R: "What I find rude is you making tons of threads and then when called on blatant contradictions made by you, you never go back to them."
Gimme an example. Oh, you did already:
R: "An example would be your repeated claims that Jesus told people to disregard the Commandment "honor thy mother and father"."
I did not claim what you said I did. Jesus did not tell people to disregard the commandment to honor their father and mother. What Jesus /did/ do was to say that that commandment is lower in the hierarchy of commandments than the commandment to obey God. So if your parent says, "Honor me by disobeying God," you shouldn't disobey God. This was true before Jesus came as well as afterwards; if an Israelite father under the Law of Moses told his children to worship idols, they were not obligated to commit idolatry.
I think this is obvious to anyone who takes the time to consider what I said alongside the relevant texts.
R: "Explaining a contradiction, while making yor own contradiction still leaves us with a contradiction."
But I'm /not/ making my own contradictions.
R: "Most christians and many skeptics dismiss books such as "The Holy Blood, The Holy Grail" because there are too many "supposes" in it."
It's rather history-challenged. Plenty of people have spent their time eviscerating the Holy Blood, Holy Grail / DaVinci Code nonsense, so I will skip all that here. Tangent.
R: "Well, that is what you are insisting we need to do in your explainations. [i.e., suppose this or that.] How can one be bad and the other be good?"
Easy: I'm playing defense. The person who posits a contradiction in the text is already making a supposition; he's asserting that Statement A must irreconcilably disagree with Statement B. The solutions I offer do not always demonstrate that A and B agree, but they do, I think, show that A and B do not irreconcilably disagree -- in other words, the view that there's a contradiction between A and B is not logically unavoidable. And that's the immediate extent of my endeavour.
When I believe that the Biblical text is self-consistent (both as a whole, and in any specific case of alleged discrepancy), I'm making a supposition. I can't always prove that my solution (or any one of several possible solutions, in some instances) is what the Biblical authors had in mind. But the person who insists that there's a contradiction there is also making a supposition -- he supposes that there's no way that Statement A and Statement B can possibly agree.
I'm content to walk by faith. Via my resolutions I want to show that the person who insists that the Biblical authors produced errors is also walking by faith (at least, when he is making a very large percentage of his claims) -- his conclusions (like mine) rest on some unverifiable premises, different and sometimes opposite premises than my own.
Yours in Christ,
Waterrock
