TRANSPONDER wrote: ↑Tue Feb 08, 2022 9:48 pmbut my view on how much the Bible fails makes it irrelevant to to talk about inerrancy meaning every single place, person and event has to be wrong before one can talk of 'inerrancy'.
Not really. The commonly held view of inerrancy is the entire Bible is without error. So, just
a single error would attack the doctrine of inerrancy. There is no need to show
every single place, person, and event is wrong.
It is also pointless to talk of Doctrinal fails or non doctrinal fails. It has been said, if the Bible is not believable in earthly claims, how can we believe the heavenly claims?
We agree on many of the earthly claims of the attack on Jerusalem. We agree there was a battle between Judah and the Assyrians. We agree Sennacherib attacked Jerusalem and then left without conquering it. What we do not agree on is why Sennacherib left. I do not see that as sufficient reason to consider the Bible as unreliable and "not believable in earthly claims".
Doctrine is the core beliefs. It is the main points of Christianity. When these are refuted, then the structure collapses. However, refuting minor points do not invalidate the main claims. Again, since I hold to a
maximalist (4) position and not absolute maximalist (5), I allow for minor points to be incorrect.
If you do not accept the distinction of what is major and what is minor are doctrinal and non-doctrinal points, then where do you draw the line of what is a major point (which would invalidate the reliability of the Bible) and what is a minor point (which would not invalidate the reliability of the Bible)?
The god and miracle claims are false
They are only false because of the
assumption naturalism is true. In order for you to claim miraculous claims are false, you must first prove naturalism is true, which, afaik, nobody has ever done this.
Don't blame you; it should have read: "how would you comment on it being non -credible that they were brought about by Biblegod for the purpose the Bible says?" And to clarify that, if the Flood was real but not total (so the reason for the Flood couldn't be what the Bible says), or if..say, clay tablets were found saying that a Mesopotamian king sent ambassadors who spoke different languages to all other nations to teach them how to build Ziggurats (and it was nothing to do with confounding people so the tower wouldn't reach heaven) would you say the Bible was true because the 'Babel' event happened or false because religious Spin had been put on it?
Your examples do not clarify what you're asking because I've never claimed any of your examples. I believe the flood was total and never said anything about ambassadors sent out to teach others how to build ziggarats.
If the evidence was compelling, yes. I had a quick look, but there always seemed to be large islands even during the most Waterworld period. But obviously to get from that to the Biblical flood much less a Flood for the reason the Bible says is just more that you have to validate.
The word "island" is not in the
article. What it does say is: "ancient Earth was an unbroken expanse of water, without a single continent." So, what large islands are you referring to?
My point in presenting the article is even scientists can posit the entire world being covered with water. So, it lends credence to the possibility of the entire world being covered with water, which is what the Bible claims.
This is why the resurrection for me is the focal debate of Bible credibility.
I would agree with this.
It is a stand or fall for Christianity. Paul hit the nail (not the one he was trying to hit

) when he said if the resurrection wasn't true, then the (Christian) faith is in vain.
Since we both agree on this, we will get back to the resurrection after discussing archaeology.
It is so very 'errant'. It is terminally contradictory. minimal errors (like one or two angels) is irrelevant. Contradiction about whether the women saw Jesus or not (and when) is relevant It doesn't matter that there may be a Bethany, a Pilate, a crucifixion, a Caiaphas or even a Jesus. Even if the arrest, trial and crucifixion was true, the resurrection accounts would still fail.
I'll repeat the question from above... if you do not accept the distinction of what is major and what is minor are doctrinal and non-doctrinal points, then where do you draw the line of what is a major point and what is a minor point?