Chumly
 
  1  
Reply Tue 18 Apr, 2006 03:21 pm
Poor ol' Rex, at least he has a sense of humor and is good on the ol' QWERTY keyboards (pun). As to the rest:

eeeeeeee.........
0 Replies
 
RexRed
 
  1  
Reply Tue 18 Apr, 2006 05:14 pm
Tell me what you think of the man Jesus Christ and I will tell you how far you will go spiritually.

We do not receive "word of knowledge" and "word of wisdom" by prefacing the Bible and faith with skepticism.

Maybe it is just that some have not reflected on the scriptures that are important.

Like this one...

James 1:21
Wherefore lay apart all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness, and receive with meekness the engrafted word, which is able to save your souls.

Comment:
ENGRAFTED WORD?

Have you ever received the word with meekness?
0 Replies
 
RexRed
 
  1  
Reply Tue 18 Apr, 2006 05:23 pm
I personally use the King James Bible because it is the most accurate in the sense that it has many reference books that can track it's words back into the ancient languages.

For instance, this Hebrew/Greek/Aramaic word was used in the Bible 5 times and translated this, this and that in these specific places.

This is Biblical research...
0 Replies
 
astounding
 
  1  
Reply Tue 18 Apr, 2006 05:57 pm
http://www.able2know.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=73147

read this topic posted in science and mathmatics.
0 Replies
 
rosborne979
 
  1  
Reply Tue 18 Apr, 2006 08:13 pm
xingu wrote:
The ancients were ignorant and didn't know what to make of nature so they created gods and used them to explain all they were ignorant of.


"They told us that the stars were pinholes in the curtain of night, through which the light of heaven shown. And it was a beautiful story. But it wasn't true. The truth is that all the stars are Suns, just far away." - A.A Attanasio.

And a powerful truth it is. One that effortlessly dwarfs all the deific fantasies into insignificant fluff.
0 Replies
 
Eorl
 
  1  
Reply Tue 18 Apr, 2006 08:18 pm
ros, you'd think so wouldn't you.

So what is wrong with Americans? I just don't get it !!

(btw, love Attanasio.)
0 Replies
 
rosborne979
 
  1  
Reply Tue 18 Apr, 2006 08:29 pm
Eorl wrote:
ros, you'd think so wouldn't you.


Apparently it is for some, but not for all.

Eorl wrote:
So what is wrong with Americans? I just don't get it !!


It's not just Americans. The media lens just magnifies the things which attract the most attention. A self fulfilling riot.

Eorl wrote:
(btw, love Attanasio.)


Wow, I thought I was the only one to read his stuff. My second favorite book of all time was _The Last Legends of Earth_. My first is _The Last Dancer_, by Danial Keys Moran (now out of print).

The quote above is from _Hunting the Ghost Dancer_ written in 1991. It's an obscure paragraph buried deeply in the book with no fanfare. But it has always stuck with me; simple elegant and powerful. Much of his writing was that way.
0 Replies
 
Eorl
 
  1  
Reply Tue 18 Apr, 2006 08:39 pm
Not just Americans, no....., but in the world survey stats they really are an abnormality in the civilised world. Do you think it's the Irish background thing?

(Last Legends was my fav Attanasio, but "Sea of Glass" by Barry B. Longyear (also out of print) was my alltime top. I'll see if I can find DKMoran in my local second-hand.)
0 Replies
 
timberlandko
 
  1  
Reply Tue 18 Apr, 2006 08:45 pm
RexRed wrote:
Tell me what you think of the man Jesus Christ and I will tell you how far you will go spiritually.

We do not receive "word of knowledge" and "word of wisdom" by prefacing the Bible and faith with skepticism.

Maybe it is just that some have not reflected on the scriptures that are important.

Like this one...

James 1:21
Wherefore lay apart all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness, and receive with meekness the engrafted word, which is able to save your souls.

Comment:
ENGRAFTED WORD?

Have you ever received the word with meekness?

Indeed, Rex, with the meekness, curiosity, objectivity and honesty of a scholar - not the irrational, illogical, unquestioning acceptance required of "believers".

[url=http://www.able2know.com/forums/viewtopic.php?p=1227652#1227652]More thasn a year ago, to you, Rex, timber[/url] wrote:
... Now, Rex, lookin' at the New American Standard Bible, the Ancient Greek artios translates as "adequate", while in the King James Bible, it translates as "perfect". In contemporary Orthodox Bibles, both Russo-Cyrillic and Greek, and in contemporary non-scriptural Cyrillic and Greek canonical writings, the translation is more along the lines of "fit", "proper", or "suitable", with certain context calling for a sense akin to "complete" or "finished". Its been many, many years since I've really thought much about it, but as I recall, looking at the works of Homer, the other Greek playwrights, philosophers, and historians, the word appears to have connoted a state of fitness or suitabiliy, as for a particular purpose, use, or task, though good argument may be made for inclusion of at least some sense of the concept of immediacy or timeliness, and to perhaps a lesser extent a concept we would characterize as "elevated" - lifted up, borne on high, carried above. Context matters quite a bit. The association of the word with the concept of "perfect", as without flaw, blemish, or shortcomming, appears no earlier than the direct antecedents of the King James Bible. Comparing Latin, Greek, Hebraic, Syriac, and Aramaic writings both of Judaeo-Christian scripture and independent of but contemporary with Judaeo-Christian scripture, artios in those times appears generally to have meant something far closer to "good enough" than to "perfect". All that, however has zip to do with anything other than the silly lexico-etymologic digression for which I freely acknowledge responsibility and herewith do apologize and from which semantic tomfoolery I declare intention henceforth to abjure.

Perhaps, Rex, some fault for the perception and assertion of some here that you do not address the point at discussion lays in that while those who criticize your presentation and content approach the issue through objective philosophic inquiry, you approach the issue through subjectictive theologic doctrine. To some, myself included, it appears you have made no point, offered no argument, engaged in no topical, forensically valid debate, but rather have preached, prosyletized, and quoted a bit - a selection of no apparent relevance to the discussion-in-progress you joined - from a particular one among many translations of the Judaeo-Christian core canon. One charitably may surmise we talk at cross purposes regarding the matter at question. Less charitably, one might ask of you, "where did that come from, why do you think it belongs here, and just where do you figure you're goin' with it?" .



More timber on the Bible:
[url=http://www.able2know.com/forums/viewtopic.php?p=1236423#1236423]timberlandko wrote:
QH787Independence[/url] wrote:
... I do however read the Bible, and yes, it is the real one ...


I take it then you're familiar with Philo's 1st Century Antiquities, with The Sibylline Oracles, the texts of Qumran, the works of Hillel the Elder, with The Talmud and The Torah, The Pentateuch, the Kabbalah, familiar with Origen, Theodotion, Eusebius, Pamphilus, Epiphanius, Lucian, Hesychius, Maimonides, with Augustine and Aquinas, with Athanasius' 4th Century Greek codex commissioned by The Emperor Constantine, essentially the foundation of Jerome's monumental late-4th Century - early-5th Century Latin Vulgate, upon which is based both the now-abandoned Geneva Bible (the version chosen by Guttenberg for printing, and which was the bible brought to The New World by The Pilgrims) and the Clementine Vulgate of 1546 , which spawned the far more rigorously and comprehensively resaerched and compiled 1582 Douay-Rheims Version, from which the 1611 King James Version directly derived (which version, incidentally, included, textually interspersed, 7 Deutero-Canonical books now referred to by Protestants as The Apocrypha, which in all subsequent editions either were redacted entirely or consigned to an appendix or addendum), as well as with the myriad other translations, transliterations, interpretations, and variously "authorized" versions which have appeared over the past half millenia. With your knowledge and familiarity, could you tell us just which bible is the "real one", and why?

Quote:
... if you have specific scriptures with references, I'd really enjoy it if you shared them with me ...


I for one would really enjoy seein' the references, scriptural, ex-canonical, and/or academic/philosophical, on which you base your assessment of the provenance of whichever bible you champion. I really, really, really would like to see them.


And some "timber on the King James Version(s) in particular" - yes, "versions" - it too has evolved through several itterations since its first publication:
[url=http://www.able2know.com/forums/viewtopic.php?p=1239509#1239509]timberlandko[/url] wrote:
QH787Independence wrote:
I am referring to the Christian Bible...


By definition, they're all "Christian Bibles" ... a conjoining of texts referred to as "Old Testament" and "New Testament" into a single unified tome. The point I'm makin' is that many folks who claim to "Know the Bible" know nothin' more than the text of a particular version or edition- one among many - which for whatever reasons satisfies the individual makin' the claim. "Knowing the Bible" and knowin' ABOUT THE BIBLE are 2 very different things; the former comes about by rote learnin', the latter only as a result of extensive study involvin' history, archaeology, philosophy, comparative theology, and literature, among other disciplines. I don't claim to "Know the Bible" - though I'm quite familiar enough with its various iterations to carry on a reasonably well-founded, fairly high level discussion of it with even the most ardent exegete. Neither do I claim to know "All about the bible", but I know far more about the bible, and of canonical text scriptural or otherwise and commentary and analysis relevant to same in general, than do most folks who claim to "Know the bible".

I have no reason to doubt you are both familiar and comfortable with whatever bible you happen to endorse. That to which I take exception is your assertion of the primacy of the version you champion over any of the rest. It is my contention that despite your personal conviction that you are right in your endorsement and concomitant assertion, no forensically valid, academically sound defense of your stated position can be made.

QH787Independence wrote:
There's more than one version...they all say the same thing, it's just worded differently...usually to provide a more easily understood message for the reader

I would submit the various iterations are intended to more readily convey a given partisan interpretation of the scriptures to a target audience than to render scripture itself more readily understandable in and of itself. Witness, for example, the 16th Century development of The King James Bible - no doubt the direct progenitor of the bible you endorse; its primary raison d'ĂȘtre was to butress the Stewart claim to the English throne and to distance the English from The Papacy.

As to the various bibles all "saying the same thing", that claim is patently aburd. To draw but one example, I invite you to research the word "filioque" and the impact it has had on Christian theologly and hermanuetics over the past 17 centuries or so.

And just to clarify, it is my conviction that religion - of any stripe - equates to superstion, and that "sacred writings" in general, regardless the faith to which which writings are sacred, equate to myth. "The Bible" is propaganda. Not that there's anything wrong with that - just that it is neither more nor less than that. Aesop's fables offer moral and ethical lessons as well, you know, as do the writings of Confucius and of the Bhavagad Gita and The Epic of Gilgamesh (which itself is deeply intertwined in the much-later appearing texts which became "The Bible")and myths and legends of all cultures across history - lessons echoed in, not unique to "The Bible".


And just for the fun of it, timber on the historicity of the purported Jesus Christ:
[url=http://www.able2know.com/forums/viewtopic.php?p=1699476#1699476]Directly addressing you, Rex,timber[/url] wrote:
Dare we hope to count the hours and the days 'twixt now and your promised return, Rex?

Well, perhaps we should, or at least might. Somehow, though, I doubt the requisite circumstance will pertain.

Oh, and as you search for the exit, by way of a signpost to historicity vs the Abrahamic Myhtopaeia, I point you to this:

a while back, and not for the 1st time, [url=http://www.able2know.com/forums/viewtopic.php?p=1678270#1678270]timber[/url] wrote:


... Apart from internal reference derived wholly and exclusively from the Abrahamic Mythopaeia itself, what evidence have you for these claims? To my knowledge, no independent, direct historical reference to anything you've mentioned there exists. I submit there is no forensically, academically, scientifically valid evidence for the existence either of the Biblical Jesus nor the Biblical Moses.


Leaving Moses for later discussion, let's examine the actual historicity of the Biblical Jesus. Those who've followed earlier discussions of mine pertaining to this particular point may experience a deja vu moment; indeed I previously have written just about exactly what follows. Feel free to ship over it if you've seen it before Laughing

Those arguing for the historicity of Jesus point frequently to Tacitus: Annals 15:44, which translates, " ... "derived their name and origin from Christ, who, in the reign of Tiberius, had suffered death by the sentence of the Procurator Pontius Pilate". More on Tacitus' reference in a bit, but first, there are a few other nearly contemporary references from other writers cited as historical proof, as well. Apologists for the Historicity of Jesus make much of the little on which they have to draw.

Frequently mentioned in similar vein to the Tacitus "proof" is Josephus' Testimonium Flavianum, from Antiquities of the Jews 18:63-64, which translates, " ... About this time there lived Jesus, a wise man, if indeed one ought to call him a man. For he was one who wrought surprising feats and as a teacher of such people as accept the truth gladly. He won over many Jews and many of the Greeks. He was the Messiah. When Pilate, upon hearing him accused by men of the highest standing amongst us, had condemned him to be crucified, those who had in the first place come to love him did not give up their affection for him. On the third day he appeared to them restored to life, for the prophets of God had prophesied these and countless other marvelous things about him. And the tribe of the Christians, so called after him, has still to this day not disappeared." Frequent mention also is made of Josephus, Antiquities 20:9.1, which translates " ... so he ("he" in the passage referring to one Ananus, eldest son of High Priest Ananus ... timber) assembled the Sanhedrin of judges, and brought before him the brother of Jesus, who was called Christ, whose name was James, and some others and when he had formed an accusation against them, he delivered them to be stoned."

Of the two Josephus references, the second, often termed the "Jamesian Passage" is accorded by historians somewhat more provenance than the first, or Testimonium Flavianum passage, which generally is accepted to be if not a whole later addition, at the very least a later-edited expansion by a 3rd Century transcriber of Christian agenda. However, neither passage is universally accepted as original, at least as currently known, to Josephus' Antiquities. There are questions arising both from contextual positioning - word usage and phrasing - and apparent internal contradictions arising from considering the passages with the overall Antiquities. It is known that Origen, a renowned 3rd Century Christian scholar and a key figure in the early evolution of Christianity, referenced the Testimonium Flavianum. It is known too that the style and word usage of the Testimonium Flavianum, while not particularly characteristic of Josephus' practice, is wholly consistent with Origen's style and usage.

Highlighted here in blue are the phrases which give scholars difficulty: " ... About this time there lived Jesus, a wise man, if indeed one ought to call him a man. For he was one who wrought surprising feats and as a teacher of such people as accept the truth gladly. He won over many Jews and many of the Greeks. He was the Messiah. When Pilate, upon hearing him accused by men of the highest standing amongst us, had condemned him to be crucified, those who had in the first place come to love him did not give up their affection for him. On the third day he appeared to them restored to life, for the prophets of God had prophesied these and countless other marvelous things about him. And the tribe of the Christians, so called after him, has still to this day not disappeared." Particularly of note is the "Messiah" reference; numerous times throughout Antiquities and his other writings, Josephus specifically and unambiguously bestows the title "Messiah" on his own patron, the Emperor Trajan. Perplexing as well is that Josephus wrote much more expansively of John The Baptist and of other zealots and cult figures among the Jews ... writings all devoid of any Jesus, Christ, or Christian reference. A last eyebrow raiser lies in the reverent tone with which Christ is described - not at all fitting either with Josephus' style or general contemporary sentiment.

None of that by itself is damning evidence, but neither is there unambiguous provenance. While it is entirely plausible Josephus wrote of Jesus, it cannot be proven that he did, and there is plentiful credible argument he did not.

Turning to Tacitus, the sole relevant passage in Annals does nothing more than confirm that at the time Tacitus was writing, there was a cult styled as "Christians", the members of which professed a belief that their self-purported central cult figure, "Christ", had died a martyr at the hands of Pilate, "Procurator of Judea" during the reign of Tiberius. That alone raises serious question as to any provenance derived thereby. While the Tacitus text suffers from none of the provenance difficulties afflicting the Josephus examples, in no way is it independent evidence of anything other than that a cult known as Christians had a tradition involving the death of their putative namesake. The key point of difficulty historians have with the oft-cited Tacitus passage is that he terms Pilate "Procurator", whereas the actual office held by Pilate was Prefect - a terminology distinction error very unlike, in fact otherwise unevidenced in, anything else ever written by Tacitus. It is, however, an error echoed in the Gospels, though nowhere else. Too, he refers to Jesus by the Graeco-Christian religious title "Christos", an honorific, as opposed to the almost universally observed contemporary Roman practice of referring to personages other than nobility or signal military accomplishment (which itself generally conveyed nobility) by given names further delineated by patronymics or regional identifiers; Abraham son of Judah, for instance, or Simon of Gaza. One must strongly consider the possibility Tacitus was working not from Roman records in this instance, but rather recounting what he had been told by or heard of Christians.

Other 1st Century writers, Suetonius, Thalus, and Pliny the Younger, also are thought by some to offer independent historical evidence of Jesus.

A passage from Suetonius' Lives of the Caesars, specifically Claudius 5.25.4, translates, "Since the Jews constantly made disturbances at the instigation of Chrestus (the contextual reference is to action taken in 49 CE by Claudius, then Emperor ... timber) expelled them from Rome." Several things stand out here. First, and perhaps least troubling, is that "Chrestus" actually is a common latinization of a known Greek proper name wholly unrelated to the messianic religious title "Christ", or "Christos". Second, there is no reference to "Christians", but rather those being discussed are given the appellation "Jews", and finally, the events described took place in 49 AD, disturbances instigated in Rome by one Chrestus, an individual apparently present both temporally and locationally regarding the disturbances - nearly 2 decades after the accepted date of Jesus' death. The only connection to Jesus or to Christians is the similarity of spelling between the name "Chrestus" and the title or honorific "Christos". Most interesting is that Pliny the Elder, writing much closer to the times in which the incidents reportedly took place, mentions Christians and/or Christ not at all.

With Thalus, we delve even deeper into ambiguity; no first person text survives, and the earliest reference to Thalus describing the crucifixion as having been accompanied by "earthquake and darkness", echoing Gospel accounts, is to be found in the 3rd Century writings of Julius Africanus, a Christian writer and leader. No contemporary record of any such occurrence in or near Judea/Palestine during the 1st Century exists ... a surprising circumstance had there been in fact unexplained mid-day darkness coincident with earthquake. That sorta thing tends to get noticed, and written about, big time. That it might have been left unremarked by any other than the Gospelers and possibly Thalus beggars the imagination.

Turning to Pliny the Younger, his voluminous correspondences with the Emperor Trajan bear frequent mention of Christians in Asia Minor, their beliefs and their practices in context of dissent against and resistance to Roman authority, and amount to discussions of how best to deal with the bother and disturbance fostered by the Christian cult. There is no mention whatsoever of Jesus, and the only reference to "Christ" is to be found in the term "Christians".

In short, history tells us nothing about the historicity of Jesus beyond that there was an offshoot cult of Judaism known as Christians, they had traditions, beliefs and practices, and that Roman Authority thought none too highly of them.



astounding wrote:
http://www.able2know.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=73147

read this topic posted in science and mathmatics.


Asounding, welcome to A2K - a kind word of advice - well meant, I assure you; its fine to dispute science and mathematics with science and mathematics; that's the process by which both are developed, explored, refined, confirmed, revised, or dismissed. However, in order to do so, one must both know the science and mathematics one wishes to dispute, and must also present that dispute in forensically valid. academically sound manner, otherwise, all one manages to accomplish is to illustrate ignorance of science, mathematics, and forensics.



Eorl wrote:
... (btw, love Attanasio.)


You mean to say you're a Brewers fan? :wink:

(BTW - if you're interested in Arthurian Legend, a marvelelous web resource may be found at The Camelot Project
0 Replies
 
Eorl
 
  1  
Reply Tue 18 Apr, 2006 09:17 pm
Thanks timber, cool site!!

I'm more into Attanasio's hardore sci-fi though.

As for "Brewers", are they Rugby League or Rugby Union...maybe even Aussie Rules....dunno, don't follow sport much. Wink
0 Replies
 
Chumly
 
  1  
Reply Tue 18 Apr, 2006 10:25 pm
timber= #1
0 Replies
 
Lightwizard
 
  1  
Reply Wed 19 Apr, 2006 07:48 am
Let's see, the last time I checked I had two copies of the St. James and the New English edition of the Bible, all of which I've studied with an Episcopalean Priest as a personal guide. It didn't require but one-tenth my mental resources required for the study of evolution as studying myth and fable does not require an IQ higher than a dead flashlight battery.
0 Replies
 
RexRed
 
  1  
Reply Wed 19 Apr, 2006 09:33 am
astounding wrote:
http://www.able2know.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=73147

read this topic posted in science and mathmatics.


Well I wanna be a rock... Smile
0 Replies
 
RexRed
 
  1  
Reply Wed 19 Apr, 2006 09:37 am
Lightwizard wrote:
Let's see, the last time I checked I had two copies of the St. James and the New English edition of the Bible, all of which I've studied with an Episcopalean Priest as a personal guide. It didn't require but one-tenth my mental resources required for the study of evolution as studying myth and fable does not require an IQ higher than a dead flashlight battery.


I disagree with you.

Studying evolution you need to fantasize that matter is dead and that takes allot of dumbing down of stuff.

Did you know there are over 250 different figures of speech used in the Bible and some have over 50 varieties incorporated?

Can you name even three of them?
0 Replies
 
RexRed
 
  1  
Reply Wed 19 Apr, 2006 09:50 am
rosborne979 wrote:
xingu wrote:
The ancients were ignorant and didn't know what to make of nature so they created gods and used them to explain all they were ignorant of.


"They told us that the stars were pinholes in the curtain of night, through which the light of heaven shown. And it was a beautiful story. But it wasn't true. The truth is that all the stars are Suns, just far away." - A.A Attanasio.

And a powerful truth it is. One that effortlessly dwarfs all the deific fantasies into insignificant fluff.


Ros that is actually beautiful "I mean the pinholes in the night..." Looking at your avatar the sun looks like a pinhole... I have not really noticed how nice your avatar is...

I like it.

The physical light from the sun and sky are actually a mirror of the light of heaven...

Even if it is a sun shining the light. It is the creator who is still the source of this light..

So the ancients were never wrong...

The stars are still pinholes in the curtain of night, through which the light of heaven is shown...

Smile
0 Replies
 
Lightwizard
 
  1  
Reply Wed 19 Apr, 2006 10:01 am
Just keep believing that quaint little ideas and simile, metaphor and irony are used in all speech, not just in the Bible.

Philosophy consists very largely of one philosopher arguing that all other philosophers are jackasses. He usually proves it, and I should add that he also usually proves that he is one himself.

H. L. Mencken
0 Replies
 
timberlandko
 
  1  
Reply Wed 19 Apr, 2006 10:01 am
As long as we're going all warm and melty over avatars here, as I've said before, Rex, your avatar is a fine bit of photography - I was impressed when you told me it was an original of yours; it reminds me very much of Joel Meyerowitz
0 Replies
 
Lightwizard
 
  1  
Reply Wed 19 Apr, 2006 10:10 am
Oh yeah, will Sully could beat up an eagle. Not that it would ever happen.
0 Replies
 
farmerman
 
  1  
Reply Wed 19 Apr, 2006 10:12 am
Im sure that Rex is familiar with Don Dunbar of Eastport. Don does some good downeast photo work also. Rex, you live near Jonesport correct?

http://www.easternmaineimages.com

hes got a nice archive and YOU DONT NEED NO STEENKEN PLUG _INS TO VIEW!!
0 Replies
 
Lightwizard
 
  1  
Reply Wed 19 Apr, 2006 10:41 am
Rather like the Croatian painter we carry in the gallery (of course, he's painting on the Dalmation Coast on the Adriatic Sea):

http://www.wentworthgallery.com/wgimage/MUSTAPIC/images/MUST-0278.jpg
0 Replies
 
 

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