It shows the class of the people who hang out on this forum.
Absolutely! It was a pretty good, clean debate if you ask me. Good points on both sides, reasonably well presented, but with tempers under control for the most part. Good job!
I do have to say I cracked myself up with my comparison of studio designers to religion.
While I was reading that, I was just itching to turn around the exact same "analogy" against you! But then I thought better of it...
Andy in his devotion, learned to read Greek so he could read the original Bible.
Well, that would help him with only about one third of the Bible: the rest of it was written in Hebrew and Aramaic... And of course, I guess you do know that there is no such thing as "the Original Bible"?
According to him it didn't say what he had been taught and what the translations were.
I wonder how well he learned it? Koine isn't easy, and doesn't use the same verbal tenses that English does, for example. Words can have multiple meanings that are only clarified by context, etc. Optional prepositions and articles that can change the meaning of an entire sentence are hard to pin down. Not an easy task.
He is no longer a Christian.
That's a pity. The more Koine I learn, the more firmly convinced I become!
But then again, nobody could accuse me of being a strict fundamentalist, since that requires imposing metal contortions on my poor old mind and doing mangled neuronal gymnastics with my brain that I just could never handle in good conscience. I'd have to convince my self that lies are true and truth is a lie in order to go down that road.
But that doesn't make the Bible any less correct, or any less powerful...
Rather, I prefer to take each part at face value, and read it as it was supposed to be read: the poetic parts I read as poetry (without trying to convince myself that stars have hands and can applaud, for example, or that rocks have mouths and can sing); the historic parts I read as historic, but from the point of view of those who wrote them (not trying to impose my own modern-Western point of view on ancient-Eastern customs); and the actual spiritual parts I read as spiritual, without hoping too much that they can be made to fit the laws of science
But what amazes me even then is how closely the Bible actually
does parallel science! There is no conflict if you study both at once and have a reasonably open mind about interpreting the Bible. For example, I see no conflict at all between the Big Bang theory, and the account of creation in Genesis: they tie in rather neatly, if you take the point of view that poor old Moses was doing his damnedest to put down on paper the things he was seeing in some kind of vision that God gave him. All things considered, he did a darn good job! But of course, a fundamentalist finds that really hard to do, since to him "water" also only ever means liquid H2O, and a "day" is a literal period of 24 hours, and nothing else (even though the exact same Hebrew word is used in several other places to mean "indeterminate period of time", much like we use it to day, as in "the day of the steam engine").
When you start reading the Bible with an open mind, admitting that it might actually be fully correct if you can only get the right handle on it, it starts to make an amazing amount if sense, and the supposed "conflicts" with science disappear! Personally, I don't see any conflict at all between the Bible and science, unless you really try hard to create those conflicts, instead of trying to resolve them. It seems to me those conflicts normally come from one side of the issue, based on preconceived notions about the other side, and without ever bothering to actually study the other side and try to figure out how to unite the two, instead of tear them apart!
So it's a pity that your friend lost his faith, based on inadequate linguistics. That really is sad. I would have liked to talk to him about that. It might just be a big misunderstanding.
Does anyone know what happened to Knightfly?
He does still drop in very occasionally, but hasn't done so in a while. You could try PM'ing him.
- Stuart -