I can't begin to count the times I've been told not to let human interpration get in the way of my faith. Okay, read the bible. I've tried, but I don't understand it. And if a 2000 year old book is the only way for god to communicate with humans, than epic fail on his part.

I don't object to a god. I believe anything is posible in the realms of the supernatural, but that also means that you can't say yours is the one true faith. If you're going to say something is 100% true and should be followed as literal gospel, FUCKING PROVE IT.

What if the reason God doesn't spread the word is because its a sort of test of humanity to have to spread the word of God? I mean, that human beings have to tell it to each-other. God COULD come down and tell it to us, but He doesn't because... I dunno, maybe that's not fair? I don't quite know, and please don't say I'm trying to weasel out of answering, I'm just speculating here. Perhaps, if God exists, He needs faith. And if faith is different from knowledge, then perhaps if God came down and proved He existed, He wouldn't have faith, he would have knowledge.

I wouldn't have a problem with that if the consequences of not having the faith wasn't eternal misery. Whether god sends people to hell or they "Send themselves there", it's not right. If god values faith, fine, but allowing people to go to hell over it? Not cool.

Gravekeeper
01-08-2011, 06:03 PM
I've read up on a few religions, and you would be surprised how similar they are. A good number mention a world devastating flood, have a good place and a bad place, and other similarities. Which is a heck of a coincidence. Yet..how they get to each is different, so HOW can that be you ask?


Its not a heck of a coincidence at all. Many of the stories are borrowed or repeated from older myths and legends. Plus *any* sort of major flood would be considered world devestating because any early culture experiencing it only knows the "world" as far as they themselves have traveled. Tsunami? HOLY SHIT WORLD IS ENDING even though it only struck all three of your villages. Besides, the oldest written language, Sumerian, has, you guessed it, a flood myth. Stories get passed down.

A good place and a bad place is even less of a coincidence. We all want to believe we don't end when we die. And we all on some level want "bad" people to have bad things happen to them, and us "good" people to be rewarded somehow. Plus after death punishment is an effective social tool to control people.

Besides not every religion does have a bad place and a good place. Some have neither, others *only* have a bad place, or only have a straight up limbo place regardless of your deeds. Others let you come back rather than sending you elsewhere, and still others don't let you leave in the first place. Letting you just chill out as a ghost, spirit, critter or monster. There are even some that have 9-10 places.

If anything it shows just how varied our attempts at explaining and understanding are. Religions that evolved in the same *regions* will borrow from each other as ideas gradually evolve. But if you compare two religions from opposite ends of the world, you're going to get two vastly different answers.

This is not a test, there is no right or wrong answer. It's a learning experience and we evolve through it. No ones waiting to damn us to eternal hellfire for touching our pecker. >.>

Lachrymose
01-08-2011, 07:36 PM
Reverend Lovejoy: "Ned, have you considered any of the other major religions? They're all pretty much the same."

Andara Bledin
01-09-2011, 02:06 AM
And if a 2000 year old book is the only way for god to communicate with humans, than epic fail on his part.
That's not the only way. But we're so founded in what we can't do, that by the time we're old enough to even consider it, we've already stopped believing that we even can.

^-.-^

Mytical
01-09-2011, 06:01 AM
Rageaholic. See this is where me and SOME Christians part way (and Muslims, and etc). I just can not fathom or comprehend a god that is petty. "Oh you had bad thoughts, go straight to hell. Do not pass go, do not collect 200." "Oh you loved this person of the same gender, bzzz you lose." etc. I think in the grand scheme of things that is just not important enough for a 'higher being' to worry about.

Not that everything is too small for them to worry about, however.

I also do not understand why a 'higher being' would require or care about being worshiped. Running a universe would be difficult enough without having to worry about who thinks they are real or not. Don't get me wrong, if you harm others or are pretty much a class A jerk, they will know and act accordingly, but minor things? Just don't understand why in all of sanity they would care.

protege
01-12-2011, 04:21 PM
Mytical, I think the answer is this: A lot of the "do it or else" crap came because someone put it in there. Think about it, what better way to control someone, than to put the fear of God into them? Even better, is that the more people they control...the more money they can get out of the converts.

Ghel
01-12-2011, 04:28 PM
Even better, is that the more people they control...the more money they can get out of the converts.
I think this is the reason for burnt offerings in the old testament. The Bible says that burning goats smell good to God, but it seems like they must have smelled good to the church elders, too.

BigGiant
01-12-2011, 04:30 PM
Personally, (and a little off topic)

I've always got a kick out of the whole "Jesus is all about love. He loves you."

But if you don't believe or accept Jesus into your heart? Burn in hell!

Nothing says love like eternal suffering.

Rageaholic
01-13-2011, 10:10 PM
Rageaholic. See this is where me and SOME Christians part way (and Muslims, and etc). I just can not fathom or comprehend a god that is petty. "Oh you had bad thoughts, go straight to hell. Do not pass go, do not collect 200." "Oh you loved this person of the same gender, bzzz you lose." etc. I think in the grand scheme of things that is just not important enough for a 'higher being' to worry about.

Not that everything is too small for them to worry about, however.

I also do not understand why a 'higher being' would require or care about being worshiped. Running a universe would be difficult enough without having to worry about who thinks they are real or not. Don't get me wrong, if you harm others or are pretty much a class A jerk, they will know and act accordingly, but minor things? Just don't understand why in all of sanity they would care.

Yeah that's what gets me. It's all the little things that can get you sent to hell. Tell a white lie? You're damned! Have sexual thoughts? Go straight to hell! And numorous other things that I fail to see why god would give a damn about (pun intended). I could understand god getting poed at someone killing or raping someone, but even that wouldn't deserve eternal punishment. It would be like a cop shooting someone 50 times for going 1 mile over the speed limit. Not only is it an excessive punishment for something so small, but it would be excessive even for bigger crimes.

And I've heard several "explainations" as to why it works this way.

God's perfect and demands punishment for any infraction: (which still makes him a petty asshole, even with the whole Jesus thing. Why create imperfect humans if you are so egocentric that you can't even handle it?)

Hell is mere seperation from god (which is still eternal misery according to those theologians. Also, how can one be seperated from god? Isn't god everywhere?)

And of course, god sending Jesus to take the punishment "we deserve". (which is ridiculous in so many ways. How is an innocent person taking a punishment just in any way? Also, why does anyone even have to be punished? Can't god just forgive?)

I've heard several different interprations, but no matter how much you spin or sugercoat it, it always comes down to becoming a Christian or be miserable forever. And that's just not love.

lordlundar
01-15-2011, 02:02 AM
Well, if the events of revelations is inevitable, I would say advance notice to duck and cover when all hell breaks loose.:p

Daskinor
01-28-2011, 07:21 PM
The Story of Noah's Ark is actually present in allot of Mediterranean cultures for a reason.

At one point in the past the Mediterranean Sea And black Sea was actualy a freshwater lake. And the ocean kept at bay. Throw in a little techtoinic shifting, the last ice sheet from the last ice age melting and maybe and earthquake. The last natural barriers fail and the sea floods the entire Mediterranean Lake area.

Any idea how devastating that would be to the area. A huge amount of farmland was lost and upwards of 100,000 people would of been displaced as the lakes became seas. Land lost to water, and farmland rendered useless by saltwater inlays. The story became myth for the area, and written in the Babylonian Epic of Gilgamesh. Also remember before the bible was ever written the Early Jewish people did spend some time in Babylonian Cites before moving on.


The story of David and Goliath is an easy one. Goliath was huge because he had a pituitary tumor. It would put pressure on the brain causing constant headaches and even violent behavior. David would be able to sneak up on him because the tumor would push up against the optic receptors in the brain causing blurred vision or even blindness. One shot to the head ruptures the tumor like an aneurysm and he goes down like a rock.

Take these stories throw in some relation to god and the message you want to send. And the events become reformed to carry what messages you want them to have, aka. "the moral of the story."

Ghel
01-28-2011, 07:45 PM
It's easy to see that the Bible is just a collection of folk tales and legends, with maybe a little bit of history thrown in. I can see that some stories were intended to have a message or "moral," but what message are we supposed to glean from stories such as Jesus cursing the fig tree? That Jesus was an idiot for expecting the tree to bear figs out of season?

Daskinor
01-28-2011, 08:27 PM
It's easy to see that the Bible is just a collection of folk tales and legends, with maybe a little bit of history thrown in. I can see that some stories were intended to have a message or "moral," but what message are we supposed to glean from stories such as Jesus cursing the fig tree? That Jesus was an idiot for expecting the tree to bear figs out of season?


The power of prayer and of god, Jesus asked the tree to be smited and so it was.

Oops hit enter to early, The tree had leaves but no taqsh. The points where the fruit will grow appear at the same time as the leaves. And the fig precursors are the size of an almond and editable. Not tasty but will keep you alive. Jesus saw the tree would not bear fruit and smote it.

There is also a nice lost books of the bible discussion where Jesus is more like a man and sometimes accidentally hurts people or things with his abilities.

Gravekeeper
01-29-2011, 04:44 AM
Let's not forget the Infancy Gospel of Thomas, where 6 year old Jesus was basically written after Loki:

"In another episode, a child disperses water that Jesus has collected, Jesus then curses him, which causes the child's body to wither into a corpse, found in the Greek text A, and Latin versions. Another child dies when Jesus curses him when he apparently accidentally bumps into him. In the latter case, there are three differing versions recorded the Greek Text A, Greek Text B, and the Latin text. Instead of bumping into Jesus in A, B records that the child throws a stone at Jesus, while the last says the boy punched him.

When Joseph and Mary's neighbors complain, they are miraculously struck blind by Jesus."

>.>

Ghel
01-29-2011, 05:01 PM
Oops hit enter to early, The tree had leaves but no taqsh. The points where the fruit will grow appear at the same time as the leaves. And the fig precursors are the size of an almond and editable. Not tasty but will keep you alive. Jesus saw the tree would not bear fruit and smote it.
Well, see, that's part of the problem. The apologetic for the taqsh was brought up long after the passage was written. How is anybody supposed to understand the Bible, when it has to be explained by apologists centuries or millennia later? And for that matter, if Jesus saw that the tree wasn't able to bear fruit, why didn't he heal it, like he had so many people in the gospels?

If the Bible were the inspired word of an omnipotent God, I would expect each person to understand it completely and immediately the first time they read it, no matter how many times it's been translated. They shouldn't need decades of study or apologetics to understand God's word.

Daskinor, it looks like your position is that the Bible is a collection of myths and legends, but that you think the stories have a historical basis. Is this something you think you can demonstrate, or is it just speculation? Also, do you think the Bible's central message, that the Biblical God exists, is true?


GK, growing up Catholic, I was always surprised that there weren't any records of Jesus' youth (except for that one time when he ran away when he was 12). I wondered how soon he knew he was God, and what miracles or smitings he performed as a child. I wondered if it was like Firestarter (the movie, not the tv series). Did he ever accidentally smite someone because he was throwing a temper tantrum? Of course, at the time, I didn't know that there were other gospels that the Catholic Church had chosen to leave out of the Bible.

Daskinor
02-01-2011, 08:48 PM
The Old Testament side has many similarities to other myths and legends in the area. You can see the genesis of such ideas, by comparing legends and other god like ideology of neighboring cultures. The most potent example is the story of the Ark and the epic of Gilgamesh. They are in essence the same story but a story meant for completely different audiences.

In the Exodus from Egypt, the plagues themselves can all be caused by one natural disaster. A volcano erupting, Santorini about 1500 years ago.

We know little about how the Old Testament really came to be. But most of the stories share a central theme. How god shapes the world and the events of our lives. To bring a sense of order to the real chaos of existing. Bad things happen because people are bad, good things happen because we respect god.

Adapting myth and legend to support this idea that god is all knowing, powerful and vengeful. But if you stay on his good side, good things happen.

The new Testament is another beast all together. We know a great deal more about it and how it was written and put together. It is not a collection of myths and legends like the old testament. The New was written to show a relation between man and god. But it is also a collection of different books written by different authors at different points of time over a span of centuries. Even then some of the books are collections of random writings and correspondence of even more people. All these authors did not share a common language, background or position within the early church. Oh and there is many, many more books of early Christan ideology that where left out.

So the early church had a problem, same problem as today. The splitting on key points of a Religion they where bringing to the people. So they did what any good Romans would do. Sit down, coble together a core set of beliefs and vote on it. Interesting fact, Revelations almost did not make it into the bible.

Now we have to remember the time, how many people knew how to read and write. So the bible was never written to be understood by the masses, only by the educated. After the fall of Rome, the Highly Educated. Imagine going to church over a thousands of years ago. You by all means would not be able to read the bible, it would have to be interpreted for you.

So now I will return to the story of Jesus and the Fig Tree.

This passage is really infamous because it shows Jesus in another light, more human one can say. Its also kinda of a rallying call for literal truth of the bible. The passage visibly shows no importance and goes at odds of Jesus' behavior.
Its also parried with Jesus' trip to the temple, another of his more human actions.

Remember what we are dealing with;

-Events Recorded centuries after they happen
-Events Written down by different authors
-These Authors have different Ideology, language and Backgrounds
-Translated from different languages
-Then taken, cut up and placed together in a more unified book of ideology
-Then that message is interpreted by a set group for the masses at large for over a thousand years.

To simply put it, in the modern bible the passage serves no purpose because its message was lost. Because its message was no longer needed.

This passage, along with the visit to the temple afterwards were most likely used to go against the institutions of old. The Jewish religion before the rise of Christianity. Passages dealing with how the new religion is not corrupt like old would fall out of wide use when the new church has become way more powerful then the old religions. So over centuries and throw in a few bad translations because the translator did not quite understand the passage himself. And there you go, you get a passage that makes no sense.

And that the key right there. It makes no sense to you or me. The bible needs to be interpreted over and over again, two men can read it and reach two entirely different conclusions. The message of the bible has to be interpreted by others. So it is always tainted with their own ideology. There are key points they all agree with but does that make it the work of god?

No, I never thought it was.

It is a work of man, So he could bring order to the world around him.

Ghel
02-01-2011, 11:54 PM
It is a work of man, So he could bring order to the world around him.
I don't see that kind of purpose in the Bible, but I agree it is a work of man. I'm all for discussing the Bible as a work of literature or fiction, as long as we agree that it is fiction.

Kheldarson
02-11-2011, 05:38 PM
I know I shouldn't respond here but...bah.

I'll go ahead and state for the record that yes I am Catholic. I'm studying apologetics in my free time, so I make no claim that I'm a trained theologian and/or philosopher. But this is the area I want to go back to study from a historical viewpoint.

So my bias being declared, going back to the original question, this seems tied more to the question of free will as is. Simply put, why should we have free will? Well, that's debated but I think it's because God, like all beings, wants to know He's loved. So He lets us choose. So He wants us to all know his message. But again, with free will, we screw things up. So we're spreading near conflicting messages. Personally, I think it's better to do your research and choose something that you believe in and stand for it. Share it if asked, but just let your life stand for itself. God knows who loves Him, no matter what the faith.

Ghel
02-12-2011, 12:45 AM
I can't believe you brought up free will. That's like the last rung of the ladder in any discussion. One more step down, and you fall into the abyss.

God wants to know he's loved, huh? How can anyone possibly love God in the way they love a parent, child, sibling, or even pet? You have to know someone to love them, and since God refuses to show that he even exists, much less let us actually get to know him, how can anybody be expected to love him? The way you describe him, God seems like a stalker, constantly watching someone, sending them anonymous cryptic messages, and then expecting his victim to respond positively to his expression of love. Creepy.

Kheldarson
02-12-2011, 03:29 AM
Or maybe he's the ultimate thought experiment. And it's the path of discovery that's really important. Hell, God's not even technically a person as he's infinite. We give him human definition. So maybe this ideal of God and the ideas that go along with Him are just a way for our puny minds to encompass the whole of the universe.

And how's God a stalker? In my version, He's laid out the clues, the ideas, the thoughts, the paths that anyone can follow if they so choose in order to find Him along said path so you can get to know him better. Good example would be St. Therese of Avila's book The Interior Castle. She describes the way to God/enlightenment/discovery of the infinite as traveling through the castle of the heart. And guess what? If you don't even start inside the castle, you'll never see God. Or infinity. Whatever. Why? Because you've chosen not to.

But would like to know how waiting for somebody to join you is being a stalker.

Rapscallion
02-12-2011, 07:51 AM
If you don't even start inside the castle, you'll never see God. Or infinity. Whatever. Why?

Because there's nothing there?

I'll quite happily look for evidence of the god you seem to believe exists, but only when there's testable proof that there's more than just supposition. I've yet to see any claim for a supernatural being be backed up to a reasonable standard. What I usually see is something akin to, "I can't explain everything, so it's my preference in invisible friend." Sometimes it comes with, "This is the only interpretation of invisble friend that is acceptable," and at other times it comes with, "Every invisible friend is valid, and they all are the same one, so I'm right anyway."

There was something I saw a while back from an atheist on Youtube that I've taken on board as it makes far more sense of my position. I'll paraphrase from memory.

"What can you do to make me believe that your god exists? Nothing. Your god can do it, though. When your god is ready to do what you claim he or she can do, show me."

It's not a closed-mind position. In fact, it's pretty open - all you have to do is give some sort of evidence.

Look at the christian god - according to his biography he's able to slay the firstborn of an entire enemy nation (though he needed help to let him and his assistants know which ones were his chosen people); plagues of locusts ravaged the land; causing the sea to open to allow his chosen people through and then return to drown their harassers; use a burning bush in the way we'd use a phone; turn someone into a pillar of salt; etc.

No semantics, no word games, no definitions - the claims made about the god you believe in need to be backed up with action by your god. Until such time, it's reasonable to not believe in that god.

Rapscallion

Ghel
02-13-2011, 08:27 PM
And how's God a stalker?
Somebody who I've never met is telling me that he loves me using cryptic messages and go-betweens (theists) rather than telling me himself. That's stalker-like.

If God is omniscient, he knows that I could never love somebody I haven't met. However, he would know what it would take to convince me that he exists (even if I don't know). If God is omnipotent, he would have the power to convince me that he exists. Being omnipotent and omniscient, he would even have the power and know-how to do so without interfering with my free will. The fact that God has not contacted me in a way that would convince me of his existence says that either he doesn't exist, he doesn't care whether I believe, or he's incompetent.

Rageaholic
02-14-2011, 06:07 PM
Somebody who I've never met is telling me that he loves me using cryptic messages and go-betweens (theists) rather than telling me himself. That's stalker-like.

If God is omniscient, he knows that I could never love somebody I haven't met. However, he would know what it would take to convince me that he exists (even if I don't know). If God is omnipotent, he would have the power to convince me that he exists. Being omnipotent and omniscient, he would even have the power and know-how to do so without interfering with my free will. The fact that God has not contacted me in a way that would convince me of his existence says that either he doesn't exist, he doesn't care whether I believe, or he's incompetent.

Exactly. I don't buy this "not looking hard enough" crap. I could buy that god wants us to do good here on earth and will reward us accordingly in the afterlife. Unfortunately, this is not what I hear from theists. You have to have a "relationship" with god which makes no sense. How can you have a relationship with an entity you can't see or hear? I'm sorry, but that is not something I can wrap my mind around. If god is trying to communicate with me, he's way too subtle.