Tired of the Nonsense wrote:
Volbrigade wrote:
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Replying to post 178 by Tired of the Nonsense]
Volbrigade wrote:
I'm going to go way out on a limb, and suppose that you don't think it happened. Cool
But I do.
You believe that a corpse came back to life and subsequently flew away. It's true that I consider that to be a perfectly silly claim. Objectively, and in the light of all reason, logic and common sense, which of the two of us appears to be standing on firmer footing?
Volbrigade wrote:
Would you like to discuss WHY I think it happened?
I would like you to spell it out in your own words.
Gladly!
First -- let me tell you what I DON’T think happened:
I DON'T think that
a corpse came back to life and subsequently flew away.
I think that we’re talking about something that is, at a minimum, hyderdimensional in aspect.
I think that our dimensionally finite existence is but a subset of another one — our cosmos, which is finite on both ends of the size spectrum (the macrocosm and microcosm), a subset of a transcending metacosm.
I think what happened in Joseph of Arimethea’s tomb that first Sunday after Passover was that the man was “translated� into the metacosm. I don’t claim to understand the technology: whether the fungible atoms that composed His body underwent a transformation into a hyperdimensional state (they, perhaps, already ARE in that state, in a limited sense); or if perhaps those atoms were simply dispelled by the sovereign will of God.
But I think the body that was resurrected was a 4D manifestation of a hyperdimensional mode of existence — again, at a minimum. A cube, if you will, manifesting as a square in our reality — an allusion to the Flatland analogy, with which I think everyone is familiar (surely).
He could therefore do any of the things that a corporeal body could do — eat, drink; touch and be touched — but He was not limited to those physical acts; He could appear in an enclosed 6-sided space, without penetrating any of its sides.
And when His disciples observed His “Ascension�, what they saw was Him leaving our natural environment, for His supernatural one. One that we can’t observe or measure, any more than we can observe or measure any of the extra dimensions physicists assure us must exist.
I think that their observance of these phenomena (along with the indwelling of the Holy Spirit — I mention that Third Person of the Trinity in the interest of accuracy, and full disclosure; but let’s not get ahead of ourselves) so profoundly impacted these ordinary laymen, that they were able to turn the world upside down with the message they validated: that God had entered His creation as a man.
I also think that by the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, they were given insights into what it all means — an important, if not the chief, one being that we will “see Him as He is — because
we will be like Him.� (1 John 3:2)
I think that’s pretty cool.
I also think it’s pretty cool how, when properly understood, the Old and New Testaments complete an “integrated message system� that is about Him, in its entirety, with its theme being “Redemption�.
“The New Testament is in the Old Testament concealed; the Old Testament is in the New Testament revealed.�
The ability to supervise the compilation of such a text is a quality that is exclusive of an Entity, and Author, that is “outside our time domain.�
I don't claim to understand the function of "metacosm" either. But then, since the word "metacosm" is an entirely made up word, that is understandable. What we are dealing with here is pure double speak. In other words, grade A make believe.
You're essentially suggesting you believe that magic occurred.
"Magic"? Did you say "magic"?
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Those whose minds are made up will likely remain unpersuaded by any arguments for the Deity of Christ. For the benefit of the open-minded, however:
Since we know that the universe had a beginning, and is thus finite in terms of both time and space; and that “everything that HAS A BEGINNING must have a CAUSE�; then it is reasonable — not “magical� — to infer that the Cause for our spacial, temporal reality must reside outside of it.
And, owing to the spectacular evidence of detailed, intricate design and order in our universe, it is further reasonable — not “magical� — to infer that the cause of our reality has both Mind, Will, and Intelligence.
That is why, even by the limited scientific knowledge and understanding of the 1st century, Paul was able to declare that those who deny the Creator were “without excuse� — since “His invisible attributes are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made…�.
That is as true today as it was then — arguably, more so, as we continue to discover the exquisite sychronicitous fine tuning involved with (e.g.) the gravitational, strong and weak atomic forces, and electro-magnetic constants; and the 4-letter code of the DNA molecule, expressed in three dimensions; etc.
Now, when it comes to the Biblical claim that God created man to have free will, in order to willingly CHOOSE whether to be in relationship and communion with Him: that is a claim each of us must CHOOSE to either accept or reject.
I maintain that it is reasonable — not “magical� — to accept that an omniscient God, who is outside of space and time, and “knows the end from the beginning� would devise a plan for His creation in which “all things work to the good for as many as love Him, and are called according to His purpose.� A plan which satisfies both our capacity for free will, and His divine sovereignty; the working out of which occurs in dimensional regions beyond our senses or measurement, in addition to our own physical reality.
And it is further reasonable — not “magical� — to marvel at the working out of that plan, described in 66 books, written by 40 authors over a span of 1,700 years, but which is “ an integrated message system from outside our time domain�. A plan in which the Creator himself enters His creation. A plan whereby only one man had to suffer a fall from the state of grace, so that through one man, Jesus Christ, all can be redeemed to that state of grace, and of eternal life.
And if that sounds magical — it is. DEEP magic.
Because reasonable people understand that magic is underrated, and reason is overrated.
And that we exist in a paradigm where secular science un-ironically asks us to accept that “once there was nothing — and then it exploded�; the existence of ten dimensions; the particle-wave duality of light —
and the most “magical� claim of all: that animals turn into other animals — microbe to sponge to fish to lizard to rodent to ape to man — through the magic potion of “lots and lots of time�.
Break out the wizard hat and wand.
Past a certain point, we must choose which “magic� we will choose to accept.
Just as everyone must choose for themselves what to do with Jesus Christ:
— worship Him as Lord, the Creator manifested as a man;
— revile Him as a liar, for making that claim;
— or reject Him as a lunatic, for the same reason.
Anything else is tepid treacle — a half measure.
________________________
Round and round we go.
You think that dimensions superior to ours is "magic".
DI thinks that God is immoral. Which itself may well be "immoral".
Why wouldn't it be? Who decides morality?
And why
wouldn't there be more dimensions than the four measurable, perceived ones?
And how would we know know they were there, if they were?
(EDIT) -- great title, btw, Z.
Thanks for the new thread -- great topic!
