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 Topic: Readings from the "Holy Book"

 (Read 75817 times)
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  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #210 - January 14, 2009, 05:28 PM

    Quote from: Hassan
    It is easier for both a Muslim and a Christian to remain in their faith so long as they don't look too closely at it.


    Hi Hassan,

    I'm more than willing to have you help me look at my faith more closely.  Did you think that posting all the verses that mention killing would somehow make me do that?  Even when many of them aren't even talking about God doing or commanding the killing?

    Or maybe randomly posting unargued copy/pastes about bible contradictions and scientific errors?

    Or perhaps asking the same question over and over even when I have said I would rather not discuss it on the forum?

    Is this the kind of thing that would have convinced you, when you were a muslim?  Or are they just rude?

    Cheers,
    sparky


    Actually it's not so much what people say to you Sparky, but that by participating in discussions you yourself examine your faith more closely.

    Though there are many who will never see anything wrong with their faith, be they Muslims or Christian - and I have no problem with that, so long as you are a peaceful person - which I'm sure you are - then good luck to you.
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #211 - January 14, 2009, 05:42 PM

    Quote from: Hassan
    It is easier for both a Muslim and a Christian to remain in their faith so long as they don't look too closely at it.




    Actually it's not so much what people say to you Sparky, but that by participating in discussions you yourself examine your faith more closely.

    Though there are many who will never see anything wrong with their faith, be they Muslims or Christian - and I have no problem with that, so long as you are a peaceful person - which I'm sure you are - then good luck to you.


    I second that Hass.  Although he did not say that he would not exterminate an entire race if God commanded him to do it i.e. we are not out of the woods yet!

    My Book     news002       
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  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #212 - January 14, 2009, 06:19 PM

    Quote from: Hassan
    It is easier for both a Muslim and a Christian to remain in their faith so long as they don't look too closely at it.




    Actually it's not so much what people say to you Sparky, but that by participating in discussions you yourself examine your faith more closely.

    Though there are many who will never see anything wrong with their faith, be they Muslims or Christian - and I have no problem with that, so long as you are a peaceful person - which I'm sure you are - then good luck to you.


    I second that Hass.  Although he did not say that he would not exterminate an entire race if God commanded him to do it i.e. we are not out of the woods yet!

    Wow, I didn't put you down as a liar.  What a shame.  Anything to score points, eh!
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #213 - January 14, 2009, 06:26 PM

    Quote from: Hassan
    Actually it's not so much what people say to you Sparky, but that by participating in discussions you yourself examine your faith more closely.


    In which case, you need people to actually discuss with.  Unfortunately, the experience on this thread was that you weren't really interested in discussion, were you?

    Which I suppose makes you, rather than me, the person who would rather not examine what he believes more closely.

    Quote from: Hassan
    Though there are many who will never see anything wrong with their faith, be they Muslims or Christian - and I have no problem with that, so long as you are a peaceful person - which I'm sure you are - then good luck to you.


    Thanks for the vote of confidence.  Although I'd rather be someone who had a reason to be a peaceful person than someone who had chosen it for convenience.  Such a person is fodder for the next idea that will convince him that it is more convenient to be violent.
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #214 - January 14, 2009, 06:33 PM



    In which case, you need people to actually discuss with.  Unfortunately, the experience on this thread was that you weren't really interested in discussion, were you?

    Which I suppose makes you, rather than me, the person who would rather not examine what he believes more closely.




    Odd, from where I was sitting it was you and Dio who came onto this thread and simply sarted with the whole "oh you don't want to learn" without giving any info as to why he was wrong, just "oh you would never comprehend" "oh you want to see it that way" etc etc

    Infact you still haven't really explained where he went wrong, you just keep banging on without providing anything substantial.  It's all in this thread.

    Inhale the good shit, exhale the bullshit.
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #215 - January 14, 2009, 06:34 PM

    Hi sparky,
    I was actually contrasting the Old Testament and the Quran.  I don't think the New Testament has any commands for Jesus followers to kill anyone (although God does it himself on a couple of occasions).


    After Jesus, why does God consider it unnecessary to continue protecting believers and cleanse the world from polytheists, atheists etc.? Why the change of policy?

    Hassan has cropped quotes to demonstrate a particular emotional point of his.  It's not really an argument from the text at all.


    Yes, some of them can really be misunderstood without the proper context (like the vision of the man for example.) I give you that. However, when reading the verses in the proper context, the overall point and fact remains that in the biblical events (which may or may not be historical) whole cities were destroyed and pillaged, people were slaughtered, virgins were enslaved, unchaste women and homosexuals were stoned to death, all because of the commands and recommendations from a God who thought that certain sins were absolutely intolerable. Now, I'm not saying that you, as a present-day Christian, have to follow those things, but you have stated that you agree with the punishments God dealt out to those people. You also stated that God's character didn't change, though most of us would disagree with that notion. So, where does Hassan do wrong, when he says that the actions of Yahweh qualify him to be blood-thirsty and psychopathic? After all you say He didn't change and He's on record for wanting brutal and insane behaviour. What natural conclusion do we draw from that about this deity?

    I am quite aware that there are alternative interpretations.  My question was how these can be supported from the text itself due to the lack of historical context that is recorded there.  I was contrasting this with the Old Testament where the historical context is plainly recorded.  


    Many Muslims will be of the opinion that certain verses were revealed in the context of war, because of the overall picture of the chapter and because many believers also consult their conscience before doing interpretations. In addition to this, the Hadith and the Tafseers are always there to clarify the details of those verses.

    In addition, the New Testament teaching on fulfillment of the Jewish law in Christ presents reasons for not extending the OT commands that is not available for the Muslim that rejects Christ's particular role in achieving this (no more than a messenger).

    There's no reason why Muslims can't also interpret the violent verses in the Qur'an to be bound to their historical time of revelation. Muslims will consider it to be absurd that this should require some kind of personal sacrifice by God.
    Great! (although most of the prophets in the bible were actually reminding the Israelites of the covenant they had made with God and what would happen to them if they didn't live up to it - many prophets were rejected before judgement came on the Israelites).  


    No, sparky. It's not great. It's not great that in those stories God acts like a tyrannical monster. It doesn't matter how many prophets God has sent, that doesn't make wholesale slaughter just or reasonable. And don't give me the answer that I think like that because "I don't like it." I get the same from my cousin when I point out how unjust punishment for unbelief is.
    It's not acceptable to be oppressed let alone slaughtered for believing in something else than the majority of a community. Nobody has the right to do such a thing. Most certainly not whackos who claims to have been informed by a God that he wants the believers to go out and murder the polytheists and rape their women. It's a principal most civilized people believe in. To you yours, and to me mine.
    If God hadn't sent Jesus to "fulfill the OT", as you say, would you have followed the prophets, or the religious rules, however unpleasant they may seem? After all, you don't disagree with the biblical events. You said you don't know what it would have been like an Israelite. That's rather a convenient cop-out answer. Wouldn't you have had some kind of compuction before stoning a woman (like they still do in Iran and other countries), or marching out to murder some evil polytheists?

    Should husbands only beat their wives if there is a Khalifat?  How is the distinction drawn between what was 'for that time' and what is 'for all time'?


    No, it's more or less obvious that this recommendation is universal. So, no caliphate is required. Well, it really depends also on the core principles and the conscience of a person who tries to interpret those verses. Also why should any apparently negative teaching be any concern for people like you who believe that not liking something doesn't have any bearing on the reality, value or truth of it? That is exactly how people who want to have faith bring themselves to believe, despite all the nasty things written in the "holy books". "Who am I to question the word of Allah? You may not like the beating verse and eternal hell for unbelievers, but I'm not the one who makes the rules. Allah knows best."

    You seem to have missed the point of the comparison.  The arguments I have been making are from the NT itself. It was Paul's argument that the OT law was fulfilled in Christ (and Jesus').  The commands to love your neighbours and enemies are extensively recorded there.  Historical development has nothing to do with it.


    What I tried to say is that Muslims can also successfully divide the Qur'an into something like the OT vs NT.

    Regards,
    Aziz

    German ex-Muslim forumMy YouTubeList of Ex-Muslims
    Wikis: en de fr ar tr
    CEMB-Chat
    I'm on an indefinite break...
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #216 - January 14, 2009, 07:21 PM

    Quote from: Hassan
    It is easier for both a Muslim and a Christian to remain in their faith so long as they don't look too closely at it.




    I second that Hass.  Although he did not say that he would not exterminate an entire race if God commanded him to do it i.e. we are not out of the woods yet!

    Wow, I didn't put you down as a liar.  What a shame.  Anything to score points, eh!


    The reason you did not put me down as a liar (lets be good Christians and avoid the insults) was because I asked you this question twice - "If God asked you to exterminate a race, would you do it?"

    You should have said "No" twice...  But you didnt.  You said he wouldnt ask you, which was not the question.  My guess is that you avoided answering the question, because according to your belief system the correct answer was "Yes, I would"! 

    For much the same reason you avoid answering questions on homosexuality, because your belief system says homosexuals should be castigated.  BTW I have started a thread on this topic as I think it would be halpful to have a Chrisitans views on this topic?

    Wonder if you could ask us a question about our belief systems that we would be not willing to share in public?

    I hope one day that you see though this unnecessary hatred, I believe it will make you more tolerant and pleasant as a person.


    My Book     news002       
    My Blog  pccoffee
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #217 - January 14, 2009, 07:31 PM

    By the way, sparky has mentioned a few times that, as opposed to the New Testament, God in the Qur'an gives a timeless command to the believers to go out and commit themselves to jihad to kill the kafiroon. He has complained that Hassan's and other's reading comprehension of the Bible is wrong or superficial at best.

    Indeed, it is true that some Muslims believe that the Qur'an orders them to attack and kill the unbelievers, but the fact of the matter is that there are various interpretations of certain chapters and passages in the Qur'an, which of course didn't get the attention of sparky because of his superficial reading of it.

    I remember that when I was a Muslim I subscribed to the interpretation of a scholar (reading on the Internet,) who said that Jihad without a Khalifat and unprovoked attacks are forbidden and that some verses only applied to the Muslims at Mohammed's time.

    And such interpretations are of course wrong interpretations. It only work on someone who can not read Arabic. In the middle east, we look at those imams who can not speak good arabic as entertaining village jester. Further, you would have to convince a young muslim that, he can only wage jihad, if a khalifat exists. So now you think he will not be able to wage a jihad, to esablish that khalifat? the young muslim will think you are crapping on him. You are placing him in a catch-22 and then you think you are so much smarter than him? The young muslim will simply ignore you. What you are telling him is impossible and stupid. He will take from you a confirmation that he koran is divine. But he will read the koran for himself to get his instructions from the koran. And he will circumvent the nice and moderate nincompoopery.

    Not to mention, it is very easy and trivial to establish a khalifat. I hear there is Three of them going around right now.

    The punishment for unbelievers in non-Prophet aeras will come in the hereafter, not on Earth. That is because only prophets will come with clear signs so as to make it possible to tell true believers and rejectors or hiders of the Truth (kafiroon) apart.

    A very nice man. A very wishful man. I wish he was the one who wrote the koran.

    Now you may say that this interpretation is not very main-stream. I partly agree with that,

    Actually his interpretation is false and can only be correct, if muslims, just like christians, stop believing that the koran is the unmutable word.

    but in contrast to Christianity Islam still hasn't undergone a period of critical analysis and enlightenment like Christianity did. Therefore it's not very fair to make that comparison without keeping that in mind.

    Why does a religion which does not agree with you, automatically is assumed to be inferior and unevolved and unenlightened. Since when does a religion need to change to fit my views of the world? Maybe, I am the One due for enlightenment into islam. Islam is an evolved religion. Islam started in a multi-cultural society and already has all the required memes to subvert such societies.



    "Ask the slave girl; she will tell you the truth.' So the Apostle called Burayra to ask her. Ali got up and gave her a violent beating first, saying, 'Tell the Apostle the truth.'"
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #218 - January 14, 2009, 08:09 PM

    Baal, there you go again with your polemic nonsense. The young Muslims will accept what the elders and the parents teach them, or they will accept what makes sense to them. I was once a young Muslim on a quest to understand my former religion, and I didn't go for the "Jihad Now!" understanding. I believed that Pax Islamica will be great and that it may or may not eventually become reality. However, I never thought that killing people or being an intolerant asshole will achieve that.

    What right do you have to say whose interpretation is the right one and all the others are wrong? You are similar to those Muslims who think that all the other sects except their own are the false and mislead ones.

    x^2 = 4

    We know that this equation has two solutions. It's -2 and +2. Baal wants us to think that a complex equation like the Qur'an + Hadith has only one possible meaning and interpretation. You're protesting Muslims who think that +2 looks like a valid solution as opposed to only -2.

    One thing that I will agree with is that some interpretations and some sects are really way off the mark. Though I'm not going to try and convince them that only -2 is the solution. However, I will point out the absurdities and the inhuman stuff in the islamic scriptures, because they as a whole are not tolerant toward non-believers, who are regularly cursed and threatened with unimaginable punishment. The thing is that most Muslims will think that God talks about really nasty and heartless disbelievers, not the kind they have to interact with on a daily basis.

    German ex-Muslim forumMy YouTubeList of Ex-Muslims
    Wikis: en de fr ar tr
    CEMB-Chat
    I'm on an indefinite break...
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #219 - January 14, 2009, 08:46 PM

    Baal, there you go again with your polemic nonsense. The young Muslims will accept what the elders and the parents teach them,

    Elders being who? And young muslims will ask the difficult questions. And the elders and parents will be stumped.

    or they will accept what makes sense to them.

    Telling a young muslim that he can only fight if there is a khalifate, therefore he can not fight to establish the khalifte, does not make sense. Find some other correctish interpretation that makes sense. I recommend telling them that the koran is mutable.

    Also attaching violence to khalifate is silly, because it is very simple to establish one.

    I was once a young Muslim on a quest to understand my former religion, and I didn't go for the "Jihad Now!" understanding. I believed that Pax Islamica will be great and that it may or may not eventually become reality. However, I never thought that killing people or being an intolerant asshole will achieve that.

    You are using yourself as an example, to make me think that beliefs and indoctrination do not matter. But beliefs and indoctrination do matter. You were tolerant of the jihadis and considered the worst elements, that islam had to offer, to be western and israeli problems that they brought on themselves.

    What right do you have to say whose interpretation is the right one and all the others are wrong? You are similar to those Muslims who think that all the other sects except their own are the false and mislead ones.

    Opinions are a right, Truth is a privilege.

    This sheikh posted his opinion as is his right. However his opinion is negated by the koran, which he claims to interpret. His opinion is also negated as it contradicts itself.

    I read the text in its original language. I read the verses that states that a kaffir is to be punished here on earth.

    I just informed you that, conditioning violence upon the existence of a khalifat is very wrong as we already have khalifats walking the Earth.

    x^2 = 4

    We know that this equation has two solutions. It's -2 and +2. Baal wants us to think that a complex equation like the Qur'an + Hadith has only one possible meaning and interpretation. You're protesting Muslims who think that +2 looks like a valid solution as opposed to only -2.

    Stop hiding behind the mask of interpretation. It does not always work and it is not always beneficial. Khalifas do exist which, according to this nice imam, permits violent verses on earth. The interpretation this nice imam did is utterly useless if not dangerous. This guy really twisted interpetations to the extreme. He performed the brain gymnastics like you could not believe. And finally, this is what he came with? Permitting violence, only if a certain condition exists, but that condition already exists? this is his -2?

    One thing that I will agree with is that some interpretations and some sects are really way off the mark. Though I'm not going to try and convince them that only -2 is the solution. However, I will point out the absurdities and the inhuman stuff in the islamic scriptures, because they as a whole are not tolerant toward non-believers, who are regularly cursed and threatened with unimaginable punishment. The thing is that most Muslims will think that God talks about really nasty and heartless disbelievers, not the kind they have to interact with on a daily basis.


    Just stick to your gun that the text is mutable.

    "Ask the slave girl; she will tell you the truth.' So the Apostle called Burayra to ask her. Ali got up and gave her a violent beating first, saying, 'Tell the Apostle the truth.'"
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #220 - January 14, 2009, 08:49 PM

    Quote
    Also attaching violence to khalifate is silly, because it is very simple to establish one.


    No it's not actually, the Islamic world is so fragmented that no single man will be able to unify them under his leadership.  It just won't happen, for a start the sunnis and the shias most definately would not agree, they couldn't even agree about who should lead them when mohammed died, they couldn't even unify then.


    Inhale the good shit, exhale the bullshit.
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #221 - January 14, 2009, 09:07 PM

    Allright Baal, whatever...  Roll Eyes Don't have the desire to discuss this any further.

    German ex-Muslim forumMy YouTubeList of Ex-Muslims
    Wikis: en de fr ar tr
    CEMB-Chat
    I'm on an indefinite break...
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #222 - January 15, 2009, 12:21 AM



    In which case, you need people to actually discuss with.  Unfortunately, the experience on this thread was that you weren't really interested in discussion, were you?

    Which I suppose makes you, rather than me, the person who would rather not examine what he believes more closely.




    Odd, from where I was sitting it was you and Dio who came onto this thread and simply sarted with the whole "oh you don't want to learn" without giving any info as to why he was wrong, just "oh you would never comprehend" "oh you want to see it that way" etc etc

    Infact you still haven't really explained where he went wrong, you just keep banging on without providing anything substantial.  It's all in this thread.

    Well, here is my first post on this thread:

    Quote from: sparky
    Wow.  A new low.  Not a single reference so that it could be examined in context.  No attempt to examine how Christians have actually understood these verses - just a general assumption that they just ignore them.  The deliberate use of an archaic translation just to make it sound 'out of date'.  And misrepresentations of Christian teaching - even of matters that have already been discussed with you (Christ dying for a sin we didn't commit).

    A production worth of skeptics annotated.  Congratulations.


    Perhaps you can tell me where I said that 'he didn't want to learn'.

    I have also explained countless times where he went wrong.  He went wrong by employing a logical fallacy to make his argument - appeal to emotion.  The truth of something does not depend on whether you like it.

    I have also, substantially, responded to anyone who has bothered to show any interest in an actual discussion (with the exception of the homosexuality question) - including Hassan who, after a single response, could offer no more than 'well it doesn't convince me'.
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #223 - January 15, 2009, 12:30 AM

    Quote
    I have also explained countless times where he went wrong.  He went wrong by employing a logical fallacy to make his argument - appeal to emotion.  The truth of something does not depend on whether you like it.


    I think it was more like this - how do you square the belief in a good and loving God with the actions and commands of the God of the Bible?  The answer is, you can't.  You either have to change your notion of God's nature, change your definitions of good and loving, or disbelieve in Christianity. 

    "Befriend them not, Oh murtads, and give them neither parrot nor bunny."  - happymurtad's advice on trolls.
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #224 - January 15, 2009, 12:31 AM

    You didn't specifically make that statement but your tone certainly implied it. You would have been hard put to post something more disparaging without going into sheer invective.

    Devious, treacherous, murderous, neanderthal, sub-human of the West. bunny
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #225 - January 15, 2009, 12:32 AM

    I second that Hass.  Although he did not say that he would not exterminate an entire race if God commanded him to do it i.e. we are not out of the woods yet!

    Wow, I didn't put you down as a liar.  What a shame.  Anything to score points, eh!


    The reason you did not put me down as a liar (lets be good Christians and avoid the insults) was because I asked you this question twice - "If God asked you to exterminate a race, would you do it?"

    You should have said "No" twice...  But you didnt.  You said he wouldnt ask you, which was not the question.  My guess is that you avoided answering the question, because according to your belief system the correct answer was "Yes, I would"! 

    For much the same reason you avoid answering questions on homosexuality, because your belief system says homosexuals should be castigated.  BTW I have started a thread on this topic as I think it would be halpful to have a Chrisitans views on this topic?

    Wonder if you could ask us a question about our belief systems that we would be not willing to share in public?

    I hope one day that you see though this unnecessary hatred, I believe it will make you more tolerant and pleasant as a person.

    I called you a liar because you claimed that I had not answered your question, when in fact I had already done so - twice.  You also implied that this meant that I might still be considered dangerous.  Which was nasty as well as deceptive.   So please don't lecture me about hatred.

    The reason you did not get the yes or no answer you were looking for is because you were asking a loaded question.

    Have a look here for an explanation if you don't know what this is:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fallacy_of_many_questions

    It is a logical fallacy for me to ask you 'do you still beat your wife?' and insist on a yes or no answer.  (Assuming you are not a wife beater) you would rightly say that you have never beaten your wife - ah, but this was not the question!

    In your case, you're question presumed something that I disputed (that God might ask me to commit a genocide).  Naturally, I rejected that presupposition rather than give you the yes or no question.  In this circumstance, 'no' is not the correct answer.  The correct answer is what I gave.

    And I'm not going to explain again why I have not responded to the questions about homosexuality as those reasons have nothing to do with this topic, nor are they related to me being embarrassed about them.
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #226 - January 15, 2009, 12:37 AM

    Quote
    I have also explained countless times where he went wrong.  He went wrong by employing a logical fallacy to make his argument - appeal to emotion.  The truth of something does not depend on whether you like it.


    I think it was more like this - how do you square the belief in a good and loving God with the actions and commands of the God of the Bible?  The answer is, you can't.  You either have to change your notion of God's nature, change your definitions of good and loving, or disbelieve in Christianity. 

    Not at all.  I do not see that there is a necessary contradiction between a good and loving God and a God who judges people.  As I said before, I expect it.  Justice is very much part of goodness.
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #227 - January 15, 2009, 12:38 AM

    Sorry Sparky. I tried to fix your quote tags but got it wrong. Would you mind redoing that post?

    Devious, treacherous, murderous, neanderthal, sub-human of the West. bunny
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #228 - January 15, 2009, 12:44 AM

    Quote
    I have also explained countless times where he went wrong.  He went wrong by employing a logical fallacy to make his argument - appeal to emotion.  The truth of something does not depend on whether you like it.


    I think it was more like this - how do you square the belief in a good and loving God with the actions and commands of the God of the Bible?  The answer is, you can't.  You either have to change your notion of God's nature, change your definitions of good and loving, or disbelieve in Christianity. 

    Not at all.  I do not see that there is a necessary contradiction between a good and loving God and a God who judges people.  As I said before, I expect it.  Justice is very much part of goodness.


    But the actions of the God of the Bible are not "justice".  He kills the innocent along with the guilty, he commands terrible punishments for minor infractions.  That is not just, it is tyrannical. 

    So, in your case you seem to have redefined justice to square the Bible with your conscience.

    "Befriend them not, Oh murtads, and give them neither parrot nor bunny."  - happymurtad's advice on trolls.
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #229 - January 15, 2009, 12:50 AM

    So, in your case you seem to have redefined justice to square the Bible with your conscience.

    Standard Operating Procedure.

    Devious, treacherous, murderous, neanderthal, sub-human of the West. bunny
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #230 - January 15, 2009, 01:02 AM

    Quote from:
    Although he did not say that he would not exterminate an entire race if God commanded him to do it i.e. we are not out of the woods yet!

    S-  I called you a liar because you claimed that I had not answered your question, when in fact I had already done so - twice.  

    I-  Which was wrong to do so.  You did not answer my question, as you know, you answered your own question. I'll leave it up to you if you wish to take it back.

      
    S-  The reason you did not get the yes or no answer you were looking for is because you were asking a loaded question.

    I-  Yes, thats why you were unable to answer it.  Loaded questions dont go hand in hand with religion.  Just keep it simple & superficial, and it works wonderfully.
    [/quote]
    S-  It is a logical fallacy .....
    [/quote]
    I- Everything is a logical fallacy to you Sparky, maybe one day you will realise your religion is the logical fallacy.


    My Book     news002       
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  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #231 - January 15, 2009, 01:24 AM

    Hi Aziz,
    Quote from: Aziz
    After Jesus, why does God consider it unnecessary to continue protecting believers and cleanse the world from polytheists, atheists etc.? Why the change of policy?


    Firstly, there was never a policy to 'cleanse the world of polytheists' and I don't think atheists are mentioned once in the commands we have been discussing.  The commands were very limited in scope and geography.

    Secondly, the Israelites were chosen to bring a blessing to all of mankind - i.e. through the Messiah.  They (not all believers) were protected as a people for that purpose.  Once the Messiah had come, those commands became redundant.

    Quote from: Aziz
    all because of the commands and recommendations from a God who thought that certain sins were absolutely intolerable.

    That is only part of the reason.  The other reason seems to have been the aim to preserve a community of people who believed in him.

    But the Christian view is that all sin is intolerable to God.  So the surprise isn't that these people were killed, it is that all of mankind wasn't killed off years ago.  When Christian's talk about a loving God, this is what they mean - a God who desires relationship so much that he withholds judgement and sends his son to receive the judgement instead.  The understanding of a loving God is predicated on the belief that judgement is real and is God's right to exercise.
    Quote from: Aziz
    Now, I'm not saying that you, as a present-day Christian, have to follow those things, but you have stated that you agree with the punishments God dealt out to those people.

    Actually, I think I have said that no-one has given me reason to think that they could not have come from God.  I don't pretend to 'agree' because I am not God and have little basis to evaluate his decisions 3000 years ago at all.

    Quote from: Aziz
    So, where does Hassan do wrong, when he says that the actions of Yahweh qualify him to be blood-thirsty and psychopathic? After all you say He didn't change and He's on record for wanting brutal and insane behaviour. What natural conclusion do we draw from that about this deity?

    On what grounds is it called 'blood-thirsty and psychopathic'?  The reasoning seems to be 'well, if a person did this they would be blood-thirsty psychopaths'.  But we're not talking about a person, but God.  God, as the source of all morality, the one who really knows us and who determines the purpose of mankind, is the only one placed to judge people.  He is the only one who can give or take away life - whether an individual or a society.
    Quote
    Many Muslims will be of the opinion that certain verses were revealed in the context of war, because of the overall picture of the chapter and because many believers also consult their conscience before doing interpretations. In addition to this, the Hadith and the Tafseers are always there to clarify the details of those verses.

    I.e. not really from the text of the Quran itself ('the overall picture of the chapter' is rather vague, don't you think).  That was my point.

    Quote from: Aziz
    There's no reason why Muslims can't also interpret the violent verses in the Qur'an to be bound to their historical time of revelation. Muslims will consider it to be absurd that this should require some kind of personal sacrifice by God.

    I didn't say they couldn't, I just said that the degree of lattitude is much greater because of the absence of context in the text of the Quran.
    And a muslim's appeal to ridicule is no more meaningful than Hassan's (although it does shed light on his 'three God in one' line in the video).
    Quote from: Aziz
    No, sparky. It's not great. It's not great that in those stories God acts like a tyrannical monster. It doesn't matter how many prophets God has sent, that doesn't make wholesale slaughter just or reasonable. And don't give me the answer that I think like that because "I don't like it."

    As we are talking about God's actions then what matters is what is 'just or reasonable' to him - not to you.  Given the rest of what is revealed about God, I don't see why taking people's lives is, by definition, unjust.

    Quote from: Aziz
    It's not acceptable to be oppressed let alone slaughtered for believing in something else than the majority of a community. Nobody has the right to do such a thing. Most certainly not whackos who claims to have been informed by a God that he wants the believers to go out and murder the polytheists and rape their women. It's a principal most civilized people believe in. To you yours, and to me mine.

    I'm not sure who you are talking to here.  I've not seen any commands by God in the bible to rape women or to kill believers because they are minorities.

    Quote from: Aziz
    If God hadn't sent Jesus to "fulfill the OT", as you say, would you have followed the prophets, or the religious rules, however unpleasant they may seem?

    But God did send Jesus and I'm not living in that time so it's a hopelessly hypothetical question.

    Quote from: Aziz
    After all, you don't disagree with the biblical events

    And you haven't given me a reason to.

    Quote from: Aziz
    You said you don't know what it would have been like an Israelite. That's rather a convenient cop-out answer.

    It's also true - for both me and you.

    Quote from: Aziz
    No, it's more or less obvious that this recommendation is universal.

    How do you know?  It was also given to people many years ago.

    Quote from: Aziz
    Well, it really depends also on the core principles and the conscience of a person who tries to interpret those verses.

    Really?  The Quran teaches that you should obey Allah's commands only if they agree with your core principles and conscience?  Where does it say that?

    Quote from: Aziz
    Also why should any apparently negative teaching be any concern for people like you who believe that not liking something doesn't have any bearing on the reality, value or truth of it?

    I didn't say that the fact that this teaching is negative is what causes me to reject Islam.  I just brought it up as another example of how lack of context makes it impossible to 'wave away' the commands contained in the Quran.

    Quote from: Aziz
    That is exactly how people who want to have faith bring themselves to believe, despite all the nasty things written in the "holy books". "Who am I to question the word of Allah? You may not like the beating verse and eternal hell for unbelievers, but I'm not the one who makes the rules. Allah knows best."

    Again, I don't know who you are talking to here.  I don't believe 'despite' the things written in the bible.

    Quote from: Aziz
    What I tried to say is that Muslims can also successfully divide the Qur'an into something like the OT vs NT.

    From your examples, it doesn't seem to be particularly successful.  In fact, it is nothing like the OT and NT because it is from a single author, revealed in a short space of time, has little theological development, contradicts the earlier revelations that it claims to confirm and has little or no historical context contained in it.

    Cheers,
    sparky
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #232 - January 15, 2009, 01:26 AM

    You didn't specifically make that statement but your tone certainly implied it. You would have been hard put to post something more disparaging without going into sheer invective.

    I was criticising the video and I listed my points.  I didn't mention or even insinuate that he didn't want to learn - just that it was a poor video.
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #233 - January 15, 2009, 01:32 AM

    Quote
    I have also explained countless times where he went wrong.  He went wrong by employing a logical fallacy to make his argument - appeal to emotion.  The truth of something does not depend on whether you like it.


    I think it was more like this - how do you square the belief in a good and loving God with the actions and commands of the God of the Bible?  The answer is, you can't.  You either have to change your notion of God's nature, change your definitions of good and loving, or disbelieve in Christianity. 

    Not at all.  I do not see that there is a necessary contradiction between a good and loving God and a God who judges people.  As I said before, I expect it.  Justice is very much part of goodness.


    But the actions of the God of the Bible are not "justice".  He kills the innocent along with the guilty, he commands terrible punishments for minor infractions.  That is not just, it is tyrannical. 

    So, in your case you seem to have redefined justice to square the Bible with your conscience.

    Not at all.  I am using the bible's own criteria of justice.  If they truly are innocent then death is not the end for them.  And taking and giving life - even for the innocent - remains God's right.
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #234 - January 15, 2009, 01:34 AM


    I- Although he did not say that he would not exterminate an entire race if God commanded him to do it i.e. we are not out of the woods yet!

    S-  I called you a liar because you claimed that I had not answered your question, when in fact I had already done so - twice.  

    I-  Which was wrong to do so.  You did not answer my question, as you know, you answered your own question. I'll leave it up to you if you wish to take it back.

    S-  The reason you did not get the yes or no answer you were looking for is because you were asking a loaded question.

    I-  Yes, thats why you were unable to answer it.  Loaded questions dont go hand in hand with religion.  Just keep it simple & superficial, and it works wonderfully.

    S-  It is a logical fallacy .....

    I- Everything is a logical fallacy to you Sparky, maybe one day you will realise your religion is the logical fallacy.

    Loaded questions don't go hand in hand with a logical argument.  And tu quoque is a logical fallacy too.
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #235 - January 15, 2009, 03:26 AM

             

    Devious, treacherous, murderous, neanderthal, sub-human of the West. bunny
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #236 - January 15, 2009, 06:11 AM

    Quote
    Not at all.  I am using the bible's own criteria of justice.


    So you use the Bible's own criteria to vindicate the God of the Bible.  That's a logical fallacy of some sort.

    Quote
    If they truly are innocent then death is not the end for them.


    If they were truly innocent they shouldn't have been put to death along with the guilty.

    Quote
    And taking and giving life - even for the innocent - remains God's right.


    And when he exercises that right arbitrarily and cruelly, he becomes an unjust and cruel God.




    "Befriend them not, Oh murtads, and give them neither parrot nor bunny."  - happymurtad's advice on trolls.
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #237 - January 15, 2009, 08:42 AM

    Quote from: Cheetah
    So you use the Bible's own criteria to vindicate the God of the Bible.  That's a logical fallacy of some sort.


    No it isn't.  It's called consistency which is what this discussion is all about.  Holding the Christian God up to, say, your concept of justice would be fallacious.  You are not God (last time I checked).
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #238 - January 15, 2009, 09:10 AM

    Quote
    No it isn't.  It's called consistency which is what this discussion is all about.


    The discussion is about the Christian God, not consistency.  Your vindication of the God of the Bible on the criteria laid out in the Bible sounds very familiar. 

    "The Qur'an is the word of God, because the Qur'an says it is sent by God." 

    Quote
    Holding the Christian God up to, say, your concept of justice would be fallacious.  You are not God (last time I checked).


    No, I'm not God.  It is not my concept of justice we are holding Yahweh up to though, it is a very basic and commonly shared principle that killing the innocent is unjust.

    And before you reach for the nearest logical fallacy, I am not arguing that it is right on the grounds that it is popularly shared.  I am just pointing out that it is inaccurate to describe it as "my" concept of justice, because it such a widely held one.  I don't think the authors of the Geneva Convention, for example, were under any impression that I was God when they laid out their definitions of war crimes.


    "Befriend them not, Oh murtads, and give them neither parrot nor bunny."  - happymurtad's advice on trolls.
  • Re: Readings from the "Holy Book"
     Reply #239 - January 15, 2009, 09:33 AM

    Quote from: Cheetah
    The discussion is about the Christian God, not consistency.  Your vindication of the God of the Bible on the criteria laid out in the Bible sounds very familiar.

    "The Qur'an is the word of God, because the Qur'an says it is sent by God."

    No, it's nothing like that.  That's a circular argument.  It would be more like there being a statement in the Quran that God does not lie and questioning whether you could find an instance of him lying or not.  It is perfectly possible that you might.  If you did, you would have found a contradiction and would have a reason for believing that the Quran was not from God (or else have to introduce the concept of abrogation to explain the change).

    When you say 'love' or 'justice', it is the Christian meaning of that term that is relevant and no other.  It is a nonsense to say 'in my understanding 'love' means to have sex as often as possible.  In the bible God does not have sex so the bible is false when it claims that God is a loving God.'
    Quote from: Cheetah
    No, I'm not God.  It is not my concept of justice we are holding Yahweh up to though, it is a very basic and commonly shared principle that killing the innocent is unjust.

    And before you reach for the nearest logical fallacy, I am not arguing that it is right on the grounds that it is popularly shared.  I am just pointing out that it is inaccurate to describe it as "my" concept of justice, because it such a widely held one.  I don't think the authors of the Geneva Convention, for example, were under any impression that I was God when they laid out their definitions of war crimes.

    I don't really care how many people believe it, it is still 'your' concept unless you can provide evidence that it is the true concept.  You just happen to have appropriated it from others.

    The Geneva Convention is about the behaviour of people - not God.  At no point, have I endorse the notion that people have the right, on their own, to judge the behaviour of others and kill them, or to kill the 'innocent'.
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