mgb wrote:
DivineInsight wrote:If that's true, then the Bible cannot be trusted to correctly describe God or his "Word". In fact, it would be meaningless to even speak of "God's Word" when you have just rejected the Bible as being a dependable source of "God's Word".
I don't reject the bible in its entirety. I contains much wisdom. But, on reading the bible, one needs to be open to God's promptings. God can use the bible to teach because the very act of reading the bible disposes our minds towards God's inspiration.
To begin with, if you reject so much as a jot or tittle of the Old Testament laws that are said to have come from God then you are reject Jesus' claim that not one jot or tittle shall pass from law.
Clearly Jesus is in grave disagreement with your rejection of the infallibility of the OT laws.
Secondly, what in the world are you talking about when you say "
God's promptings"?
Unless you are claiming to have actually been in clear contact with a supernatural entity where you have established an unambiguous two-way communication, then what could "God's Prompting" possibly mean?
All it would mean is that you are comfortable in presuming that God approves of whatever happens to "
Feel Good" to you. And you consider this "Good Feeling" about something to be God prompting you to recognize it as truth.
This is as uncompelling as an argument for a God can possibly be.
mgb wrote:
Apparently you have created your own God in the image of what you would like a God to be like.
No. I have understood the bible in the way God wants me to understand it, insofar as I can. But it takes a lifetime of reflection and guidance to grasp these things. Yet, the truth is simple: "I am the way"
This is nonsense. All you are telling me here is that you push your desired understanding onto the God you would like to imagine existing.
mgb wrote:
The essence of Christianity and all true religions is The Way.
Virtue and morality are part of The Way.
Virtue and morality lead to God and to truth.
That is the essence of Christianity.
If that were true there would be no need for Jesus, or to believe in Jesus, or even for a Bible to exist in the first place.
After all, if this magical God can inspire you toward truth in any real-time manner, then he wouldn't need books, or Jesus, or preachers, or churches, or evangelists, or any of that.
All he would need to do is inspire you toward truth just as you claim he is already doing.
But clearly this doesn't fly.
Not only this, but this then requires that God himself has inspired and prompted you to reject large parts of the Bible. Especially parts from the OT.
So you are basically claiming that God has inspired you to proclaim to the world that the Bible is "heavily distorted".
Just think about this mgb. You are actually proclaiming to everyone here that I am correct in rejecting the Bible
as it is written because God himself has inspired you to do precisely the same thing.
God should be absolutely thrilled with me for having rejected the heavily distorted picture the Bible portrays of God.
How could God not be pleased by my rejection of what you claim is a "heavily distorted" picture of God?
You are actually supporting my position without even realizing that you are doing so.
Because after all, I'm not even claiming that no God exists. To the contrary, like you, I imagine that there exists a God too. Of course I tossed out the heavily distorted Hebrew account of God because I could see that this was clearly false.
In fact, back when I was a Christian and I was trying to understand the Bible so I could teach it, but instead I discovered that it cannot possibly be true "
as it is written". I didn't instantly become an atheist. To the contrary I actually continued to believe in a "God".
And like you, I even felt that God was inspiring me to reject the Bible, and guiding me to truth. And those feelings ultimately led me to discover the Buddhism. For a while I convinced that God led me to Buddhism as the ultimate truth. But I eventually realized that there is no God leading me anywhere and that all of this was just wishful thinking on my part.
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One thing I can say with absolute certainty. If there is a God, that God is totally pleased with the fact that I don't even care whether or not He, She, It exists.
After all, why should a God care about such a petty thing?
Especially in my case, because whether a God exists or not isn't going to change who I am one iota.
I'm either good enough for God or I'm not. And I'm more than happy to take that position. It's not a rebellious or defiant position of any kind. Humans my view it that way, but they are irrelevant. If a God exist the God would fully understand precisely what I mean and also understand that it's the most honest and intelligent position I can take.
In fact, mgb, I openly confess to everyone, including any gods that might exist that I cannot know whether or not they exist. And that's the only honest position I can possibly take. To make any other claim would be a lie. Including claiming that I know a God exists when the truth is that I don't.
Now you may think this contradicts my claim in this very thread that entropy proves that a God cannot be both eternal and intelligent simultaneously. But that's just an observation based on what humans have discovered about logic and reality.
Moreover, if the Buddhist are right God doesn't need to be both eternal and intelligent simultaneously. The God of Buddhism has no intelligence when it's not manifest as a physical world. It has no need for intelligent when its "sleeping" in a dreamless sleep. And the physical universe only exists when God dreams. God then becomes the universe in this way.
So ironically the God of Buddhism can exist even without entropy.
So that's yet another big plus for the God of Buddhism.
Also the God of Buddhism couldn't care less whether any humans claim to believe in God or not. That's simply not important to the God of Buddhism.
Only the jealous-God of the Hebrews get's all bent out of shape if someone refuses to acknowledge him and his authority.
Believing in a God is totally unnecessary.
In fact, I claim that anyone who needs to believe in a God in order to strive for righteousness is already necessarily an unrighteous person beneath that facade.
If a person can't be righteous without a God, then they aren't going to be righteous with one. At best, all they could hope to do is be pretentiously righteous in the hopes of fooling the God into thinking they are righteous, when in truth they aren't.
And why do I say that in truth they aren't? Well, because they can't be righteous without a God. That's pretty much a given by definition. And so that's ultimately who they truly are.
In short, if a person can't be good without God, then they aren't a good person. Period.