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Answering the Atheists
20 February 2008 1:58am
1392 posts
  [ Ignore ]   [ # 61 ]

Is there anything other to be than a Biblical literalist? After all, meaning is defined purely on the syntactic level.

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20 February 2008 9:35am
370 posts
  [ Ignore ]   [ # 62 ]
Dannii Willis - 20 February 2008 01:58 AM

Is there anything other to be than a Biblical literalist? After all, meaning is defined purely on the syntactic level.

Pardon?

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20 February 2008 11:58am
1392 posts
  [ Ignore ]   [ # 63 ]

(Sarcasm)

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“Never imagine yourself not to be otherwise than what it might appear to others that what you were or might have been was not otherwise than what you had been would have appeared to them to be otherwise.”

Dannii in Japan!

   
20 February 2008 1:03pm
370 posts
  [ Ignore ]   [ # 64 ]
Dannii Willis - 20 February 2008 11:58 AM

(Sarcasm)

Umm… I actually didn’t understand what you meant. Honest.

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“Our lives begin to end the day we
become silent about things that matter”
Martin Luther King

   
20 February 2008 1:11pm
1392 posts
  [ Ignore ]   [ # 65 ]

I was sarcastically saying that the only meaning found in a text was at the syntactic level, ie pure word order, dictionary word definitions etc, rather than there being the possibility of figurative language or idioms.

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“Never imagine yourself not to be otherwise than what it might appear to others that what you were or might have been was not otherwise than what you had been would have appeared to them to be otherwise.”

Dannii in Japan!

   
21 February 2008 2:18pm
1119 posts
  [ Ignore ]   [ # 66 ]

Rod, you were a bit confused by what i said earlier.
sorry I have taken a while to reply. I have been very busy.

I was just saying that your proposition that ‘that the onus is on Christians to prove that God exists’ only makes sense within an athiestic worldview (which i obviously don’t accept)

1. Philosophically, It assumes God is a material entity that is measurable. 
2.Theologically, the Bible says it is not possible for me to prove God to you using human reason. God reveals himself to you. He is the agent of grace. All I can do is point you to Jesus, as the revelation of God within human history.
3. Historically and sociologically, it assumes that atheism is the default position. I don’t accept this.

Time has an little artile that makes this point.

University of Oxford researchers will spend nearly $4 million to study why mankind embraces God. The grant to the Ian Ramsey Center for Science and Religion will bring anthropologists, theologians, philosophers and other academics together for three years to study whether belief in a divine being is a basic part of mankind’s makeup.

“There are a lot of issues. What is it that is innate in human nature to believe in God, whether it is gods or something superhuman or supernatural?” said Roger Trigg, acting director of the center.

He said anthropological and philosophical research suggests that faith in God is a universal human impulse found in most cultures around the world, even though it has been waning in Britain and western Europe.

“One implication that comes from this is that religion is the default position, and atheism is perhaps more in need of explanation,” he said

(Charles Taylor’s A secular age also does a great job at explaining how the atheistic worldview is built on 3 historical evolutions in philosophy. None of which are beyond challenge)

   
21 February 2008 2:28pm
464 posts
  [ Ignore ]   [ # 67 ]

In Antony Flew’s new book There is a God contains an account of how as a philosopher he was one of the main exponents of the argument that the onus is on Christians to prove there is a God, ie that athiesm should be the default setting for humanity. The book recounts that he has found that arguement less and less sustainable. He has come out as a theist.

   
21 February 2008 3:14pm
718 posts
  [ Ignore ]   [ # 68 ]
Jeremy Halcrow - 21 February 2008 02:18 PM

2.Theologically, the Bible says it is not possible for me to prove God to you using human reason. God reveals himself to you. He is the agent of grace. All I can do is point you to Jesus, as the revelation of God within human history.

Good post Jeremy.

Thanks for the tip on Charles Taylor, “A Secular Age”.

Actually you can do more than point to Jesus, you can argue cogently on the basis of natural law. Roms 1, 2 esp 2:15, cf Acts 17:16 for a practical demonstration. Have I mentioned J Budziszewski before?

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21 February 2008 5:09pm
1119 posts
  [ Ignore ]   [ # 69 ]

Yes David, you are right that Paul argues from natural law. I do think natural law arguments can lend credibility to the Christian account… not sure about ‘proof’ in the sense that Rob means. I suspect he is thinking in certain categories of positivist logic and scientific methodology.
This is speculative but I wonder if natural law arguments are a little problematic in our culture’s ‘modernist’ framework because of the dominant meta-narrative of scientific positivism.

   
21 February 2008 5:18pm
718 posts
  [ Ignore ]   [ # 70 ]

Thank you again Jeremy. I will need to think more about what you are saying. Natural law is one arrow in a quiver full.

Interesting to read the atheists - they are all modernists to a man, not a post-modernist amongst them!

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“My heart I offer to you, O Lord, promptly and sincerely”
Courtesy John Calvin

   
21 February 2008 5:52pm
1119 posts
  [ Ignore ]   [ # 71 ]

That said, William Lane Craig is the best Christian apologist I’ve come across arguing in these categories.

Worth checking out his site. I have found him helpful.

   
22 February 2008 1:03pm
2511 posts
  [ Ignore ]   [ # 72 ]
David Ashton - 03 February 2008 01:25 AM

P.S. Why does this application’s spell checker use American English?

Use Firefox (for free) it has an Australian spell checker.

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22 February 2008 1:50pm
5269 posts
  [ Ignore ]   [ # 73 ]
Jeremy Halcrow - 21 February 2008 05:09 PM

Yes David, you are right that Paul argues from natural law.

I don’t believe this is so—certainly not in Rom 2 or Acts 17, and Rom 1:18-32 rules out the possibility of the argument having either validity or effectiveness due to the nature of sinful humanity.

The Roman Catholics, following Aquinas, would be happy with what you suggest, however. But I’m not sure their happiness would make you happy! (or should, for that matter)

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22 February 2008 5:04pm
718 posts
  [ Ignore ]   [ # 74 ]
Gordon Cheng - 22 February 2008 01:50 PM
Jeremy Halcrow - 21 February 2008 05:09 PM

Yes David, you are right that Paul argues from natural law.

I don’t believe this is so—certainly not in Rom 2 or Acts 17, and Rom 1:18-32 rules out the possibility of the argument having either validity or effectiveness due to the nature of sinful humanity.

Gordon,

You are confusing the differing roles of natural law and special revelation.

May I suggest you dig out Peter Hastie’s editorial and interview with J Budziszewski in the June 2005 edition of Australian Presbyterian and then we can argue the toss over natural law if that is still your wish.

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“My heart I offer to you, O Lord, promptly and sincerely”
Courtesy John Calvin

   
22 February 2008 5:44pm
5269 posts
  [ Ignore ]   [ # 75 ]

Thanks David, I will try to look up the article next time I’m in at Moore Coll.

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