Can the Calvinistic God Sovereignly Decree This, Or Not? And if Not, Why Not?

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Steve Hays has responded to what I said here:

Loftus: It's quite possible that the total evidence is against Christianity but that Hays' Calvinistic God simply makes/decrees him to believe against the evidence.

Hays: Even if we were to credit that hypothetical, it presupposes the very existence of the Calvinistic God. Hence, it assumes that Calvinism is true even if all of the apparent evidence were arrayed against it.

Really? Let’s backtrack and take a deeper look. Hays started out by claiming that all objections to his faith are stupid ones. That’s what he said. Again, he said that all objections to his faith are stupid ones, including what I'm going to argue for here. That’s stupid as in S-T-U-P-I-D. Then I argued that as far as he knows the total evidence may be against his faith but that his Calvinistic God is making/decreeing him to believe against the available evidence. In his response does he dispute this? No! Can he? I doubt very much that he can. Nonetheless, he calls such a possibility a “hypothetical.” But I’m still very interested in why such a possibility is merely a “hypothetical.” Based upon Calvinism he just does not know. There is no way for him to determine whether the “hypothetical” is true or false. In fact, such a possibility has as much plausibility as the alternative possibility that he believes.

Now back to his claim that all objections to his faith are stupid ones. If my “hypothetical” (as he calls it) is true, then the objections against his faith are not stupid ones. In fact, the objections against his faith are right on target, and surely some of them, if not most of them are intelligent, whereas his rejection of our objections is not very intelligent. And if this is the case, then who wears the dunce cap now?

Furthermore, what happens as a result of granting this “hypothetical” as he calls it? The total available evidence is against Calvinistic Christianity. That’s total as in T-O-T-A-L. The available evidence would be against believing in Calvinistic Christianity. Now let’s say he grants this possibility. What follows? Epistemologically once someone accepts this as a fact then he should cease believing. It’s that simple. To be on the side of intelligent thinking and to have integrity with oneself such a person should reject Calvinistic Christianity…EVEN IF THE CALVINISTIC GOD EXISTS! That’s right....even if the Calvinistic God exists! One cannot continue to believe unless one accepts what he believes are false beliefs, and that IS stupid!

Again, the problem here is how Hays would know his faith is correct if what I suggested is true about the total available evidence being against his faith? According to Calvinism he has no reason to suppose that the evidence supports his faith and yet he continues to have the gall to call all objections to his faith stupid objections. How does he know they are all stupid objections if God is decreeing what he believes against the total available evidence? Our objections might be intelligent objections whereas Hays' arguments might be the stupid ones. The only difference is that Hays' God decrees what he believes. But the fact remains that our objections are not stupid objections, given this possibility.

But here’s how Hays continued to respond:

Hays: In that event, as long as my belief is true, notwithstanding the evidence to the contrary, who cares? At the end of the day, I’m right and he’s wrong. It would make my arguments superfluous. I’d be right even without my supporting arguments. How is that a problem?

Not so fast Steve!

Here is where you must deal with yet another twist, and I want you to think real hard about this, okay? If the total available evidence is actually against your faith even though the Calvinistic God exists and decrees that you believe, then you also have no reason to suppose that those who believe in the Calvinistic God will be rewarded in heaven while the skeptics will be punished when facing God’s judgment. That’s right. Just like God may decree you to believe in him against the evidence, God may also have a secret will to save those skeptics whom he decrees to follow the actual available evidence where it leads! God may actually have a secret will to only save those who do not believe in him! If you think otherwise, tell me upon what basis you think this? You may argue that such a God is duplicitous all you like, but duplicity isn’t a serious criticism of the Calvinistic God, now is it? He can reveal what he wants us to do in the Bible, like "love one another," and yet he can also have a secret unrevealed will that decrees someone to murder his neighbor.

A God like that can make the available evidence against what you believe AND he can also save those who follow the available evidence, at the same time he's sovereignly decreeing all of this.

Steve, maybe you’d better take another good hard look at the available evidence. Maybe it just isn’t stupid after all. Your eternity may be at stake. And as far as you know, based upon YOUR theology, your God is using me right now to speak to you. Who knows, right? He’s brought you into contact with me to help you see the light of day. How do you actually know otherwise…that’s what I’m still waiting to hear. Until you take seriously this objection to your faith and deal with it head-on how do you know our objections are really stupid? Such an objection as this one is not stupid at all. However, your refusal to take seriously this objection of mine makes me conclude you are not thinking deeply enough.

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What God Really Wants

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We all have difficult decisions to make in life. Believers in the Judeo/Christian God do also, like: "should I sacrifice my kid to God?" Or, "does God want me to leave my wife and marry a prostitute?" Or, "is genocide okay sometimes?" Or, "who do we get to replace Judas?" Or, "what color do we paint the *narthex?"


So, how do Evangelical Christians know what God really wants? They seem to be divided into two camps. Some think God said/says everything you need to know in the Bible (not the Jerusalem Bible), some believe in "the Spiritual gifts" like prophecy, dreams, visions, word of knowledge and wisdom-along with the Bible. Either way, both believe God guides them. Whether one believes God speaks to them through the Bible or through a still, small voice, how does one distinguish between their own thoughts and feelings and the will of God?

I was a co-elder in a church back in 1999 (remember Y2K?). One of the other elders in the church "received from God" that the end was near. He believed the church was to move from Virginia to northern Maine, so the nuclear fallout wouldn't get us when New York was bombed. I got to split the church when I got up and said I didn't think this was from God. Now, as nutty as this guy may sound, he was intellegent and sincere, he believed himself to be a prophet. Was he any nuttier than Hosea or Abraham? Both the Tenach and the new testament support the notion of a "prophet." Prophecy, dreams and visions are listed in the Bible as ways that God communicates to people. How does one know if that dream was from God or pizza? Or, if one is getting their cues by reading the Bible, does one skip those parts guiding them to commit genocide? How does one "follow" a God one cannot see or discern?

Then there is choosing straws and the Urim and Thummim. Urim and Thummim (generally translated "revelation and truth," respectively), were objects connected with the breastplate worn by the Jewish High Priest during the time of the first temple and it's believed they were used as a type of divine oracle. In Acts, the apostles purportedly used a similar method of divining God's will when they chose straws to see who would replace Judas. Implicit in both of these methods is an understanding that ones own thoughts and feelings can color what "God is saying," but of course both assume you are asking the right question. If God wants the narthex painted red and you only give Him a choice of blue or yellow, your sunk and don't even know it.

So, how does one explain to ones wife that it's okay to sacrifice the kid or leave her and marry a prostitute because God said so? How does one first explain it to oneself?

*Narthex: 1. church entry or lobby area. 2. dyslexic former drug enforcement agent with a speech impediment.

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Dr. Steve Freud

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This is a reply to Steve Hay's response to what I wrote in my rebuttal to Jason Engwer. As one can see, Steve likes to play psychologist there. Either that or he's trying to impress readers with a bad impersonation of Sigmund Freud. And hence, the title of my article here. (Warning for the humor impaired: this response contains some friendly sarcasm and satirical humor). Here we go:

"Matthew Green has posted a long, bitter, self-pitying hit-piece on Jason Engwer:http://debunkingchristianity.blogspot.com/2006/09/green-vs-engwer-defending-visions.html"

Steve doesn't understand why I posted my rebuttal. First of all, it's a very long piece because Jason Engwer complains that I am always too vauge and I never give enough details. I wanted to give him a run for his money this time. As for self-pitying, where am I feeling sorry for myself? The fact of the matter is that, for the most part, I am a very joyous person, except when rubbed the wrong way by self-righteous blow-hards like Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, and Robert Turkel. Secondly, my very long response wasn't meant to be bitter but I wanted the tone of the rebuttal to suggest that I felt that Engwer had rubbed me the wrong way. In fact, throughout my post, I repeatedly offer to debate Engwer in very civil, respectful, and friendly terms. Would someone who is angry and bitter do this? I think not Steve. Personally, I get the impression that you're reading your misconceptions into my post here, Steve.

Steve: This is one of those unintentionally revealing pieces which tells you a lot about the critic and nothing about the target.In particular, we see that Green’s opposition to the Christian faith is essentially emotional rather than intellectual.

Well, yeah, sure, if you like pretending you're a modern version of Sigmund Freud, Steve. As for my opposition to the Christian faith essentially emotional rather than intellectual- that's not very accurate. I do have strong intellectual skepticism towards the Christian faith, especially given that I have good reasons to believe that some of its core and vital doctrines have been refuted, such as inerrancy and creationism. I do have a stong emotional loathing of Christianity, particularly of Christian fundamentalism because I believe that it's very harmful to human beings. My opinion is simply that fundamentalism is the most authentic type of Christianity that exists today and I deeply loathe fundamentalism.

"For example:"I am pretty sure that Jason just looks down his nose at me personally, thinking what a waste my life is as an atheist, when I could be as high and holy as he is in the arms of Jesus! Please. The last thing I can think I would possibly want is to spend eternity with Mr. Engwer. I loathe arrogant, self-righteous, and judgmental people and if Mr. Engwer is offended that I loathe him, too damn bad! He needs to get over himself!

Steve: Needless to say, this bears no resemblance to Jason.

Steve, I am pretty sure that you would agree with me that context always helps in these cases. I mentioned this after having cited an example of an article that Jason wrote. It's after having read this article that I have kissed my initial hopes of a pleasant, friendly, and well-meaning exchange with Jason good-bye. I could very well be wrong this and I have even offered the opportunity to debate Jason on more pleasant and friendlier terms. You should know this Steve; I know you read my article.

Steve: Rather, Jason is merely a stand-in for MG’s father-complex. As a renegade P.K., MG is taking his arrested teenage rebellion at his old man, and redirecting it at the next available target.—which happens to be Jason

I am? Would it surprise you, Steve, that I actually get along great with my dad these days? My father and I have come to have quite a lot of respect for each other. Sure, we disagree with each others' beliefs but I don't hate my dad. Oh, I get it Steve, you're playing Freud here. I also was never into any kind of teenage rebellion. In fact, I was very shy and quite as a teenager. My mother once told me that she thought I was a little "too" shy at times. Why would I be going through a period of "arrested teeange rebellion" right now at my father? My father isn't the same kind of man he was all those years in the ministry as I was growing up. My "old man" has really mellowed out although he can still be stubborn at times- then, again, so can I.

I want to ask Steve something. Steve, if I am engaging in a late form of teenage rebellion, do you think I am doing drugs, having sex, and listening to rock and roll? If so, I hate to disappoint you but that is not the case. I am still very much a virgin and I am waiting until I fall in love with a woman, I don't ever plan on doing drugs, and I don't particularly care for rock'n'roll. The only music which I imagine might come close, that I like is "Magic Carpet Ride". Does that count, Steve? Besides, apart from Steve's silly stabs at pretending he's Freud ( I hope he doens't actually do this at parties- I'd hate to imagine people throwing popcorn at a sucky impersonation of the good, late doctor) if I was redirecting it at the "next available target", um, wouldn't that be Robert Turkel since I knew him long before I ever encountered Jason Engwer? Come on, Steve, you don't even really know me. You're reading stereotypical motives into what I wrote as something that an P.K. atheist "must be like". After all, without the Christian Savior in our hearts, we have no choice but to be angry and miserable, right? I don't think so!

Steve quoting me:
"Continuing:"I have no problem with that. In my opinion, Jason has long arrived at this point and I see him as little more than another spin-doctor out to fleece the world of faith."

Steve: Yep, that’s what Jason is up to, all right. Jason is a prosperity preacher, out to fleece the flock in order to subsidize his grand mansion in Malibu, Lamborghini, Lear Jet, superyacht, and other accoutrements of his lavish lifestyle."

Jason Engwer repeatedly linked to Robert Turkel and that's why I concluded that he was a spin-doctor. I thought that by putting himself in the same league as Turkel that he was, in effect, endorsing him uncritically, perhaps even hero-worshipping Turkel. I hope he doesn't. If I am wrong about him being a fleecing spin-doctor, then I will apologize for it. But the day that comes is when he stops linking and endorsing Robert Turkel.

Steve: Continuing:"I want to make it clear that while I have no problem accepting that the resurrection of Christ did, in fact, occur, and that it validates the claims made by the Christian gospel of the New Testament, I would never willingly and gladly accept the Christian gospel. On the contrary, I find the Christian gospel to be horribly repugnant but that doesn't mean that I won't be intellectually dishonest. If I came to believe that the resurrection happened, I wouldn't embrace such a conclusion gladly. Contrarily, I would only, ever, accept it extremely grudgingly, and I would have to be violently dragged kicking and screaming into the Christian faith. Since I have no desire to spend eternity with the Christian god, or his followers like Mr. Engwer himself, if I came to conclude that the Christian faith is valid, I would most likely take my own life. I mean, seriously, if I lived, knowing that Jesus Christ was alive and that the gospel claims about him were true, what would I be accomplishing by living as though he wasn't risen and alive and trying to avoid the implications of the gospel? If I found the Christian faith to be that repugnant, wouldn't it make much more sense to take my own life sense I am accomplishing nothing by delaying the inevitability of Hell itself? Oh, what? Mr. Engwer doesn't like that decision of mine? Pity I don't care. If he doesn’t like it, all I feel I can say to him is: drop dead!!!""

I said this after I got the strong impression that Jason was condescending towards the retired couple. I got a strong impression that Jason was just another arrogant apologist right up there with Robert Turkel and Jonathan Sarfati. And yes, I was bitter when I wrote this because I felt offended by what Jason wrote! I mean, who wouldn't?

Steve quoting me: "Even if my hypothesis proved invalid and there are good reasons, further, to believe that Jesus rose from the dead and the Christian gospel is true, then I would admit to such a thing, and then proceed to overdose on medication so I can take my own life and get judgment over with. Seriously. If Jason has a problem with this, then screw Jason!!"

Again, keeping with the context. I got a strong impression that Jason was very condescending towards the couple and was being so, even towards me. I even offered to debate Jason, Steve. Let's not forget that here.

Steve quoting me: Let me state that if the Christian gospel was true and I concluded such, I would not avoid the inevitability of Hell. I would take my rightful place there. I promise Jason this and if he doesn't like the fact that I don't want to be his "brother in the Lord", that I don't want to hug him and thank him for saving me, be his buddy, go to Church, adore those arrogant bastards in the Church, too damned bad! Jason can drop dead!"

Steve: So, by his own emphatic admission, MG’s rejection of the Christian faith is motivated by pure emotionalism.

Steve, I do have a strong emotional loathing of the Christian faith. And I am serious about what I said. If it was to prove true, I would take my own life. Period. I am not certain that my intellectual skepticsim is justified and I am hoping to enroll in graduate school to test my intellectual skepticism to see if it holds water. If it doesn't, and my skepticism proves flawed and the Christian faith is true, I really don't see the point in delaying the inevitability of Hell. But, Steve, you can read whatever you want into my statements. Your suggestion of "pure emotionalism" is far from accurate.

Steve: The evidence for or against the faith is irrelevant. He hates Christians and he hates the Christian God. That’s his bottom line.

No, any evidence for or against the faith is not irrelevant, Steve. It's highly relevant. I do not hate Christians Steve. I have Christian friends, believe it or not. I have Christian family members and I do not hate them. So it's not the bottom line here; you are grossly mistaken Steve. This isn't true so please do not repeat this or else this is libel. You have only your own integrity to damage here, Steve. As for hating the Christian God, I do find the Christian god to be a loathesome species of deity after some of the things I have read about him. Let me ask you something, Steve? How do you claim to know so much about what's going on in my mind? How do you know, Steve?

Steve quoting me:Continuing:"My personal loathing of Jason aside, I have to say that although I have attempted a response here, I freely leave it to readers to judge for themselves.

Steve: Thanks. MG. We’ve taken you up on the offer and judged you accordingly.

Steve, don't be facetious here. I was asking readers to judge my arguments here and you know this.

Steve: Continuing:"I agree with Till. I find it bizarre that Jason would want to link to someone who is so idiotic such as this. If this is the quality and caliber of apologetics that Jason wants to associate himself with, I freely leave it to him, since by linking to and (in effect) endorsing Robert Turkel without qualification, Jason is only making himself look foolish.

Steve: Yet another example of his raw emotionalism. Just a few months ago, MG was defending Turkel against Steven Carr.

Raw emotionalism? I confess to a very failed attempt at diplomacy with a fellow who I now regard as a spin-doctor! I came to finally see the light about Turkel. I really wanted to believe that there was a lot of good in him but there wasn't and there isn't. If I hated Christians, would I have attempted a friendly diplomacy with Turkel and some of his readers in the first place? Well, Steve, your bluff has been called. You just shot your own criticism there to pieces.

Steve: Now, however, he’s turned against Turkel. And having turned against him, if Turkel is evil, then Jason is evil for linking to Turkel’s website.

Well, John Loftus was right: he predicted to Turkel that Turkel would turn me against him. Needless to say, Loftus was right on the money. My post on the subject makes it clear why I turned against him. While "evil" would be a very strong word to describe Turkel, I didn't say that I thought Jason was evil at all for linking to Turkel's website. Foolish and idiotic, yes. But that is forgivable and we can learn from our foolishness. I have done many foolish things in my life and have acted idiotically, and guess what Steve? I have learned from those mistakes of mine. Still to this day I make stupid mistakes and act foolishly. Let me ask you something: where did I say Jason was "evil"? If not, can you stop pretending to be Freud here? Please by all means, continue your day job!

Steve quoting me: Continuing:"As for his appeal to Glenn Miller and the Christian CADRE, I wouldn't exactly put much stock in what these folks have to say in terms of a rebuttal. If Jason links to Turkel, I cannot reasonably expect the work of Miller or the CADRE to be of any higher quality. Neither should any other rational, carefully thinking adults."

Steve quoting me: I haven't read Mr. Price's discussion but being that Jason had linked to Robert Turkel, I am not expecting to be impressed with Price's discussion. I have seen what quality and level of caliber that Jason thinks is good apologetics.

Steve: This is, of course, completely irrational. Even if Turkel were inept, that does not prejudge Glenn Miller or Christopher Price. To dismiss them unread based on guilt-by-association is yet another example of MG’s undiluted emotionalism.

No, it's not another example of my "undiluted emotionalism". If Jason has never linked to Miller or Price, then I would gladly go over them and debate the issue further with Jason. I have actually read Miller's material and while I think he makes some good points here and there, I am not all that impressed with Mr. Miller's arguments, although he is definitely above the sarcasm, insults, and arrogance of Turkel. As for Price, Jason has advised me not to be so quick to dismiss Price and I admit that I am willing to give his arguments a fair shake. I would've done that anyway, had I not seen Turkel linked to with Price. So, if there's any guilt-by-association, it's only because Jason is disgracing Miller and Price by putting them in the same league as Turkel.

Steve: BTW, I assume that Jason links to various websites for the simple reason that anyone who is reading Triablogue has access to the Internet. But many people who have access to the Internet do not have access to a good research library.

But does Jason have no concern for quality, here? Jason links to many websites for the reason that anyone reading your website, Steve, has access to the Internet and not always good research libraries; I do think that even Jason could do better than link to Turkel. Besides, Steve, do you deny the examples that I cited against Turkel? My sarcasm- that Jason cannot do better because he linked to Turkel was actually intended to shame him somewhat and make him think about who he was linking to. In all seriousness- I hope that Jason will do better than to link to Turkel in the future. Turkel is an utter disgrace to Christian apologetics. Lastly, my offer to have a friendly, courteous, and respectful debate with Jason still stands, believe it or not, I just didn't want Jason to give me what I thought was a condescending and arrogant attitude, which I got the serious impression that he was trying to dish out at me in his rebuttals to what I have written.

Steve: Therefore, Jason refers them to online resources when he can for their convenience.

Steve, at this point, I simply ask Jason to seriously reconsider who he is linking to. Perhaps Jason doesn't know Turkel that well. Perhaps he hasn't seen what Turkel has done in the past. If he hasn't, I am willing to apologize and retract my sarcasm and my attempts at shaming him, provided that Jason get to know what kind of person he is linking to better and why I consider Turkel to be a slimeball these days. My offer to debate Jason on friendlier, respectful, and courteous terms still stands, you know? Heck, I'd be willing to debate you, too, Steve. We can have a friendly, good-natured, and respectful debate or even a discussion if you like. I only responded to Jason the way that he did because I honestly felt as thought he threw the first stone at me like I thought he did at that one retired couple.

Steve: Of course, Jason’s sources are by no means limited to the Internet. He often quotes from scholarly works. But there’s a limit to how much you can manually transcribe.

Good! Jason should use the Internet for sources if they prove to be well-informed and scholarly, even if written by nonscholars such as Glenn Miller (or has he gotten an advanced degree since I last read something from him?) Jason quotes from scholarly works- good. I am glad that he does and I think that shows that Jason is seriously interested in discussing these issues on a scholarly level. I just wish he would think twice before linking to someone whose lack of professionalism and personal ethics, his critics (myself included) have challenged.

Steve quoting me: Continuing:"I wouldn't trust Christian apologists to effectively rebut Carrier and Price.

Steve: Just another example of MG’s reactionary hysteria.

My reactionary hysteria? Um, Steve, no offense here, but you're not good at impersonating Freud. Sorry to tell you this. There need not be any reactionary hysteria in me and I am really bewildered that you would make this out to be a case of it on my part. Yes, I wrote in a really sarcastic and I was even a bit nasty but I only did so because I thought that Jason had thrown the first stone. Let's not forget here that I did offer to debate Jason on friendlier, repectful, and more civil terms. The offer is even open to you if you are interested, Steve.

Steve: What does "trust" have to do with it? You don’t have to take what they say on faith. Rather, you judge them by the quality of their argumentation.

Um, I have seen the quality of some of their arguments, Steve, and there is no faith here involved. I am not using "trust" in terms of faith, religious or otherwise. I don't trust them to do a good job for the same reason I don't trust certain politicians to make good on their campaign promises once they're elected to power. I distrust Christian apologists for the similar reasons I distrust many politicians.

Steve: "Continuing:"The fact that my ‘treatment’ of the issues was not as detailed and as extensive as Jason would like and that he feels the need to suggest that I am ignorant of New Testament scholarship and critical history in general is just meant as an insult to me personally."

""Apologists like Jason want more than anything to prove that their critics are uninformed, careless, stupid, ignorant- or else we would be Christians like him and just adore him!"

Steve: Other issues aside, MG is several years younger that Jason. MG is also a fairly recent apostate.

Jason may well be older than me but I fail to see what difference an age-difference makes here. As for my "fairly recent" apostacy- how long would Steve imagine is "fairly recent"? I deconverted from Christianity four years ago. I evolved from Christianity, to Deism, to agnosticism, and finally atheism.

Steve: By contrast, Jason has been doing this sort of thing for quite a few years now. So, as a matter of fact, Jason does know a whole lot more about the subject than MG.

That may well be the case, Steve. You know as well as I do that it doesn't make Jason right or me wrong nor does it discredit my arguments and vindicate his. Jason may know more about the subject than I do. I have never denied that I am still learning and I do not for one second claim that I "have arrived". Jason may know a lot more about the subject than me. I am curious as to Jason's plans are for the future. If he working on an M.A. or Ph.D. degree? I will be this next year, working on my M.A.

Steve: "But that’s not all. Consider some of MG’s own disclaimers in the course of this very post:

"I just lack the expertise to decide one way or another. The simple truth of the matter is that I would love to embrace Carrier's theory, in all its details."And:"Both Richard Carrier and Robert Price seem to endorse the Radical Criticism school of New Testament thought. Although I find such an approach fascinating, Jason is right in that I don't necessarily commit myself to their views because I lack the scholarly expertise to make that kind of a judgment, although I would love to embrace the school of the Radical Critics; I'm just not sure if it's necessary or not. It all boils down to scholarly expertise."

Steve quoting me: And:"But the fact of the matter is that I am still undecided on the question of the genre of the gospels.

Steve: So, by his own admission, MG is quite ignorant and uninformed.

Um, the folks I have cited are scholars. If I need to be a scholar to be considered informed, then of course, I plead to being ignorant and informed. If by "ignorant and uninformed" and I am not well-studied as you or Jason are, Steve, that may well be the case. I am not claiming I am super-informed or even expertly so. I'd like to know what your point is?

Steve quoting me: Moving along:

"In each of these passages, Herodotus names his sources and how he got a hold of this information he finds worthy to pass on. Now I ask Jason: where do the synoptic gospels identify their sources? Where does John do so? Herodotus writes what he hears from the Egyptians, Carthaginians, and Persians. Does Luke say how he knows what women went to the tomb, or how he knows where Joseph took Mary and the baby Jesus after the dedication of Jesus? Does Mark say how he knows that Jesus cursed the fig tree? Does Matthew say how he knows about the story of the wise men and Herod? No. Does John's author say how he knows that Jesus cleansed the temple and overturned tables? or how he knows that Jesus supposedly raised Lazarus from the dead? No."

"No names, methods, weighing of evidence, competing claims, or anything like that in the gospels.

Steve: The problem here is that MG is comparing the incomparable. Herodotus is writing about events from the distant past.This is quite different from contemporary history.

How am I comparing the incomparable here? What difference does it make that Herodotus is writing about many events from the distant past? My point is one of critical intent. And I do believe that if some authors are claiming to narrate the greatest event in human history in terms of soiterology, then they should be very critical in what they intend to write. Does Steve believe that if authors are writing events that are contemporaneous with their lives, they need not be critical-minded? Even about extraordinary claims?

Steve: Suppose Peter Lawford wrote a biography of Frank Sinatra. Would we ask, where did he get his information? What was his methodology? Did he weigh the evidence? Sift through competing claims?That would all be irrelevant. Since Lawford was a member of the Rat Pack, we know that he would be either getting his information from first-hand observation or from the testimony of other Rat Pack alumni.MG is simply assuming, without benefit of argument, that the canonical gospels are either anonymous or pseudonymous.

Well, in the case of Lawford writing a biography of Sinatra, we would have enough background information to determine whether or not Lawford was in a position to narrate Sinatra's life events with great accuracy. Let's also bear in mind that we are talking about two different cultures here. We are talking about a pride-guilt culture in which the comparsion is futile because of our high-technology, information mediums, means of recording history, and journalism standards, that was simply unavailable to people back then. Most people in the time of Christian origins, lived in a time where this was not the case, not to mention that there was a general lack of concern for precision in honor-shame cultures, especially in the 1st century Mediterranean. I have tried to document this in an essay I have written by which I plan to post on Loftus' blog in the near future. I invite you and Jason to take a look.

Steve: Moving along:"For many people ‘extraordinary evidence’ is indeed vague and often allows for critics to move the goal posts in terms of what the bar when it comes to evidence that will be enough to convince them. I, however, will tell people what it is that it takes to convince me that such ‘extraordinary events’ have occurred."And:"I am committed to naturalism, philosophically, but this need not exclude an empty tomb by any means. I am committed to a naturalistic paradigm of Christian origins, something Jason cannot brook.

Steve: The Resurrection is only extraordinary given his naturalistic presumption. And it demands extraordinary evidence given his naturalistic presumption.

Oh, I see, so anything goes with you, Steve? So do you accept the sightings of the Virgin Mary at Fatima, the various sightings of Bigfoot, all the alleged stories of UFO/alien abudction, of various psychics who claim to predict future events? The resurrection is not only extraordinary given my "naturalistic presumption". I could be a Deist and believe that a supernatural Creator exists and still not believe that the resurrection happened due to a lack of extraordinary evidence, any other reasons or criticisms (like bibical inerrancy aside). I was even willing to qualify my remarks to: supernatural claims require supernatural forms of evidence. So, Steve, I guess you believe all the claims made about UFOs, Virgin Mary sightings, psychics, the lost civilization of Atlantis, astral projections, and all of that? I guess if you watch Most Haunted on the Travel Channel, then you really do believe that Derek Acorah really gets possessed by the "spirits" that supposedly haunt a given place?

Steve, my sarcasm aside here, how do you go about differentiating between any claims you're willing to accept and those you reject?

Steve: Assuming naturalism, then any alternative explanation is more likely than a miraculous event like Resurrection.

Not necessarily. Natural explanations require naturalistic forms of evidence. Supernaturalist explanations require supernaturalist forms of evidence. That's the epistemological axiom I work with. Naturalism need not be presupposed or assumed from the get-go.

Steve: All that MG has done is to beg the question in favor of naturalism. It’s not the evidence for or against the Resurrection that’s setting the bar, but metaphysical naturalism.

I have? I wasn't even defending naturalism. Being committed to philosophical naturalism isn't the same thing as defending it and even Steve knows that. I have just told Jason that I am committed to philosophical naturalism and naturalism is my conclusion thus far. I am willing to believe that the resurrection happened if supernatural forms of evidence were given to me, such as the risen Jesus appearing to me like he allegedly did to Paul on the road to Damascus or to doubting Thomas. That would be a step in the right direction. Of course, such a Being would have to help me confirm that I am not hallucinating the whole thing.

Steve: And where’s his argument for naturalism?

Oh, good grief! Where did I say I was giving one? I was only defending my hypothesis of visions, which a Deist, a pantheist, or other religionists can accept. Heck, even Muslims can accept my hypothesis. No naturalistic presuppositions are necessary here. Steve, I'm sorry, did I burn your straw man there? (I'm teasing Steve; just teasing you there)

Steve: Continuing:"Price points out well what is the problem with critics like Jason. He points out parallels between gospels like Mark and legendary accounts of immortals and suggests that Talbert’s research points to the gospel resurrection narratives as being legendary in nature.

Steve: MG would do well to read David Aune’s detailed and devastating review of Talbert.

I have also read Talbert's response to Aune; have you?

"Continuing:Robert M Price (who Jason will probably arrogantly scoff at if I know him like I know the back of my hand) has the following to say about critics like Jason:"The research done by Talbert and others makes the set of alternatives proposed by the apologists (i.e., ‘’hoax or history’) a false one. It is considerations like this which make works like Andersons' The Evidence for the Resurrection hopelessly out of date. In this book, and a large number of others like it, the apologists manage to effect a resurrection of their own-- they bring back the deists and rationalists of the eighteenth century as their opponents in debate…New Testament scholarship has long since left both Anderson and Venturini behind, since it has shown at least that the facticity of the resurrection narratives cannot be simply taken for granted. Granted they are not lies, they may yet be legendary." ("Guarding an Empty Tomb" in Beyond Born Again)"[Jason] just assumes that folks like me or just like the critics of old. Sorry buddy, the shoes do not fit and no amount of shoe-horning on your part is going to change that, Jason. Price is right; New Testament scholarship has left the likes of Anderon and Venturini behind and I agree with Price that scholarship has shown that the facticity of the narratives cannot be taken for granted. Jason is simply wearing the old, warn out shoes of Anderson and McDowell in this case. It is sadly, Jason, and not me, who is stabbing at a foe long since dead.

Steve: This criticism is about to boomerang on MG’s head, especially when he proceeds to issue a laundry list of Bible contradictions.

We'll see about that!

Steve: The funny fact of the matter is that MG is the one who’s operating with a precritical, 18C paradigm of what inerrancy should like look.

Oh, really? And what would a modern paradigm of inerrancy look like? (I have read books on biblical inerrancy you know, Steve. I have, for instance, read a lot of Norman Geisler's book Inerrancy)

Steve: 18C literature acted as if the Gospel writers were mere stenographers, recording speeches verbatim and reporting events in minute, chronological detail.

You think I view inerrancy as being a "mechanical-dictation" process? Bzzzzzzz! Wrong Steve!

Steve: But the litany "contradictions" which MG regurgitates from the lips of traditional literature of infidelity dissolves under the lens of genre criticism, narrative criticism, redaction criticism, and the like as we make allowance for the literary conventions and historiographical techniques of the 1C AD.

Oh Steve, come on, man! If it makes any difference, I haven't even read the traditional literature of infidelity such as Robert Ingersoll or David Strauss, if that's who you have in mind.

Steve: MG is the one who’s stuck in a time-warp.

Hmmm..I guess then that Norman Geisler and the late Gleason Archer are/were stuck in the same time warp as me. I have been reading some social-science commentaries on the gospels as well as a book by Abraham Rihbany on the world of the Oriental and their attitudes towards precision.

Steve: By contrast, Jason can readily defend inerrancy by appealing to contemporary NT scholarship.

Guess what, Steve? I can readily refute inerrancy by appealing to contemporary scholarship. In fact, I'd appreciate it if you told me what "taditional literature of infidelity" I am regurgitating from the lips of? Care to cite any examples?

Steve: MG likes to cite socio-rhetorical scholars. Well, what about Craig Keener and Ben Witherington, to name a few?

I am quite fond of Ben Witherington. He's a refreshingly honest scholar and I really enjoyed reading his material in The Christology of Jesus. As for Craig Keener, I am not to keen on him (dare I pun?)

"Finally:At 10:19 AM, September 03, 2006, John W. Loftus said..."If anyone believes what the people at Triablogue say then we are all totally ignorant about everything here at DC. And yet they betray themselves by dealing with what we write on a daily basis. Why spend so much time dealing with the arguments of a stupid site, if DC is one? They cannot have it both ways, for if they regularly argue against us, then they think we are intellectually worthy of their time.

Steve: A non sequitur. DC is simply a convenient repository for stupid arguments against the faith. Since the only objections are stupid objections, DC will do as well as anyone else.

Steve, maybe my criticisms of Jason were misplaced. Maybe you're the one with intellectual arrogance here. But, I have definitely proposed a friendlier, more civil, and respectful debate offer? Will you take it up if Jason declines here?
Nice try, Steve. But I cannot really give you a good mark for your Freud impersonation here. I have seen better. But let me know when you get your degree in psychology!

Matthew

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Kirk Cameron Goes Bananas!

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* I normally don't call anyone "stupid," and I'm still not going to, but I am going to say so regarding the ideas presented below! *

A cousin brought this to my attention about a week ago, and I have not been able to stop laughing at the sheer stupidity of it since. When I get depressed, I just think of this and I feel better! A friend of my cousin's wanted to argue apologetics with him and brought him to the webpage of former atheist and actor, Kirk Cameron, and boy did the laughs begin to roll!

When he told me about it, I thought it was a joke, but it isn't. It's for real, and to this day I cannot think about it without at least cracking a smile! The most egregious error from Answers In Genesis doesn't begin to compete with this!

Watch the video where Kirk and his co-host argue that a banana is, "an atheist's worst nightmare!" The banana, an atheist's worst nightmare!. Behind my hysterical laughter, I only have a few things to say to Kirk or whoever wrote this numbskull-ish material...

What about pineapples, Kirk? They have virtual "spikes" on them and are damn hard to get into! And what about coconuts, Kirk? They are very hard to get into, and in fact, you basically can't get into them without a good hard surface to crack them open with. You can even konk someone over the head with one and it'll be an effective weapon. If god wanted man to have a convenient eating experience, why didn't he make all our natural food products like the banana? What about other food products like oranges and apples, where getting into them is not quite as convenient (in the case of the apple, you've got to stop eating before you get to the core because the seeds of the apple are poisonous)? And bear in mind, we are not even considering poisonous plants and fruits, nor are we considering having to chase down bison, spear them to death, cut them up, carry them back to camp, cook them, and eat them!

Besides, what about grapes, Kirk? People choke on them all the time. My brother, a medic in the army, struggled to free a grape that was lodged in the windpipe of a soldier. The man ended up dying it was so tightly stuck in there. Imagine, death by grape inhalation! Do an internet search for accounts of choking on grapes and you will see it happens to hundreds of people a year!

I won't carry on because of the mind-blowing stupidity of this idea. I'll just end by saying this is as moronic and simplistic as what an old Pentecostal woman once argued at me with, saying that since God made the river just big enough for the riverbed, therefore, we have evidence of him!

I dare say unbelievers and most believers will have a good laugh at this!

(JH)

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Does Atheism Lead Back to the Superstitious World of Pantheism?

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I have long been a student of world-views and have been interested in which ones historically led to the next one, and so forth in the West [For a great discussion of this see James W. Sire, The Universe Next Door: A Basic World-View Catalog (IVP 2000)]. I know that Deism historically led to atheism, and atheism leads some people to pantheism or New Age philosophy. I just don’t think it has to. I have to stop this slippery slide somewhere, and so I do so at atheism. I just don't think atheism leads back to the superstitious beliefs of pantheism, with its omens, crystals, holistic healing, astrology, automatic writing, psychics, necromancy, reincarnation, spirit gods, and the occult. But some argue that it does.


Does this surprise you? C.S. Lewis: “Pantheism is congenial to our minds not because it is the final stage in a slow process of enlightenment, but because it is almost as old as we are…it is immemorial in India. Pantheism is in fact the permanent natural bent of the human mind; the permanent ordinary level below which man sometimes sinks…It is the attitude into which the human mind automatically falls when left to itself.” [Miracles: A Preliminary Study, Macmillan, 1947, (pp. 84-85)].

According to Douglas R. Groothuis, “the New Age (Western pantheism) and secular humanism (atheism in action) are more like cousins than strangers, and the competition between the two world views is more of an in-house feud than a dispute between opposites. A better metaphor might be to view the One as taking the baton from a once robust but now failing secular humanism so that the race to win Western civilization might be won by a new kind of humanism—cosmic humanism.” [Unmasking the New Age (IVP, 1986, p. 52)]

Why is this? It’s because both pantheists and atheists agree on one basic idea. Both world-views agree that reality is of one substance, unlike the theist or deist who believes there is a creator/creation distinction. Pantheists will say that the One exists, and atheists will say that all that exists or will ever exist is matter. They may use different words like “Spirit” and “Matter.” But they both agree on Monism, that is, everything is One (substance), so why should it matter what word someone uses to describe the One?

They may also both agree that there are no universal truths or absolute standards in ethics, from some perspectives. The pantheist will say that ethics disappear as a category, while the atheist may claim that man creates his own truth or ethics.

They both may agree that human beings have no intrinsic value above anything else in reality. The pantheist will say that we are all spirit beings; incarnations of the One, while atheists will claim human beings are merely highly evolved animals.

They both see humankind’s problem as that of ignorance of our true potential which is hindered by the theistic view of God. For the pantheist, this ignorance hinders the Cosmos from being One, while for the atheist this ignorance inhibits scientific progress, creates class struggles, mass neurosis, intolerance and environmental disasters.

They both see the solution to be the same too, from opposite poles. The pantheist’s solution is to exalt ourselves as the gods we truly are, while the atheist wants to dethrone God as creator. “Gods in Disguise,” or “Naked Apes,” all reality is being ultimately equalized.

Death too, is seen the same, from some perspectives, as the end of personal existence. For the pantheist, that which is reincarnated is just another incarnation of the One, while for the atheist death is the end of the individual as it is known.

“The key problem for the secular humanist is the genesis of mind in the universe. How can mere matter in motion produce mind? How can inanimate chance give birth to animate purposeful beings such as animals and people? Lifeless matter could never transcend itself. Thus, philosophical evolutionists asserted that consciousness emerged from latent potentialities in matter. Matter is not lifeless, but spiritually potent. This latent consciousness (mind) becomes actualized in evolution and conscious of itself in man. The difficulty of matter producing mind disappears, but what is left is more than materialistic humanism. Materialism evolves into pantheism.” “In the end, the supernatural is not really supernatural, but another dimension of the natural.” [Unmasking the New Age (IVP, 1986), pp. 53-54]. Or, according to Charles Hodge, “If matter becomes mind, mind is God, and God is everything. Thus the monster Pantheism swallows up science and its votaries.” [quoted by Groothuis, p. 54]. In other words, once matter is all there is to account for consciousness, then matter is consciousness is some sense of the word. And if that’s so, matter has some very unusual characteristics, in that it can be aware of itself and can think. So matter could possibly be described as being “alive” in some sense of the word, and atheists are pushed in the direction of pantheism.

As an atheist I feel the general force of this argument, but in the end I must reject it. I’ll share a few of my reasons and open it up for discussion. In the first place it is scientific investigation and reason which leads me to atheism. It is what has worked to produce technology, space flight, and micro-surgery. It has been used to basically eliminate polio and tuberculosis from the industrialized world. But when we look at the possibility of abandoning the scientific pursuit in favor of returning once again to superstition we abandon the very things that have produced what we now experience. Returning to witchdoctors and acupuncture and crystals and tea leaves is simply not an option to modern scientifically thinking people. It is to abandon what got us here in the first place.

The thing that probably separates atheism from pantheism is the belief that this universe exists by chance. Once someone accepts this he can no longer have any leanings toward pantheism, contrary to the Christian critics. There is nothing in a chancistic universe that can lead to the idea that nature is "alive" even if we have evolved as conscious thinking human beings and can reflect upon this chancistic universe. This is the non-sequitur. Among others, Daniel Dennett in Consciousness Explained and Francis Crick in The Astonishing Hypothesis: The Scientific Search for the Soul, are attempting to explain consciousness by non-purposive explanations.

Besides, pantheism is just unbelievable to me. Pantheists claim everything and everyone is One. The One is what we may call “God.” There are different “in house” arguments within pantheists but I must simply reject their whole worldview outright, although people are not being irrational to believe it, for rational categories fly out the window from their perspective. If God is the changeless absolute and we are God, then why must we go through the process of attaining enlightenment in order to reach the awareness that we are God? Doesn’t that require change, something the pantheist God does not do? Moreover, if all distinctions are lost in God, then what is it that distinguishes between an unenlightened person and one who is enlightened? Why bother being enlightened when the unenlightened person is just as much God as the one who is enlightened?

Then too, if all is God, and God is beyond spirit-matter dualisms, then everything we experience with our five senses all throughout our entire lives is simply wrong—an illusion—Maya. It’s hard to believe a world-view that says everything I experience all my life is nothing but an illusion, although I understand it, especially as a philosophy instructor, when we consider that we use filters to see and hear reality. With our eyes and ears, we do not see or hear the whole electromagnetic and sonic spectra. What is visible or audible to us is a small portion of reality. We don’t see cosmic rays, gamma rays, x-rays, ultraviolet or infrared light, and we don’t hear radar, radio, television and ultrasonic waves. I liken reality in my classes to “white noise” coming from a weak TV signal. But I still cannot believe “reality” is nothing more than the filters themselves.

Pantheists also say God is beyond our concepts to describe. Their goal is to go beyond all conceptual viewpoints. But that seems to me to be a contradiction, because when they describe God or this process they must use concepts, and the end result is that God becomes void of any meaning at all.

Furthermore, the whole concept of reincarnation is an extremely depressing thought to easterners. To see why I reject reincarnation see here.

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"The Only Objections are Stupid Objections..."

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Steve Hays over at Triablogue has responded to a comment of mine by saying: "DC is simply a convenient repository for stupid arguments against the faith. Since the only objections are stupid objections, DC will do as well as anyone else." see here. [Edit, since I linked to Steve he deleted his original comments and instead commented on this post of mine.]

There are a whole host of Occidental thinkers throughout the ages who have rejected Christianity, including Bertrand Russell, while nearly all Oriental thinkers have rejected Christianity. But all of our objections are stupid ones? Really?

Hays believes that Calvinistic Christianity (his brand) is intellectually superior such that all one needs is knowledge to see the truth. This statement of his tells more about him and probably his team members than it says anything about his case. He's certain that he's correct. But subjective certainty says nothing about his case. No wonder he treats anyone who disagrees with him with such distain. All the rest of us are stupid, even those Christians who disagree with his brand of Calvinistic Christianity. Such an attitude is extremely sophmoronic and naive. He will never consider any argument against his faith because he has already presupposed that they are all stupid objections. And he calls on us to become educated and intelligent in order to see the light. But this attitude of his reveals such an ignorance that he is the last one to offer advice on intelligently evaluating our objections.

But Hays has a monumental task ahead of him to convince people of this, since Christianity is losing ground in the marketplace of ideas. His predicted response is that all such people are stupid for accepting the objections to Christianity. If I ask why should God place a premier on intelligence or in a proper education, he will respond that God grants people the ability to see the truth but hides it from those who are perishing. So in effect, we offer stupid objections here at DC because God has allowed/decreed us to believe stupid things. And so Hays & Company treat us as if we are stupid.

This is not someone I care to have a conversation with. I only want conversation/debate partners who will treat me as a dignified person who has sincere objections. Hays & Company cannot do this. They can no longer be taken seriously as serious conversation/debate partners because of their idiosyncratic interpretations of the Bible along with their intellectually superior attitude toward people who disagree with them.

What has probably never occurred to Hays is that it is quite possible that the evidence for Christianity is much weaker than the objections against it, and I can argue this based on his own Calvinistic grounds. It's quite possible that the total evidence is against Christianity but that Hays' God simply makes/decrees him to believe against the evidence. That would conversely make Hays' arguments the stupid ones which are subsequently accepted by stupid people who believe them. Since this is very possible given his Calvinistic God, perhaps he ought to look once again at our objections. But this time he ought to do so seriously.

Or, Steve Hays must show me why I'm wrong when I argue for this here, and here, based upon his own Calvinistic theology. It's his choice. But as of yet I have not seen Hays & Company argue against what I wrote.

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Green vs Engwer: Defending Visions

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Green Answers Engwer: The Argument over Visions


On this blog, I have put forth an essay series on the visionary origins of Christianity. I have decided to make it a five-part series, beginning with an essay on visions and four subsequent posts defending objections to my visions. Jason Engwer of Triablouge has seen fit to compose a rebuttal of what I have written on the subject of visions. In what follows will be a point-by-point rebuttal to what Mr. Engwer has written.

While I have to say that I love to have good exchanges with friendly and well-meaning Christians on topics like the resurrection, biblical inerrancy, higher criticism, and the like, I have a particular dislike of nasty apologists, especially those with gigantic ego problems. I had hoped that perhaps Mr. Engwer might be a Christian who is interested in a friendly and respectful exchange but I now believe that I was only kidding myself. I believe that like countless others, Mr. Engwer is quite an arrogant fellow with a confrontational style and I tend to be fully confrontational with him in this post. It's not to just me that Mr. Engwer seems to have a self-righteous and condescending demeanor; I recall reading an article from Mr. Engwer's website in which he looked down on a retired couple in the most self-righteous and condescending tone I have ever seen. I found it quite appalling, wondering who the hell was Jason to look down on this couple for what they were doing ("wasting their lives" as Mr. Engwer put it; they were collecting shells when they could be trying to climb up to Mr. Engwer's spiritual plateau and be as holy as Engwer apparently thinks he is) and what business was it of Jason's? If I was the retired man in question, I would tell Mr. Engwer to rot in the very hell he apparently doesn't want us putrid heathens go to. I am pretty sure that Jason just looks down his nose at me personally, thinking what a waste my life is as an atheist, when I could be as high and holy as he is in the arms of Jesus! Please. The last thing I can think I would possibly want is to spend eternity with Mr. Engwer. I loathe arrogant, self-righteous, and judgmental people and if Mr. Engwer is offended that I loathe him, too damn bad! He needs to get over himself!

After I began composing my posts answering objections to visions, Mr. Engwer began his response. He wrote a blog post entitled "Matthew Green's Attempt to Dismiss the Resurrection Evidence". Now that sounds like a confrontational title to me. I was thinking that perhaps it was more confrontational than Engwer had intended but as I began reading, I realized that it was just as confrontational as the title suggested. I was thinking that perhaps he could word it "Matthew Green's Attempt to Rebut Arguments for the Resurrection" but no. Mr. Engwer, in my opinion, isn't out to merely present arguments he finds persuasive. Rather, as I see it, he wants to shove the evidence in skeptics' faces ( and ram it down their throats) and if these skeptics are not intellectual cowards, they will accept Christ, become Christians, and will adore Mr. Engwer as their dear, precious brother in the Lord! Pardon me while I gag!

I want to make it clear that while I have no problem accepting that the resurrection of Christ did, in fact, occur, and that it validates the claims made by the Christian gospel of the New Testament, I would never willingly and gladly accept the Christian gospel. On the contrary, I find the Christian gospel to be horribly repugnant but that doesn't mean that I won't be intellectually dishonest. If I came to believe that the resurrection happened, I wouldn't embrace such a conclusion gladly. Contrarily, I would only, ever, accept it extremely grudgingly, and I would have to be violently dragged kicking and screaming into the Christian faith. Since I have no desire to spend eternity with the Christian god, or his followers like Mr. Engwer himself, if I came to conclude that the Christian faith is valid, I would most likely take my own life. I mean, seriously, if I lived, knowing that Jesus Christ was alive and that the gospel claims about him were true, what would I be accomplishing by living as though he wasn't risen and alive and trying to avoid the implications of the gospel? If I found the Christian faith to be that repugnant, wouldn't it make much more sense to take my own life sense I am accomplishing nothing by delaying the inevitability of Hell itself? Oh, what? Mr. Engwer doesn't like that decision of mine? Pity I don't care. If he doesn’t like it, all I feel I can say to him is: drop dead!!!

But I do not find the case for the resurrection persuasive. It's my goal to do my best to show why there isn't any "evidence" for the resurrection. If Mr. Engwer feels so inclined, he can shout that there is all he wants to but I ask readers to carefully consider my critique. This is going to be quite a lengthy rebuttal and so it might take some time to digest. In this rebuttal, I plan to respond point-by-point so I will use the ID markers "Green" for me and "Engwer" for Darth Engwer, erm..Jason. Mr. Engwer has so far written two responses to my posts, "Matthew Green's Attempts to Dismiss the Resurrection Evidence" and "Were some of the Gospel Narratives Fabricated.." So, folks, without further ado, I give you my rebuttal to Mr. Engwer's nonsense.

1.) The Spin Doctor Is In....or Darth Engwer rides again..

Engwer: Matthew Green of Debunking Christianity has posted two more articles on the resurrection. One is about the empty tomb, and the other is about the diversity of Jesus' resurrection appearances.

Green: Jason is correct here. I appreciate that he links to my posts on the subject so readers can read for themselves what I write. This is unlike some other Christian apologist I know of who seem to lack the sophistication of showing his readers both sides of an argument and laughably accuses people of sound-bites when he himself doesn't answer his critics point by point.

Engwer: In his articles, Matthew makes reference to the work of Richard Carrier, though he sometimes distances himself from Carrier and comments that he's only mentioning his view as one possibility among others. He also mentions Robert Price. Carrier and Price, including arguments of theirs like the ones cited by Matthew, have been answered at length by Glenn Miller, J.P. Holding, and Christian CADRE, for example.

Green: Oh dear lord, no! Jason didn't just link to Robert "No Links" Turkel, did he? Is this the same Robert Turkel who made a complete fool of himself by stating that the gospels sometimes list the Greek word for "anistemi" twice and hasn't apologized for it because his ego is way to big to allow for that sort of thing! Is this the same Robert Turkel who took a link by my fellow skeptic Stephen Carr and altered it so it went to an article that Turkel himself wrote and then lied about altering the link later? Is this the same Robert Turkel who made the incredibly idiotic statements below? I reproduced this from Farrell Till's "The Humpty Dumpty of Apologetics" in Part 5 of his rebuttal. Note that although I do not think that Till is the best skeptic and inerrancy critic on the planet ( I thought he was extremely foolish not to take up studies of New Testament social-science criticism such as the Context Group works but that was just my opinion- nowadays we agree to disagree as friends) but I do think that Till hit the nail on the head in this particular instance. Here is the following:
...........................

Turkel:We have only ourselves to blame if we find the message of the Bible "unclear": It is we who made our language less colorful and less idiomatic than Hebrew. It is we who choose to look down on other cultures and pronounce them inferior, rather than trying to understand them.

Till:

This has to be the stupidest argument I have ever heard. I speak English because I was born in a place where English was spoken. I had nothing to do with the evolution of English from its Germanic forerunners, so I cannot be "blam[ed]" if "less colorful" idioms in English conceal from me some of the "nuances" in Hebrew. The same is true of a person now living in China or Japan or Norway or India or wherever.

It is time to call a spade a spade. I cannot believe that even Turkel would be stupid enough to make an argument like this, as if any person is responsible for the language that he learns as he is growing up. I suppose that on the day of judgment "God" will say to non-Hebraic people, "You are going to hell, and it is your own fault. You shouldn't have made your language less colorful and less idiomatic than Hebrew."

Really, Turkel, you have outdone yourself
............................

Green (continuing). I agree with Till. I find it bizarre that Jason would want to link to someone who is so idiotic such as this. If this is the quality and caliber of apologetics that Jason wants to associate himself with, I freely leave it to him, since by linking to and (in effect) endorsing Robert Turkel without qualification, Jason is only making himself look foolish. I have no problem with that. In my opinion, Jason has long arrived at this point and I see him as little more than another spin-doctor out to fleece the world of faith. As for "distancing" myself from Carrier, Jason makes it sound as though I find Carrier's theory too far-fetched and embarrassing to endorse and that I am only appealing to it at arm's length. That's hardly the case if Jason thinks that this is what I am, in effect, doing. I just lack the expertise to decide one way or another. The simple truth of the matter is that I would love to embrace Carrier's theory, in all its details. As for his appeal to Glenn Miller and the Christian CADRE, I wouldn't exactly put much stock in what these folks have to say in terms of a rebuttal. If Jason links to Turkel, I cannot reasonably expect the work of Miller or the CADRE to be of any higher quality. Neither should any other rational, carefully thinking adults.

Engwer: Since Carrier and Price have already been answered to such an extent, and since Matthew sometimes distances himself from their arguments and doesn't make much of a commitment to their claims, I'm not going to be saying much about their theories. Readers interested in more of a response to Carrier and Price can consult sources like the ones linked above. My focus will be on the views of Matthew Green.

Green: I wouldn't trust Christian apologists to effectively rebut Carrier and Price. I hardly trust them to sit the right way on a toilet seat. I mention the views of Carrier and Price as a serious possibility that I am seriously interested in investigating. Both Richard Carrier and Robert Price seem to endorse the Radical Criticism school of New Testament thought. Although I find such an approach fascinating, Jason is right in that I don't necessarily commit myself to their views because I lack the scholarly expertise to make that kind of a judgment, although I would love to embrace the school of the Radical Critics; I'm just not sure if it's necessary or not. It all boils down to scholarly expertise. As for him focusing on my views, good! I hope to make him wish, he hadn't.

Engwer (quoting me)"Although I have no philosophical objections to accepting an empty tomb as a core historical fact, I do have serious reservations about accepting it as solidly factual. I do not find the arguments of William Lane Craig or Gary Hagerman to be persuasive. However, rather than critique their attempts to defend the empty tomb here, I wish to focus on a chief reason for my hesitation in accepting the empty tomb as historically factual. It's possible that the empty tomb originated as a symbolic creation. Historian and fellow atheist Richard Carrier has proposed the possibility that the empty tomb is a symbolic creation; pious historical fiction created to teach a metaphorical truth....Carrier argues that Mark falls into the genre of didadic hagiography and that the empty tomb is an example of a didadic creation of Mark to teach a spiritual truth. He argues that it was later taken as a core historical fact and was subsequently embellished as a legend in later gospels....Even if Carrier is wrong about some of the details of his plausibility argument such as Mark using the Psalms to construct his empty tomb story, I see no reason to throw out the core of his theory, that is, the empty tomb story is a symbolic fiction....It's precisely because I cannot rule out the possibility that Carrier is right about the empty tomb being didadic fiction, I cannot agree with Christian apologists that the empty tomb is an incontrovertible historical fact."

Engwer: Matthew repeatedly mentions Christians like William Craig, Gary Habermas, Michael Licona, and J.P. Holding, but all of those men speak of probabilities, not "incontrovertible historical fact" (unless they use such a phrase in the sense of high probability). Saying that a theory of Richard Carrier is possibly true isn't saying much. The issue we should be primarily concerned about here is probability, not possibility or certainty, and what men like Craig, Habermas, Licona, and Holding argue about the empty tomb is far more likely than Carrier's speculations. A probability isn't a certainty, but it's better than a possibility.

Green: Oh, is that so, Jason? Craig, Habermas, Licona, and Turkel only speak of probabilities? Let's see, for instance, what Dr. William Lane Craig says. I am quoting him in a debate he had with Gerd Ludemann. Here is what Dr. Craig has said:

"Fact 2: On the Sunday morning following the crucifixion, Jesus' tomb was found empty by a group of his women followers" (pg 33). In response to Craig's case, New Testament scholar Robert Gundry wrote the following:

"Craig's argument grows out of what he regards as "four established facts": (1) Jesus' burial in a tomb by Joseph of Arimathea, (2) the discovery of Jesus' tomb to be empty, (3) postmortem appearances of Jesus as risen and (4) the original disciples' coming to believe that he was physical risen from the dead despite their having every reason not to believe. Craig then argues that Gods' resurrecting the dead body of Jesus offers the best explanation of the facts." (pg. 104).

Do not Habermas, Licona, and Turkel also speak of the empty tomb as being a fact? Granted, the word “incontrovertible” is my own qualifying word but I do believe that it is justified. My reason for thinking so is the consensus appeals of Craig and Habermas to what the majority of New Testament scholars think. Craig, himself, appeals to four “established facts” that the majority of New Testament scholars accept, or so-sayith Craig. The appeal to authority, I believe, is designed to intimidate the reader into accepting the burial and empty tomb of Jesus as being beyond controversy, or otherwise it would not enjoy such widespread acceptance among New Testament scholars. Craig is, in effect, saying “Hey, look, the majority of New Testament scholars believe that the empty tomb is a fact so if you disagree that means that you are on the radical fringe; you don’t want to go against the expert consensus of opinion do you? Do you want everyone to think that you’re crazy for not going with the mainstream opinion? If you deny that there was an empty tomb, then you might as well deny that the earth goes around the sun!” As for saying that Carrier’s theory is a possibly doesn’t amount to much in Jason’s eyes, but I may have simply misphrased what I meant earlier. I believe that Carrier’s theory is a promising possibility and that it’s quite plausible but in saying that I don’t know how to rule out that possibility, all that I am saying is that I don’t know how to rule out Carrier’s possibility as implausible or improbable. It need not be proven logically or historically impossible for me to rule it out. Jason should say that he believes the arguments of Craig, Habermas, and Holding’s arguments for an empty tomb is far more likely than Carrier’s speculations. But, no, I think Jason wants to intellectually force skeptics to accept the resurrection.

Engwer: Matthew asks whether the gospel writers intended to refer to historical events. He uses a similar line of reasoning in his second article, regarding the diversity of the resurrection appearances. In that second article, he comments:

"This is made all the more problematic, in my opinion, with the lack of clear authorial intent in some of the narratives. The closest thing we have to an authorial intent to narrative events accurately is the Lukan prologue. Such a statement of authorial intent is clearly lacking in Matthew, Mark, and John. We don't have any stated intent in the other synoptics or John that the accounts are attempts to record and narrate history accurately. There is no critical mindset that I am personally aware of!"

We have far more than Luke's prologue to go by. Even if we only had Luke's prologue, however, Matthew hasn't given us a reason to reject the historical genre suggested by the gospel of Luke's prologue.

Green: Where did I say that I wanted to give readers a reason to reject the historical genre of the gospels? My argument, rather, was that since there is a lack of authorial intent in regards to critical narration of historical events, we cannot be justified in giving it the same doubt-benefit that we give to historical works of antiquity that do display clear authorial intent in terms of narrating history critically. It doesn’t necessarily mean that I take Luke’s gospel is to be as anti-historical or necessarily unhistorical, it just means that I wouldn’t give the benefit of the doubt to Luke that I would give to, say, Thucydides or Tacitus.


Egwer: And if Luke's gospel was intended to convey history, it seems likely that the three other gospels, written in such a similar manner, had the same intent.

Green: And Jason knows this......how? How does it seem likely?

Engwer: In addition to Luke's prologue, we have a large amount of evidence from the manner in which the remainder of the documents were written, the setting in which they were written, the manner in which the earliest Christian interpreters viewed the documents, the manner in which the earliest enemies interpreted the documents, etc. Matthew's treatment of this issue suggests that he doesn't know much about it. Statements such as we find in Luke's prologue aren't the only means by which an intent to write history can be expressed.

Green: It may surprise Engwer that my original posts on the subject weren’t meant to be a detailed, extensive argument on the historicity of Luke, his genre, historical context and setting, or the related gospels. Pray tell, Jason, what “large amount of evidence” do we have? What was the “manner in which the earliest Christian interpreters viewed the documents, the manner in which the earliest enemies interpreted the documents”? Jason will have to clarify what he means by this. The fact that my “treatment” of the issues was not as detailed and as extensive as Jason would like and that he feels the need to suggest that I am ignorant of New Testament scholarship and critical history in general is just meant as an insult to me personally. If Engwer would like to debate the issue with me in greater detail, I am willing, provide that he doesn’t act so damn condescending and arrogant. Will he change the tone of his writings? Will pigs fly spontaneously through the air? I am not holding my breath here.

Engwer: Even if we limited ourselves to such statements, why wouldn't a passage like John 21:24 also qualify?

Green: Well, shit, Jason this isn’t a hard question to answer, you know. All the verse says is that this is from a disciple who testifies to such things and “We know his testimony is true”. My question for Jason is how? Nowhere else in the gospel of John does the author say how we knows what happened. Such phrases like “We know his testimony is true” doesn’t really say that much because John’s author doesn’t identify his sources nor does he explain who “we” is in the verse. Who is “we”? And how does “we” know “his” testimony is true? I don’t see any critical prolouge in John’s gospel nor a naming of sources or methods or weighing of different stories of the same event or even expressing healthy skepticism towards anything.

Engwer: Or when Matthew 28:15 refers to a Jewish argument about the empty tomb still being used "to this day", what are we to conclude other than that the Jewish enemies of Christianity had used the argument in the past as well, and that such an argument about physical evidence related to Jesus' resurrection was part of the discussion occurring between Christians and Jews of the time?

Green: And how am I personally to know that Matthew’s author didn’t make up that story used “to this day”? My problem here is that I am not aware of any independent Jewish sources from the 1st century recording any such argument used by Jews. If Matthew is responding to a Jewish argument about the empty tomb, why is doesn’t Jason cite independent, attesting Jewish sources from the 1st century onward that attest to such an argument used by Jews? I regard the story as a Matthean creation. Matthew’s author doesn’t even cite his source. How does Matthew’s author know that this was an argument actually used by Jews “to this day”? He doesn’t say that he interviewed any Jews of his period or that he consulted any Jewish sources on the matter.

Lest anyone think that I am being far too stringent in terms of the level of evidence that I am demanding, let’s bear in mind that Mr. Engwer himself believes that the Bible is the inerrant, inspired word of God, right? This would have to mean that the gospels, as biographies, would have to be the most historically accurate and flawless books ever written in the history of mankind. They would have to be far more reliable and historically accurate than our best critical historians from history. In fact, in order for the gospels to be inerrant historically, they would have to be much more reliable than any other document from history can possibly be! Thus, synoptic authors such as Luke and Matthew would have to be more reliable than Thucydides could've possibly have been. Unfortunately, the gospels don't give any indications of strong reliability to such a degree that they are more reliable than our best historians from antiquity. Let me give an example. One of the first critical historians was the Greek historian Herodotus. He wrote a collection of his works titled, simply, The Histories. Herodotus, unlike any gospel authors, states his sources and methods. Let's look at a few passages from Herodotus, shall we?

Book 1.5: "The Persians for their part say that things happened thus; and they conclude that the beginning of their quarrel with the Hellenes was on account of the taking of Ilion. As regards to Io the Phenicians do not agree with the Persians telling the tale thus; for they deny that they carried her off to Egypt by violent means, and they saw on the other hand that when they were in Argos she enjoyed sex with the master of their ship, and perceiving that she was with child, she was ashamed to confess it to her parents, and therefore sailed away with the Phenicians of her own will, for fear of being found out. These are the tales told by the Persians and the Phenicians severally; and concerning these things I am not going to say that they happened thus or some other way, but when I have pointed to the man who first within my own knowledge began to commit wrong against the Hellenes, I shall advance the story, giving an account of the cities of men, small as well as great."

Here, the Greek historian Herodotus identifies his sources and it seems to be oral tradition and interviews. The Persians and the Phenicians he has interviewed have told him these things and he has related this information as far as his sources have allowed him to. This is an example of an historian explaining his sources and methods. Let's look at another passage, shall we?

Book 2.123: "Now as to the tales told by the Egyptians, any man may accept them if such things appear credible; as for me, it is to be understood throughout the whole of history that I write what I hear reported by the people in each place. The Egyptians say that Demeter and Dionysos are rulers of the world below; and the Egyptians also first reported the doctrine that the soul of man is immortal, and that when the body dies, the soul enters into another creature which chances then to be coming to the birth, and when it has gone the round of all the creatures of land and sea and of the air, it enters again into a human body at birth; and that it makes this round in a period of three thousand years. This doctrine certain Hellenes have adopted, some earlier and some later, as if it were of their own invention, and of these men I know the names but I abstain from recording them"

Here, Herodotus once again identifies his sources and how he came in possession of any information he deems credible. He tells of what people he interviewed and listened to told him, and in this case, some Egyptians have told him of Demeter and Dionysos and the Egyptian's belief in the immortality of the soul. There is another passage that I wish to look at:

Book 4. 195: "Opposite these, as the Carthaginians say, there lies an island called Kyrauis, twenty-three miles in length but narrow, to which one may walk over from the mainland; and it is full of olives and vines. In it they say there is a pool, from which the native girls with birds' feathers smeared over with pitch bring up gold-dust out of the mud. Whether this is really so I do not know, but I write what is reported. It might be true, for even in Zakynthos I saw myself pitch brought up out of a pool of water. There are several pools, and the largest of them measures seventy feet in diameter and is six feet in depth. Into this they plunge a pole with a myrtle-branch bound to it, and then with the branch of myrtle they bring up the pitch, which has the smell of asphalt, but in other respects it is superior to the pitch of Pieria. this they pour into a pit dug near the pool; and when they have collected a large quantity, then they pour it into the jars from the pit; and whatever thing falls into the pool goes under ground and reappears in the sea, which is a half-mile distant from the pool. Thus then the report about the island off the coast of Libya is also probably enough true"

In each of these passages, Herodotus names his sources and how he got a hold of this information he finds worthy to pass on. Now I ask Jason: where do the synoptic gospels identify their sources? Where does John do so? Herodotus writes what he hears from the Egyptians, Carthaginians, and Persians. Does Luke say how he knows what women went to the tomb, or how he knows where Joseph took Mary and the baby Jesus after the dedication of Jesus? Does Mark say how he knows that Jesus cursed the fig tree? Does Matthew say how he knows about the story of the wise men and Herod? No. Does John's author say how he knows that Jesus cleansed the temple and overturned tables? or how he knows that Jesus supposedly raised Lazarus from the dead? No.

This is the problem: none of the gospel writers bothers to explain their sources or methods. What we have that even comes close is the Lukan prologue and an obscure appeal to credible testimony in the ending of John's gospel. No names, methods, weighing of evidence, competing claims, or anything like that in the gospels. And Jason would have us believe that the gospels are more reliable than Herodotus, more reliable than Thucydides or any other historian from antiquity. He has to in order to believe that these documents are divinely inspired of God. Herodotus even goes onto name his sources (1.20-21, 2.29, 4.14, 4.29, 5.86-87, 6.53-54, 8.55, 8.65). Luke doesn't at all. Nor does John. If Jason disagrees, fine, he can do so to his heart's content but I want to know why I should consider the gospel authors to be more critical and historically accurate than the gospel authors. Come on, Jason! I defy you to!


Engwer: Such indications of an intent to convey history are found over and over again in the gospels, Acts, and other relevant sources, including in their resurrection accounts.

Green: Nope, sorry, Jason, try again. John 21:24 is not an intent to convey history. Nothing in John's prologue suggests that he wants to convey history to his readers. Nothing in Matthew 28:15 is intended to convey or narrate history in a critical fashion. In John 21:24, John doesn't say how we was able to determine that the "testimony" is true. He doesn't say that he was an eyewitness to these events or that he interviewed people.

Engwer: Matthew suggests that the resurrection accounts in the gospels might have been derived from or shaped by Old Testament passages, but the Old Testament is rarely cited in the passages of the gospels addressing the empty tomb and the resurrection appearances. The resurrected Jesus in the gospels is never made to appear as the resurrected righteous of Daniel 12:3, for example, and there isn't anything in the Old Testament that's detailed enough to be a plausible basis for something like the resurrection appearances of Luke 24 or John 21. The parallels drawn between the Old Testament and the gospel accounts are far too vague to demonstrate a probability of fabrication.

Green: I mentioned this as a possibility because I discussing the possibility that Richard Carrier has raised. That the Hebrew Bible is rarely cited in the passages of the gospels addressing the empty tomb and the resurrection story doesn't prove that the Hebrew Bible did not influence it in some way. I mention as a possibility that the gospels may be sculpted from stories in the Hebrew Bible midrashically. Now, I am not committed to this hypothesis, but mention it as serious possibility that I would love to study in more detail in graduate school. As for the parallels drawn between the Hebrew Bible and gospels accounts being "far too vague to demonstrate a probability of fabrication" I ask Jason: where the hell did I say that I believed that they might have been fabricated? I have not and do not suggest that the resurrection accounts are fabricated. Why the false dichotomy between inerrant gospel (pun intended) truth on one hand and deliberate, deceitful fabrication on the other? I am reminded of apologists like Josh McDowell who think that if you don't accept the resurrection, you must either think that someone stole the body. These apologists love to try and trap skeptics into admissions that Jesus had to rise from the dead or you're left with three (quite nonsensical) remaining possibilities: the body was stolen by the Romans, the Jews, or the disciples.

The fact remains that I do believe that the resurrection narratives are largely pious fiction and may well exist as apologies against heretics or critics. To believe, however, that these narratives are fictional and lack any factual basis, is not to suppose that they are fabrications. It is completely unnecessary to suppose any fabrication whatsoever. Often, fiction of this type served apologetic and even propagandistic purposes. This doesn't mean that the fiction is a deliberate and dishonest fabrication of any sort. Yet apologists like Jason will not have any of this. Another problem, which will become apparent, is that Jason has made a straw man of my arguments to make his task of rebutting much simpler by assigning me the role of early skeptics who accepted the historical inerrancy of the New Testament gospel narratives and yet sought naturalistic explanations for the events narrated.


Engwer: We know that when Paul discussed the resurrection in 1 Corinthians 15, he had historical events in view. That's why he uses "then", "untimely born", and other references to chronology.

Green: Wait a minute, the reference to "untimely born" is used in the famous 1st Corinthians 15 creed. It may well be the case that Paul had historical events in view but that doesn't in any way establish that he was being critical with any history that he might have been trying to narrate. Notice in the creed that Paul says that he is passing onto the Corinthians, what he himself received. Paul doesn't say whom he received it from nor does Paul say that he interviewed any of the people whom Jesus is alleged to have appeared to such as Peter, James, the Twelve, the disciples, or even the 500. Paul doesn't say when he received the creed, from whom, or how he determined that the people whom he received it from were passing on anything that was reliable or trustworthy. Paul doesn't say that he interviewed Peter or James or the Twelve. Who were these 500 people? Why don't we have any independent, attestation from them? Why don't we have letters from any of these 500 to whom Jesus allegedly appeared to, documenting what they saw, when and where they saw it, how many people were present and under what conditions that Jesus is believed to have appeared. Was it to believers? To Skeptics? So far Jason is treading on weak ground here.


Engwer: Similarly, we know that the book of Acts was written in a highly historical genre. See Christopher Price's discussion here.

Green: I haven't read Mr. Price's discussion but being that Jason had linked to Robert Turkel, I am not expecting to be impressed with Price's discussion. I have seen what quality and level of caliber that Jason thinks is good apologetics. On the other hand, there are some scholars who believe that Acts is fiction and contains nothing of any high historical reliability whatsoever. I have in view New Testament scholars like Vernon Robbins, who, I wouldn't be surprised if Jason looks down his nose at as an inferior mind.


Engwer: Though documents like 1 Peter and Revelation say less about the resurrection, they do, like other New Testament documents, have a historical resurrection in view.

Green: Or they might have the resurrection as part of their creed. 1st Peter doesn't say anything about there being any eyewitness testimony to the resurrection nor is there any critical affirmation of the traditions handed down underlying the gospels. I have yet to see anything about the book of Revelation intending to narrate events in a highly critical and historically authentic manner.

Engwer: Considering that being a historical witness of the resurrected Christ was a requirement for apostleship, and considering that the New Testament documents put so much emphasis on eyewitness testimony (John 15:27, Acts 1:21-22, Hebrews 2:3, 2 Peter 1:16, 1 John 1:1-3, etc.), why should we think that the writers of the gospels and Acts would decide to use non-historical accounts when discussing the resurrection?

Green: I am not sure I agree that being a historical witness of the resurrected Christ was requisite for apostleship from day one. I can accept that it later evolved in the Church to weed out heretics claiming to have an authentic pedigree in terms of being annointed as an apostle from a succession of apostles going back to Christ himself, but I doubt that this was the case from the very beginning. Besides, even a requisite for apostleship such as being a witness of the resurrected Christ, doesn't establish that any such claims to having been a "witness" means that those claims were reliable or that the so-called "witnesses" were not victims of visions or delusion. I ask Jason this: how did the early Church go about determining which "eyewitness" claims of having seen the risen Christ were reliable? How was the Church able to know that the claims to being a "witness" were indeed authentic and that the claims were not the result of some kind of delusion or indeed a fabrication?


As for Jason's claims here that the New Testament documents put so much emphasis on eyewitness testimony, let's have a look at some of these references.
John 15:27, "And you also must testify, for you have been with me from the beginning"

In this passage, Jesus is believed to be talking with his disciples. But not all New Testament critical scholars believe that passages like these are historically authentic and represent the authentic words of Jesus himself. Even if this passage from which this verse of Jason's was culled, did represent the authentic words of Jesus, it doesn't in any way establish the historical reliability of the resurrection of Christ. The passage is not even about the resurrection. The proceeding verses talk about the "Counselor" being sent from God (a reference to the Holy Spirit) who will testify about Jesus. Doesn't sound like a historically reliable and critically narrated event of the resurrection and it doesn't seem to establish the historical reliability of any "eyewitness" testimony underlying the resurrection accounts.

Acts 1: 21-22, "Therefore, it is necessary to choose one of the men who have been with us the whole time the Lord Jesus went in and out among us, beginning from John's baptism to the time when Jesus was taken up from us. For one of these must become a witness with us of his resurrection"

In this passage, Matthias was chosen to replace Judas Iscariot. Considering that I accept a relatively late date for the composition of Acts, I have doubts that this passage is historically authentic. In fact, I believe that the very passage that contains these verses contain a different and contradictory account of how the Field of Blood got it's name than the one in Matthew 27: 6-8 following Judas' death. I do not accept that this passage is historically authentic; rather, I tend to accept that this emphasis on "eyewitness" testimony in the early Church was an apologetic device against heretics, many of whom claimed false pedigrees of having descended from an apostolic line of succession. Jason's evidence here is no real evidence at all.


Hebrews 2:3, "..(H)ow shall we escape if we ignore such a great salvation? This salvation, which was first announced by the Lord, was confirmed to us by those who heard him"

Okay, who is "us" in this passage? How was it "confirmed" and by who? Names, places, dates, methods anyone? Who heard "the Lord" and who confirmed it.

Come on, Jason, you can do better than this! Oh, no, wait, you linked to Robert Turkel; I cannot expect any better than this trite.

2 Peter 1:16 "We did not follow cleverly invented stories when we told you about the power and coming of the Lord Jesus Christ, but were eyewitnesses of his majesty."

Who is "we" and how did "we" know "we" weren't following cleverly invented stories? And is this a reference to the resurrection of Christ and any eyewitness testimony that has been critically and authentically established? No! In fact, it's a reference in a letter that is believed by the majority of New Testament critical scholars to be a forgery. I haven't seen Jason give any reasons for believing that this is an authentic letter from Peter. Oh but wait, to HELL with critical New Testament scholarship when it dares to disagree with Jason. Morons they are, aren't they? Well the ball is in Jason's court; if he wants us to know why we should side with him and his evangelical buddies over the world of critical New Testament scholars who reject 2 Peter as a forgery, that's up to him. I trust people should know better than to accept it as authentic based on the pontifical say-so of apologists like Jason.

Engwer: The idea that all eyewitness accounts of the resurrection witnesses would be ignored or radically altered by the time the gospels and other such documents were written is unlikely. If events like the ones the gospels and Acts discuss didn't occur, then why is there such widespread recording of such events at a time when there was still so much concern for eyewitness testimony and when eyewitnesses and contemporaries of Jesus and the apostles were still alive?

Green: Wait a minute! How does Jason know that there were "eyewitness accounts" to begin with? Who says that the eyewitness accounts would be "ignored" or "radically altered" by the time the gospels and other New Testament documents were written? Who is saying this and how are people suggesting any eyewitness testimony would be "ignored or radically altered". Someone here is beginning questions left and right. As for the events in the gospels and Acts not occurring as recorded, Jason asks "why is there such widespread recording of such events at a time when there was still so much concern for eyewitness testimony and when eyewitnesses and contemporaries of Jesus and the apostles were still alive?" What "widespread recording" of such events is Jason referring to? What "widespread recording" of such events was there when the eyewitnesses and contemporaries of Jesus and the apostles were still alive? What? Is Jason not going to tell us what "widespread recording" there was, how it was reliable, trustworthy, who it was written by and when? Come on, Jason!

At this point, Mr. Engwer included some lengthy quotes such as from Christian New Testament scholar Craig Keener, Richard Swineburne, and the early Church father Ignatius. I won't go through each of these quotes, point by point as I have been doing with Engwer's comments. I do want to make some general observations about the quotes though. First of all, I am well aware of the work of New Testament scholars like Richard Burridge who argue that the gospels are in fact biographies. I believe that the school of thought of the gospels as biographies are more rational than the form-critical school which holds that the gospels are not biographical in terms of genre. I believe that Charles Talbert has done good work in helping to turn the tide away from Rudolf Bultmann and his disciples. I have no real problem in the long run with accepting a biographical genre of the gospels as Burridge has argued for. But the fact of the matter is that I am still undecided on the question of the genre of the gospels. There is the work of Richard Burridge who argues that the gospels are biographical in nature. Dennis MacDonald, holds that the gospel of Mark is an "anti-epic" of Homer. Michael Goulder has proposed a lectionary genre for the gospels and believes that they are not meant to be historical in any sense.

I have say that I am undecided on the issue of gospel genre and I don't honestly expect to come to a conclusion about it until I get into graduate school. I plan to study very closely gospel genre as well as source criticism. I am sorry to say that I cannot comment any more on this topic.


Engwer: Regarding Matthew Green's speculation that Mark might not have been attempting to convey historical information about the empty tomb, Richard Swinburne writes:

"It would be very odd indeed if Mark, seeking to tell his readers something, and phrasing his Gospel as a historical narrative and so understood by two near-contemporaries [Matthew and Luke] (themselves familiar with other churches, some of whom must have read Mark and could have corrected any obvious misunderstanding of it by Matthew and Luke), was really doing something quite other than trying to record history." (The Resurrection of God Incarnate [New York: Oxford University Press, 2003], p. 73)

Green: Um, isn't that rather Carrier's speculation? I introduced it as a possibility but to illustrate a general point that I have alluded to. I am undecided on the ultimate issue of gospel genre and I am not at this point, well-versed in gospel genre studies to reach an informed conclusion (and Jason, please, no rude and unsolicited advice here). I would agree that the question of gospel genre largely determines what we are to accept as fact regarding the death and burial of Christ. A question of genre has great bearing on whether we can determine if Jesus was buried in a tomb or shallow grave, whether he was buried honorably or dishonorably, whether the burial was fictional or historically true, whether it was symbolic or factual.

Engwer: Much more could be said, but the point is that Matthew's suggestion that the gospels might not have meant to convey historical resurrection accounts is unreasonable. Matthew can't acknowledge the general historical genre of the documents, then arbitrarily exempt some passages he wants to dismiss as unhistorical, since there is no way to single out every passage Matthew would need to single out for exemption. The resurrection in general and the details included in the gospel accounts are among the subjects the earliest Christians and their enemies interpreted in a historical sense.

Green: Even if I acknowledge the general historical-biographical genre of the gospels, that doesn't mean that all the details of the gospels are historically inerrant down to every dotted 'i' and crossed 't'. It doesn't mean that gospels cannot contain fictional elements. I am also not "arbitrarily" exempting some passages I want to dismiss as unhistorical. I question or dismiss some passages as unhistorical when I believe that there are discrepancies, legendary embellishments, statements of error in a passage. It's not because I want to dismiss whatever may conflict with my pet skeptical theories because I want to avoid accountability to Jason's precious god. In this rebuttal, I will illustrate exactly what kind of contradictions I have in mind. Hell, if Jason would like to, I will me more than willing to debate Jason or any other Christian on this point if time permits. In fact, I just won't stop at the level of contradictions and errors, I will be glad to explain what my chief reasons for rejecting the resurrection. As for the resurrection in general and the details included in the gospel accounts as being among the subjects that Christians and their enemies interpreting in a historical sense- I ask, did the enemies of the Christians believe that such accounts were historically inerrant and reliable? Even if the earliest Christians and their enemies interpreted such accounts as being historical- that doesn't establish the historical reliability of such accounts.

Engwer: Regarding the empty tomb in particular, we have no good reason to think that an author like Mark would fabricate an account of the empty tomb, especially with elements such as the tomb's discovery by women while the male disciples are in unbelief and are hiding. When other sources, including the early enemies of Christianity, go on to treat the empty tomb as a historical fact as well, Matthew's speculation that the empty tomb account may have been unhistorical becomes even more implausible. Mark was writing in a highly historical genre, so were the other gospel writers, and the earliest Christian and non-Christian interpreters viewed their accounts in a highly historical manner.

Green: Oh dear, here we go again! Jason is using the same old tired argument that Mark would not fabricate an account because he mentioned women and that would be seen as historically reliable since it would be embarrassing to include women in the narratives given that they are considered unreliable as witnesses. First of all, where the hell did I say that Mark or any other gospel writer fabricated their account? I suggested the possibility of pious fiction but that is NOT the same thing as a fabrication. Do I have to yell this in Jason's ear, here?

Secondly, I don't believe that the presence of women is embarrassing- the gospels are not legal documents and so I don't see it as representing any stigma for readers or for audiences, whom the preaching of the gospel mentioned details like an empty tomb discovered by women. In fact, I think it may well be a literary motif to have women discover the tomb. I'd be happy to elaborate on that in more detail but even this is quite speculative in nature and depends on genre theories other than biography such as didadic or some form of sacred fiction.


At this point, Jason has addresses the objections of other participants at 'Debunking Christianity' so I'll let these other folks respond to Jason if they're so inclined but there was something worth responding to that Jason has written.

Engwer: We know that Paul believed in the resurrection of the body that died. See Christopher Price's documentation here, for example. See also J.P. Holding's article here. An empty tomb would be implied in any discussion of a physical resurrection. And while Paul never directly discusses the empty tomb, he does seem to have considered Luke's gospel scripture (1 Timothy 5:18), and Luke refers to an empty tomb. It's highly unlikely that associates of Paul like Mark and Luke would believe in an empty tomb, yet Paul wouldn't. Paul had a lot of influence over the churches in Ephesus, Rome, Corinth, and other cities, and those churches are known to have accepted the gospels early on. Are we to believe that Paul's associates and the churches he influenced collectively rejected Paul's view of the resurrection and collectively replaced it with the view found in the gospels, and that this major shift occurred just after Paul's death and without leaving any trace in the historical record? What's far more likely is that Paul doesn't directly mention the empty tomb because there was no place in his extant writings in which there was a need for mentioning it.

Green: Oh wow! Look boys and girls, Jason has linked to Robert Turkel again. So Jason, let me ask you something- do you believe that the Greek word for "anistemi" was used twice for emphasis in John 20:9? Do you believe that we have only ourselves to blame if we find the message of the Bible to be unclear? If the answers to these are "no" perhaps you might want to stop linking to a silly apologetic boob like Robert Turkel and stop endorsing him. But, hey, if you like looking like an idiot, buddy, then I will say no more.

Engwer: Matthew Green goes on to argue:

"Suppose I believed that Jesus was temporarily interred in the tomb by Joseph of Arimithea and was subsequently reburied elsewhere and that the reburial not only left the tomb empty but triggered visions among Jesus' followers. If I constructed such a theory, this theory would have sufficient enough explanatory scope to explain how the tomb got empty as well as what caused the followers of Jesus to have visionary experiences. In fact, I believe that a theory of reburial would probably be the best explanation if I accepted the empty tomb as a core historical fact. This may not be sufficient in itself to fully answer the objection, but I do believe that it is a step in the right direction. Suppose reburial is historical implausible. I could simply opt for agnosticism regarding the cause of the empty tomb."

Matthew repeatedly suggests that an empty tomb may have "triggered" some "visions" of Jesus. As I've told Matthew before, he needs to be more specific. The term "visions" is too broad. Which psychological disorders does Matthew have in mind with each individual involved (Paul, James, Peter, etc.)? Why doesn't he demonstrate that the purported resurrection witnesses meet the standards for experiencing such a psychological disorder? Replacing the term "vision" with the term "altered state of consciousness", as Matthew sometimes does, doesn't give us enough detail either. These terms are vague enough to cover a large variety of experiences, and whether a person experienced a psychological disorder has to be evaluated according to the details.

Green: Oh good lord! Jason complains here that I am not being specific enough because the term "visions" is too broad. What I had in mind as far as "visions" go can be found in my first essay on the subject. I clearly referred to the collective, group visions involving altered-states-of-consciousness as discussed by Bruce Malina and Richard Rohrbaugh in their books, both their Social-Science Commentary on the Synoptic Gospels and their Social Science Commentary on the Gospel of John. These discuss "visions" as understood by cultural and psychological anthropologists whose research Malina and Rohrbaugh USED. What is so difficult to understand about this is beyond me. Jason asks "Which psychological disorders does Matthew have in mind with each individual involved"? Jason, where the hell did I say I BELIEVE psychological disorders are involved? Quote me, Jason! I would appreciate it if you didn't put words in my mouth like that, Jason! In other words, put up or shut up! He next asks me to demonstrate that the witnesses meet the standards for experiencing such "a psychological disorder". Again, where did I say that I believe that psychological disorders are involved? Where Jason? I am starting to think that someone ought to bitch-slap Jason. His next statement is actually funny. He says that replacing the term "vision" with the term "altered-states-of-consciousness" doesn't give enough detail either. Replacing? Replacing? I didn't say anything about "altered-states-of-consciousness" replacing the term "visions". What I said was that "visions" INVOLVED "altered states of consciousness". Does Jason see the difference here? If he doesn't, he needs more help than I can give him. In other words, the reason why you saw what you did when having a visionary experience is because your mind was in an altered stated of consciousness.

Next, Jason will have to explain what he means by saying that these terms are vague enough to cover a large variety of experiences. That he would make this and the previous statements regarding psychological disorders, and replacing "visions" with altered-states-of-consciousness, confirms to me that Jason is in fact guilty of what he arrogantly accuses me of: not reading my works closely enough and that he doesn't know much about the Context Group scholars. All of this and linking to Robert "No Links" Turkel on top of that!

Engwer: How would an empty tomb "trigger" what Matthew calls "visions" of the resurrected Jesus? Why should we think that an empty tomb account alone would produce widespread visions? The earliest sources we have repeatedly tell us just the opposite of what Matthew is arguing. They tell us that empty tomb accounts weren't sufficient to bring about belief in Jesus' resurrection (Luke 24:11, 24:21-24, John 20:2, 20:15, 20:25).

Green: Well, Jason could always pick up Malina and Rohrbaugh's social-science commentaries and read them to find out the answer here. But in case he is too lazy or has some bad reading comprehension problems, let me spell it out for him (as a way of bonking the poor schmoe over the head with a hammer). Jesus was an Israelite holy man. Malina and Rohrbaugh explain, culturally, the function of such a holy man:

"A holy man is a person who has direct contact or communication with the realm of God by means of altered states of consciousness. The activity of holy men usually is directed to the benefit of people in their society. Such persons heal the sick, exorcize the possessed, and know what is going on in the unseen realm of spirits, demons, and angels. In their encounter with spirits, holy men can interact with them without fear of being possessed. They can travel through the spirit/demon world, and they can readily make contact with the realm of God (Mark 9:7//Matt 17:15//Luke 9:35; see also John 12:28-30). The call to be a holy man often comes through an altered-states-of-consciousness experience in which the holy man makes contact with the realm of God. He is then possessed by the spirit of God or adopted by God. The events surrounding Jesus' baptism describe such a call (Mark 1:9-11/Matt 3:13-17//Luke 3:21-22). After such a call, such persons are tutored either by a spirit or by a real-life teacher, such as John the Baptist. They learn the necessary ritual skills of their roles, and how to pass the loyalty tests ("temptations") that they might face ( Mark 1: 12-13, Matt 4:11/Luke 4:1-13). The frequent reports in Synoptic summaries and anecdotes underscore Jesus' role of holy man of God throughout his career. In Hellenism, such holy men were called divine men. The title "Son of God" is such a Hellenistic designation for holy man of God." ( Malina, Bruce and Richard Rohrbaugh, pg. 369).

Jesus was considered an Israelite holy man and therefore when Jesus was arrested, the process of his trial was basically an exercise in status-degradation, a casting of shame on him. Jesus' honor, especially the honor he enjoyed as a holy man, was insulted by the powers that existed, namely the Jewish leadership in the gospels. To die as Jesus dead, would've been considered by his disciples as an insult to his honor especially considering that crucifixion was a shameful punishment. Jesus' burial in the gospels is also a shameful burial because it lacks two key elements which would make it an honorable Jewish burial- burial in a family grave and ritual morning (see Byron McCane's excellent book Roll Back the Stone for more details). If Jesus was crucified and did not deserve it, then the shameful punishment would be seen by those who knew Jesus was innocent, as an insult to his honor, especially given that Jesus was a holy man who had ascribed honor in the course of his role as such.

Now, Jesus was not guilty to deserve crucifixion. Therefore, if Jesus was not guilty to deserve crucifixion, then people who knew this would see Jesus' honor as being insulted by the powers that be. Therefore, the people who know that Jesus was innocent and did not deserve crucifixion or could be convinced that Jesus did not deserve it and thus his honor being insulted by crucifixion, would expect that God would restore the honor of Jesus by reversing the death process. Malina and Rohrbaugh go onto explain in some detail:

"Archaeological evidence and later scribal Pharisaic documents disclose to us the meaning of Israelite burial customs at the time of Jesus. Israelites regarded death as a lengthy process, not a moment in time. In elite circles of Judea, between the last breath and sundown, the body would be laid out on a shelf in a tomb and carved into limestone bedrock outside of Jerusalem. Mourning rites would commence, continuing throughout the year as the body underwent decomposition. The rotting of flesh was regarded as painful, but also expiatory for the dead person. One's evil deeds were thought to be embedded in the flesh and to dissolve along with it. After a year, the mourning ritual concluded. In the first century, people thought that the bones retained the personality, and that God would use them to support new flesh for the resurrection. After this year of purification and putrefaction, the bones of the dead were often collected and placed in an ossuary or "bone box", which was in fact a second burial casket. This process was called the ossilegium, "the collection of bones". The ossuary was designed like a box for scrolls, just long enough for the thigh bones to be laid in like scroll spindles awaiting a new hide and new inscription by the divine hand. In an alternate image, the bones could also be regarded as loom posts made ready for God to weave a new body. In keeping with these views on the character of resurrection, inkwells and spindle whorls have been found in excavated tombs.

"This day of second burial marked the end of the family's mourning and its turn toward the hope of reunion and resurrection. Obviously, then, the disappearance or loss of a body after death would be experienced as a greater calamity than the death itself because the family would be unable to prepare the bones for resurrection. Legally, even the bones of an executed criminal were supposed to be returned to the family after being held in custody of the Sanhedrin during the yearlong period of atoning putrefaction. In effect, capital punishment included the loss of life, the suppression of mourning, and the imposition of supposedly painful but purifying disintegration of the flesh overseen by the court in a special tomb maintained for that purpose. When the flesh was gone, the sentence was completed, the debt was paid, and the bones became eligible for resurrection. These cultural beliefs and practices provide the context for understanding the claims of the first generation of Jesus' followers about the resurrected Jesus. In John's account, Jesus dies condemned by the Judean populace, leaders and crowds alike (although at the hands of the Romans). Then a ranking Judean, Joseph of Arimathea, takes his body into custody. It is laid in a separate tomb, to begin to serve the sentence of decay in order to atone for its sins."


Here is where the element of expectation comes in....

"It is precisely this penal/atonement process that is interrupted if the tomb is suddenly discovered to be empty. To say that Jesus was raised is to say that God overturned the judgment of Israel's chief priests and the Judean populace, the judgment that Jesus needed to rot to prepare for resurrection. Instead, God supposedly took Jesus directly from last breath to resurrection because there had been no guilt in his flesh. God intervened before the rotting started, hence God overturned the death sentence. The claim that God raised Jesus is a claim of divine vindication for the deeds and words of Jesus. His life has been that of the Word made flesh in Israel, and God preserves its flesh record intact. Taken in its cultural context, the claim of the resurrection for Jesus asserts that his death was wrong and has been overturned by a higher judge. This cultural interpretation of the death of Jesus contrasts sharply with the theological one: that Jesus' death was right and necessary and required by God "to take away the sin of the world." The Synoptics juxtapose the two interpretations in a smooth narrative sequence, with Jesus even predicting three times that he will die and be raised." (Malina, Bruce and Richard Rohrbaugh, pgs. 347-8).

Since a holy man communicated with God by means of altered-states-of-consciousness, if Jesus came back from the grave, the disciples would expect to be able to communicate with him in an altered-state-of-consciousness as well. It's because of this social expectation of shame reversal that would trigger the expectation that the disciples would see Jesus again, in a visionary experience of some sort, as a way of asking forgiveness for having abandoned Jesus and having shamed him in the garden when in-group loyalty mattered most. They would seek to ask God forgiveness, which was basically to restore their honor in the eyes of God and restore their in-group and kinship loyalty to Jesus and restore the honor of their friendship with him. That, Jason, is how I believe that an empty tomb would trigger visions. But of course if Jason had read these commentaries or read them more closely than he might have so far, I wouldn't have to spell it out for him, now, would I?

As for the earliest "sources" Jason cites, Jason is assuming that I even accept these verses as authentic and historically reliable. I don't necessarily but if Jason wants to look at them in greater detail, I am willing to in order to further critique his case.

Engwer: If the visions Matthew has in mind are hallucinations or something else requiring particular mental or physical conditions, why doesn't Matthew demonstrate that the resurrection witnesses met such conditions? Why would an empty tomb report produce visions among skeptics like James and Paul? Why would the people undergoing these visions think that they had seen a resurrected Jesus? Why didn't they think they saw a resuscitated Jesus or something else more consistent with traditional Jewish thought?

Green: I am not an expert on "visions" or what triggers them. I have been trying to construct a plausible historical hypothesis involving visionary experiences based on what sources I have been studying so far. I am not sure what conditions have to exist in order for people to have visions. I do believe that such visions did happen and occurred frequently. As for an empty tomb producing visions among skeptics like James and Paul- I don't think it would have needed to. We're not told when James converted. We are told of an appearance of Jesus to James in 1st Corinthians 15 but we are not told that it was that which converted James. James might've converted earlier or even later, after Jesus supposedly ascended into heaven. As for Paul, no, I don't believe that an empty tomb triggered any visions in him. I am talking about Peter, John, and the rest of the "Twelve" is what I have in mind. I'm also not sure that I believe that the disciples would've held that they had seen a risen Jesus from the very start. I believe that it might have been precisely a resuscitated Jesus that they thought that they had seen to begin with. This is even assuming that the argument by William Lane Craig and Robert Turkel is even right and no one would believed in an individual resurrection before the final judgment. However, I am not at all certain that the all Jews everywhere would never have believed in any individual being resurrected prior to the general resurrection. I explained in one of my posts, responding to the arguments of Robert Turkel why I believe this to be the case.

Engwer: As I discussed in an earlier article, the information we have concerning the resurrection appearances is highly inconsistent with what we know about hallucinations and other psychological disorders that critics sometimes suggest. For reasons like the ones I discuss in the article linked above, it's implausible to dismiss all of these details in the resurrection accounts as unhistorical.

Green: Hmmm, do I sense a liking of Jason to strike down straw men arguments here? I have not suggested that these were "hallucinations" or "psychological disorders". Let me state something here to help clarify my position. Perhaps a light will flicker in Jason's head. I believe that the ancient Mediterranean was what anthropologists call an "honor-shame" society. We, living here in the United States, live in what may be called an "pride-guilt" society. Much of the Mediterranean and Arabian world were honor-shame societies and many, if not most or all, are honor-shame societies to this day. Japan is also an honor-shame society. In such agonistic societies, the social system tends to be highly collectivized, highly agrarian, and high-context. In such honor-shame societies, especially in religion, visions are known to occur involving altered-states-of-consciousness. Likewise, we in the United States, England, and other pride-guilt societies tend to be highly individualistic, highly urbanized, and low-context. I suspect that "hallucinations" and the like happen in pride-guilt societies and tend to be highly individualistic.

In fact, I would like to commend Christian scholars such as Gary Habermas, Gary Collins, and Mike Licona for rebutting theories of "hallucinations". They're right about hallucinations; hallucinations tend to be highly individualistic and one person cannot cause a hallucination in another person (except, perhaps by hypnosis?). I believe that "visions" happen in honor-shame societies whereas "hallucinations" happen in pride-guilt societies. Visions can be collective and occur in groups of people at a time and are considered normal whereas hallucinations are individualistic and are considered abnormal and are usually accompanied or caused by psychological disorders. This is the chief reason why I think that Jason is confused in his rebuttal and why he is trying to assign to me positions I really do not hold.

Engwer: Critics like Matthew Green can't just arbitrarily assert that all resurrection details inconsistent with his theory are unhistorical. He has to have some objective means of leading us to the conclusion that the details inconsistent with his theory are unhistorical details. So far, he hasn't produced any such objective means. On the other hand, I've given reasons for believing that such details are historical. See the article linked above.

Green: And guess what, readers? I am not doing any such things. First of all, I am not at all arbitrarily asserting that the resurrection details that are inconsistent with my hypothesis of visions are unhistorical details. I believe that the chief reason why the resurrection details are unhistorical is because of the discrepancies and embellishments underlying them. If I was to accept the empty tomb as being historical, I would probably believe that reburial is the best explanation and that visionary experiences are the best explanation of any postmortem appearances of Jesus. As for not producing objective means- I want to know what Jason would accept as "objective means" As for leading "us" to the conclusion that details inconsistent with my hypothesis are unhistorical- who is "us"? Is it Christians like Jason Engwer? If so, why? Why the hell would I be seeking to convince Jason Engwer? Why would I be seeking to convince Evangelical Christians of my hypotheses and conclusions? Sorry if this hurts Mr. Engwer's ego here but I really do not give a damn what Jason or Christians like him believe. I really couldn't care less what Jason believes, wants to believe, thinks, or what-have-you.


Engwer: Matthew goes on:

"If the postmortem appearances and the empty tomb were both supernaturally caused, Christianity would not have naturalism to contend with but rival supernaturalist theologies to counter....A Zoroastrian could argue that Ahura-Mazda had sent a angel or ghost, disguised as Jesus, to trick his followers into thinking that he rose from the dead. A Muslim could argue that Allah allowed an evil spirit, a demon if you will, to appear as Jesus in order to deceive Jesus' followers, because Allah wanted a rival religion to flourish so by the time that Islam originated, Allah could test the faith of Muslims with a heresy like the Christian gospel."

Matthew isn't a supernaturalist. But when Christians are responding to supernaturalists, they do provide answers to arguments such as the ones Matthew mentions above. If a Zoroastrian or Muslim wants to acknowledge Jesus' resurrection, but attribute it to some source other than the God of the Bible, then the issue under discussion would no longer be whether Jesus was resurrected. Rather, the issue would be something like who raised Jesus or why He was raised, not whether He was raised. We would then take the relevant philosophical considerations and other relevant data into account. The suggestion that the resurrection appearances were demonic would be considered in light of issues such as whether it's likely that God would allow a demon to fulfill detailed prophecy and claim to be God, for example, then appear to rise from the dead. We would also consider the source of the claim of demonic deception. Do we have any reason to trust such an assertion by a Zoroastrian or Muslim? If nothing in Zoroastrianism or Islam compels me to acknowledge the truthfulness of those religions, then why should I trust those religions to interpret Jesus' resurrection for me? More could be said, but Matthew Green isn't a supernaturalist, so such supernatural theories aren't the issue of primary concern here.

Green: Of course I am not a supernaturalist. As for "they" providing "answers to arguments such as the one" that I mention above, I have to say that I don't think Jason has read my article closely. My argument was not what if a Zoroastrian or Muslim acknowledges that Jesus has been raised. My argument was what if they came to conclude that God (be it the Zoroastrian deity or the Muslim deity) tricked Zoroastrians or Muslims into thinking that Jesus raised from the dead. Jason says that the issue under discussion would no longer be whether Jesus was resurrected. Jason, not surprising in the least, has missed my point. My point was that if these rival supernaturalists accepted the empty tomb and that Jesus appeared to his followers, then these rival supernaturalist faith groups, would simply devise theological theories of supernatural trickery, instead of having to accept that Jesus had risen. That was my point! The rest of his discussion on this point is moot until Jason reads what I have written again and proves to me that he understands my points.


Engwer: Matthew writes:

"It is true that simpler theories always have greater explanatory scope. But there is a point where a theory can have too much explanatory power in which it explains everything, and actually doesn't really explain anything because there is no observation or fact which it cannot explain. Such a theory, having too much explanatory power ceases to be a simple theory and becomes simplistic."

But the resurrection of Jesus doesn't "explain everything" in the sense Matthew is suggesting. It does explain the data we have, but there could conceivably be data it wouldn't explain. We have no such data, but it would be absurd to reject a theory because it's consistent with all of the data we do have. "Explaining everything" is a problem only if the "everything" includes all conceivable possibilities. But the "everything" that Jesus' resurrection explains isn't every conceivable possibility, but rather the data we do have in the historical record. That sort of "explaining everything" isn't a disadvantage. It's an advantage.

Green: I didn't say that the resurrection theory does "explain everything". It does explain some data that we have and there are data that it doesn't explain such as the discrepancies, errors, and legendary embellishments that I will gladly elaborate on. My point was simply that greater explanatory scope isn't always a good thing but usually is. Nor do I say that "explaining everything" includes "all conceivable possibilities" even assuming I understand what Jason means by "all conceivable possibilities"- I am not sure I do; I just don't remember taking such a position and therefore I think that Jason might be attacking a straw man argument of his own making. Like Jason, I am only appealing to the data that we have and I believe that Jason will have to face up to some of it that he doesn't think exists but I am going to show does exist.

One more thing here. I have talked here and elsewhere about explanatory scope of a given hypothesis or theory. But explanatory scope is just one criterion. There are several criteria involved here. I refer readers to criteria outlined by C. Behan McCullah. The criteria he lists are the following: 1.) implication of other observations and statements, 2.) explanatory scope, 3.) explanatory power, 4.) plausibility, 5.) parsimony (or Ad Hocness), 6.) Disconfirmation, and 7.) relative superiority. Explanatory scope is just one criterion out of several and in some cases, limited explanatory scope is better. Let's move on, shall we?


Engwer: Matthew goes on to cite some examples to illustrate his argument, examples involving Santa Claus and aliens building the pyramids, for example. He writes:

"As to why some kids believe that they both 1.) see a man looking like Santa Claus at a local mall and 2.) they will open gifts placed under the tree with, we can put forth two hypotheses. The first is the 'Santa Claus' hypothesis. This hypothesis states that there really is a jolly old man from the North Pole who does visit shopping malls before Christmas and really does visit houses, placing wrapped gifts under the tree for kids to discover and open the next morning. The second hypothesis is called the 'Cultural Trickery' hypothesis. This hypothesis states that it is parents and other grown adults working in collusion with each other to fool kids into thinking that Santa Claus is real....Notice that the 'Santa Claus' hypothesis is a much simpler explanation for the two observations 1 and 2 and that the 'Cultural Trickery' hypothesis is a more complex theory of causation regarding observations 1 and 2. Should we not, then, accept the 'Santa Claus' hypothesis as the more rational hypothesis because of its simplicity and greater explanatory scope?"

Matthew is using an example of something we know to be false for reasons other than the reasons he mentions. We know people who dress up as Santa. We know that different Santas have different physical features. We know that parents buy gifts for their children in the name of Santa. Etc. Nobody reading Matthew's example is going to evaluate his example without taking such factors into account. Matthew acts as if he's appealing only to people's knowledge of "observations 1 and 2", but every reader is going to take other factors into account as well. We don't have evidence against Jesus' resurrection comparable to the evidence we have against the Santa theory. And we don't have evidence for the Santa theory comparable to the evidence we have for Jesus' resurrection.

Green: Yes, I am using an example of something that we know to be false for other reasons and some of these other reasons is that the "Santa Claus" hypothesis fails other criteria! We know people who dress up as Santa, that each Santa has different physical features, and we learn with age that parents buy gifts for their children and lie their asses off by saying that it came from Jolly Old St. Nick. These other factors are incorporated when we use other criteria and that's why the "Santa Claus" hypothesis fails. As for me acting as if I am appealing to only to people's knowledge of "observations 1 and 2", I am talking about what children observe who are convinced that Santa Claus exists. In fact, I explicitly said that these were what children observe. As for not having evidence against Jesus' resurrection comparable to the evidence we have against the Santa hypothesis- I would ask Jason what it would take to convince him that Jesus' resurrection did not happen? And please, no bullshit like "Where is the body of Jesus today if he didn't rise?" Besides, what evidence does Jason think exists against the Santa hypothesis? I believe that there isn't any evidence for the resurrection but there is evidence against it, which I will elaborate on, if requested.

Engwer: If you take all of the data related to Santa into account, including photographs of different men putting on Santa clothing, parents explaining that they bought gifts in the name of Santa, etc., then the Santa theory doesn't explain the evidence well. We have explicit and widespread evidence for what Matthew calls the "Cultural Trickery" theory. That theory explains the evidence well. Matthew's speculations about Jesus' resurrection, on the other hand, don't explain the evidence. He has no equivalent of malls giving men paychecks to dress up as Santa or parents acknowledging that they bought gifts in Santa's name.

Green: If we take into account all of the data that we possess related to Santa, then the Santa hypothesis fails the "relative superiority" criterion. The Santa hypothesis fails the parsimony criterion, it is way too ad hoc to be a better explanation than the cultural "trickery" hypothesis (i.e. how do the reindeer fly, why have we not detected any home or elf-workshop at the North Pole, how can Santa reach millions of houses in a single night in the United States, Canada, and even Europe, how did Santa manage to live all these years without being immortal or having divine attributes, etc), and it fails the disconfirmation criterion because know from photographs, observations, paychecks, accounting, parents confessing that they lie to their kids, etc. which goes against any of these gifts or mall appearances of Santa being caused by the real Santa. But in regards to observations one and two, the Santa hypothesis has greater explanatory scope then the cultural trickery hypothesis. Jason is right to point out that the Santa hypothesis doesn't explain all the data well, but this is not the case of the hypothesis failing the criterion of explanatory scope as compared to the cultural "trickery" hypothesis, but rather it fails the criteria I just mentioned. In the case of the "Santa" hypothesis, it's not a more rational theory because it fails other criteria and isn't a better explanation of all the data. But it is a simpler explanation of the observations I made in my essay. Thus, Jason's attempt to rebut me on this point fails.

Engwer: It's advantageous, not disadvantageous, for a theory to have features like "simplicity and greater explanatory scope". Other factors have to be taken into account as well, but Matthew hasn't shown us that there are other factors that lead us away from the conclusion that Jesus rose from the dead. Saying that other factors have to be taken into account does nothing to show that those other factors make Matthew's theory more plausible.

Green: I didn't say that it was disadvantageous for a theory to have features like "simplicity and greater explanatory scope". What I did say was that these do not always work. Irrational hypotheses certainly do meet the "explanatory scope" criterion sometimes but fail on other grounds as I have just pointed out. I never said that "simpler/greater explanatory scope" is always disadvantageous. Rather, what I said was that it's not always a good thing. I qualified this statement in my essay and I can quote it if Jason wants me to. Hell, I can print it out and wave it in his face if he needs me to. I can even draw a stick picture with crayons if that will help him to understand my point better.
Engwer: He goes on to use the example of aliens building the pyramids:

"Let me recall an example I mentioned above, the theory that alien visitors with superhuman technology, are responsible for the origin of the pyramids of Egypt. Suppose that actual archeological or written evidence of the actual origins of the pyramids was nonexistent, forever lost to history. Would that make the alternative alien theories somehow more credible, more likely? Not really. In the lack of historical evidence for the actual origins of the Egyptian pyramids, I would simply choose to be agnostic."

If we had a "lack of historical evidence", then why would anybody think that an alien theory is the best theory? We have a lot of historical evidence relevant to early Christianity. Christians don't just argue that Jesus must have risen because the raising of Jesus would be simpler than a series of naturalistic events. Simplicity is one factor among others. As I said above regarding the Santa Claus example, saying that other factors have to be taken into account does nothing to show that those other factors make Matthew's theory more plausible. Instead of discussing Santa Claus and aliens, Matthew needs to do more to explain how his vision theory supposedly better explains the evidence related to the resurrection of Christ.

Green: There are some people who think that the alien theory is better because it's incredulous to them that cultures like the Egyptians could built such massive structures such as the pyramids. I believe that there is a lack of evidence for any contact and intervention by aliens and my point was that even if we don't know exactly how the Egyptians constructed their pyramids and the insights behind their architectural feats were lost to history, that doesn't make the alien theory any more credible than nonalien theories of pyramid origins. I don't say that Christians argue that Jesus rose just because the resurrection is a simpler theory; I fully acknowledge that Christians like William Lane Craig, do try to show how the resurrection theory meets all the criteria outlined above. Jason says "instead of discussion Santa Claus and aliens, Matthew needs to do more to explain how his vision theory supposedly better explains the evidence related to the resurrection of Christ". Believe it or not, my original post was to answer objections to hypothesis like the ones I advocate.

Sad as it may seem, I do not write with the intention of trying to persuade Jason or impress him nor do I give convincing him a high priority at all in my writings on the subject. I am not out to convince Jason; I honestly don't give a shit whether Jason is convinced or not.


Engwer: Matthew writes:

"Agnosticism would be prima facie more likely, more rational than any alternative theory of alien origins of the Egyptian pyramids, for a reason as simple as that alien theories are extraordinary theories requiring extraordinary evidence. Reasoning by means of analogy, then, even if I had no clue whatsoever as to what caused the empty tomb, I believe that because extraordinary or even supernatural evidence for the resurrection is lacking and the New Testament is historically errant, I would simply declare agnosticism as to the cause of the empty tomb."

A term like "extraordinary evidence" is vague and allows critics to keep claiming that whatever amount of evidence they're given isn't enough. Humans will receive and communicate any evidence they have for a historical event through ordinary means (eyesight, speaking, writing, etc.). If you see a man who has risen from the dead, you see that man with ordinary eyesight. You write about your experience with ordinary writing. Etc. If you're going to ask for "supernatural evidence" for the resurrection, then do you also need supernatural evidence for that supernatural evidence? You have to rely on the ordinary rather than the extraordinary at some point. A resurrected Jesus would be seen with ordinary eyesight and heard with ordinary hearing, and we would evaluate the testimony of the eyewitnesses by ordinary standards. The resurrection is the miracle. Seeing the resurrected person isn't.

Green: For many people "extraordinary evidence" is indeed vague and often allows for critics to move the goal posts in terms of what the bar when it comes to evidence that will be enough to convince them. I, however, will tell people what it is that it takes to convince me that such "extraordinary events" have occurred. Take the pyramid theory for instance. I regard it as an "extraordinary" hypothesis and I realize that "extraordinary" may, indeed, be too vague a term. Since aliens possessing superior technology are supposed to be superhuman agents, let me state that "superhuman" theories require "superhuman" forms of evidence. Now let me give examples of what kind of evidence it would take to convince me so that I cannot be accused, as a critic, of claiming that whatever amount of evidence I am given isn't ever enough. If aliens really did contact, reveal themselves to, and intervene in ancient societies like ancient Egypt, I would expect there to be evidence they left behind. Maybe a time capsule containing video or digital footage of how the pyramids were built, perhaps digital information such as digital star charts showing where the aliens came from, how they got here, and how to contact them if they still exist, or how to discover the remains of their civilization if it no longer exists. Such a time capsule could include information that only an advanced civilization would know such as detailed knowledge of mathematical theorems and proofs, knowledge of molecular genetics or perhaps unified theories of physics and quantum gravity and equations of such that they might be willing to share with more advanced civilizations as such would evolve over time. This is an example of "superhuman" evidence that could exist to persuade an individual like me that alien theories of origins are indeed a more credible, more rational theory behind why the Egyptian pyramids and other ancient engineering feats of architecture exist.

I am not saying that this would be enough in itself to convince me but it would be a step in the right direction. I would probably contact the Council for Secular Humanism and the Scientific Committee for the Investigation of the Paranormal to get their take on the finding if such a capsule were to be found. I will gladly tell Jason what it would take to convince me that Jesus really had risen from the dead.

Engwer: It's reasonable to want to be careful with something like a resurrection claim, since such an event isn't part of the normal course of life and since it would have significant implications. The Christian claim involves hundreds of witnesses (1 Corinthians 15:3-8), including people who had been enemies of Christianity, and we have many examples of those witnesses' willingness to suffer and die for what they had seen, for example. Nobody is being asked to believe in the resurrection because of what one anonymous source thought he saw one time out of the corner of his eye. There's a lot of depth and many layers to the Christian case for Jesus' resurrection. That's why critics of religion in general tend to spend far more time on Jesus' resurrection than they do on something like the miracles associated with Buddha or Muhammad. Critics wouldn't be appealing to widespread memory losses among the early Christians, widespread psychological disorders, widespread apathy among Christianity's early enemies, etc. if the evidence for Jesus' resurrection was easy to dismiss. The demand for extraordinary evidence probably results from the fact that the evidence is indeed extraordinary by normal standards for ancient history. But the term "extraordinary" is vague enough to allow the critic to keep changing his standards however he needs to in order to avoid an unwanted conclusion.

Green: I agree that for people who are attracted to Christianity's truth claims that they want to be careful with such a claim and investigate it very carefully because of it's significant moral and personal implications. As for the Christian claim involving hundreds of witnesses, Jason appeals to the Corinthians 15 creed. There is a problem here. Paul doesn't say whom he received the creed from, or that he personally interviewed Peter, James, the 500 or anyone else. Next, we don't have independent attestation from these sources affirming what is stated in the famous creed. When Jason says that no one is being asked to believe in the resurrection because of one anonymous source thought he saw one time out of the corner of his eye- no, but Christians are asking the world to believe what four anonymous gospels say, whose authors do not identify their sources, methods, how they went about assessing the reliability of sources, eyewitness claims, etc. We have a creed that might have come from Paul (there are even some scholars who believe that the 1st Corinthians 15 creed is a post-Pauline interpolation; now watch as Jason includes a link from Robert Turkel trying to rebut this) who doesn't identify the source of the creed, doesn't say that he interviewed the people mentioned in the creed, especially not the 500. There is simply not a lot of depth and many layers to the Christian's case for the resurrection- and if Jason wants to argue differently, I will be more than glad to take him on providing he is a lot friendlier and less arrogant-sounding in his tone.

I personally have to say that despite people such as Michael Goulder or Gerd Ludemann (who don't seem informed on New Testament social-scientific criticism) who appeal to theories of hallucination, widespread memory loses, psychological disorders, apathy among Christianity's earliest adversaries, the problem is that these critics are not only divorced from the social context but many of them are simply granting too much ground to Christian apologists in terms of the reliability of the gospels, especially their details. Robert M Price (who Jason will probably arrogantly scoff at if I know him like I know the back of my hand) has the following to say about critics like Jason:

“The research done by Talbert and others makes the set of alternatives proposed by the apologists (i.e., "hoax or history") a false one. It is considerations like this which make works like Andersons' The Evidence for the Resurrection hopelessly out of date. In this book, and a large number of others like it, the apologists manage to effect a resurrection of their own-- they bring back the deists and rationalists of the eighteenth century as their opponents in debate. The apologists assume that their opponents, the imagined advocates of the "wrong tomb" and "swoon" theories, etc., agree that the gospel resurrection accounts are substantially accurate even down to the details. Otherwise, for instance, Edwin Yamauchi could hardly dismiss the possibility that grave robbers removed Jesus' body, merely by an appeal to the Johannine notation that Jesus' shroud was left behind. Yamauchi assumes that his opponents will accept the Johannine narrative at face value as he himself does. Unfortunately, such easy targets have long since vanished. Rationalists and deists like Paulus and Venturini used to argue this way since, oddly, they held to the near-inerrancy of the texts' reportage of events, yet claimed that apparent miracles were to be explained naturalistically! That Anderson has only such people in mind is obvious from a quote like this: "The only rationalistic interpretations of any merit admit the sincerity of the records, but try to explain them without recourse to the miraculous." New Testament scholarship has long since left both Anderson and Venturini behind, since it has shown at least that the facticity of the resurrection narratives cannot be simply taken for granted. Granted they are not lies, they may yet be legendary.” (“Guarding an Empty Tomb” in Beyond Born Again)

Price points out well what is the problem with critics like Jason. He points out parallels between gospels like Mark and legendary accounts of immortals and suggests that Talbert’s research points to the gospel resurrection narratives as being legendary in nature. It is Christians like Jason who think in terms of false dichotomies such as “hoax or history” or think that if the resurrection narratives aren’t historically inerrant down to their secondary details like crossed ‘t’s and dotted ‘i’s then it must all be fabrication, through and through. It is Jason who is resurrecting opponents of the past, opponents who did, indeed, counter with ridiculous and easily rebutted theories such as the “swoon” or “wrong tomb”. Jason is assuming that critics like me accept the resurrection accounts are accurate down to the details. And Price is right; these old critics such as Paulus and Venturini, are critics whom Jason finds easy to rebut and the only way he can easily attack me is by assuming that I am just like them. I don’t hold to the near-inerrancy of the gospel narrations, seeking to explain any apparent miracles naturalistically, yet that is precisely what Jason has in mind here. He just assumes that folks like me or just like the critics of old. Sorry buddy, the shoes do not fit and no amount of shoe-horning on your part is going to change that, Jason. Price is right; New Testament scholarship has left the likes of Anderon and Venturini behind and I agree with Price that scholarship has shown that the facticity of the narratives cannot be taken for granted. Jason is simply wearing the old, warn out shoes of Anderson and McDowell in this case. It is sadly, Jason, and not me, who is stabbing at a foe long since dead.


Engwer: Matthew writes:"First of all, I believe that the New Testament accounts of the resurrection are highly discrepant and are impossibly inconsistent, especially in terms of secondary details despite whatever core historical facts underlie the accounts."The issue under discussion is the resurrection, not Biblical inerrancy. But while Matthew refers to the resurrection accounts as "impossibly inconsistent", he gives no examples of an impossible inconsistency.

Green: I am so glad that Jason brought this point up! First of all, I believe that Jason has missed my point here. My point, in the original article, is that the diversity of appearances presupposes that the narrative accounts are completely complementary and harmonious. In other words, the harmony of the accounts presupposes biblical inerrancy and the diversity of appearances presupposes the harmony of these accounts. The issue is not directly biblical inerrancy but it is indirectly because the best information Christians believe that we have comes from the gospel narratives and the 1st Corinthians 15 creed, all of which must be harmonious. If we are to believe that God inspired the resurrection accounts to be the best narration of the resurrection as an historical event, then we very damned well better believe that God meant for them to be inerrant accounts. If they err in any secondary details, why assume that God inspired the authors to get any core historical facts right? If the secondary details are wrong, inconsistent, inaccurate, why believe any of it happened, assuming that this was God’s chosen way to communicate to humanity that crown event of history? The key operating assumption here is that God chose to inspire these accounts to accurately narrate the most important part of his plan for human history, the confirmation of salvation for believers!

Secondly, I do plan to show in detail how the resurrection accounts impossibly disagree with each other. In fact, since Jason complains about my lack of detail so much, why not get it over with and go over the discrepancies? Even though I am planning on writing an essay series on biblical inerrancy and its flaws for Loftus’ “Debunking Christianity” blog, I might as well list them here so Jason will stop complaining about my lack of details. But before I begin, I want to make a note about the resurrection accounts and that I do think that some critics overstate the case for the errancy of the resurrection accounts and the discrepancies. I also believe that discrepancies should be divided into two categories: explicit and implicit contradictions. The former are quite explicit in detail and contradict other explicit details of other gospel narratives while the latter or discrepancies, while not as strong and as explicit as the former, are discrepancies because it can be argued, very reasonably, that a given author meant for the reader to understand something at complete odds with what another writer intended for his audience to understand. With these considerations in mind, I now turn to the inconsistencies.

1.) Was the tomb rolled away before the women arrived as in Mark, Luke, or John, or after the women arrived as in Matthew. In Matthew 28:2, it says that there was an earthquake and that an angel descended from heaven and rolled away the stone, apparently after all the women arrived. In Mark 16: 2-5, Mary Magdalene and her traveling companions wonder who will roll away the stone, on their way there and find the stone removed when they finally get there (verse 4). In Luke 24:2, the women arrive at the tomb and find the stone rolled away. In John 20:1-2, Mary Magdalene (and whoever else might've been with her) take one good look at the empty tomb and instantly run to get Peter (it doesn't even seem that they entered the tomb at all!) The usual inerrantist explanation for this is that in Matthew 28:2, the Greek word for "was" ("ginomai") in describing the earthquake is translated in the pluperfect sense. Inerrantists like Robert Turkel, the late Gleason Archer, and their cohorts regard the word "was" for the earthquake as being in the pluperfect sense so the verse is best understood as referring to an earthquake and descending angel rolling away the tomb before the women arrived-but there are serious problems with this "resolution". They will argue that Matthew 28:2 should be read as the New American Standard Version or the New International Version translates it, such as the following:

"And behold, a severe earthquake had occurred, for an angel of the Lord descended from heaven and came and rolled away the stone and sat upon it." (New American Standard Version). Thus Turkel, the late Archer, Geisler, and others will argue the earthquake had occurred while the women were on their way to the tomb, and would've been rolled away brfore they arrived. I have two major problems with this "resolution".

First of all, not all translations render the Greek word for "was" ("ginomai") as in "And behold, there was an earthquake, for an angel of the Lord descended..." (Matthew 28:2) in the pluperfect sense. Some translations of the Bible, render the Greek word in simple past tense. I list some of the translations below:


"And behold, there was a great earthquake, for an angel of the Lord descended from heaven and came and rolled back the stone and sat on it.(English Standard Version)


"And behold, there was a great earthquake; for an angel of the Lord descended from heaven, and came and rolled away the stone, and sat upon it." (American Standard Version)


"And behold, there was a great earthquake; for an angel of [the] Lord, descending out of heaven, came and rolled away the stone and sat upon it." (Darby Translation)

In all of these versions, the Greek word for "was" ("ginomai") is not translated in the pluperfect sense. But more importantly, is the Greek word phrase kai idou, which is translated in many versions of the Bible as "And behold!" In Matthew 28:2, this word phrase modifies the statement that an earthquake occurred because of the descending angel who rolled away the tomb. Whenever the word phrase "And behold" is used, it almost always states the occurrence of an event in the statement it is grammatically connected to, as having occurred after the events in the proceeding verse. Let's look at some examples of this here. I am going to go through a number of verses, each verse coming from three translations: the New American Standard Version, the English Standard Version, and the American Standard Version (from all three when applicable)


Matthew 3: 16


After being baptized, Jesus came up immediately from the water; and behold, the heavens were opened, and he saw the Spirit of God descending as a dove and lighting on Him-New American Standard Version

And when Jesus was baptized, immediately he went up from the water, and behold, the heavens were opened to him, and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and coming to rest on him-English Standard Version

I ask readers here- who would believe that the author was trying to narrate that the heavens were opened up and the "Spirit of God" descended upon Jesus before Jesus was baptized? No, the phrase "and behold ( "kai Idou" in Greek) modifies the second sentence to show the event occurring after the baptism and coming up and out from the water.

Matthew 4:11

Then the devil left Him; and behold, angels came and began to minister to Him-New American Standard Version

Then the devil left him, and behold, angels came and were ministering to him-English Standard Version

Then the devil leaveth him; and behold, angels came and ministered unto him-American Standard Version

I ask readers again- who would believe that the author was narrating the story here as to suggest that the angels came to Jesus and started ministering to him before the devil left him? No, again, the phrase "and behold" suggests that "angels came" and "ministered to him" occurred after the devil left him.

Matthew 8:24

And behold, there arose a great storm on the sea, so that the boat was being covered with the waves; but Jesus Himself was asleep-New American Standard Version

And behold, there arose a great storm on the sea, so that the boat was being swamped by the waves; but he was asleep-English Standard Version

And behold, there arose a great tempest in the sea, insomuch that the boat was covered with the waves: but he was asleep-American Standard Version

Here, "and behold" suggests that the great storm arose after Jesus and his followers had gotten into the boat and after Jesus had fallen asleep. I don't know of anyone who would seriously understand the author to be telling readers that the storm arose before Jesus and his followers got into the boat and Jesus dozed off.

Matthew 8:34

And behold, the whole city came out to meet Jesus; and when they saw Him, they implored Him to leave their region-New American Standard Version

And behold, all the city came out to meet Jesus, and when they saw him, they begged him to leave their region-English Standard Version

And behold, all the city came out to meet Jesus: and when they saw him, they besought him that he would depart from their border-American Standard Version


So, did "all the city" come out to meet Jesus and urge him to leave their region before Jesus performed the miracle? Nope. "And behold" modifies verse 34 as to suggest that the people in the city came out to meet Jesus and urge him to leave after Jesus performed the miracle spoken of in verse 33.

Matthew 17:3

And behold, Moses and Elijah appeared to them, talking with Him-New American Standard Version

And behold, there appeared to them Moses and Elijah, talking with him-English Standard Version.

And behold, there appeared unto them Moses and Elijah talking with him-American Standard Version.


Did Moses and Elijah appear before Jesus and his three disciples went up to the mountain and watched as Jesus was transfigured? Or did it occur after Jesus took his followers up the mountain and was transfigured before them.

Matthew 26:51

And behold, one of those who were with Jesus reached and drew out his sword, and struck the slave of the high priest and cut off his ear-New American Standard Version

And behold, one of those who were with Jesus stretched out his hand and drew his sword and struck the servant of the high priest and cut off his ear-English Standard Version

And behold, one of them that were with Jesus stretched out his hand, and drew his sword, and smote the servant of the high priest, and struck off his ear-American Standard Version

Did Peter draw his sword before Jesus was arrested? I don't think so! I believe that it was after Jesus was seized for the arrest that Peter drew up the sword and struck the slave of the high priest.

Matthew 27:51

And behold, the veil of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom; and the earth shook and the rocks were split-New American Standard Version

And behold, the curtain of the temple was torn in two, from top to bottom. And the earth shook, and the rocks were split-English Standard Version

And behold, the veil of the temple was rent in two from the top to the bottom; and the earth did quake; and the rocks were rent-American Standard Version

Did the curtain of the temple tear in half, from top to bottom, before Jesus spoke his last words and die? Or was it after Jesus died, that the curtain tore into two from the top, downward?

Thus, we see a pattern here. "And behold" modifies the sentence that it attaches to and the sentence which is modified, describes something as occurring, after the event in the previous verse. We can see this in verse 51 of chapter 27, which suggests that the curtain-tearing occurred after 26 which speaks of Jesus' death. We can see that verse 51 of chapter 26 describes Peter as cutting off the ear of the high priest's servant, after Jesus was arrested in verse 50. We can see verse three of chapter 17, in which those present with Jesus at his transfiguration saw Moses and Elijah, after Jesus was transfigured on the mountain in verse two. In verse 16 of chapter three, "and behold" attaches the rest of the verse "the heavens were opened, and he saw the Spirit of God descending..." to "After being baptized, Jesus came up immediately from the water" in a single verse. But since "the heavens were opened, and he saw the Spirit of God descending.." comes after the phrase "and behold" what are readers to conclude but that Matthew meant to say that the heavens opened up after Jesus was baptized and come out immediately from the water? I don't know of anyone who would conclude that Matthew's author meant that the heavens opened up and the Spirit descended on Jesus before he stepped into the water to be baptized.

Readers can then understand why I believe that Matthew 28:2 describes the earthquake and angelic descent as being after the women have arrived at the tomb. It's precisely because "and behold" modifies verse 2 as describing something after verse 1 as it does in the verse cases I have just cited above from different translations. I, therefore, conclude that a contradiction here exists!

2.) Did the women enter the tomb, encounter angels, remember the angels’ words and then run back and convey them to the disciples as all of the synoptic gospels say or did Mary Magdalene and whoever was with her, run to tell the disciples that someone had stolen the body and she had no clue as to where it was as in John 20:1-2.

In Luke, chapter 24, we read the following:

1But on the first day of the week, at early dawn, they came to the tomb bringing the spices which they had prepared.
2And they found the stone rolled away from the tomb,
3but when they entered, they did not find the body of the Lord Jesus.
4While they were perplexed about this, behold, two men suddenly stood near them in dazzling clothing;
5and as the women were terrified and bowed their faces to the ground, the men said to them, "Why do you seek the living One among the dead?
6"He is not here, but He has risen Remember how He spoke to you while He was still in Galilee,
7saying that the Son of Man must be delivered into the hands of sinful men, and be crucified, and the third day rise again."
8And they remembered His words,
9and returned from the tomb and reported all these things to the eleven and to all the rest.
10Now they were Mary Magdalene and Joanna and Mary the mother of James; also the other women with them were telling these things to the apostles.
11But these words appeared to them as nonsense, and they would not believe them.
12But Peter got up and ran to the tomb; stooping and looking in, he saw the linen wrappings only; and he went away to his home, marveling at what had happened.

In this passage, the women went to the tomb, found the stone rolled away, encountered angels, they remembered what Jesus said, then departed to tell the disciples what happened. Verse 9 and 10 are of particular importance. The women "returned from the tomb and reported all these things to the eleven and to all the rest. In the next verse it says that "they were Mary Magdalene and Joanna and Mary the mother of James.."

Further in the chapter, when Jesus is believed to be walking with the two men on the road to Emmaus, they said this to Jesus:

22"But also some women among us amazed us. When they were at the tomb early in the morning,
23and did not find His body, they came, saying that they had also seen a vision of angels who said that He was alive."

So, in other words, Mary Magdalene and whoever went with her, successfully told them what they had seen. When the women told the eleven "all these things", that logically, then, includes "saying that they had also seen a vision of angels who said that He was alive", and verse 9 includes Mary Magdalene as one of them out of grammatical necessity here. The problem arises when we try and reconcile this with John 20: 1-2:

1Now on the first day of the week Mary Magdalene came early to the tomb, while it was still dark, and saw the stone already taken away from the tomb.
2So she ran and came to Simon Peter and to the other disciple whom Jesus loved, and said to them, "They have taken away the Lord out of the tomb, and we do not know where they have laid Him."

In these verses, Mary Magdalene runs (along with whoever may have been with her) to Simon Peter and the disciple whom Jesus loved, and said to them, "They have taken away the Lord out of the tomb, and we do not know where they have laid Him"

Mary Magdalene, then, hasn't seen any angels, hasn't gotten the message, and hasn't relayed the message in clear contradiction to verses 22-23. In fact, we can conclude that Mary Magdalene had not even entered into the tomb but instead arrived at it, took one good look at it, and then left in panic without even having entered into it. If she did enter into it as in the synoptics, particularly Luke, she would've encountered angels, came back with the message, and have told the disciples that they had seen a vision of angels who said that he was alive. We can conclude therefore, that Mary Magdalene didn't even enter the tomb and sure as hell didn't encounter any angels. I'd like to see Jason resolve this.

3.) Were there Eleven disciples in the room on the first Easter Sunday in Jerusalem, to which Jesus appeared to (which would’ve included all the original disciples save doubting Thomas) or were there only ten as in John 20?

Recall, verse 9 from Luke 24 above. It says that the women told the Eleven what they had seen and heard. Yet in John we read a different story. We read this, in John 20: 19-24:

19So when it was evening on that day, the first day of the week, and when the doors were shut where the disciples were, for fear of the Jews, Jesus came and stood in their midst and said to them, "Peace be with you."
20And when He had said this, He showed them both His hands and His side The disciples then rejoiced when they saw the Lord.
21So Jesus said to them again, "Peace be with you; as the Father has sent Me, I also send you."
22And when He had said this, He breathed on them and said to them, "Receive the Holy Spirit.
23"If you forgive the sins of any, their sins have been forgiven them; if you retain the sins of any, they have been retained."
24But Thomas, one of the twelve, called Didymus, was not with them when Jesus came.

In verse 19, it says that on the first day of the week, when it was evening, Jesus came and stood among them, and verse 24 says that Thomas was not with them originally. Then why the hell does it say in Luke 24:9 that there were Eleven present?

Oh, I think I get it! Judas Iscariot rose from the dead as well! You see, Judas hung himself in Matthew's account, and God raised him from the dead after Jesus rose and Judas hung out with the disciples that very night (one of Luke's "eleven"), and then was present later when Thomas showed up (making Twelve as in the 1st Corinthians 15 creed) and then he fell later in the field and his guts spilled out all over the place! Poor Judas, he died, rose just for some cameo appearances of Jesus, only to pull a Humpty Dumpty and fall, to die again! I get it now! Thanks for helping me to see the light here, Jason! I can imagine Jason saying that the "eleven" was only a figure of speech and that Luke knew all along that only ten were present! Yeah...sure. And what textual indicators would exist in the passage to indicate that this, indeed, was the case?

These are all explicit contradictions in the text that are impossible to resolve adequately without far-fetched plausibility scenarios, none of which are logical or remotely likely. Now, however lets shift gears and look at discrepancies which are implicit but nevertheless discrepancies.

4.) How many angels were there? Matthew and Mark record only one angel while Luke and John record two. Now the usual apologist quibble here is that Mark and Matthew only mentioned one but that doesn’t rule out that another angel was simply present. But there is a problem here. When the angel in Matthew speaks, he speaks in a first person singular. He says “For I know what you are looking for”. The problem? Many apologists are fond of pointing out that, for instance, Mary Magdalene wasn’t alone in her trip to the empty tomb in John 20. They will point to the first person plural of what Mary Magdalene says in John 20:2, “For they have taken the body of the Lord and we don’t know where they have put them” Thus, apologists are fond of saying, the text implies that more than one women was present! If this is the case, then, does that mean that the angel’s use of first person singular in Matthew 28: 3 implies then, that only one angel was present? If not, why not?

5.) Did Jesus appear to the disciples first in Galilee or Jerusalem? Matthew and Mark imply that Jesus appeared to them in Galilee first while Luke and John. Jesus appeared to them in Jerusalem. Now apologists will quibble and say that the appearance in Galilee was not immediate but eventual. This is absurd! First of all, notice the verb tenses in Matthew and Mark. In Matthew 28:7 we read the angel saying:

7"Go quickly and tell His disciples that He has risen from the dead; and behold, He is going ahead of you into Galilee, there you will see Him; behold, I have told you."

Notice we see "is going" not "will go. Let's look at Mark, shall we? In Mark 16: 7, the angel says:

7"But go, tell His disciples and Peter, 'He is going ahead of you to Galilee; there you will see Him, just as He told you.'"

Again, notice the "is going" rather than will go.

Now compare this with the prediction of the resurrection, in which Jesus says that he “will go”.

Matthew 26:32 "But after I have been raised, I will go ahead of you to Galilee."

Mark 14:28 "But after I have been raised, I will go ahead of you to Galilee."

Notice the difference between “will go” and “is going”? If Jesus was going to eventually go to Galilee and not immediately why are the verb tenses not uniform? Why doesn’t the angel say that Jesus “will go” to Galilee and instead of “is going”? For a prediction of Jesus eventually going to Galilee, this seems a bit misleading as to the timing. Secondly, if Jesus only intended to make an eventual trip to Galilee, why have the angels tell the women to relay this message to his disciples? What could Jesus have the angels tell the women, or even he, himself, have the women tell his disciples that he couldn’t have told them himself, since he was going to meet with them, anyways, that very same day? What could the women have relayed to the disciples that he couldn’t have told them himself?

This discussion of discrepancies should prove to any rational person that the Bible is indeed errant and highly discrepant. Biblical errancy is the one of the two chief reasons that I disbelieve that the Bible is the word of any god and that I disbelieve that the resurrection happened at all. If Jason wishes to defend his utterly nonsensical belief that the Bible is inerrant, I will be more than willing to oppose him in a debate!

In fact, while I am on the subject, why don’t I spell out the other chief reason I do not believe the resurrection happened. Jason, therefore, can answer both arguments if he is so inclined to do so.

Engwer: Matthew continues:

"As Robert M Price notes, the very admission of a need to harmonize the accounts is an admission that the accounts cannot be taken at face value and that the burden of proof is on the resurrection narratives themselves, not on the critics who would call these narratives into question."

What does Matthew mean by "cannot be taken at face value"? If one account tells us that people A, B, and C witnessed an event, while another account tells us that people B, C, and D witnessed it, then the two accounts differ. They can be taken at face value in the sense of accepting them as possibly consistent with each other. They can't be taken at face value in the sense of accepting each account as giving us every detail of what occurred. But why would anybody assume that either account was attempting to give every detail? Sources often differ from one another without contradicting each other in historical research, courts of law, etc. See the examples cited by J.P. Holding here. Harmonization is commonly practiced in historical research and in other fields.

Green: Well, it’s easy Jason. When I say that an account cannot be taken at face value, I have in mind the historicity of an account or multiple accounts claiming to narrate a given event. An account can be taken at face value where there are no discrepancies, no errors, no inaccuracies, no embellishments or distortions, and the author has a critical intent to narrate history as factually as his sources will allow. But however, when two or more accounts conflict with each other, then the accounts cannot be taken at face value in terms of giving the accounts the benefit of the doubt. In Jason’s hypothetical above, the accounts do indeed differ, if A,B,C, witnessed an event while another account says that it was people B, C, and D witnessed it, and I am glad that Jason agrees that they can be taken at face value in terms of consistency. But where Jason assigns a straw man argument to me that he wants to knock down is assuming that I am suggesting that all the accounts that we have are attempting to give every detail. I haven’t argued this.

Two or more accounts need not give every detail but they should be consistent on any details that they do offer. If the synoptic gospels say that the women encountered angels, believed their message, left the tomb, and told the disciples that they had seen angels who said that Jesus was risen from the dead, and John 20:1-2 says that Mary Magdalene and whoever was with her took one look at the tomb, saw the stone had been rolled away, and jetted off for the disciples without having even entered the tomb, and told them that Jesus body had been taken and they didn’t know where the body was, that is not a matter of differing yet complementary details that give a bigger picture than what either account by itself gives us. Rather, it is a case where two accounts claiming to narrative the event give us details that are inconsistent with each other. Sources do often differ from one other without contradicting each other but not the way I have described above. The accounts are inconsistent and no amount of hand waving on the part of apologists like Jason is going to change that! I also notice that Jason has once again linked to Robert Turkel. But Turkel’s attempt at reconciling the accounts has proven to be nonsensical as I have shown above!

One last thing, I fully agree that harmonization is commonly practiced in historical research and in other fields (well, duh, Jason! I am only getting my B.A. degree in history as I write this! You don’t think I know that? ). But the question is one of legitimacy here. Harmonization should be attempted whenever it’s legitimate to try and attempt it. Otherwise, how would you know when a harmonization of two apparently conflicting accounts was legitimate and when the attempt is nothing but a far-fetched plausibility scenario that is hare-brained, indeed, because some biblical apologists seem more interested in defending a pet theory such as biblical inerrancy to their dying breath.

Engwer: Matthew tells us that those who want to harmonize have a "burden of proof", but he doesn't tell us what it is. The sort of burden of proof that historians would try to meet would be to demonstrate that two differing accounts can be harmonized and that we have reason for trusting the two sources who give the differing accounts. And Christians have harmonized their sources and have given reasons for trusting those sources.

Green: I didn’t think I would have to explain what the “burden of proof” was. I thought that most people reading my blogpost would be sufficiently educated to know what I was talking about. My point, which I fear Jason may have missed again, is...well..let me rephrase it so Jason should even be able to understand it crystal clear. Jason wants us to believe that the gospel accounts of the resurrection are reliable. I argue that they are discrepant. Jason has to argue that the are reliable despite appearances to the contrary. That Jason would acknowledge that harmonization is needed goes to show that the gospel accounts of the resurrection cannot be taken at face value as being reliable and that gospel narratives’ reliability has to be argued for despite appearances to the contrary. It is Jason and his cohorts who argue that the gospels are reliable and so the burden of proof is on him and his fellow apologists to explain how the gospel narratives can still be reliable despite the fact that they appear to conflict with each other calling into doubt the reliability of the secondary details and calling into question of any core historical facts underlying the accounts. The “burden of proof” should be clear now. It is up to Jason to defend the reliability of the resurrection narratives and the historicity of the events that they purport to narrate, despite the appearance of discrepancies, which would call the historical reliability of the gospel accounts into question. If this still isn’t clear to Jason, then let me go get the crayon box.

Jason should state that Christians have attempted to harmonize their sources and have tried to give reasons for trusting those sources but he won’t because he’s too over-confident about his apologetics for the resurrection. I, on the other hand, freely leave it to my readers to determine whether I have made my case or not.

Engwer: In his latest articles, Matthew makes much of alleged inconsistencies in the gospels, but some of the most significant problems for his vision theory are in elements of the gospels (and other documents) that are only mentioned by one source or are reported in a similar manner by more than one source. All of the sources who comment on Jesus' tomb agree that it was empty. All of the sources agree that Paul had been an enemy of Christianity prior to seeing the risen Christ. Etc. When an event is reported in only one place, such as the appearance to James in 1 Corinthians 15 or the appearance on the road to Emmaus in Luke 24, we can't claim to know that the event must not have occurred because of supposed errors in the gospels. If John's gospel is wrong on some issues, it doesn't therefore follow that it's wrong on all issues, much less that the other three gospels, Acts, Paul, Peter, etc. are unreliable as well. Arguing that two gospels contradict each other can only prove the unreliability of one gospel, not both of them. Why would questioning a detail in Mark's gospel, for example, give us reason to doubt what Paul reports in 1 Corinthians 15? Matthew hasn't given us any reason to reject Biblical inerrancy, but even if he did, his vision theory would still be untenable. A passage like 1 Corinthians 15 or John 20-21 would be highly problematic for Matthew's theory even if documents like 1 Corinthians and John weren't Divinely inspired scripture.

Green: Yes, I do make much over the inconsistencies of the gospels but this something Jason just cannot skate around. The discrepancies are real enough and the harmonization of boobs like Robert Turkel, the late Gleason Archer, and the America’s own “Dean of Apologetics” the loathsome Norman Geisler just won’t cut it. I have attempted to show why rational people should reject the inerrancy of the gospels. Jason argues that some of the most significant problems for my vision hypothesis are in the elements of the gospels. If he is assigning me the role of his long-ousted critics, like the early deists and rationalists who accepted the historical inerrancy of the gospel accounts by over-rationalizing them to death by clutching at absurdity on top of absurdity, he is wasting his breath. I don’t accept the secondary details as being historical accurate or even likely and thus I don’t agree that any elements of the gospels pose a significant threat to my hypothesis. Jason says that all of the sources who comment on the tomb of Jesus agree that it was empty. Well, these sources are the gospels and most New Testament scholars believe that Matthew and Luke were dependent on Mark and Q so that isn’t really saying much to say that they agree on the empty tomb. So what? That is not the same as having multiple, independent, attesting sources attest to an empty tomb so Jason is trying to make the ice look thicker than it really is.

Jason says that all the sources agree that Paul had been an enemy of Christianity prior to his Damascus vision. Actually Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John don’t mention it. Only Acts (which gives differing accounts of the event), Galatians (which ironically seems to conflict with the accounts given in Acts), and only another Pauline epistle or two. That is not all of the sources. Another point: I never said that just because an event is recorded only in one place that we can’t claim to know that the event must not have occurred because of errors in the gospels. But if the gospels do err in what they report, then that calls into question all of the other sources of events in our canonical New Testament. It calls into question of how can anyone be at all certain that any “Holy Spirit” divinely selected the gospels as well as other books as being divinely inspired when the Church set out to determine what the canonical New Testament collection would be. If the gospels do, indeed, have errors, then why are we at all confident that other sources that the “Holy Spirit” sought to include are, likewise, not without error?

Another point: Jason says that if John’s gospel is wrong on some issues, it doesn’t therefore follow that it’s wrong on all issues, much less that other New Testament documents are unreliable as well. Oh wow! When I read this, my jaw just about slapped the floor. If Jason really believes this, then why does he defend biblical inerrancy and infallibility on his website? If he really believes this, then inerrancy and infallibility should not really matter to him though. Thus, I never said that if two gospels contradict each other that it proves that both are unreliable. I never stated this. Jason can quote me if he feels gutsy enough to call my bluff. What I do believe and have stated (if I recall correctly) is that if two gospels contradict each other, that calls into question one or more of the gospel’s reliability. If two gospels contradict each other, it may be the case that one or the other is in error or perhaps one of them. So it is not accurate for Jason to state that if the gospels contradict each other, then that only proves that one gospel is unreliable. What if both are in error on a given point? As for asking why questioning a detail in Mark’s gospel would give us reason to doubt what Paul reports in 1st Corinthians 15, it can give us reason but not necessarily and I am not arguing that it does necessarily.

What it does challenge, however, is whether the canonical New Testament as we have it right now is the result of any “Holy Spirit’s” providence over the set of documents that comprise it. If an error is found in Mark, we have to ask why would any such being such as the “Holy Spirit” would include a book containing an error, which he would have to have known about, and include it with other documents that are inspired? If the “Holy Spirit” erred in one judgment as far as what books to include in the present New Testament canon, why trust the judgment of any such “Holy Spirit” when it comes to other books? As for not giving any reason to reject biblical inerrancy, I have now, buddy, I have now. If you want to debate the issue with me, Jason, you know where to find me, dude.

Engwer: Let's consider a detail found often in the resurrection accounts. All of the sources agree that the resurrection witnesses weren't expecting to see Jesus resurrected (Matthew 28:1-6, Mark 9:10, 16:1-3, Luke 24:11, John 20:25, Acts 9:1, etc.). Yet, we know that expectations play a major role in hallucinations and other psychological disorders. Are we to believe that all of the sources commenting on this subject were mistaken? With somebody like Paul, who refers to himself as a former enemy of Christianity, how would it be plausible to argue that he was expecting to see the risen Christ? Were his travel companions expecting to experience something? All three accounts of Paul's conversion in Acts mention the fact that Paul's companions shared in the experience (9:7, 22:9, 26:14). The three accounts can be reconciled, but even if we were to grant the claim that they're contradictory, why should we think that a first century author (apparently somebody who knew Paul) would three times refer to an element of Paul's experience that didn't actually occur? The author of Acts apparently was with Paul when he spoke about his conversion (Acts 26:12-27:2). It's not just that one or two sources refer to this concept that people weren't expecting to see Jesus. Rather, the concept is referred to often, by a variety of sources and in a variety of contexts. These weren't people gathered together, expecting to see something. Often, they saw something they didn't expect.

Green: For the last goddamned time, I am not arguing that the disciples were victims of hallucinations or any other psychological disorders. Besides, it’s interesting to know that Turkel has argued the same thing here. Is he cribbing Turkel but not identifying his source? I hope not but, then, again, I cringe every time Jason links to Turkel. Jason argues that the disciples weren’t expecting Jesus to have risen but I have tackled this subject in another post which was written after Jason composed this reply, so I cannot in all fairness, expect Jason to attempt another silly rebuttal on this point, since this rebuttal was written prior to my post. He can do so in a later rebuttal if he’s feeling that cocky to want to put me in my place. I have argued that the if the disciples were believed to have been raising people from the dead and so even if they weren’t expecting a resurrection, Christians would have to at least believe that the disciples would be expecting Jesus to have been resuscitated. Assuming the earliest Christians believed that Jesus came back with a body of flesh, who is to say that the earliest Christians did not believe that Jesus had been resuscitated and that later this belief evolved into a belief that Jesus had been resurrected? But here is another problem I would ask Jason and his buddies: if no Jew was expecting any individual resurrections prior to the general one at the day of judgment, how is it that some people became convinced that one of the prophets of old had risen from the dead as Luke records? If Jason believes that these people merely believed one of the prophets of old had merely been resuscitated, fine, let him back it up with textual evidence. He can start by answering my blogpost in detail beyond what he has made so far in terms of comments.

Engwer: What about other details in the accounts that aren't mentioned as often, but are credible? Luke and John refer to how the risen Jesus sometimes ate with His disciples, for example. That would produce physical evidence that something like a hallucination wouldn't produce. Since eating food is something that would be expected to commonly occur among any group of people who are together a lot, and since nothing said elsewhere in the New Testament contradicts such accounts, why are we supposed to believe that these events didn't occur?

Green: How does Jason know that these details are credible? Luke and John refer to the risen Jesus as sometimes eating with his disciples and now Jason appeals to the distinction sometimes made by William Lane Craig between visions and appearances. The appearances involved extra-mental phenomena such as eating that cannot be explained by any "hallucination" or vision. I have attempted an answer at this in another post which Jason has posted an answer to. Jason also says that nothing elsewhere in the New Testament contradicts such accounts, why believe this did not take place? Well for one thing, I believe that Matthew and Mark contradict these accounts by placing the first appearance of Jesus in Galilee, not Jerusalem. I have elaborated on and explained why I believe a contradiction really does exist. Besides, even given the lack of any contrary accounts, what evidence does Jason have that Jesus really did eat with his disciples after his death? I regard the stories as pious fiction (not necessarily fabrications, mind you, just pious fiction designed to illustrate the physicality of Jesus' resurrection).

Engwer: We could broaden the issue by asking about the desire for physical evidence in general. All four gospel authors refer to physical evidence produced by the resurrection (Matthew 28:9, Mark 16:4-6, Luke 24:42-43, John 21:9-13, etc.). Similarly, the early Jewish opponents of Christianity acknowledged the empty tomb, and Ignatius of Antioch reports a possible extra-Biblical tradition involving the disciples' touching Jesus' resurrected body (Letter To The Smyrnaeans, 3). Since the desire for physical evidence makes sense from the standpoint of common human experience and in the context of first century Jewish beliefs about resurrection, why should we think that the sort of desire for physical evidence reflected in these sources is unhistorical?

Green: My chief reason for regarding the credibility of these reports as wanting are the discrepancies, embellishments, and signs of redaction. Again, it seems as though Jason is assigning me the role of earlier critics who accepted the historical inerrancy of the gospels and then sought to hyper-rationalize away the details. I don't accept the secondary details as being historically reliable. I ask Jason: why should I? Jason argues that Jewish opponents of Christianity acknowledged the empty tomb- where? Where outside of the gospels? I want independent, early, attesting sources here. That Ignatius of Antioch reports a possible extra-Biblical tradition involving the disciples' touching Jesus' resurrected body- so what? One possibility Jason introduces and doesn't explain how Ignatius came to know of this, where it might have come from, etc. Did Ignatius test this for authenticity? Jason doesn't tell us.

Engwer: This is a context in which the number of resurrection appearances is significant. 1 Corinthians 15 reports six appearances, and Luke refers to Jesus as appearing to people over a period of 40 days, for example. Jesus didn't just appear once or twice. How likely is it that people living in a context like first century Israel, with its beliefs about the physicality of resurrection, would repeatedly think they saw the risen Jesus without seeking any physical evidence?

Green: Jason, again, is even assuming that all of these "sources" are complementary, I do not believe that they are. I believe that the gospels contradict each other. Furthermore, there is another problem that I didn't mention above. In 1st Corinthians 15, it says that Jesus appeared to the Twelve. What Twelve? Jesus only appeared to Eleven people (yes Jason, go back through Matthew and Luke and count them, it says that there were Eleven disciples present; here the verses are Matthew 28: 16; Luke 24: 9). Then there is that pesky problem of John, with Doubting Thomas not being present on the night Jesus rose from the dead. I ask Jason: why the Twelve reference in 1st Corinthians 15. Oh, I get it! You see: Judas Iscariot originally hung himself from a tree and died and so the risen Jesus rose him back from the dead so he could join the other Eleven in witnessing the risen Jesus. After he witnessed the risen Jesus (and this occurrence was written in 1st Corinthians 15), Humpty Dumpty then had a bad fall in a field and his guts were splattered, killing Dumpty..erm..Judas a second time. Good lord, I feel sorry for Judas here. Killed and raised again only to die a second time.

As for Luke referring to Jesus as appearing to people over 40 days, well, 40 need not be taken literally. 40 was a number that was often used in the Middle East

Engwer: Much more could be said, but we don't have to accept inerrancy before asking questions like these. Matthew hasn't given us any reason to reject inerrancy, but even if he did, the presence of error in some details wouldn't justify the sort of radical non-historicity that Matthew would have to advocate in order to dismiss all of the evidence inconsistent with his theory.

Green: No one doesn't have to accept inerrancy before asking questions like these but one has to presuppose biblical inerrancy in order to assume that the gospel accounts and 1st Corinthians 15 are complementary. It's only then can apologists like Bill Craig and Gary Habermas argue that a "diversity" of appearances exist. To assume, for instance, that the appearance in Galilee (as recorded by Matthew) and the appearance in Jerusalem ( as recorded in Luke and John) all happened, one has to assume that the appearance accounts in Matthew and Mark are complementary with the accounts of Luke and John. One has to assume that these accounts are inerrant and that they can be harmonized, reflecting their inerrancy. This is what I mean by presupposing biblical inerrancy. As for not giving any reason to reject inerrancy, I have given my reasons above. If I did present error in some details, that would strongly call into question not only the accounts bearing those details, but all the other accounts allegedly recording the same event. Besides, I am not advocating any radical nonhistoricity (there's no hyphen there Jason). I only brought up what possibility that Carrier has argued for. I don't believe that there is any evidence inconsistent with my hypothesis.

Even if my hypothesis proved invalid and there are good reasons, further, to believe that Jesus rose from the dead and the Christian gospel is true, then I would admit to such a thing, and then proceed to overdose on medication so I can take my own life and get judgment over with. Seriously. If Jason has a problem with this, then screw Jason!!

Engwer: If you go through the relevant documents and take note of all of the details Matthew would have to dismiss, it becomes apparent that he isn't just suggesting common human fallibility. He's suggesting radical, widespread delusions, memory lapses, misunderstandings, dishonesty, and apathy, and not just among the early Christians, but in some cases among their early enemies as well. I'm not aware of any other place in human history, any place other than those early decades of Christianity, where critics have to make such radical speculations in an attempt to dismiss a reported miracle.

Green: Hold the phone here! I introduced one possibility, that the empty tomb was a fiction- one that I am not necessarily committed to. I seriously have no problem in accepting an empty tomb here. I reject the historicity of the secondary details because I believe that they contradict each other and seriously believe that my visionary hypothesis is more likely, prima facie. I am not suggesting "radical, widespread delusions". I am suggesting commonplace visions involving altered-states-of-consciousness, that Richard Rohrbaugh and Bruce Malina are suggesting is common and normal in honor-shame societies that they introduce in their Social-Science Commentaries on the gospels. These are not "radical, widespread delusions". As for "memory lapses, misunderstandings, dishonesty, and apathy" where have I suggested all of these? Jason will have to elaborate if he condescends to do so. As for among their early enemies, Jason will have to give independent, early, attesting evidence. He has to remember: I don't accept the gospels as historically inerrant down to every last dotted 'i' or crossed 't' even though I'm sure that he would love nothing more to do that so he can ram the resurrection down my throat and force me to convert! Fat chance, Jason!


Engwer: Matthew writes:

"Matthew records an appearance of Jesus to his followers in Galilee while Luke places the first appearance of the risen Jesus to his followers in Jerusalem on the night he rose from the dead. Christian defenders of biblical inerrancy and the resurrection will argue that the two accounts are complementary. What if they really do contradict each other?"

Why would anybody think that there's a contradiction? What's supposed to be contradictory?


Green: Well, shit, Jason, the answer is not difficult, you know. I posted the answer above. Scroll up!


Engwer quoting me: Matthew writes:

"The problem, then, is that Christian apologists like Bill Craig and Gary Habermas may be milking the New Testament for data that simply may not exist, trying to squeeze as much juice out when the accounts may be completely dry. The 'diversity' they have in mind, I would contend, is simply imaginary. This is not to say that there wasn't a diversity of appearances, only, that it seems to me that Bill Craig and Gary Habermas and their apologist cohorts are basing their argument for a diversity of appearances on illegitimate grounds. They are treating the New Testament accounts as if they are reliable narratives, to be completely accepted at face value....The bottom line seems to me to be that any such 'diversity' presupposes harmonization and inerrancy and that has to be argued for despite appearances to the contrary, not simply assumed at face value."

It doesn't seem that Matthew is as familiar with the work of Craig and Habermas as he suggests he is, or he isn't being careful in representing their views. Here's a representative example of what Craig has argued on this subject:

Green: Bullshit! I am quite conversant with their works! Apologists like Jason want more than anything to prove that their critics are uninformed, careless, stupid, ignorant- or else we would be Christians like him and just adore him! It's time for me to gag, again! Jason quotes both Craig and Habermas...

"On multiple occasions and under various circumstances, different individuals and groups of people experienced appearances of Jesus alive from the dead....there is no single instance in the casebooks exhibiting the diversity involved in the postmortem appearances of Jesus. It is only by compiling unrelated cases that anything analogous might be constructed." (in Paul Copan and Ronald Tacelli, editors, Jesus’ Resurrection: Fact or Figment? [Downers Grove, Illinois: InterVarsity Press, 2000], pp. 33, 190)And Habermas:

"The wide variety of times and places that Jesus appeared, along with the differing mindsets of the witnesses, is another formidable obstacle. The accounts of men and women, hard-headed and soft-hearted alike, all believing that they saw Jesus, both indoors and outdoors, provide an insurmountable barrier for hallucinations. The odds that each person would be in precisely the proper and same frame of mind to experience a hallucination, even individually, decrease exponentially." (see page 5 here)

Do these comments by Craig and Habermas require "harmonization and inerrancy"? No. All that's required is an acceptance of the historicity of some portions of the relevant documents. That's why Craig and Habermas regularly explain that their argument for the resurrection doesn't require belief in Biblical inerrancy. They frequently appeal to what's commonly accepted in modern scholarship, including among non-Christian scholars.

Green: Oh yes they do, Jason! Craig and Habermas don't seem to realize that their attempts to present these accounts as historical presuppose inerrancy. Inerrancy is axiomatic in order for the accounts to be complementary so apologists like Craig and Habermas can milk the accounts for their "diversity" of appearances. You have to do more than accept just "some" portions of the relevant documents. You have to accept that Jesus appeared both in Galilee and Jerusalem and that the accounts of these occurrences, do not contradict each other. You have to accept that the Eleven disciples were present (in Luke) on the night of Jesus' resurrection doesn't conflict with John's account in which Doubting Thomas was absent. You have to accept that there is a harmonization of the synoptic accounts which say that the women left the empty tomb, convinced that they saw angels and their message with John, in which the women did not encounter angels on their first visit to the tomb. You have to square all of this with 1st Corinthians 15, which says that Jesus appeared to the "Twelve" despite the fact that Judas Iscariot was dead and Doubting Thomas was out on the eve of the resurrection in John's account. So which is it, Jason? Did Jesus appear to Twelve (1st Corinthians 15), Eleven (Luke 24:9), or ten (John 20:24). It looks as though Jason really has his work cut out for him!

Engwer: If you accept the historicity of the resurrection appearances of 1 Corinthians 15, for example, which doesn't require inerrancy, then you have a wide diversity of resurrection appearances from that passage alone. 1 Corinthians 15 alone mentions appearances to individuals and appearances to groups, appearances to believers and appearances to unbelievers. In groups as large as the eleven disciples or the more than 500 men mentioned in 1 Corinthians 15:6, we would expect a wide variety of personalities. And 1 Corinthians 15 alone, even if we considered nothing else, mentions six different appearances, which suggests the sort of diversity William Craig and Gary Habermas refer to. You don't have to believe in the inerrancy of the gospels and Acts in order to conclude that the women who went to Jesus' tomb had a different mindset than Saul of Tarsus had on the road to Damascus. You don't have to accept Biblical inerrancy in order to conclude that an unbeliever like James would have had a different mindset than a disciple like Peter. Etc.

Green: This list of appearances, though, isn't really all that strong. Assuming that Paul really did get the list as is stated, Paul doesn't mention who he got it from, that he interviewed any of these people listed in the creed. Worst of all, is that there is no independent, multiple attestation from these people that confirm what is written in the creed! Do we have a letter from Peter or James affirming that Jesus really did appear to them as mentioned in the creed and that they were able to confirm that it was really him and that they weren't deluded somehow? Do we have any attestation from the 500 that the event really did happen? Who were the 500? Were they skeptics? Were they believers? Did they all see the exact same thing? We don’t' know.

Matthew Green has said a lot about alleged errors in the Biblical accounts, but he hasn't given us a single example of an error, and the most significant problems with his theory would remain even if we were to reject Biblical inerrancy. He mentions a lot of possibilities, but doesn't commit to much and doesn't go into much detail. But detail is what's needed. Making vague references to "visions" or telling us that something naturalistic may have triggered both the empty tomb and the resurrection appearances, but not telling us what it was that did the triggering and how it brought about "visions", isn't enough. It's also not enough to ignore large amounts of evidence about the genre of the New Testament documents while acting as if we can't know whether the New Testament authors intended to write historical accounts. Matthew can't remain silent or speak only in vague generalities in the places where his vision theory is weakest. The problem isn't that Matthew's opponents are assuming Biblical inerrancy. The problem is that Matthew's theory is absurdly implausible before we even get to a consideration of inerrancy. That's why theories like Matthew's are so unpopular, even among scholars who reject the inerrancy of scripture.

Green: Well, I have given examples of contradictions here. I await to see how Jason plans to resolve them or maybe he will mostly evade the problem as Robert Turkel has done. As for the rest of his complaints here, I say that my original posts were not meant to be a detailed defense of visions. As for the most significant problems remaining if inerrancy were rejected, what problems are these? The nonproblems of psychological disorders and other details that he supposedly thinks destroy my hypothesis? I only mention one possibility as far as the tomb goes and that is Carrier's possibility. I am committed to naturalism, philosophically, but this need not exclude an empty tomb by any means. I am committed to a naturalistic paradigm of Christian origins, something Jason cannot brook. I seriously doubt anything will be "enough" for Jason; he writes as though I seek to convince him that the resurrection hasn't happened, even though I don't give a rat's ass whether he's not convinced or not. I do not "ignore" large amounts of what Jason considers "evidence" because I am not persuaded that any of what he has presented, is evidence, and if I concluded that it was evidence for Jesus' resurrection, I would write a letter apologizing to Jason, admitting that he's right.

One more thing: I don't intend to "remain silent" or speak in "vague generalities" in places where he perceives my hypothesis as being the weakest. The problem, contra Jason, is that "my" opponents are presupposing inerrancy, whether they realize so or not, whether they state so or not. In fact, we can debate the plausibility of my hypothesis in greater detail. If Jason would like me to be polite, civil, and respectful, I will be happy to oblige- on the condition that he is the same way. As long as he's arrogant, confrontational, and combative, I'll respond likewise. I also haven't been "ignoring" any evidence about the genre of the New Testament documents, particularly the gospels. For me, I am still studying the subject and I don't really expect to come to an informed conclusion until graduate school. If the genre of the gospels demands that they be biographical ( that Burridge is right and that they are biographical in genre), that doesn't necessarily mean that all passages are necessarily historical down to the smallest details. As for my hypothesis being unpopular- for whom? Scholars of what theological stripe? Even scholars who are nonbelievers? Or are we talking about Christian scholars?

Engwer: The evidence suggests that the early Christians were attempting to convey historical accounts when they wrote documents like 1 Corinthians and the gospels. The evidence suggests that many details of the resurrection accounts are inconsistent with what we know of hallucinations and other psychological disorders.

Engwer: Matthew Green isn't attempting to give the best explanation of the evidence. He's attempting to give the best naturalistic explanation. But this is a case in which we have a supernatural explanation that's significantly better than any naturalistic theory. And that supernatural explanation is better in a context in which we have a lot of information. We know a lot about first century Israel, common Jewish beliefs of the time, how people viewed Jesus prior to thinking they had seen Him risen from the dead, the details of the settings in which some of the appearances occurred, what the witnesses were willing to suffer as a result of making the claims they made, etc. It isn't a lack of information, but rather the presence of much information, that results in attempts to dismiss dozens of details given to us by first century documents.

Green: As to whether the evidence really does suggest that the earliest Christians were trying to convey historical accounts- that's debatable and I am more than willing to debate as time permits it. Jason, once again, repeatedly critiques a position, I do not hold to, namely "hallucinations" or "psychological disorders". Contrary to Jason, I am attempting to give a best explanation of the evidence; we just have conflicting views as to what "evidence" exists. I heartily, disagree that this is a case in which a supernatural explanation is significantly better than any naturalistic theory. We do indeed know a lot about 1st century Palestine, but I dispute what Jason claims that we know for sure. As for his statement "It isn't a lack of information, but rather the presence of much information, that results in attempts to dismiss dozens of details given to us by first century documents." This statement alone speaks volumes about Christian apologists and their thinking about skeptics. To apologists like Jason, it isn't a lack of information; we have plenty of it, and it's only denials because people don’t' want to be held accountable to their Creator.

Let me state that if the Christian gospel was true and I concluded such, I would not avoid the inevitability of Hell. I would take my rightful place there. I promise Jason this and if he doesn't like the fact that I don't want to be his "brother in the Lord", that I don't want to hug him and thank him for saving me, be his buddy, go to Church, adore those arrogant bastards in the Church, too damned bad! Jason can drop dead!

My personal loathing of Jason aside, I have to say that although I have attempted a response here, I freely leave it to readers to judge for themselves. Jason will, no doubtedly, pin a response. I am willing to debate the details here, the very details that Jason whines constantly about me not going into. If he wants to debate, fine and good. I am willing to as long as we treat it as a respectful, civil, and friendly debate. The moment Jason sinks to acing like a condescending, arrogant, self-righteous prick, I will respond in kind. I am more than willing to debate the plausibility of my thesis. I recall a debate between Gary Habermas and Anthony Flew. Boy, how I wish I could've been an Flew's shoes. I'd love to have that kind of debate, given the social-science arguments I believe I have at hand. Well, anyways, whether Engwer and I will debate this in greater detail remains to be seen. I have posted a detailed, point-by-point response to his rebuttal and I simply leave it to readers to determine whether I have succeeded or not.

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I am a Freethinker First, and an Atheist Second.

35 comments

Layman wrote the following things about Robert Price and Acharya S. in the comments section here:

The irony here is that these two heroes of skepticism are atypical of what most online skeptics might expect. Heathen Dan is right that Acharya S is a new age prophetess. Robert Price is more of a materialistic skeptic, but he is also an ardent conservative warhawk who defends Bush's foreign policy.


My response:
Let me state for the record that I am a freethinker first, and an atheist second. No freethinker faces a potential excommunication or heresy trial for not abiding by the party line as far as I'm concerned. I left Christianity partly over this party line attitude. Acharya S. was a Blog member here for a week until she recused herself because of her critics, and I have invited Bob to be a member here with no luck yet.

Where I agree with people, I agree. Where I disagree with people I disagree. That's it. For instance, I do believe Jesus was a historical figure in the 1st century, unlike them. But I learn from everyone.

The goal here at DC is to Debunk evangelical Christianity. This could be done by a Deist, a new age pantheist, an agnostic or an atheist. Where we agree we agree. Where we have our own disputes, we will dispute. Christians do the same thing when it comes to differing views of Calvinism, eschatology, baptism, pentecostal gifts, church polity, and so on. But unlike them such disputes do not undercut a common goal we have when it comes to Christianity.

I (along with Ed Babinski) do not put up barriers between freethinkers so long as we share the same goals. Where we disagree we will disagree, but our commond ground is still that we are freethinkers. We are not hamstrung by religious dogmas and creeds and scriptures that define whether or not we are allowed in the group. We just ask that people are able to back up their beliefs and defend them in areas where we share common ground. Even if someone is way out of bounds with what I think can be rationally defended, I can still say, "but she makes a good case against Christianity...she makes me think."

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Because of Who?

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What with pedophile priests, a truly frightening trailer for a film called JESUS CAMP, comparisons of modern political absurdities with Nazi Germany, and various other religious/political rants firing up atheist/freethought bloggers everywhere I was reminded of something the bible has exactly right:

As it is written: "God's name is blasphemed among the Gentiles because of you."

Because of who?


Turn with me, if you will, to Romans chapter 2 verse 17 (this is the NIV version.) "Now you, if you call yourself a Jew (insert your choice in place of Jew; Christian, apologist, preacher, pastor, televangelist, churchgoer, etc.); if you rely on the law and brag about your relationship to God; if you know his will and approve what is superior because you are instructed by the law; if you are convinced that you are a guide for the blind, a light for those who are in the dark, an instructor of the foolish, a teacher of infants, because you have in the law the embodiment of knowledge and truth --- you, then, who teach others, do you not teach yourself? (Does any of this sound familiar?) You who preach against stealing, do you steal? You who say that people should not commit adultery, do you commit adultery? You who abhor idols, do you rob temples? You who brag about the law, do you dishonor God by breaking the law? As it is written: "God's name is blasphemed among the Gentiles because of you.""

On more than one occasion I used this to get people to toe the line and I've forgotten how many times I heard it preached to bring on some heavy duty guilt. What believer would want to be the cause of god's name being blasphemed? Bad behavior? You're being watched. Look at how horrible the consequences might be.

And don't tell me that it isn't legit to substitute for Jews. This is common practice in Sunday school and sermons all the time. Have to make it relevant. That's in the bible, too, 1 Corinthians 9 verse 9: "For it is written in the Law of Moses: "Do not muzzle an ox while it is treading out the grain." Is it about oxen that god is concerned? Surely he says this for us, doesn't he? Yes, this was written for us ..." (Keep reading for some fund raising guilt.) All these things are supposed to be written to us so we can learn.

One of the most obvious and pathetic cases of this was the fall of Jimmy Swaggert several years ago. Just weeks before his meeting with prostitutes, I heard him preach (while crying his heart out, naturally) against the evil sinfulness of good Christian women wearing shorts above the knee in public. What a horrible sin. But who caused god's name to be blasphemed?

The standard escape clause for all this is the little phrase: "We're only human." If you decide you're going to speak for god, you put yourself into a position of extreme pressure. Any inappropriate behavior on your part has dire consequences. All the name calling and slander that comes up while defending your beliefs does not reflect favorably on your god.

I would be more than a little pissed off if my name was blasphemed because of you.

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Godlessness Rare Behind Bars

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I saw two articles on the relative proportion of atheists in prisons versus religious groups, and I thought it worth sharing.

First, a compilation of present-day statistics:
atheists, being a moderate proportion of the USA population (about 8-16%) are disproportionately less in the prison populations (0.21%).
Next, a more thorough review from multiple studies. Quote:
It's suprising how many people say to me, "You're an Atheist? You must have no conscience about commiting crime then." Nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, if we examine the population of our prisons, we see a very different picture:

In "The New Criminology", Max D. Schlapp and Edward E. Smith say that two generations of statisticians found that the ratio of convicts without religious training is about 1/10 of 1%. W. T. Root, professor of psychology at the Univ. of Pittsburgh, examined 1,916 prisoners and said "Indifference to religion, due to thought, strengthens character," adding that Unitarians, Agnostics, Atheists and Free-Thinkers are absent from penitentiariers or nearly so.

During 10 years in Sing-Sing, those executed for murder were 65% Catholics, 26% Protestants, 6% Hebrew, 2% Pagan, and less than 1/3 of 1% non-religious. Steiner and Swancara surveyed Canadian prisons and found 1,294 Catholics, 435 Anglicans, 241 Methodists, 135 Baptists, and 1 Unitarian.

Dr. Christian, Superintendant of the NY State Reformatories, checked 22,000 prison inmates and found only 4 college graduates. In "Who's Who" 91% were college graduates, and he commented that "intelligence and knowledge produce right living" and that "crime is the offspring of superstition and ignorance."

Surveyed Massachusetts reformatories found every inmate religious, carefully herded by chaplins.

In Joliet, there were 2,888 Catholics, 1,020 Baptists, 617 Methodists and 0 non-religious.

Michigan had 82,000 Baptists and 83,000 Jews in their state population. But in the prisons, there were 22 times as many Baptists as Jews, and 18 times as many Methodists as Jews. In Sing-Sing, there were 1,553 total inmates with 855 of them Catholics (over half), 518 Protestants, 177 Jews and 8 non-religious. There's a very interesting qualified statistic.

Steiner first surveyed 27 states, and found 19,400 Christians, 5,000 with no preference, and only 3 Agnostics (one each in Connecticut, New Hampshire, and Illinois). A later, more complete survey found 60,605 Christians, 5,000 Jews, 131 Pagans, 4,000 no preference, and only 3 Agnostics.

In one 29-state survey, Steiner found 15 unbelievers, Spirtualists, Theosophists, Deists, Pantheists and 1 Agnostic among nearly 83,000 inmates. Calling all 15 "anti-christians" made it one half person to each state. Elmira reformatory overshadowed all, with nearly 31,000 inmates, including 15,694 Catholics (half), and 10,968 Protestants, 4,000 Jews, 325 refusing to answer, and 0 unbelievers.

In the East, over 64% of inmates are Catholics. In the national prison population they average 50%. A national census found Catholics 15%. They count from the diaper up. Hardly 12% are old enough to commit a crime. Half of these are women. That leaves an adult Catholic population of 6% supplying 50% of the prison population.

Liverpool, England produces three percent as many young criminals as Birmingham, a larger city, 28% coming from Catholic schools. What does this tell you about parochial school systems or claims that religion is the guardian of morals?

Fifty-two percent of people belong to no church, yet live clean lives and supply less than 1% of the total criminal population. So much for religious indoctrination.
Interesting stuff. I would note a careful disparity must be made between correlation and causation. Also, the religious upbringing must be differentiated between the religious preference of the prisoner during the incarceration, as many get "jailhouse religion" at the expense of taxpayer dollar-funded programs in prisons and jails.
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Salvation and Damnation: A Panoply of Moral Dilemmas by Ken Nahigian

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How does one obtain “salvation” and avoid eternal hell? The Bible supplies more than one answer, yet each answer raises its own moral dilemma as we shall see after first reviewing the obligatory Bible verses below. (We will also be examining a variety of Christian responses from the "freewill defense" all the way to "Calvinism.")


ARE WE SAVED BY BELIEF ALONE?

“Whosoever believes and is baptized will be saved, but whoever does not believe will be condemned.” (Mark 16:16)

“... whosoever believes in Him shall not perish but have everlasting life.” (John 3:16)

“Whoever believes in him is not condemned, but whoever does not believe stands condemned already because he has not believed in the name of God’s one and only Son.” (John 3:18)

“He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him.” (John 3:36)

“He that heareth my word, and believeth on him that sent me, hath everlasting life.” (John 5:24)

Jesus answered and said to them, “The only work God requires is to believe in the one he sent.” (John 6:29)

[The jailer] “brought them out, and said, Sirs, what must I do to be saved? And they said, Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy house.” (Acts 16:30-31)

“For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith - and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God - not by works, so that no one can boast.” (Ephesians 2:8-9)

“... by the works of the Law no flesh will be justified in His sight.” (Romans 3:20)

“We maintain therefore that a man is justified by faith apart from the works of the law.” (Romans 3:28)

“If you confess with your mouth, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.” (Romans 10:9-10)

“So that the law has become our tutor to bring us to Christ, that we might be justified by faith. But now that faith has come, we are no longer under a tutor.” (Galatians 3:24-25)


OR ARE WE SAVED BY WORKS ALONE?

Take for instance the deed or act of forgiving others. According to the Gospel of Matthew it assures us God's forgiveness for ourselves: "Forgive us our trespasses [Father God], as we forgive those who tresspass against us... For if ye forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you." (Matthew 6:12,14)

[Jesus said] “Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil. For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled. Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven: but whosoever shall do and teach them, the same shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven. For I say to, That except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven. Ye have heard that it was said of them of old time, Thou shalt not kill; and whosoever shall kill shall be in danger of the judgment: But I say unto you, That whosoever is angry with his brother without a cause shall be in danger of the judgment: and whosoever shall say to his brother, Raca, shall be in danger of the council: but whosoever shall say, Thou fool, shall be in danger of hell fire.” (Matthew 5:17-22)

"Therefore all things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them: for this is the law and the prophets... Ye shall know them by their fruits. Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? Even so every good tree bringeth forth good fruit; but a corrupt tree bringeth forth evil fruit. A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit, neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit. Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewn down, and cast into the fire. Wherefore by their fruits ye shall know them. Not every one that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven. Many will say to me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? and in thy name have cast out devils? and in thy name done many wonderful works? And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity. Therefore whosoever heareth these sayings of mine, and DOETH them, I will liken him unto a wise man, which built his house upon a rock."(Matthew 7:12,16-24)

The "sheep and the goats" are separated on the day of final judgment and the goats get eternally punished while the sheep are granted eternal life, based on their works/actions/deeds: "When the Son of man shall come in his glory, and all the holy angels with him, then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory: And before him shall be gathered all nations: and he shall separate them one from another, as a shepherd divideth his sheep from the goats: And he shall set the sheep on his right hand, but the goats on the left. Then shall the King say unto them on his right hand, Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world: For I was an hungred, and ye gave me meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink: I was a stranger, and ye took me in: Naked, and ye clothed me: I was sick, and ye visited me: I was in prison, and ye came unto me. Then shall the righteous answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we thee an hungred, and fed thee? or thirsty, and gave thee drink? When saw we thee a stranger, and took thee in? or naked, and clothed thee? Or when saw we thee sick, or in prison, and came unto thee? And the King shall answer and say unto them, Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these my brethren, ye have done it unto me. Then shall he say also unto them on the left hand, Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels: For I was an hungred, and ye gave me no meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave me no drink: I was a stranger, and ye took me not in: naked, and ye clothed me not: sick, and in prison, and ye visited me not. Then shall they also answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we thee an hungred, or athirst, or a stranger, or naked, or sick, or in prison, and did not minister unto thee? Then shall he answer them, saying, Verily I say unto you, Inasmuch as ye did it not to one of the least of these, ye did it not to me. And these shall go away into everlasting punishment: but the righteous into life eternal." Matthew 25:31-46

“And behold, one came to Him and said, “Teacher, what good thing shall I do that I may obtain eternal life?” And He said to him, “...if you wish to enter into life, keep the commandments.” He said to Him, “Which ones?” And Jesus said, “You shall not commit murder; You shall not commit adultery; You shall not steal; You shall not bear false witness; Honor your father and mother; and You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” (Matthew 19:16-19)

An official asked him this question, “Good teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?” Jesus answered him, “... You know the commandments, ‘You shall not commit adultery; you shall not kill; you shall not steal; you shall not bear false witness; honor your father and your mother.’” And he replied, “All of these I have observed from my youth.” When Jesus heard this he said to him, “There is still one thing left for you: sell all that you have and distribute it to the poor, and you will have a treasure in heaven.” (Luke 18:18-22)

“God will give to each person according to what he has done. To those who by persistence in doing good seek glory, honor and immortality, he will give eternal life.” (Romans 2:6-7)

“...you, O Lord, are loving. Surely you will reward each person according to what he has done.” (Psalm 62:12)


OR ARE WE SAVED BY BELIEF AND WORKS (WITH THE EMPHASIS BEING ON WORKS, SINCE BELIEF OFTEN COMES WAY TOO EASY, AND EVEN DEVILS BELEVE)?

"What doth it profit, my brethren, though a man say he hath faith, and have not works? can faith save him? If a brother or sister be naked, and destitute of daily food, And one of you say unto them, Depart in peace, be ye warmed and filled; notwithstanding ye give them not those things which are needful to the body; what doth it profit? Even so faith, if it hath not works, is dead, being alone. Yea, a man may say, Thou hast faith, and I have works: shew me thy faith without thy works, and I will shew thee my faith by my works. Thou believest that there is one God; thou doest well: the devils also believe, and tremble. But wilt thou know, O vain man, that faith without works is dead? Was not Abraham our father justified by works, when he had offered Isaac his son upon the altar? Seest thou how faith wrought with his works, and by works was faith made perfect? And the scripture was fulfilled which saith, Abraham believed God, and it was imputed unto him for righteousness: and he was called the Friend of God. Ye see then how that by works a man is justified, and not by faith only." (James 2:14-24)


DISCUSSION OF THE ABOVE MEANS OF SALVATION AND THE MORAL DILEMMAS THEY PROVOKE

If salvation were important you would think that the Bible would speak about it with greater clarity and consistently. But lurking behind the question such apparently conflicting verses raise are other problems, deeper ones, for each alterative brings with it its own moral dilemma.

If faith/belief alone is sufficient, mass murderers like Oliver Cromwell, Torquemada or Hitler (all Christian believers) are in heaven, while compassionate non-Christians such as Anne Frank, Ghandi or Albert Einstein burn in hell. This hardly seems merciful or just.

On the other hand, if good deeds or works alone are sufficient, the practical distinction between ethical humanism and Christianity turns to vapor. Christian doctrine might well be true, but no more essential to salvation than chemistry or the binomial theorem. Instead of teaching about Jesus, Christian missionaries should try to convince people simply to be decent human beings, to love and care for each other. How many souls have they lost over the last two thousand years while pushing the wrong message? (Why do they still push it?)

If salvation requires both correct faith and good works, then Hitler and Torquemada may well be damned, but we still face the moral madness of basically good people burning in hell--Thomas Jefferson, Anne Frank, Mark Twain, Robert Frost, Albert Einstein, Luther Burbank or Buckminster Fuller, none of whom were orthodox Christian believers, as well as billions of others who were so unlucky as to be born into non-Christian cultures, down to the smallest, sweetest child. Forever. (And that means a lot of people, since the Bible seems to imply only a fraction of humankind will escape hell. See: Matt 7:13-14, Matt 22:14, Luke 13:23-24.)

Can such questions be resolved successfully and all such difficulties made to vanish? One attempt to do so involves linking faith with good works, as if sincere faith and moral behavior necessarily reflect each other. The argument, subtle and not unclever, goes something like this:

Correct & sincere faith inspires good works; good works indicate sincere & correct faith. A true believer naturally does good in order to honor and respect God. Any who claim to believe but who do evil are not truly committed in their hearts, or their faith is flawed. Moral midgets like Hitler and Torquemada did not really have faith, despite what they may have told themselves. Outstanding moral giants such as Spinoza, Anne Frank, Albert Einstein and Christopher Reeve did indeed have faith on a subconscious level, even if they were unaware. The same for innocent children and the righteous pagans. They were “Christian in their hearts.” They simply did not know it.

Clever as this is, it conflicts with what we see. In general, crime and immorality are not less in regions of deep religious belief, indeed are often higher. The American “Bible Belt” states, and religious nations such as Mexico or Brazil, have exceptionally high rates of violent crime, far higher than secular regions such as Japan or the Netherlands. This is a worldwide pattern. Among prison inmates in the United States, the measured incidence of atheism is about 1%, but in free society about 7% - 11%, suggesting religious skeptics are less likely to commit serious crimes. The sins and moral gaffes of evangelical leaders here are almost legendary. Even Billy Graham, supposedly the best of the lot, wrote a letter to Richard Nixon in 1969, demanding the bombing of farm dikes in North Vietnam – something that would have devastated the economy, constituted a war crime under international law, and killed over one million people.

As the great Christian writer C. S. Lewis wrote in a letter to a friend, “... we must fully face the fact that when Christianity does not make a man very much better, it makes him very much worse... no worse than an animal, something like a devil.”

In any case, it is difficult to swallow the claim that someone can be a religious believer without being aware of it.

The next popular rationalization comes in four flavors at least. The common thread is that God sets different conditions for different groups.

#1 God judges the ancient Jews and pagans (those who never heard of Jesus) by good works, the rest of us by faith. Innocents (those who died before they were old enough to make a decent decision) get a free ticket into heaven.
#2 God “looks into the hearts” of pagans and innocents, judging them by a general unspoken spiritual potential, an unconscious acceptance of God-seen-in-nature.
#3 God gives pagans and innocents a second chance. Immediately after death He reveals himself, then they may decide to accept or reject Him.
#4 It’s a mystery. God has a Secret Plan for the salvation of pagans and innocents. It is not our business to know.

These take the edge off the original dilemma, but open another can of worms: double standards. In #1 & #2, pagans clearly get the better deal, since to be saved they need only be good in a normal, everyday, human sense, or at least have a decent benevolent attitude, something most of us are inclined to anyway. Dying innocents get the best deal of all, an almost automatic ticket into heaven. It is enough to make you envious of crib-death babies; or wonder if abortion is really such a bad thing.

Likewise concerning #3 above; for in that case we struggle in a world of obscurity and doubt, stumbling in the dark, half-guessing, guided only by flawed human teachers and muddy texts two thousand years old with a hundred faiths shouting contrary interpretations in our ears. Meanwhile the pagan will get to meet God face-to-face before having to make his decision.

Such replies also make God into a “respecter of persons” (contrary to Acts 10:34-35), and to some extent salvation becomes a gamble, a matter of drawing the right straw, being born in the right time and place, or dying under just the right circumstances. Even worse, they subvert the motive for missionary work. Telling a pagan about Jesus erases the saving value of all his good works, or removes the “second chance” he is due for after death, putting him at immediate, profound risk of everlasting pain. So why tell?

Reply #4 is the most honest, and rather refreshing in its way. Yet Christians have mocked secularists for having no ready answer to highly technical questions about things like the evolution of bacterial flagellums. Now here we find a battleship-sized hole right in the heart of Christianity, a mystery concerning the salvation of 98% of all humanity--making Christianity a less certain worldview.

Beyond these, the arguments grow more surreal. One common stand is simply to shrug off the idea that God condemns people to hell. God condemns no one--rather, the damned damn themselves, they “choose” hell. Alas, this contradicts both the Bible and common sense. The Bible makes it clear that the torments of hell occur because God causes or ordains them in a very deliberate way. See Matt 7:13-14, Matt 13:41-42, Matt 25:41, Mark 9:44, Mark 9:47-48, Mark 16:16, Rev 20:10-15, Rev 21:8. Jesus “casts” souls into hell, commands them to “depart” into fire which was “prepared,” the smoke of the burning rises up “forever,” and so on and so on.

If you believe the Bible, damnation is a positive action of God, not something God is helpless to prevent. God is less like a fireman desperately running from house to house trying to put out fires-- more like an arsonist throwing lit matches into the basements.

The next common plea is that eternal hell is unfortunate but necessary. Why? Because God is a God of justice as well as mercy. We can’t have evil people in heaven. The reward of heaven would be meaningless without the alternative of hell’s punishment. Assuming “salvation by works,” such a plea might make some sense. Even then it seems strained.

As psychologists and criminologists know, punishment is effective only if it is swift, and if it is manifested in this life and commensurate with the crime. That is why a civilized society will guarantee a speedy and public trial (our 6th Amendment) and prohibit cruel/unusual punishment (8th Amendment). But what of infinite punishment for finite crime? What of punishments meted out in an invisible, secret place, known only by rumor--punishment occurring at the end of life or the end of all time, when all decisions are made and done, and lessons and regrets are useless? That is more like what we see in societies policed by secret, terrorist death squads. Such punishment must fail as a deterrent, and can habilitate no one. The only reason for it can be revenge. And that is unworthy of a just God.

(Ironically, the concept of "hell" has been used throughout Christian history mainly to frighten some Christians away from the "heretical" beliefs of other Christians, and thus it's been used mainly to try and promote uniformity of belief, which however never worked, since the "heretical" Christians simply used the same "hell-laden" language to dissuade their followers from joining the other sect in return. Some big examples include the mutual excommunication of two halves of Christendom at the time of the Catholic split with the Eastern Orthodox, and later at the time of the Protestant split with Catholicism, the latter of which was followed by The Thirty Years War. Even much later, Christian denominations in America--which sprouted up interminably in this new land--competed for souls hungrily with one denomination and their seminary blaming the rest for their "heresies." So for centuries "hell" did not prove much of an inspiration for people to avoid doing harm to one another in society in general, but provided plenty of reasons for Christians to distrust and fear each other's theological differences of opinion.)

Alternatives to the "eternal hell" view of course exist. It doesn't seem totally unreasonable to suppose that a truly loving and resourceful God might be able to find a way to save everyone. It might involve erasing some of the memories of wicked or recalcitrant souls, continual reeducation and repeated incarnations. Eventually, by law of averages, all souls would find salvation. It may take time, but God has infinite time, and infinite resources. So no problem.

At the very least, God could simply put unsaved souls to a peaceful rest, erase them, uncreate them or suspend their consciousness. After all, human doctors can repress consciousness, perception and sensation with the simple use of general anesthesia. Does it make sense to say humans can do something that God cannot?

Some sects and denominations do, in fact, believe in universal salvation or at least the peaceful annihilation of the unsaved. These are the Universalists and the Annihilationists. Some Evangelical Christians agree with one or the other of those two viewpoints. (*See note at end of article.)

One final, desperate argument declares the whole moral issue void. God made us, so God may do with us as He wishes, save or damn on a whim. God works under no moral strictures. Indeed, His will and His actions define morality. Whatever He does is right by definition. He is the Boss.

It’s a very Calvinist view. And it has a certain irony. It is like a loosing chess player sweeping all the pieces off the board. After Christians work so hard to convince us that God is loving, just and good, what a letdown to learn that loving, just and good simply mean “whatever God is.” Then saying “God is good” is as empty as saying “A = A.”

Maybe it is. In that case, God may also lie and break promises with moral impunity. It would be odd to claim that eternal torture of innocents is OK for God, but lying and promise-breaking are beyond the pale. So under the God-may-do-as-he-wishes logic, the Christian automatically looses all assurances, all guarantees--including guarantees of Biblical veracity, salvation and eternal life. Anything goes. All bets are off.

In fact, if morality for God is truly arbitrary and unrestrained, He could decide, on caprice, to send all Christians to hell and all atheists to heaven. It would be the last word in moral relativism. And the richest irony of all.

Are you sure you want to go there?

~~~~~~~~~~~

ENDNOTE
* There are Annihilationists among Evangelical Christians. For instance see the book, Four Views on Hell, part of the Counterpoints Series by the Evangelical publishing house, Zondervan Press, in which four Evangelicals debate their views of hell, one of them being Annihilationism. John Stott, author of the Intervarsity Press book, Basic Christianity, and member of the Evangelical Theological Society--is also an annihilationist. There are other annihilationist members of the ETS as well.

There are also Evangelical Christians who are Universalists. There were quite a few of them a hundred years ago who wrote popular books and preached powerful pro-Universalist sermons. It was also a view not unpopular among the earliest church fathers. Even today you can read the writings of famous Christian Universalists throughout history here; not to mention a recent book in which Evangelicals debate the topic, Universal Salvation? The Current Debate, Eds., Robin A. Parry and Christopher H. Partridge.

About the Author
KEN NAHIGIAN is a former Christian whose story, "How I Walked Away," appears on the Secular Web.

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Acharya S. and Dr. Robert Price on the Infidel Guy Show

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In the words of an email I received from Acharya S. --->


The stage: InfidelGuy.com
The event: Dr. Robert Price and I will be appearing together on Reg Finley's "Infidel Guy" radio program on Friday, September 1, 2006 from 8:00 to 9:00 PM EST/5-6PM PST.

The background: Dr. Robert Price is the author of several books on Christian history and mythology, including "Deconstructing Jesus." Some years ago, he wrote an unfavorable review of my book "The Christ Conspiracy" and revealed in it my real name, published in "Free Inquiry" magazine. Needless to say, this occurrence brought me quite a bit of grief.

In any event, cut to the current scene, Dr. Price has read "Suns of God" and written a favorable review and sent it for publication in his Journal for Higher Criticism. We have exchanged cordial emails over the months, and have mended the fences to my satisfaction. So, while this upcoming event will NOT be the contentious free-for-all that some may be hoping for, it WILL be a rare opportunity to hear two of the better known figures in the world of Christian origins and mythology come together for a (hopefully) civil discussion of what I consider some of the most important and interesting issues human beings can think about.

This may be the most important show I have ever done!

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Are Marriage Vows Immoral?

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We are repeatedly informed that the God of Christianity has absolute morals. Yet when we review the claims made about morality within the Christian world, we are often left scratching our heads. Clearly the claimed system of God’s absolute morality is nothing like what we think of as humans, and we puzzle and puzzle over what gets priority in this God’s world.

We think that genocide and the killing of baby boys is always immoral, but in this absolute morality of the Christian God, apparently at times it is morally acceptable. Numbers 31:17, Judges 20:48, and 1 Samuel 15:3. We think that murderers should be punished, not excused. And most certainly that their infant son should not be killed for their crime. 2 Sam. 12:15. But this is what is required in this absolute Christian God Morality scheme.

And we are told that the times of the Tanakh were different, and God related to the people in a different manner, imposing a different morality. (Sounding like a morality based on relativism, not being absolute.)

Taking just one example--Why did God change His position on taking vows? Did He discover that there is some scale of morality which allows a vow-taker to supercede other moral laws?


God, in the form of Jesus, makes His position on vows very clear. Don’t. “I say to you, do not swear at all.” Matthew 5:34. This is a change from what God had previously stated in Mosaic Law.

Under Moses, if one made a vow, there were certain requirements. Such as: they must not delay in performing it. Deut. 23:21. God even provided for a priority of vows, in that a woman could be overruled by her father or husband. Numbers 30:5 & 8. If a man makes a vow, he cannot break it, but must complete it. Num. 30:2

Following the imposition of the Mosaic Law, we have instances of people swearing to do things that are bound by them. Spies to Rahab the Harlot. Joshua 2:12. David to Saul. 1 Sam. 24:22. David to Bathsheba. 1 Kings 1:13. All of Israel. Ezra 10:5. On this last one, God was upset because they swore falsely, which was a problem. Jer. 5:2

Evidently taking vows was not only contemplated by God’s morality, it was regulated, and enforced. God did state that taking a vow would never be mandatory (Deut. 23:22) but one had the option. Until God said “Do not swear at all” in the Sermon on the Mount. (I have seen it argued that this is not a change in Mosaic Law. It most certainly is! Prior to Jesus, one could or could not take a vow, but if one did, there were certain limitations. After Jesus, one cannot take a vow. Period. That is a change.)

The author of James definitely got the memo, and reiterates God’s new commandment. (James 5:12.) The author of Hebrews apparently missed the new commandment and wrote about taking oaths as still acceptable. (Heb. 6:16) The author of Acts was absent that day, so they, too, seemed to think that God’s morality still provided for taking vows. (Acts 18:18 and 21:23)

Did God’s morality regarding taking vows change? Did something happen where God decided that swearing to do something was not such a good idea, and based upon new information, did away with it altogether?

I can’t help but wonder when God imposed the new rule on swearing, He was thinking about Jephthah and how poorly THAT all turned out.

Jephthah had a Gileadite father, but his mother was a whore. So all the legitimate Gileadites, in what has been unfortunately historical for Christian morality, threw him out of the community-- not based on what he did, but on something over which he had no control. (How Jephthah was to blame for who his mother was is beyond anyone’s guess. Still, he gets the punishment for his Mother’s occupation.)

It turns out that Jephthah was a big, strapping fellow, and being a courageous outcast, attracted a number of other outcasts, into an army. The Gileadites became threatened by the Ammonites. They needed Jephthah’s army. Again, in typical Christian manner, when Jephthah was needed, his heritage became no longer an issue, and the elders of Gilead swore to not only accept him, but to make him their leader. Despite the fact his mother was a whore.

Jephthah agreed to fight the Ammonites. He had an army and the support of his old community, although he lacked the support of the other tribes of Israel.

But Jephthah wanted more. An Edge. A Nudge. He makes a vow. If God would provide him the victory over the Ammonites, Jephthah swore upon arriving home, to provide as a burnt offering to God whatever comes out of his door.

And tragedy occurs. God provides the victory. And the first thing that meets Jephthah when he comes home is his only child—his daughter. Jephthah immediately realizes what he must do, and with wisdom beyond her years, his daughter (we never know her name) says, “You made an oath. You have to keep it. Do what you have to do.”

Jephthah is bound by his oath, and sacrifices his daughter. Now, in our humanistic determination, we would find this act immoral. While breaking an oath is assuredly not encouraged, it can be remedied here without the necessary loss of life.

Somehow, in this absolute morality proposed by the Christian viewpoint, breaking an oath is MORE immoral than killing an innocent child. If I swear to God if He gives a good parking spot, I will break the arms of my son—is it a greater sin to not break his arms upon getting right next to the handicap spot?

Is this why God, in the form of Jesus, decides to do away with swearing altogether, since He realized (upon becoming human) the ludicrous notion that keeping an oath is more important than human life or harm? But if God is changing his mind as to what is moral for humans, we end up with a non-absolute moral system in which to work. Just as secular humanists attempt to frame a moral system, and persuade others of its viability, the Christian is equally attempting to guess at what God wants humans to do and persuade others of the viability. We are no different—you and I.

[A side note for which I apologize, but it will come up, so I might as well head it off as best I can now.

Apologists typically argue that Jephthah did not actually kill his daughter, but rather devoted her to the Lord. The arguments in favor of this claim are:

1. Mosaic Law did not allow for human sacrifice.
2. Jephthah’s daughter’s response.
3. Other children (Samuel) were devoted to the Lord similarly.

The arguments against this claim are:

1. Mosaic Law is not clear about human sacrifice.
2. Jephthah’s response.
3. The “Festival of Lament.”

It leaves us in a bit of a quandary. I think the strongest argument against her being killed is in her recorded response. Upon learning the vow, she asks for a two-month reprieve (violating Deut. 23:21) to grieve over the fact that she will never lose her virginity. After it is recorded in the cryptic “Jephthah did what he vowed to do” we receive the further notation that she never had sex.

It seems odd (unless there was some cultural significance to this) that upon learning she would die, her biggest concern was that she would never get to have sex. While sex is great, at the moment, we would think dying would have a much higher focus of her attention. Further, if she was killed, the phrase, “And she never knew any man” become superfluous. Like saying, “Jephthah killed her, and on, by the way, she missed Yom Kippur next year.”

However, on the flip side, Jephthah’s reaction is extreme, if she was devoted to the Lord. Apologists claim that this is because his lineage would end (as she was an only daughter.) Why? There is nothing to indicate that Jephthah could not have any more children. This was a time of multiple wives. Of kidnapping other people’s daughters to bear children. (Judges 21:21) The Judge before Jephthah had 30 sons and (coincidently) the Judge after Jephthah also had 30 sons.

Jephthah had no inheritance (whore’s son, remember) and the story of his possessions is questionable. (Lived in Tob, but his house is listed in Mizpah.) There is no indication, and it is pure speculation, that Jephthah had any interest in continuing his lineage.

The passage records that each year, the daughters of Israel held a four-day event in which they recounted, or rehearsed the story of Jephthah’s daughter. (The word “lament” in the KJV is bad translation. Sorry.) Not even Samuel got that, and he was devoted, too! The impression left here is more of a tragedy along the lines of a death, rather than a life of servitude.

Mosaic Law does not help the apologist. According to Leviticus 27:3, if a person is consecrated by vow, they can be redeemed by payment to the priest. Jephthah would have had to pay 10 shekels to save her. (Lev. 27:5) A two-month lament? Tearing of clothes? After saving Gilead, we would think Jephthah could spring 10 shekels to save her.

BUT, Lev. 27:28 says no devoted offering may be redeemed. Worse, Lev. 27:29 says that one devoted to destruction could not be redeemed, but must be put to death. What is “devoted to destruction?” If the apologist claims that Jephthah’s daughter was not to be killed but was devoted to be the equivalent of a burnt offering, it would certainly seem feasible that Lev. 27:29 still mandates her death.

But Deut. 18:10 prohibits having one’s sons or daughters “pass through fire” which is claimed to be an idiom of child-sacrifice. Deut. 18:10 doesn’t say anything about fulfilling vows, though.

The best part of Christian “absolute” morals is that there are so many conflicting statements. If Jephthah devoted his daughter can he redeem her? “Yes”—Lev. 27:3, or ”No”-Lev. 27:28. If she was devoted to destruction, must she be killed? “Yes” – Lev. 27:29, “But not by fire” – Deut. 18:10. But Jephthah vowed a burnt offering. Which means, regardless of the apologetic position, he either breaks his vow, or breaks Mosaic law.

Under God’s “absolute morals” what is worse? See—we don’t know! It is all up to argument, and persuasiveness. Just. Like. Relative morals.

My resolution to the problem: I am convinced that Mosaic Law did not develop until the period of the divided kingdoms. The story of Jephthah is a legend from a time prior to Mosaic Law in which a Canaanite sacrificed his daughter in thanks for a victory. His story was incorporated in the Hebrew culture, and then made sanitized and made cryptic by removal of the actual sacrifice.)

As I read the tale of Jephthah, I can’t help but reflect on King David’s similar situation. King David committed murder (perhaps) but certainly adultery—a crime punishable by death. Yet in this Christian morality scheme, there appears to be an out. An exception. Regardless of the immorality or morality of an action, God can impose mercy, and exempt the person from punishment.

What is so “absolute” about that? We have an arbitrary determination of who gets exempted from punishment. Further, God, within this scheme of mercy, can inflict death as a punishment for this crime on another person! (See also “David’s Census.”)

At least with King David, we see that he did something wrong. There is nothing recorded that Jephthah did immoral. There is no reason why God could not have intervened, provided mercy, and saved the daughter. When asked “Why didn’t God?” all that can be said is, “We don’t know.”

Exactly. This system of “absolute morality” has introduced an arbitrary factor (God) in which we can no longer determine when they will step in, when they will not, nor the results. We see that God changes His mind about the morality of vows. We have no information as to the priority of morals—which is more important: death or keeping a vow or following the law?

Although it is not the sole issue with the concept of absolute morality, in this area what I see is one being absolutely ground in arbitrary:

Naturalist: As there is no way for us to determine absolute morality, we must determine it as best we can with what we have.
Christian: Ah—but we have Absolute Morality!
Naturalist: Grounded in what?
Christian: God.

Naturalist: And what is God’s morality?
Christian: As there is no way for us to determine God’s morality, we must determine it as best we can with what we have.
Naturalist: And this is different from me….how?

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Minister Sentenced for Sexually Abusing Women

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Along with Catholic molester priests there are a whole host of evangelical ministers and pastors who abuse people sexually. Just recently one was sentenced to prison for this. See here. What do you Christians makes of this? Ministers commit adultery, molest children, sexually abuse women, pilfer money from the church, and so on. Pastors are supposed to be the best examples of Christianity, but they don't seem any better than any other Christians. Why is this? Where is the power of the Holy Spirit in their lives? Why is it that Christianity is the only religion that claims a creator God (via the Holy Spirit) takes up "residence" in the life of the believer but it doesn't produce people who act any better than anyone else, especially its pastors?

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Did Darwin Lead to Hitler?

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Ed Brayton at Dispatches from the Cultural Wars recently wrote about the supposed connection between Darwin and Hitler. He concluded: The bottom line, and I do not think I'm being too strident in using this language, is that this simplistic "Darwin led to Hitler" thesis is laughably ridiculous. It simply cannot be taken seriously by anyone with even a minimal amount of historical knowledge and the ability to reason. See here.

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George Carlin is a Sun Worshipper

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Did you know George Carlin is a sun worshipper? This is funny. He's very good. How does he get away with this in a Christian dominated society?

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The 47th Carnival of the Godless

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The 47th Carnival of the Godless is up with something in it from DC.

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The Necessity of Atheism

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Over at Ebon Musings there is an essay on The Necessity of Atheism where one can find a brief summary of the core justifications for atheism. It's pretty good, but it doesn't allow for any discussion. So let's discuss it here. What do you think?

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There IS Reason to Hope

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Thanks to Ed Babinski for tipping me off to two recent articles from the National Secular Society, for they filled me with hope for our future this morning: Australian Youth Follow The Secular Trend, and Spanish Youngsters Have Had It With Religion, Too. From the articles (also see here):

Australian Youth Follow The Secular Trend
Aug. 11, 2006

Less than half Australia’s young people say they believe in a god, and many believe there is little truth in religion, a new study has found. The three-year national study, a joint project between Monash University, the Australian Catholic University and the Christian Research Association, found many young people live an entirely secular life.

The study, The Spirit of Generation Y, found just 48 percent of those born between 1976 and 1990 believed in a god. Dr Andrew Singleton of Monash University, a co-author of the study, said they were surprised by the findings. "It’s well known that there has been a turn away from church attendance and participation in young people," he said. "But we thought there was going to be a move towards alternative spiritualities. There are still a number turning towards it, but not as big as you would have thought."

Religious identity will be among the questions contained in this year’s Australian census. We see the same effect in this census as in the UK census, when 72% of people said they were Christian, even though every other survey and poll showed this to be vastly over-stated. This was because of poor wording of the question.

The Australian survey found 20 percent of young people did not believe in a god and 32 percent were unsure. It also found just 19 percent of those who identify themselves as Christian was actively involved in a church (attending services at least once a month). More than 30 percent of Generation Y was classified as "humanists," rejecting the idea of a god, although some believed in a "higher being."

Dr Singleton said it was a trend that was likely to continue. "We live in a very individualistic and self-orientated society and I don't see a lot of things challenging that," he said. “One of the many predictors of whether we become religious is our parents, and unless there is a massive cultural shift, I see that the trajectory will continue as it is."

Spanish Youngsters Have Had It With Religion, Too
Aug. 11, 2006

A poll of 1,450 young people in Spain shows that most believe that religion is of little importance and has no place in schools. The survey of people aged 15 to 29 shows that attitudes have changed radically since the era of the dictator Franco. Then, homosexuality was banned. Now gay marriage is legal, with 80 percent of those who were asked agreeing with the change in the law.

More than two thirds of those polled said they were in favor of abortion (legalized in Spain in 1985) and 76 percent said they approved of euthanasia "to help someone suffering from an incurable disease if they asked for it." A third declared themselves non-believers, with the majority of the remainder stating that religion had little relevance in their lives.

Although this will be good news for the socialist government of José Luis Rodriguez Zapatero, it will cause yet more angst among the Catholic hierarchy who have traditionally held enormous power in Spain.
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Truth in Advertising Laws Should Apply to Christian Propaganda!

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One of my favorite atheist sites is Daylight Atheism, where if you click on the link you'll see one reason why. The question addressed is why truth in advertising laws are not applied to Christian propoganda. A great question!

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Oh My Sweet...LORD!

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Oh, Jesus H. Christ, how I wish this was only a joke, but it's apparently not:


The sort of guilt-by-association that comes by this must do more to motivate a believer to single-handedly dismiss Christianity, sheerly out of a desire to dissociate from such a travesty, than all the horrors of the Dark and Middle Ages combined.

HT: Pandagon
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Impossible to Believe

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I write this post after having read J.E. Holman's excellent post "Now what, Christian?" I want to share a simple and profound truth, a realization that I have come to grips with: faith is impossible for me. Many Christians, upon hearing this, might blink at me with disbelief, protest in denial, or simply try and dialouge with me in hopes of showing me that I have a faulty conception of what faith is. I recall talking with a fellow apostate, Robin, and telling her that it's impossible for me to believe.

First of all, I tried to believe. I sincerely did believe for a decade that the Bible was God's word, that Jesus Christ was his Son, and that Christ was crucified to atone for our sins and that he rose from the dead. I sincerely did believe in creationism, in biblical inerrancy, in the loving providence of God. But now I cannot. I cannot go back to believing in any of that again. I cannot go back through the agony of second-guessing God's motives with each passing prayer, wondering if this or that is a yes-or-no sign. I cannot muster the intellectual gymnastics needed to make creationism or inerrancy work. I cannot work consciously to edit my thoughts and make sure that they confirm to the will of God. For me, it's impossible for me to do that all again. Even if I absolutely wanted to, I don't have the energy, the willpower, or the mental gymnastics. I have seen inerrancy and creationism refuted and I am extremely confident that the resurrection never happened.

Some believers argue that I was never saved to begin with. Even if that's so, why didn't God save me at the age I sincerely thought I was saved.?Why did God let me go groping around in the dark suffering under the honest delusion that I really was saved? What kind of God of love would allow for that? How long was God determined to let me undergo the delusion before having me snap out of it? Why did God let me labor under this delusion for 10 years? This is what I don't understand. I wanted to believe. I wanted the closeness I sincerely believed that others had with God. I wanted God to speak to my heart the way other Christians said that God did to theirs. I wanted so desperately to hear the voice of God, just some indication that he was there and that he loved me.

I wonder the same of other members who left the fold. Why didn't God really save John Loftus to begin with and never let him go? Why did God keep his eternal arms around Ed Babinski or JE Holman? I also think of Robert M Price and Charles Templeton. Both Price and Templeton really did believe that they were saved. Biblical criticism hit Price's faith and withered at it until there was nothing left and the problem of pain and suffering hit Templeton's heart until his faith eroded. If both men were unsaved, why didn't God save them to begin with? If both men were, indeed, saved, then why didn't God work harder to keep them into the fold?

All I can think of is that the biblical God must be a cruel beast if he really does exist. These honest men, including myself, absolutely wanting to believe. And yet we cannot believe. It's impossible for me. I am sure it's the case for Price and it was for Templeton. I will gladly let Loftus and Babinski speak for themselves. If God saved us, why didn't he keep us? Or, why didn't God save us to begin with so we would never leave the fold? I ask the question for many Christians: why does God make faith impossible?

Matthew

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Now What, Christian?

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The year was 1995. I was just about to begin preaching school, and when so much was going right for me as I went through every day, tinged with anticipation of the good things that awaited me in the ministry, I was troubled. I wasn't just troubled, I was stumped, disarmed by what someone, an atheist, had asked me. I was an outgoing personal evangelist for ten months before this as I hit the ground running at my conversion to save a sin-sick, dying world. I was used to facing tough questions while "witnessing" to unbelievers, but as a certain young, un-intimidating, blond-haired man sat before me (an atheist whom my preaching friends thought I had a better chance at converting), I was stopped dead in my tracks.

They were wrong. Not only did I fail to convert him, but he asked a question that totally disarmed me and made us all squirm. I had no answer for it, no sharp retort that would make me, my friends, and our faith look cool and sophisticated.

"Well, I honestly don't believe in the bible or Jesus. I've tried but I can't, so what is one to do if they can't believe?" I had no answer for him. I had never faced this question before. After unsuccessfully making an argument from Pascal's Wager, I think I remember saying something to him, like "just keep trying and God will providentially show you."

"So in the mean time, if I die without believing, am I going to burn?", he asked. After a long pause, and with an embarrassed look on my face, I said, "Yes, you will, but I will pray for you that God will grant you the time to repent."

I felt terrible saying this. The atheist was very soft spoken. He was an almost speechless kid, not particularly well versed in argument or atheology. He just couldn't believe. Our church youth group had been stringing this guy along for a while, asking him to pray and sing and come to youth functions with us. He did, but it was all to no avail. We never could convert him.

Before our conversation ended, I was compelled to say something rude. I tried one last time to guilt-trip him with a disturbing, unsettling comment that would prod him into submission to the fearsome almighty. Since the Bible made it clear to "seek and ye shall find," and "to him who knocks, it shall be opened" (Matthew 7:7), and since Jesus and his word could never be wrong, this could only mean that this young man who struck me as nothing but sincere and forthright in his desire to believe, didn't really want to believe. His heart was captured by satan, and I had to help him break free. I knew I was really honoring my God by saying this to finish off our conversation, "Too bad you're choosing to burn in Hell then! 'The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.'" He sharply acknowledged my slightly aggressive tone and said, "So because I can't believe, I deserve to burn?" I backed off him with something soft, like, "Just remember that in the time it takes you to come to belief, you are still lost and will burn in hell if you die in the mean time, but I will keeping pray for you." I thought I could get him to believe out of fear. But instead of getting a rise out of him, he just calmly glanced around, collecting his thoughts, and said again, "Well, if I can't believe, I can't believe now, can I? Why should I burn for following my brain?" As the discussion continued, his honesty continued to shine right through, making me yet more uncomfortable. He kept on inquiring what to do since he couldn't believe.

Out of options and desperate to make a convert, I said again what so many preachers say, "Just try and live the Christian lifestyle first and faith will develop later." He just grinned, shook his head, assuring me it wouldn't work, got into his car, and drove off. I never saw him again, and I don't even remember his name, but I think of him from time to time.

My preaching friends and I jested amongst ourselves how sad it will be to see that man's poor soul burning in Hell. One of my friends said to me, "I hope the Lord causes something bad to happen to him so he will turn to God." I shutter to think how I actually found such a statement appropriate at the time!

Leaving this discussion, I was angry at myself for not having the convincing words to convert him. I was also angry at the preachers I looked up to for not giving me the proper arguments to win over a hungering soul. I lost out to the devil. I felt defeated and weak.

Just less than ten years later, I found myself in exactly this man's shoes. In the summer of 2003, my wife, still a staunch believer, commended my soul to hell. When we began to argue over my decision to leave the ministry, I asked my wife, "What am I supposed to do? I can't believe in theism anymore. I've tried." Her words, "Then you'll just have to go to hell!" Amazing the role reversals life puts us through, wouldn't you say?

To this very day, there is no Christian who can deal with this question. They are painfully disarmed by it, and I can see why. It hurts to be out of options, to see a problem and know you can't fix it.

I want to take this time and ask our Christian readers, what do we hellbound infidels do now that your apologetics have failed, and your arguments and testimonies proven ineffective in converting us back to the fold? We've prayed and cried, and reflected on our inner-selves. We've read and studied and meditated and reflected some more on our sinful, depraved consciences, now what? What if we are never providentially led back into God-belief as most atheists aren't? What if we breathe our last breaths as unbelievers, painfully thinking to ourselves, "But I can't believe!" What should we expect when we wake up in the next world? Fire? Torture? Darkness? Tumultuous agony for eternity? When all your quips and quotes, your testimonies and trilemmas, your apologetics and promises, have failed to pierce our targeted hearts, then what?

Should we be thinking about how in hell we'll finally have the faith we wanted here on Earth and finally got the answers we sought, but now it's too late? Should we be thinking about how we had the freewill to believe, if only we'd used it, even though we couldn't use it because we couldn't believe? Should we be thinking about what we will say to God, the angels, and our fellow condemned souls as we are ushered off to the empire of the damned?

Now what, Christian? What are we to do? Where are your answers now? What witnessing tool will you whip out to finish this job? What assurances, what hope can you give us?

(JH)

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Welcome to the World of Christianity (by Harry McCall)

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As a Christian, you are now following THE supreme God who created the universe. The main facts you need to know are these:
Your God is omnipotent (Having unlimited power and authority).
Your God is omnipresent (He is present everywhere).
Your God is omniscient (Having total knowledge).
Your God commands billions of angels of which just one could destroy the world.

As a Christian, you are part of a large and diverse group totaling over 2.1 billion members that has a worldwide budget that totals approximately one half of a trillion dollars.

Satan (a fallen angel) is your main and only adversary who leads a small rag-tag army (1/3 the size of God's) of fallen angels (demons).

Satan has limited power (Only what little control God gives him).
Satan has no earthly members (Just a few "Dabblers").
Satan has no budget.

AND YET...

According to God's own word, the Bible (especially the Book of Revelation), God, with all the above supreme attributes, is losing a battle He created and even sacrificed His only begotten son to win.

For instance, most of humanity will one day stand before your God at the Great White Throne of Judgment to "give an account" of why they as mortal sinful creatures with limited understandings, screwed up, and then they will be cast into a Lake of Fire (whose smoke rises forever), i.e., blamed for their loss of innocence and (and/or their great great great ancestor's loss of innocence) for all eternity.

HOW ARE WE TO MAKE SENSE OF ALL OF THE ABOVE?

It is a divine Mystery. (A theological term employed by the Catholic Church to depict the lack of understanding we mere mortals have of God's ways.)

Harry McCall (former ministerial student, whose testimony appears in Leaving the Fold: Testimonies of Former Fundamentalists)

P.S., Liberal Christians and universalists may disagree with some of the above "welcome" statements, however, Christian philosopher Victor Reppert at his blog, "Dangerous Idea" has tangled with the question of how a finite being like Satan could be racking up so many souls compared with God who has an infinite amount of resources and wisdom as His disposal.

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More Chain-pulling for the Anti-Intellectualist Right

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A free marketplace of ideas doesn't bode well for orthodox Christian beliefs. An article in the American Family Association Journal, "Colleges Turn Left, Students Think That's Right," concludes:
what students and parents don’t realize is that today’s campuses are functioning as an indoctrination into the realm of liberalism. As early as the 1790s, Yale college students were openly disavowing Christ. Despite periods of revival, the denial of Christian beliefs and the acceptance of secularism have persisted and gained strength through the years.
Surely not! Surely being in a place which encourages rational thinking and critical examination of evidence and truth values is good for Christianity, right? Apparently not:



J. Budziszewski wrote,
The trial everyone has heard about – but most people underrate – is the sheer spiritual disorientation of the modern campus...Methods of indoctrination are likely to include not only required courses, but also freshman orientation, speech codes, mandatory diversity training, dormitory policies, guidelines for registered student organizations and mental health counseling
My favorite take on how these things endanger and indoctrinate students in an anti-Christian way comes from PZ Myers:
Mental health counseling, though, I can see as dangerous to born-again Christians. It might make them sane.
All Budziszewski has done is spread more of the "Religious Liberty for Me, but not for Thee," approach. That is to say that since universities encourage students to tolerate the views of others, Christians benefit (they are tolerated and allowed to exercise religious freedom) but decry the benefit being given to the Muslim, Buddhist, atheist...etc.

Given the fact that universities are flooded with Christian campus groups and often are set in college towns which contain at least 1-10 Christian churches per thousand people ratio, I find it hard to believe that people like Budziszewski could be so dense as to cry that attending a university "indoctrinates" you. As if university students are isolated from family and friends, or are not allowed to attend as many worship services a week as they want, and pray as much as they want, and read their Bible as much as they want, etc.

In point of fact, this belies the weakness of the value system Budziszewski wants to protect: these students choose to lay aside the faith of their childhood to explore the world of ideas they discover. Some find the world too large for the narrow mind they brought with them to college, and grow out of it. Big surprise...

American students (esp those raised in Christian homes, which is who this article is about) are basically surrounded by Christianity and Christian culture from birth. The truth is that Budziszewski knows this, and he knows that the "disorientation" he declaims platitudes over is really "exposure to different thinking." Well, sorry, but that's the function and purpose of a university. The reason this exposure is so deleterious in the view of Budziszewski and Focus on the Family and others is the moral and intellectual bankruptcy of many of these selfsame Christian beliefs and values -- they are easily shown as such.

If you want your kiddies "safe" from the "dangerous" ideas, then you'd better not just homeschool them for high school, but "home college school" them too. There's no better way to ensure the survival of your religious views than to isolate your children from reality, such that the indoctrination of views you've exposed them to since birth is never challenged by competing worldviews. This article really underscores the saddest thing -- these people can't see that the fact that university education frequently leads to a deconversion, or change in views, is quite telling of their childrens' views in the first place. If your kids are brought up believing ignorant things, and you want them educated, then what in the hell do you expect?

If you don't want them to question the logic of basing their entire lives on the reliability of a dusty set of scrolls of unknown origins, you'd better not send them somewhere that encourages serious rational thinking. The college you pick had better not teach them modern chemistry, physics, biology, etc., or else they may start to be a bit incredulous about axe heads floating on water, global floods and bathtub arks, and people raising from the dead (just like in other myths they learn as myths). Perhaps Patriot University ("Dr." Dino's alma mater), or Pacific International University ("Dr." Baugh's alma mater)?

Another funny note is that the public universities suffered a reversal in this trend since the '80s, whereas Christian colleges cause more deconversions since the '80s.

(HT: PZ)
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The Sick Mind of a Lone Christian

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Someone sick lone individual [who may not be a Christian after all, since the same thing has been done to Christians]is sending emails to people with mine and Daniel Morgan's return email addresses on them. Ed Babinski pointed it out to me because he received something that had the official look of coming from me, but it didn't come from me. Then on a different blog someone commented using my name who made statements to the effect that I was a homosexual pedophile, and by clicking on my name it takes a person to my blogger profile. I was alarmed at this and immediately denied that such a comment came from me, but my comment was deleted, leaving the other comment falsely attributed to me to stand.

Deleting my comment when I denied what that false impersonator wrote can be traced to the blog owner, and this is what I strongly object to and should be condemned even if the site is a parody of mine by a Christian. That blog owner is Paul Manata.

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"The Discomfiter," Christian History, Crazy Human Primate Species

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Layman, Thanks very much for your comments concerning my recent post, Steve Hays of Triablogue, The Discomfiter, and Stephen Colbert. I shared the information about bad/crazy things religious people have done (and the craziness of the conflicting varieties of Christianities) simply in an effort to level the playing field when dealing with someone as crazy as "The Discomfiter" whom I assume to be a Christian in atheist clothing bent on showing how crazy atheists must be.

I was not condemning all Christians, nor would I suggest that a person should disbelieve in Christianity because of its failures. I disbelieved in Christianity after examining the Bible and also after acknowledging goodness, love, and wisdom in people other than Christians.

As for charity and Christianity, or for that matter, civilization and Christianity, there are diverse opinions. But most would agree that Christianity's contributions in the arts and sciences peaked a while back. Today anyone of any religion or none can produce wonderful music, or impressive scientific research.

As for health care/hospitals, it’s true, in the early 1800s, religion was still the monopoly provider. And the hospitals themselves were each devoted to preaching the religion of a specific religious sect, and could turn away whomever they wished on that basis, or forbid the sick from being visited by ministers or rabbis of a rival sect while at the hospital but had to endure preachments made by that sect’s ministers. Also in the early 1800s that system was failing—remember Dickens?—and the response came swiftly. Think of Florence Nightingale (a universalist Christian, a view others deemed heretical, who taught that hospitals should admit anyone regardless of beliefs and also allow them access to whatever minister or rabbi they wished), or think of the Red Cross (the American Red Cross was founded by Clara Barton a universalist Christian, while the International Red Cross was founded by Andre Dunant--a gay man), Jane Addams and Hull House. New kinds of private, nonprofit organizations sprang up, as did unprecedented forms of government activity. It’s worth noting that most of the replacement institutions were not “lifestance organizations.” They weren’t other churches or fraternal groups. Indeed, they tended not to be the kind of organizations that sorted their members by lifestance at all. In a word, they were secular.

Dr. Albert Schweitzer, who spent years in Africa as a doctor and helped publicize the plight of suffering Africans, was a liberal Christian and author of The Search of the Historical Jesus in which he concluded that Jesus was a man who preached that the world was going to end soon. And, Helen Keller (the woman who lost her sight and hearing to a bout with Scarlet Fever when she was very young, but who learned how to communicate via touch, and who proved an inspiration to generations of people suffering from severe disabilities) was both a Swedenborgian, and a member of the American Humanist Society.

TODAY, a vast number of charities (including organizations devoted to finding cures for diverse diseases) are secular, or of a non-Evangelical Christian variety. There is the American Cancer Society, The Heart Association, The Will Rogers Institute, and many others. There’s the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation that Gates poured 30 billion into, and his friend Warren Buffet poured a little bit more than 30 billion into. (Both of those men being reticent and reluctant to connect themselves with religion.)

In fact, if it were not for a host of scientists, engineers and agriculturalists--who happened to be either lapsed churchgoers, unorthodox Christians, heretics, apostates, infidels, freethinkers, agnostics, or atheists--and their successes in the fields of agricultural and medical science, hundreds of millions would have starved to death or suffered innumerable diseases this past century. Those agricultural and medical scientists “multiplied more loaves of bread” and “prevented/healed more diseases” in the past hundred years than Christianity has in the past two thousand.

Likewise, TODAY, institutions of higher learning are mostly secular and non-Evangelical.

Richard Dawkins, an atheist, also has made a remark I find interesting: “If all the achievements of scientists were wiped out tomorrow, there would be no doctors but witch doctors, no transport faster than horses, no computers, no printed books, no agriculture beyond subsistence peasant farming. If all the achievements of theologians were wiped out tomorrow, would anyone notice the smallest difference?” [quoted in The Guardian]

As for famous atheists who have been mass murderers, yes they have. But they were driven not only by selfish ideals, but also religious-like ones, like promises of a “worker’s paradise,” or a holy book be it a “Communist Manifesto,” or in the case of Maoism, a “Little Red Book” with “verses” his people had to memorize. Such ideals and practices seem to motivate human primates en masse. Absolute certainty is certainly a huge temptation. Add the fact that the states and churches of Europe pounded the message into people’s heads for centuries, “Obey!” People were fed up with that. And Marx was fed up with the system of state and church that was using and abusing people as interchangeable parts in factories, the same factories that Marx’s religious counterpart, William Blake called, “Satan’s mills.” As for Hitler and Stalin, apparently they both wanted to become priests in their youth. And Stalin it appears was well versed enough in the Bible to be aware of the story of the betrayal of Christ by someone near him, and killed anyone he feared might one day become his Judas. Mao arose during the confusion and upheavals of a World War. The Kymer Rouge I have read arose partly in response to America’s war in Vietnam, especially illegal secret bombing missions conducted by the U.S. on the Cambodian-Viet Nam boarder. What I’m saying is that the history of human primates on this planet seems to have explanations of complex and varied sorts.

I think we were lucky that when Europe was going up in flames during the wars between Christian nation-states following the Reformation, they didn’t have modern weaponry. That “Thirty Years War” has been compared to World War 1 without the modern weapons. Of course the Christian west had the advantage of guns and steel and was able to exert control over a lot of the world for a couple centuries (not to mention the advantages that the “germs” carried by westerners to the New World, brought the conquerors).

About serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer, I read that he was raised Christian and in his youth attended a fundamentalist Christian school. He reverted back to his chilhood faith in prison. I’m sure his victims wished he had reverted sooner. Perhaps the portrayal in his school of atheists as evil teachers of total irresponsibility made him think that's all any atheist could or should be, and maybe he pawned off his own inclinations on "atheism," as an excuse, based on such teachings. Honestly, I don't know many atheists in America who would agree that a great way to make friends is to keep people's heads in your freezer.

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The Apostle Paul’s use of Analogy

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The Jewish historian Hyam Maccoby argues in his book “The Mythmaker: Paul and the Invention of Christianity” that Paul could not have been a trained Pharisee. He argues this through multiple lines of evidence, but one line of evidence that was interesting to me was that Paul did not reason carefully on many occasions. Maccoby thinks this indicates that Paul didn’t have Pharisaic training. One example he cites is the passage Romans 7:1-6.

1Do you not know, brothers—for I am speaking to men who know the law—that the law has authority over a man only as long as he lives? 2For example, by law a married woman is bound to her husband as long as he is alive, but if her husband dies, she is released from the law of marriage. 3So then, if she marries another man while her husband is still alive, she is called an adulteress. But if her husband dies, she is released from that law and is not an adulteress, even though she marries another man.

4So, my brothers, you also died to the law through the body of Christ, that you might belong to another, to him who was raised from the dead, in order that we might bear fruit to God. 5For when we were controlled by the sinful nature,[a] the sinful passions aroused by the law were at work in our bodies, so that we bore fruit for death. 6But now, by dying to what once bound us, we have been released from the law so that we serve in the new way of the Spirit, and not in the old way of the written code.


Here Paul is making the analogy that when a husband dies; the wife is free to remarry. This is to illustrate how Christians are free from the law and can now be the bride of Christ. On one side of the analogy, we have a woman/bride, a deceased husband, a new bridegroom. On the other side we have the Christian (who died and was raised with Christ), the Torah, and Christ (who died and was raised).

But for the analogy to work, he needs to keep straight who is the widow and who is the deceased. In his illustration it was the husband’s death that made the wife free. But the Christian is the “Bride” and the Torah is supposed to correspond to the husband. The one who is free to remarry in the first scenario is the one who didn’t die. The Torah is the only thing in the second analogy that didn’t die. But he isn’t making a point about the Torah being free to take a new groom. In order for the analogy to hold the law has to be what died, not the bride and/or the groom.

Apparently Paul is introducing the idea that our own death frees us from the law. But if that is the case, why isn’t he talking about the freedom of the dead husband? Shouldn’t Paul have talked about how the husband is now free from the wife to make the analogy work? Of course, freedom usually entails the power to do something. Either to do what is desired or what we should be done. Power and freedom are not properties normally associated with the dead. (Of course zombie weddings probably would not be common experiences for Paul’s readers, so the correct illustration would have been difficult.)

This apparently confused analogy leads to several questions. If God were to inspire a collection of books, wouldn’t he want them to reflect his nature? If there is a God, I would expect his intellect would be much greater than ours, and he could certainly guide his servants to make clear arguments and analogies. Why shouldn’t flawed analogies and arguments disqualify Paul’s writings as scripture?

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Steve Hays of Triablogue, The Discomfiter, and Stephen Colbert

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On the Christian blog, "Triablogue," I found a thread titled, "The Discomfiter," that discussed a new blog of that name by someone who claims he has deconverted from Christianity and become an atheist seemingly overnight, but whose arguments are mere parodies of the atheistic types of arguments at "Debunking Christianity." After reviewing the blog of the "The Discomfiter," Steve Hays at "Triablogue," wrote, "The only plausible alternative is that The Discomfiter is legit, but out of his mind."

Is that the only "plausible" alternative? Maybe for Steve, who already views all non-Christians as insane in some sense in God's eyes, but anyone with a lick of commonsense could tell "The Discomfiter" was NOT legit from the start. Apparently Steve's legit-o-meter is broken. Makes me wonder whether he watches "The Colbert Report" and finds the "only plausible alternative" to be that Stephen Colbert is a genuine Right Wing fanatic?

If you need further evidence that "The Discomfiter" isn't legit listen to his radio interview on Unchained Radio where The Discomfiter imitates Jack Nicolson (or maybe Robert M. Price) and says that logic, time, and evil, don't exist, and adds, "poison can be harmless one day and deadly the next, that's how ruled by chance the cosmos is" (my paraphrase). The folks who "called in" were also "plants," with phony questions and phony personas like "The Discomfiter" himself. It was a total joke in a Stephen Colbert vein.

One irony this brings up however is the fact that unlike "crazy atheists" like "The Discomfiter," there's far more crazy Christian stories in the news, i.e., from people falling over themselves to see everyday objects that look like Jesus; to Christians being scammed out of billions via "religious affinity" scams (as reported in Christianity Today where the Christian investigator admits, "Religious scams are among the most common and Christians are easy targets.") See also Baptist Leaders Caught Fleecing the Flocks). Or see The North American Securities Administrators Association report, "Preying on the Faithful: The False Prophets of the Investment World," that describes one outfit that cited the blessing of the tribe of Asher by Moses in Deuteronomy that “the feet of the people will be bathed in oil” as the basis for drilling for oil. Or just google, "Preying on the Faithful." (I guess the Biblical promise that God will give "wisdom" to all who pray for it, doesn't work, because I bet a lot of scammed Christians first prayed to God asking whether they ought to hand over their money and signatures to these other folks or not. The scammers themselves are often Christians with far too much faith in both God's ability and their own to multiply monetary blessings for His brethren.)

Equally devastating are the stories of devout Christian heads of mega-corporations. Have you read about the ones involved in the two biggest corporate scandals in recent times, the heads of Enron and WorldCom. They were truly devout believers. Read the above pieces about their faith and belief in their Bible-God's directing hand by clicking on Enron and WorldCom.

Or have you read the latest articles chronicling Protestant ministers who abuse kids or other reports of clergy sexual abuse (even in the Boy Scouts, another firmly theistic group, whose history of abuse goes way back and who have obstructed the release of files on the matter), not to mention THE LARGEST CASE OF CHILD PROSTITUTION IN U.S. HISTORY, that involved Reverend Tony Leyva, Pentecostal TV-evangelist who used to wear a Superman costume and carry a Bible, nicknaming himself “Super Christian,” and who was in the Guinness Book of World Records (for four years) for preaching the longest known sermon (72 hours straight), and who was hired by a Georgia television station to replace Jimmy Swaggert’s show, was arrested by the FBI, along with three of his fellow fundamentalists, on charges of transporting boys across state lines for the purposes of prostitution or criminal sexual activity. Reverend Leyva railed in public against “filth” and “smut.” In private he sodomized more than 100 church boys, and was sentenced to 20 years in federal prison in 1989. [See Brother Tony’s Boys: The Largest Case of Child Prostitution in U.S. History]

Or how about cases of Christians murdering other Christians during exorcisms (you'll have to ask me to send you those, from different sources); or devout Christian wives murdering their sons and daughters (I'm not talking about taking a "morning after pill," but killing already born children); or serial killers like the Son of Sam and Jeffrey Dahmer claiming they had become "born again" in prison.

Then there's fiascos like the mega-church that spent a quarter of a million dollars to build a replica of the Statue of Liberty, but their version holds a cross aloft instead of a torch and clutches the Ten Commandments to her breast. What about the guy in the rainbow colored wig who used to hold up signs that read, "John 3:16" at televised sporting events? Do you know what happened to Rockin Rodney? Or how about a famous evangelist (Arthur Blessitt) who is currently raising money to launch a cross into outer space so it circles the globe.

So the world of religion remains crazier, wilder(and far funnier)than the world of atheism.

But one of the craziest things in my opinion is the fact that the earliest Christians didn't stop writing tales about Jesus and Paul and other apostles with the New Testament's books and letters, but continued to write additional Gospels and Acts and fake letters of Paul and Peter (including descriptions of visions they allegedly rec'd). Some scholars of course doubt that Paul and Peter wrote everything attributed to them in the Bible itself. Talk about early Christians being devout liars, who may have even thought they were inspired to collect and write down such tales. (The New Testament itself, in the book of Jude, even cites an ancient literary forgery as if it contained a genuine "prophecy" from "Enoch the seventh from Adam.")

Christians continued lying over the centuries concerning what famous non-believers and/or heretics said on their death beds, faking stories about what Voltaire said to what Darwin said.

Wild crazy Christian urban legends have also been passed around by Christians for decades, like the "sound of hell, taped from the bottom of a well drilled deep below the earth's surface." Or "end times" madness. Or "man-prints found inside dinosaur prints." I haven't even scratched the surface of the Pentecostal world and its crazy tales. Or nudist Christians down in Florida. (Yup, Christianity includes folks who like to cover their bodies like Amish and Catholic nuns, but it also includes naked clergymen and naked congregations who preach the good NUDES about Jesus Christ.)

More fun info below! Be discomfited!

Christianity runs the gamut...

From silent Trappist monks and quiet Quakers--to hell raisers and serpent-handlers;

From those who “hear the Lord” telling them to run for president, seek diamonds and gold (via liaisons with bloody African dictators), or sell “Lake of Galilee” beauty products--to those who have visions of Mary, the saints, or experience bleeding stigmata;

From those who believe the communion bread and wine remain just that--to those who believe the bread and wine are miraculously transformed into “invisible” flesh and blood (and can vouch for it with miraculous tales of communion wafers turning into human flesh and wine curdling into blood cells during Mass);

From those who argue that they are predestined to argue in favor of predestination--to those who argue for free will of their own free will;

From those who argue God is a “Trinity”--to “Unitarian” Christians (including not only Unitarian-Universalist churches, but some backwoods primitive Baptist churches, and Messianic Christian-Jewish denominations, not to leave out God’s chosen people in the earliest “testament” in the Bible);

From those who believe nearly everyone (except themselves and their church) will be damned --to those who believe everyone may (or will) eventually be saved;

From those who taught/teach that heretics and apostates ought to be executed [some Reconstructionist Christians still teach it would be good to bring back the practice] -- to Albigensian and Cathar Christians who outlawed violence and taught that the shedding of blood and the killing of any living thing, even the slaughtering of a chicken or ensnaring a squirrel, was a mortal sin (a belief they based on the spirituality and metaphors of Christ's meekness and forgiveness in the Gospel of John). [See The YellowCross: The Story of the Last Cathars’ Rebellion Against the Inquisition 1290-1329 by René Weis]

From Christians who view Eastern religious ideas and practices as “Satanic”--to Christian monks and priests who have gained insights into their own faith after dialoging with Buddhist monks and Hindu priests;

From castrati (boys in Catholic choirs who underwent castration to retain their high voices)--to Protestant hymns and Gospel quartets--all the way to “Christian rap;”

From Christians who reject any behavior that even mimics “what homosexuals do” (including a rejection of fellatio and cunnilingus between a husband and wife)--to Christians who accept committed, loving, homosexual relationships (including gay evangelical Church groups like the nationwide Metropolitan Baptist Church);

From Catholic nuns and Amish women who dress to cover their bodies--to Christian nudists (viz., there was a sect known as the “Adamites,” not to mention modern day Christians in Florida with their own nude Christian churches, campgrounds and even an amusement park), and let’s not forget born-again strippers;

From those who believe that a husband and wife can have sex for pleasure--to those who believe that sex should be primarily for procreation--to those who believe celibacy is superior to marriage (i.e., Catholic priests, monks, nuns, and some Protestant groups like the Shakers who denied themselves sexual pleasure and only maintained their membership by adopting abandoned children until the last Shaker finally died out in the late 1900s)--all the way to those who cut off their genitals for the kingdom of God (the Skoptze, a Russian Christian sect);

From those who believe sending out missionaries to persuade others to become Christians is essential--to the Anti-Mission Baptists who believe that sending out missionaries and trying to persuade others constitutes a lack of faith and the sin of pride, and that the founding of “extra-congregational missionary organizations” is not Biblical;

From those who believe that the King James Bible is the only inspired translation--to those who believe that no translation is totally inspired, only the original “autographs” were perfect--to those who believe that “perfection” only lay in the “spirit” that inspired the writing of the Bible’s books, not in the “letter” of the books themselves;

From those who believe Easter should be celebrated on one date (Roman Catholics)--to those who believe Easter should be celebrated on another date (Eastern Orthodox). And, from those who believe that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son (Roman Catholics)--to those who believe it proceeds from the Father alone (Eastern Orthodox view as taught by the early Church Fathers). Those disagreements, as well as others, sparked the greatest schism of church history (the Schism of 1054) when the uncompromising patriarch of Constantinople, Michael Cerularius, and the envoys of the uncompromising Pope Leo IX, excommunicated each other;

From those who worship God on Sunday--to those who worship God on Saturday (Saturday being the Hebrew “sabbath” that God said to “keep holy” according to one of the Ten Commandments)--all the way to those who believe their daily walk with God and love of their fellow man is more important than church attendance;

From those who stress “God’s commands”--to those who stress “God’s love;”

From those who believe that you need only accept Jesus as your “personal savior” to be saved--to those who believe you must accept Jesus as both savior and “Lord” of your life in order to be saved. (Two major Evangelical Christian seminaries debated this question in the 1970s, and still disagree);

From those who teach that being “baptized with water as an adult believer” is an essential sign of salvation--to those who deny it is;

From those who believe that unbaptized infants who die go straight to hell--to those who deny the (once popular) church doctrine known as “infant damnation.”

From those who teach that “baptism in the Holy Spirit” along with “speaking in tongues” are important signs of salvation--to those who deny they are (some of whom see mental and Satanic delusions in modern day “Spirit baptism” and “tongue-speaking”);

From those who believe that avoiding alcohol, smoking, gambling, dancing, contemporary Christian music, movies, television, long hair (on men), etc., are all important signs of being saved--to those who believe you need only trust in Jesus as your personal savior to be saved;

From Christians who disagree whether the age of the cosmos should be measured in billions or only thousands of year--whether God pops new creatures into existence or subtly alters old ones--even some who disagree whether the earth goes round the sun or vice versa;

From pro-slavery Christians (there are some today who still remind us that the Bible never said slavery was a “sin”)--to anti-slavery Christians;

From Christians who defend the Biblical idea of having a king (and who oppose democracy as “the meanest and worst of all forms of government” to quote John Winthrop, first governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, with whom some Popes agreed, as well as some of today’s Protestant Reconstructionist Christians)--to Christians who oppose kingships and support democracies;

From “social Gospel” Christians--to “uncompromised Gospel” Christians;

From Christians who do not believe in sticking their noses in politics--to coup d’etat Christians;

From “stop the bomb” Christians--to “drop the bomb” Christians;

From Christians who strongly suspect that the world will end tomorrow--to those who are equally certain it won’t.

All in all, Christianity gives Hinduism with its infinite variety of sects and practices a run for its money.

E.T.B.
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The Christian God--or gods? For out of Paraguayan Catholics, Vermont Congregationalists, Utah Mormons, and New Zealand Anglicans, sprout as many gods as are carved on a Jain temple wall.

John Updike
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In practice, Christianity, like Hinduism or Buddhism, is not one religion, but several religions, adapted to the needs of different types of human beings. A Christian church in Southern Spain, or Mexico, or Sicily is singularly like a Hindu temple. The eye is delighted by the same gaudy colors, the same tripe-like decorations, the same gesticulating statues; the nose inhales the same intoxicating smells; the ear and, along with it, the understanding, are lulled by the drone of the same incomprehensible incantations [in the old Catholic Latin mass tradition], roused by the same loud, impressive music.

At the other end of the scale, consider the chapel of a Cistercian monastery and the meditation hall of a community of Zen Buddhists. They are equally bare; aids to devotion (in other words fetters holding back the soul from enlightenment) are conspicuously absent from either building. Here are two distinct religions for two distinct kinds of human beings.

In Christianity bhakti [or, loving devotion] towards a personal being has always been the most popular form of religious practice. Up to the time of the [Catholic] Counter-Reformation, however, the way of knowledge ("mystical knowledge" as it is called in Chrstian language) was accorded an honorable place beside the way of devotion. From the middle of the sixteenth century onwards the way of knowledge came to be neglected and even condemned. We are told by Dom John Chapman that "Mercurian, who was general of the society (of Jesus) from 1573 to 1580, forbade the use of the works of Tauler, Ruysbroek, Suso, Harphius, St. Gertrude, and St. Mechtilde." Every effort was made by the [Catholic] Counter-Reformers to heighten the worshipper's devotion to a personal divinity. The literary content of Baroque art is hysterical, almost epileptic, in the violence of its emotionality. It even becomes necessary to call in physiology as an aid to feeling. The ecstasies of the saints are represented by seventeenth-century artists as being frankly sexual. Seventeenth-century drapery writhes like so much tripe. In the equivocal personage of Margaret Mary Alacocque, seventeenth-century piety pours over a bleeding and palpitating heart. From this orgy of emotionalism and sensationalism Catholic Christianity seems never completely to have recovered.

The ideal of non-attachment has been formulated and systematically preached again and again in the course of the last three thousand years. We find it (along with everything else) in Hinduism. It is at the very heart of the teachings of the Buddha. For Chinese readers the doctrine is formulated by Lao Tsu. A little later, in Greece, the ideal of non-attachment is proclaimed, albeit with a certain, pharisaic priggishness, by the Stoics. The Gospel of Jesus is essentially a gospel of non-attachment to "the things of this world," and of attachment to God. Whatever may have been the aberrations of organized Christianity--and they range from extravagant asceticism to the most brutally cynical forms of realpolitik--there has been no lack of Christian philosophers to reaffirm the ideal of non-attachment. Here is John Tauler, for example, telling us that “freedom is complete purity and detachment which seeketh the Eternal...” Here is the author of “The Imitation of Christ,” who bids us “pass through many cares as though without care; not after the manner of a sluggard, but by a certain prerogative of a free mind, which does not cleave with inordinate affection to any creature.”

Aldous Huxley, Ends and Means: An Inquiry into the Nature of Ideals and into the Methods Employed for Their Realization
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Live long enough and you’ll encounter a lot of folks who say you are not really a Christian for a host of reasons. I’ve found the “no-true-Christian-would-do-or-believe-XYZ” game one of the more popular among, well, Christians.

Jonathan ( jge642000@yahoo.com ) at the yahoo group ExitFundyism
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People have an amazing ability to fool themselves. Even Christian theology teaches that there are those who think they are believers but aren't. But just watching, as I have, an Islamic music group from Malaysia makes one realize how similar their actions are to those of a Christian music group. To see a man standing in deep meditation outside of a Shinto temple in Japan makes one wonder how belief comes about. To see a woman with great concern on her face burning a huge number of incense sticks at a temple in Hangzhou, China (one of my very favorite pictures) tells one that fervent prayer (and belief in the efficacy of prayer) is not the sole province of the Christian. To see how devoted Tibetan Buddhists are to their beliefs when compared with levels of devotion shown by many western Christians to theirs, makes one wonder why so many of us are less committed than them; same with the Islamacists who are willing to die for their beliefs while much of the West is not interested in self-sacrifice.

Glenn Morton [Evangelical Christian], American Scientific Affiliation (ASA) Email Discussion Group (June 16, 2006)
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In my journeys in Christianity both in America and abroad I’ve run across a myriad of believers, a mosaic of Christianity:

I remember a converted Christian who used to be a “Satanist ,” saying, “What’s the big deal about smoking marijuana?”

A Pentecostal pastor in Holland sat crying at a street side cafe worried that one of his woman parishioners was going to hell since she had stopped coming to church and was now wearing make-up.And as he cried, his tears rolled off his cheeks into his beer. (Many Pentecostal Christians in the U.S. ascribe to an ethic of absolute abstinence from alcohol.)

I’ve known Christians who won’t own a TV; others who won’t allow playing cards in their house, and others who drink alcohol liberally and have every material possession imaginable. Others attempt to memorize the Bible to such an extent that it blocks most of their own personal original thoughts about anything; others who are social activists who take up causes like opposing abortion or picketing a Marilyn Manson concert; others who are simple and humble and feed the poor and house the homeless; others who are missionaries in third world countries suffering hardship for the “cause of Christ.” There was a sub group, however, in my institute who were King James Only--they believed the KJV was the only true inspired Bible for today and that all other versions were corrupted. As a group, they were radically enthusiastic and were proud to be KJV ONLY, and often fueled arguments over alternate translations. Heaven forbid they should catch anyone reading or enjoying The Living Bible (a modern English paraphrased translation of the ancient Hebrew) which they viewed as “the Devil’s work.”

Karl Arendale at the Yahoo Group, ExitFundyism
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Theology is a comprehensive, rigorous, and systematic attempt to conceal the beam in the scriptures and traditions of one’s own denomination while minutely measuring the mote in the heritages of ones’ brothers.

Walter Kaufmann, The Faith of a Heretic
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Was Jesus Left Handed?

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While on vacation, my best friend and I decided to golf. We attempted to put together a set of clubs from various sets available where we stayed and ran into an immediate problem—he is left-handed. No left-handed clubs.

Yet one more of a variety of nuisances a left-handed person endures in a predominantly right-handed world. (Before anyone panics, we were able to borrow a left-handed set where we golfed.)

Thinking about it, I asked my friend if he would have preferred to be right-handed. “Sure, it would make things like this so much easier, and not being a baseball player, there is no advantage.”

If you hold to a pre-incarnate existence for Jesus, then there has been one human in the entire course of history that actually got to choose--before birth--whether they would be predominantly right-handed, left-handed or ambidextrous. In fact, by holding to a virgin birth, it was absolutely necessary for Jesus to pick out His specific DNA, prior to being born. Could not let the chips fall where they may, because Joseph was not providing any.

What DNA did Jesus choose? Did he go with right-handed (to make his life a bit easier) or left-handed (to suffer a bit)?


Many of us have wrestled with the concept of Jesus being God and Human. The idea of “100% God and 100% Man” is as problematic as the quintessential High School coach that says, “Give 110%.” We all know that 100% is the most we could ever possibly give, and in the same way, no creature could be of such a dualistic nature and consist of “200%.”

What traditionally happens, in this discussion, despite long dissertations, and numerous citations, is that it boils down to “We don’t know.” Is that satisfying enough? Yet another, in a long list, of items claimed by humans to exist in a God, yet when questioned, the human can only say, “It simply is—we don’t know why.” If this is not convincing to you in the field of cosmology or abiogenesis, (while remote, at least it is feasible for natural causes) why should it be convincing to me when you are claiming something that is logically impossible (not feasible at all)?

Rather than the traditional arguments, I got to contemplating on the concept of Jesus picking out His own DNA. (Creating a conundrum in itself, as Jesus, always existing, would always KNOW what DNA he would pick, and therefore had no real choice. He already pre-knew he would be right-handed, so how could he have chosen differently?)

First, the basics. We read that God forms normal humans in the womb. Job. 31:15, Psalm 139:13. Jesus claims to have existed long before he was born. John 8:58. Even if Mary supplied half the DNA, she had no Y-chromosome to make Jesus male, so at the least that had to come from God.

There’s Jesus, say 10 BCE, putting together his DNA to see how he will turn out when a human. Hmm…first problem. According to Luke 4:2, there was at least something that would tempt Jesus to sin. Heb. 4:15 says He was tempted in all ways just like we are.

It would seem that many people have a genetic predisposition toward certain sins. If Jesus was to be tempted in “all ways” (there’s the troublesome phrase) did he include those predispositions in his DNA? Did he include a propensity toward alcoholism, so that he could be tempted in the same way that a human with a similar propensity is?

If there is a genetic inclination to homosexuality—did Jesus include that as well? Or toward gambling? Or a higher libido? As we look about us, we see that many humans struggle with various problems at different levels. Did Jesus include all that in the mix as well, so as to be intimately familiar with how a person could be tempted in those regards? Does he include desires? James 1:14

Frankly, I think feet are one of the uglier body parts. A woman’s bare foot is about as exciting to me as a rock. However, there are some people that have a foot fetish. Seeing a bare foot causes them to lust. A sin. Did Jesus throw in a foot fetish in his DNA?

Or does “tempted in all ways” merely mean representative?

“Here Jesus, have a drink!”
“Oh wow. There for a moment I was tempted to have too much. There. That takes care of alcoholism, drug addiction, gambling addiction, workaholics, LSD and pot.”

“Hey Jesus, let’s go make out with those girls.”
“Whoops. I was tempted to lust for a second. There. That takes care of lust, fetishes, pedophilia, necrophilia, sodomy, adultery and fornication in one fell swoop.”

Of course, the traditional response to this may be, “It will mean what we want it to mean at this particular moment, but we haven’t even figured out how one creature can be 200%, so we really don’t know how 100% of a creature can be tempted (Heb. 4:15) and 100% of the same creature NOT be tempted (James 1:13) without it looking like a complete logical contradiction.”

Or did Jesus have an inclination to “nudge” His DNA a bit? He could zip up his IQ a few dozen points, just by including the right cells. Is that getting the whole human experience? Would it have been more appropriate to include Dyslexia?

According to Luke 2:47-48, by the time Jesus was 12, he was astounding the teachers at the temple with his understanding. How did he get so smart? Did he “nudge” his IQ at the time of he made himself, so as to astound those simpletons? He was God—how far could he bump it and make it seem legitimate? 200? 250?

Or, in order to have this knowledge, did he do a little tapping into the 100% God part and dig into omniscience? Does 100% Human include the ability to tap into 100% God at will? Can any of us, when stumped, reach over with our brain into the God-Brain part of us and triumphantly shout, “Ha! There’s that tricky answer!” Of course not.

There is no DNA for that.

The ability to even utilize any of the 100% God eliminates Jesus from being 100% Human, since no other Human has ever been able to do that.

How many other things did Jesus foresee and include in his own DNA? Not eating for 40 days is possible. (Luke 4:2) But by including a gene that would give one a lower metabolism would sure help the process.

And what was Jesus’ pain threshold? Knowing he was going to be crucified, did he “nudge up” that threshold just a bit, in order to endure? Or, aware he could tap into God when he wanted, did he not bother?

Stories are recounted as to the 100% Human Jesus using the 100% God Jesus as needs arose. If he was hungry, he could turn a few fish into a banquet. (Mt. 15:36-38) (But with that metabolism he gave himself, maybe he didn’t need to.)

While we all understand the social necessity of taxation, it does not mean we like to pay them. To all the 100% Humans reading this, wouldn’t you like the chance to draw from a 100% God inside of you and find money to pay your taxes? That is what Jesus got to do. No 100% human has the ability to guess that the next fish caught would happen to contain inside it the right amount to pay for their taxes. (Mt. 17:24-27)

Is it possible we have not found psychic DNA, which Jesus used, or is it more likely that Jesus borrowed some of his God-power on this one?

I do not know of any DNA that allows one to walk on water, or control weather, so on those, I would think Jesus also dipped into the God-side. (Mark 6:48; Luke 8:24)

(As an aside, if there are instances in which we observe Jesus utilize the God-power, it is very probably that he equally used it in situations we could not observe. How do we know he suffered while being crucified? All he had to do was turn on some God-power and all the pain would disappear. He didn’t even have to act in pain, because he was doing the silent suffering servant bit. By foreseeing the future, he could have been watching a Tigers/Sox baseball game in his mind the entire time!)

At the time the Gospels were written, concepts such as DNA, or genetic manipulation would be inconceivable. Now we gained knowledge in these fields which render even more problems to the stories of a God creating a human form for Himself. How does a God pick how much IQ to give Himself if He is to interact with Humans? How much pain threshold? If he is to be tempted by hunger, how much metabolic rate? How remarkable is it for a God to appear in Human form, if he has picked the best DNA from the crop?

I propose that the First Century writers not only did not know of these scientific findings, but would not have cared even if they did. They were writing mythos or legend. Anything that seemed problematic could be resolved by “It’s a miracle.”

Little has changed in 2000 years, except now Christianity is attempting to maintain a reasoned scientific position in a more knowledgeable world, and many people are scratching their head, wondering how this fits with what they know.

In the end, I think the better solution is to stick with “We don’t have a clue—chalk it up to another unexplainable facet of God.” But I hope Christians understand that a human giving dogmatic descriptions they insist on being accurate, but then are unable to explain makes the proposition not very convincing.

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The Omniscience Defense

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Vic Reppert has weighed in on my suggestion that God could’ve created us with wings by using the best possible Christian response, which I’ll call The Omniscience Defense. Most other Christians, with the exception of Layman, have been critiquing my suggestion by actually denying that God could create human beings with wings, which I think I’ve sufficiently responded to here. It amazes me that some critics who think God is omnipotent are actually taking the Non-Omnipotent Defense, as I call it, since that’s what my argument has forced them to do. These Christians might as well join the ranks of panentheists right now.

Anyway, Vic is at least smart enough to provisionally grant for the sake of argument that God could’ve created humans with wings. At least that avoids panentheism. He can stay in the Christian community for now. ;-)

Reppert replied: “Let me grant, for the sake of argument, that I can't think of any good reason why God couldn't have given us all wings. Exactly what does that buy the atheist? Why is this any different from the argument that says ‘There are gaps in the fossil record, I can't see how evolution could have make these transition, therefore there is no naturalistic explanation for these transitions and a creator must exist.’"

If you’ll notice, Vic doesn’t initially argue his case when he poses a different problem for the atheist. If I say "you have a problem," and my “conversation partner” (i.e. politically correct definition of antagonist or opponent) says, "yeah, well you too have a problem," he has not answered his specific problem. As far as my specific problem goes, I am not a specialist in science, especially when it comes to evolution, and I’m not required to be a specialist in every area about that which I generally think is the case. Though I do present a good case for not believing in the Biblical God here at DC on other grounds. Just start reading here to see my reasons.

Vic again: “Let's take a humbler example. Many Monopoly players try to make the game more fun by collecting all the payments to the bank from various sources and putting them on Free Parking. Then when someone lands on Free Parking, they get all that money. And there is nothing wrong with changing the rules in that way. However, there is a reason why the game itself doesn't do that, which was explained in The Monopoly Book. Monopoly games tend to be long, but the game ends when all but one player goes bankrupt. Taking money that would otherwise have gone into that bank and putting it back into the hands of players slows down this process and makes the game even longer. Now, I had never thought of that. What looked like an improvement to the game of Monopoly had a downside I didn't realize until it was pointed out to me. So what about my [John’s?] suggestions for improving the universe? The makers of Monopoly are mere mortals. What about a being of infinite intelligence? Is it not at least possible that from the point of view of Omniscience our proposed improvements for the universe really might not turn out to be improvements after all. Think about that next time your opponent lands on Park Place when you have a monopoly there.”

This is the most intelligent objection that a Christian can make against my argument. But it fails miserably…miserably. Since I am preparing to have a public debate on the problem of evil with David Wood of www.answeringinfidels.com this October I do not want to tip my hand too much here. The short answer is that the Omniscience Defense cannot overcome the fact that more knowledge does not mean a suspension of the knowledge one has. Let’s say that I fell off a bridge while working on it and ripped my arm off in the process because I didn’t have wings to fly. I would be in a great amount of pain if that took place. That is knowledge that I personally have about the pain of losing an arm. And it is knowledge about the future prospects of living life without an arm. Call this possible world X. The Christian theist is arguing that world X (for me or for humans in general) is better than if my arm was not amputated in this manner if I had wings. Call this preferrable non-amputated arm existence, possible world Y. What would it take to make world X better for me (or humans in general) than world Y? Nothing in this world, I’ll tell you that right now. Nothing. That’s my judgment, as it would be your judgment if it happened to you.

In fact, I cannot conceive of world X ever being better than world Y no matter if I won a lawsuit and became rich because of it, or if I won the sympathy of the woman of my dreams because of it, or if I became famous as a result of it. I would not trade my arm for anything. Now along comes a theist who tries to argue that God knows why he didn’t give me wings and that I should trust him. But then I take a look at my arm and I cannot conceive of world X being better than world Y. I cannot even conceive of any possible reason why this God might have for not giving me wings, given the nature of world X. So without even being able to conceive of a possible reason for not giving me wings, I can legitimately ask why I should trust the Omniscience Defense in the first place. More knowledge will not help, unless that knowledge is contrary to how I judge things. That’s right. It’s not just more knowledge we’re talking about here. God must have contrary knowledge that I cannot even conceive as to the reason he didn’t give me wings. But if his contrary knowledge is not something that I can conceive, then I have no reason whatsoever to trust that he exists or that he knows something about world X such that it’s better than world Y, for it is much more reasonable to trust what I can conceive than what I cannot conceive.

Ed Babinski has often quoted Voltaire on this subject who said: "The silly fanatic repeats to me... that it is not for us to judge what is reasonable and just in the great Being; that His reason is not like our reason, that His justice is not like our justice. Eh! How, you mad demoniac, do you want me to judge justice and reason otherwise than by the notions I have of them? Do you want me to walk otherwise than with my feet, and to speak otherwise than with my mouth?"

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Again, Why Couldn't God Create Us With Wings?

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Let me respond to a critic who has mocked my suggestion that God could’ve created us with wings here. In the first place I chose this particular example knowing it's not the best example I can conceive of to be different in our world, for a reason. If I can defend this lesser example then it will be even more defensible when I defend other, better examples. But I can defend this change, and I will do so here.

My critic wrote:
But is that practical from an engineering standpoint? You can’t just graft a pair of wings onto a human being and make it fly.

No I can’t. Are you saying that God can’t? Why? Why can’t he? He’s God. Do you really think God is omnipotent or not? Could God have created us so that we could levitate? Yes or no? Could he have created the laws of the universe such that they allow for levitation or not? Is he in charge of the laws of the universe or not? Or is God limited in what he couls create by these laws such that God must create a universe within the bounds of certain laws of creation which he never created? Let’s say he cannot do this by natural means because he never created the laws of nature. Then who did? To say God is limited in his creative power by the laws of the physical universe is to say he did not create the laws of the universe. Then who did create them? Where did they originate from?

Furthermore, if God cannot create just anything in the natural world because of these laws, then why can’t God merely supercede these laws? Let’s say that God couldn’t create fleshly creatures who could levitate by virtue of the supposed fact that he cannot change the laws of nature. Then why is it that God couldn’t cause us to levitate whenever we thought about levitating, much like Superman flies through the air by thinking of flying without any known propulsion? Why can’t God do this? He can and any Christian who thinks otherwise is just not thinking. He could do anything in the physical world irregardless of whether he can create the laws of the universe or not. He can make human beings who have wings and could fly. He could make us look every bit like we do with operational wings.

God could do this naturally by reducing our body weight like birds if he wanted to, or increase the muscles in our wings so that we could fly, or he could just make us fly when we thought about flying. Did you know that God could reduce the size of this universe, this whole universe, by 10 times, or 100 times, or a 1000 times and we would not know the difference since everything will look the same size to those who have been reduced in size? So, if our body weight is too heavy to fly then he could cut our body weight in half or more by merely reducing the whole size of the known universe? Or he could have reduced the size of planet earth (or whole solar system) and the gravitational field would make us lighter in weight (like the gravitational field on the moon). Or he could have just made gravity such that even with the present size of earth it would allow us to fly with wings. And if by changing the present force of gravity may cause other unforseeable problems in the universe, then God could fix those things too. Or God could maintain a perpetual miracle at some point, which would fix any problems with a less intense gravitational force. For those who say God must create and maintain a natural universe with no perpetual miracles I wonder why that must be the case. Does this God ever get weary? Would maintaining a perpetual miracle make him tired somehow? Then how can he truly be omnipotent?

But my critic has further objected to what I argued for in this way: “If you modify a man, at what point does he cease to be a man?” What can be made of this? This presupposes that God must make a man. Is this because God must make man in his physical image or something? Hardly. If the English word “man” only applies to presently existing human beings, then with a major winged change that English word no longer applies to us, of course. But we would still be able to redefine the English word “man” to include a human being with wings. What is essential to the Christian for there to be free willed creatures who decide their destiny apart from God’s directly felt presense, anyway? Why do we have to be warm blooded creatures who can’t fly? Why? I see nothing about such creatures that requires that we must necessarily be warm blooded creatures who cannot fly? Nothing. All that’s necessary is that we are thinking creatures who have free will, from the Christian perspective.

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Reppert on Ridiculing One's Opponents.

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One of the most intelligent Christan bloggers is Victor Reppert who recently commented on those who comment on Christian and atheist blogs. To see all that he said go here. I totally agree with him when he wrote: "I really dislike ridicule, from either side of the fence." He also said, "I consider the ridicule heaped on atheists that I see on some blogs to be a bad witness." I think the same as he does when it's the atheists who are doing the ridiculing. I'm not saying there isn't a place for some of it in some forums specifically addressed to the proverbial "choir" for venting and/or entertainment purposes. It's just not something I pander to here at DC from either side of the fence.

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What Could God Have Done Differently?

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David Hume argued that if he could come up with one improvement to God's purported creation that it would call into question God's goodness. He suggested four things, one of which is that God could've created us with a greater propensity to work (more energy). So let me open this up for discussion. If you were God, what would you reasonably do differently to make this a better world with less suffering?

Let me be the first to suggest an improvement. God could've created human beings by adding a pair of wings to our backs so that we could fly. There would be no more falling to our deaths. We would have better transportation such that there would also be fewer fatalities on our roadways and airways. Such a winged improvement would result in less suffering than our present bodies. We know God could've done this because there are naturally existing birds in this world who fly. So why didn't he?

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From Religion to Reason

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I was born in March of 1978 to a young Christian couple. My dad was a divinity student at a Bible college in San Jose and my mother was on medical leave, herself a student. I was raised in a very conservative Christian family. My dad was a minister and my mother was a housewife and music leader for our Church. When we were growing up, like many other Christian families, we were taught never to question the faith. Religion was never considered a matter of reasoning or logic but we were taught to believe it based on authority; religion was not something that was backed up by historical or any other kind of scientific evidence or any sort, but rather, it was true because my dad said so.

I was first baptized at 13. I really didn't have a deep grasp at what being a Christian was all about. It wasn't so much that I really understood what Christians described as a "relationship" with Jesus Christ. Rather, I had convinced myself that I committed a sexual sin and sought relief from the guilt it created. Some time after I was baptized, I backslid for a year or so. In the summer of 1992, my dad moved our family to San Francisco. My dad was the only pastor at a First Christian Church and the Board of Trustrees had decided to prepare a house they owned next door to be a parsonage for my family. My mother didn't want to go but my dad wouldn't hear of it. After much arguing my dad moved us over there, having put his foot down.

My dad decided to enroll my brother Dan and myself in a private Christian high school. I recall meeting an English teacher who was a committed Christian. Impressed by his character, I decided to devote my life to Jesus Christ. This time I wanted a relationship with Jesus. Things went well for some time. But soon enough I began to have doubts. How did I know Christianity was really true? I believed it wholeheartedly but I began asking myself how did I know it was true, though? What got me to question it, I am not sure but I did. And the doubts crept in, especially when I once heard a guest speaker at my high school give a talk. Did I handle my doubts in a calm, rational, and objective manner? Far from it! I hit the panic button! I recall the first time I ever had doubts, rather than try to rationally analyze them and treat it as a problem to be solved, I tried a silly superstitous ritual to revitalize my faith. It worked and I was able to stave off doubts for some time. But, like a pesky poltergeist, they would return.

I never really talked to my dad about doubts I had or trials I seemed to go through. He seemed to get rather angry that I would even doubt or question the faith. I recall one time I asked a very innocent question to my dad. I was fascinated with theology and asked him a simple question because I thought he was the best resource. My dad could've replied "That's an interesting question, Matt. I never really studied that a lot. Tell you what-why don't you go down to the library or a Christian bookstore and see if there are any books on the subject?" His actual response was in angry frustration: "I don't know and to tell you the truth, I am not really worried about it!" Offended by such a response I recall saying "Geez..you're a grouch!" "You have no right to call me that!!!" he yelled, snapping back at me. I recall leaving the living room thinking what a jerk he was.

After this and similar experiences I decided not to go to my dad for help. I couldn't go to my mother because she would simply refer me to my dad and it seemed like every time I had a problem or trial in my life my dad would make me feel very guilty or stupid for letting a problem "get to me". As far as my religious problems went, I knew I was on my own. Sometime after my freshman year, I became interested in "apologetics". Apologetics is the art of defending the Christian faith. Now, one might assume that I would simply go to the nearest Christian bookstore and stock up on Josh McDowell, Paul Little, and other Christian apologists, right? Well, not exactly.

Inspired by a television show, I decided to manufacture my own proofs of God's existence. All from the Bible! What a naive young teenager I was! When I was in my sophomore year of high school, I decided to test my "proofs" out on my history teacher. You can imagine the expression on my face when he saw right through them! But problems got worse. That year marked my first deep exposure to the theory of evolution beyond a mention of it in a history book from my freshman year. I recall reading my dad's college biology textbook on the "evidence" for evolution and I recall reading the first chapter of Romans and about how men exchanged the glory of the immortal God for images made to look like mortal man and creatures. Somehow I just knew Romans was right but I had no clue how to explain the "evidence" for evolution.

About a week before Thanksgiving of my sophomore year, I was jumped at the public high school I had been going to. The administrators at Galileo High couldn't assure my parents that I would be safe from the gang-related activity so I was withdrawn. My parents decided to homeschool me. That proved to be a mistake as well. By that time I had gotten interested in apologetics. My dad decided to try to talk me out of it. According to my dad, instead of being interested in apologetics, I should think about becoming an inventor. That way I could make a lot of money. But I wasn't interested in making any money at that time. I was only 15-16 for Pete's sake! I wasn't going to make up for what I later thought was my dad's or grampa's lost dreams of being rich and very wealthy. Yet my dad thought that Christians should be trying to make a lot of money and preach Christ crucified to their friends.

My dad didn't like the thought of apologetics very much. My dad thought that a good testimonial of the joy that Jesus gives someone should be more than sufficient proof that Christianity was true. My dad expected us to believe the faith was true mostly because of his testimonial ( the irony, of course, was that my dad was just as often grumpy and grouchy as he was joyful as I was growing up). But there was something odd about testimonials. I couldn't put my finger on it right then and there but there was something fishy about it. I would learn a short time later that many different religions as well as atheism, pantheism, deism, and agnosticism had glowing testimonials and using glowing testimonials to argue for Christianity was special pleading at best. Never-the-less my dad believed that a testimonial was the only correct proof that anyone could need or want that the faith is true. My dad just couldn't see how anyone who was not a Christian, after meeting him, could not want to become one.

That Christmas, I got McDowell's tome Evidence That Demands a Verdict. Here was the miracle tylenol that I needed to quench my doubts! I recall devouring the chapters on the historical reliability of the Bible and the chapter on fulfilled prophecy. So impressed with this book, I decided to write to the ministry and express my struggles with evolution. I was sent a book by McDowell on the subject of evolution (yes, the very one that Glenn Morton had ghost-written the section on evolution for!) I had at this time became fascinated with "creation-science" and started odering books from the Institute for Creation-Research and The Bible-Science Association, if I recall correctly.

It was at this time that my dad was considering moving out of the city. My mother was happy because we had a family meeting and my dad was strongly considering it, especially after he had played a game of basketball with my younger brother Dan in the backyard. Everything was going pretty good it seemed. Or so I thought.

I don't know what it was but my dad made some decisions that he didn't explain to us. My dad thought that it was a mistake to take me out of public school and so the next year, I learned, I would be going back to public school and he decided that we were not moving out of the city. My dad not only didn't expain it to us ( he felt he didn't need to explain his decisions; we just had accept them without question) but his personality seemed to take a turn for the worst. Over the next couple of years my dad seemed to become more grumpy and much more domineering. He fancied himself the unquestionable father figure.

I recall going to Pt. Magu naval base (near Santa Barbara, California) to visit my uncle Bruce and his family. When I went there, my grandmother made me a grandiose offer; she offered for me to go up to Oregon and stay there and even go to a Christian high school. As much as I loved the opportunity I turned it down. My dad wouldn't even hear about it. I just knew it. My dad wouldn't even discuss it, wouldn't hear of it, just put his hand up and look the other way.

Soon enough I found myself back in high school. I went to Arroyo High school in San Lorenzo. I was determined this time to get straight A's. I tried and I tried but I barely got above C's or B's. I tried my hardest but I felt that my hardest was far from good. I couldn't go to my dad for help because I felt that he would get angry. I didn't even want to go for help. I had this stigma of going to help for my studies. I felt that the only proper way to learn anything was to do it all by yourself without anyone's help whatsoever. Help was the whimp's way out. It was a complete academic cop-out. It was my responsibility and mine alone to get good grades without anyone's help.

I never achieved academic excellence. Nor did I ever meet my dream girl. Throughout junior high and high school, as far as I could tell, I always wanted a girlfriend. All the other kids seemed to have a romantic partner, including Christian kids, so why not me? Why shouldn't I be privy to the same kinds of blessings as other kids? I recall sitting in a chemistry class at Arroyo and looking at the girl, Heather, sitting behind me. It dawned on me that no girl would ever like me, especially not in high school. My junior year of high school was the year of hell for me. However, my senior year of high school wasn't so bad. In fact, it was much better! I not only finally made honors but I decided to dress differently, to try to fit in. I thought that if I dressed like my brother Dan, I was bound to get a girlfriend. So I dressed like my brother. All the girls seemed to adore him. The girls thought he was so cute. I so envied him. I graduated from high school with honors that semester. Everything seemed to be going well except that Mrs. Right never came along. What happened?

In my freshman year of college, I encountered a different atmosphere. I joined the Los Positas College Republicans and became the treasurer. It was going good for a year. I managed to do well, but not quite honor material. Still the girl of my dreams didn't show up. I managed to do well until the next fall. My whole life then fell apart. I was feeling more lonely than ever. I decided to stop dressing like my brother because I wasn't fooling anyone and I wasn't being myself. I decided to go back to being nerd-boy.

It was in the fall on my sophomore year that I fell swoop into deep clinical depression. I recall taking a chemistry class and I became very suicidal. All I could think of was my dream girl. It wasn't fair. I was missing out on so much! So I ended up withdrawing from all my classes. When I finally told my dad he exploded. I enrolled back into my college but it wasn't the same. I tried to ward off depression as much as I could but my emptiness consumed me. I was still very deeply depressed. At that time something interesting happened. I had ordered a book by a Christian astronomer who argued that the universe was very old. I read this book and became persuaded that the universe was indeed ancient and so I became a progressive creationist. I even recall a fellow Christian trying to persuade me to become a young-earther again. Didn't happen though. Then came graduation day. A girl in the Christian club named Eunice graduated with highest honors. What the hell?! That was no fair! She is as happy as can be and a straigh A student while I was a miserable and a mediocre student.

I pretended to be happy for my graduation but I was feeling miserable. I couldn't see the fairness in any of this. I didn't go to a university that fall. My father suggested that I take a year off from school because my parents reasoned I was feeling burnt. Well not really. I was depressed because of some stingy deity who was playing favorites with people and tormenting others purely for the hell of it.

It was after my graduation that my family moved from San Francisco to Manteca. My dad got so sick of my mother's griping and about how miserable she was in the city that he resigned from the ministry and my family moved. I was so happy to leave that Church. I started attending a contemporary Church in Manteca, called "Calvary Community". I decided to seek Church counseling for my depression. Who knows? Maybe I would even meet a lovely Christian girl there.

First I went to the worship service with my parents and then to my parents' Church-of-Christ. Soon after, I went to Calvary exclusively. I became friendly with the worship team there and some of the pastors over time. They got a new pastor there named Dan. He was a great guy, someone you could really laugh with. I recall discovering at that time the websites that attacked "creation-science" and so I wondered if there were any that attacked the Christian faith. I decided to go through the google search engine and found a site attacking biblical inerrancy by a former Christian named Fred.

Upset by this, I went out to Barnes and Nobles near where I worked, and purchased Gleason Archer's book Encyclopedia of Bible Difficulties. I challenged the skeptic to a debate. I was so cocky-sounding and determined to make a fool of this atheist. I found out that Archer had made a mistake and I found myself apologizing to this skeptic for my rude behavior and feeling that I had my clock cleaned, I didn't want to debate any further. He was grateful for my apology and told me not to feel so bad.

My depression didn't lift at all. In fact, it grew worse if anything. I was feeling constantly suicidal. No amount of counseling helped me. Around this time I went to look for more sophisticated apologetics. I don't recall how but I soon hit upon the Secular Web. I found Jeffrey Jay Lowder's anthology debunking McDowell's book. I decided to take a second look at McDowell's book and I was shocked to discover many errors and logical fallacies I didn't see addressed on the "Jury is In". Soon enough I began to realize that Christian apologetics was falling apart. Not only was McDowell's book shot through with errors but the progressive-creationist books were flawed as well. It was at this time I began having serious doubts. I read some blistering essays by Robert M Price. He wrote a kick-ass review of Bill Craig's book, which he entitled "By This Time He Stinketh". I was troubled by what Price and others wrote. I recall reading that a narrative or two in the Bible was not in the earliest manuscripts. This troubled me. If stories such as Jesus and the women caught in adultery were not in the earliest manuscripts, what was? What might be in the earliest manuscripts that might not have been in the original autographs? If these stories were added to subsequent generations of manuscripts, then that meant one thing: the Bible had been tampered with. I began wondering if the Bible was tampered with on these points and if it was..what else had been tampered with? On top of deep depression I began to wonder if the faith really was true.

I was attending a college youth group at the time. I told a youth minister named John Hoppis that I was considering taking a leave of absence to tackle my questions. John persuaded me to stay and share my concerns to the youth group. I guess I was expecting a warm and understanding atmosphere. What I got instead was an judgemental and icy reception. When I went there, I encountered a self-righteous jerk named Jason Wallenberg who attended the group with his girlfriend Liz. I explained my doubts and Jason tried to argue a confession out of me that I was looking for reasons to be self-serving. What the hell??? Another guy named Mike Mercer tried to help me but was utterly clueless. While I loathed Jason for his self-righteousness, I thought Mike was well-meaning but a moron. I tried explaining my intellectual doubts to him but he thought that the reason I had doubts was because I was not doing daily devotionals with prayer! Presto! That was it! I just wasn't pronouncing "Abbra-Ca-Dabbra" correctly or snapping my fingers as I was doing it! It was so simple, wasn't it Mike? All I had to do was click my heels three times while chanting "There's no place like home, there's no place like home!"

The solution was ludicrous! Why would I continue to pray and read the Bible when I wasn't so convinced that the Bible was God's word after all? What the hell kind of stupid solution was that? I wasn't going to continue praying or reading the Bible until I found out why on earth should I even believe it was God's word. I wasn't going to pray or read it until I knew what historical evidence existed to back up the faith's claims! I wasn't going to pray or do devotionals until every contradiction or error was solved to my satisfaction! I wish I had discontinued to go there. Hell, I wish I had began reading the Bible more closely and critically. I would've noticed the contradictions and errors earier and I would've left the faith earlier. But, no, like a fool I stayed.

I began to realize that most Christian apologetics had very little substance to it. I found that the last reasonable reconciliation of Genesis with science was the Days of Proclamation theory, championed by Alan Hayward and Glenn Morton. This theory stated that each day of Genesis was literal but was a day of proclamation or fiat. Thus we have a literal creation week followed by billions of years of astronomical, geological, and biological evolution which fulfilled the creative proclamations of Genesis! The flood of Genesis, I came to conclude, was a local flood and the Garden of Eden was where the Mediterranean Sea now was. It made so much sense now!

I came to the conclusion that Christian apologetics was in need of deep reform. It was around this time that I became aware of the Skeptical Review and the SkepticsAnnotatedBible. But I only read critiques of the Skeptical Review, never really read many of the articles themselves. As for my depression, it was still there. I was still deeply depressed and still to a large extent suicidal. I recall once deciding to end my life. I looked up a gun store in the Yellow Pages and found one on Yosemite Ave. I started down there. My plan was to find out how much a 45 semi-automatic handgun cost. I would then go to Bank of America and withdraw the necessary funds from the ATM.

As I was going down there, I noticed the family car pulling up and my dad asked me if he could give me a ride somewhere. I couldn't tell him I was going to blow my brains out. Knowing a Bank of America was near, I told him that I was going there to get a withdraw. He showed me a B-of-A machine nearer to our house. It amazed me how close I came to ending it all that day. Now my dad wasn't expecting to find me there nor did he know of my plans. In fact, it was purely coincidental that he pulled up to where I was. I attributed the aborted plan to divine intervention and so I tried to get closer to God. I tried to pray to him. I tried harder and harder. Nothing seemed to work. I could be out on the backlawn trying to pray and it would be interruped because an ant would crawl on me.

I would be trying to pray in my room but at times I would encounter a cold, deafening silence. My faith was on very weak grounds. After having someone else's romance rubbed in my face, I would sometimes go into my room screaming at God "Why do you hate me?!?!?!" No answer. Just a stubborn silence. Near the summer and then the fall of 2002, I discovered Deism. I really liked it. A belief in a Creator based solely upon reason! Sounded absolutely delicious. But no. I knew better. The Christian faith was backed up by solid evidence. I printed out some essays online from a few Christian apologetics websites. I also had some debate books in which Bill Craig seemed to kick skeptics' asses on the resurrection.

I was absolutely miserable at this time. Like it or not, the Christian faith was backed up by historical evidence. No matter what pleasant, freethinking alternative was available, some Christian apologist be it William Craig or James Patrick Holding always had a rational rebuttal to it. At the end of the day, I was always left with the conclusion that the faith was true. I was miserable and I began to hate apologetics. I hated it to death! I was "stuck" with apologetics now matter how miserable trying to be a Christian made me. I loved Deism on the other hand. I recall a week or perhaps days before my deconversion thinking "I could be a Deist right now if the resurrection wasn't backed up by historical evidence!" I was infuriated. Sadly, no one knew of the deep turmoil I had inside. No one knew of the misery I faced deep inside.

I recall reading one anti-apologetics website that absolutely intrigued me. A skeptical historian named Richard Carrier noted that he wasn't going to be responding to an apologist, James Patrick Holding, whose arguments I was "stuck with". Apparently, Carrier explained:

"I see no need anymore to respond to Holding. His method is typically polemical, childish and disrespectful, he rarely comprehends anything I or any opponent says or means, and he has a nasty tendency to make wild, unsubstantiated claims about antiquity, and then, when he is called on it, deletes or alters his essays without notice, and modifies them to suit research he conducted only after his lack of research was pointed out.

"In this case, his argument against me is simply bizarre. He says that a story about a man who died and came back to life and founded a religion wherein believers went to eternal paradise has no parallel with Christianity. That is to engage in some pathetic special pleading, and I think it is patently absurd to any reasonable observer."

Carrier also noted:

"The rest of his points fall to the same objections: wild generalizations about antiquity that he does not back up with any scholarship, and which are seriously suspect to anyone familiar with the actual literature of the period; complete disregard for how my evidence actually relates to my point; misunderstanding of even the simplest things I said; and addressing details as if they refute my point when in fact they have nothing whatever to do with it."

I think it was because of this, I decided to give the Skeptical Review another look. A closer, deeper, honest look. I was amazed at what I read. The resurrection accounts contradicted each other, Jesus was supposed to be God, and yet Jesus was tempted despite the fact that James says God can't be tempted. I decided to take a closer look at how the Field of Blood got its name. The accounts contradicted each other. Finally, I decided to go to the Skeptical Review website. I read some debates that Farrell Till had with a Christian apologist who calls himself "James Patrick Holding". I thought Till had really hammered this apologist badly. Till demonstrated to my satisfaction that Jesus made an error in Mark 2:26 in reference to Abiathar being high priest when David went to Nob when it was his father Ahimelech was high priest.

I recall the last pieces of my faith evaporating in one night. I felt free. I had a crush on Deism so I decided to become a Deist. Within a day or so I felt that my depression had completely lifted. I had a newfound sense of confidence, a newfound sense of joy. Hell, my sense of humor even improved. I remember signing a manifesto for my deconversion stating that I had become a Deist. I was a freethinker and I loved reason.

This is not to say that I didn't have any second thoughts on the subject. On the contrary, I had several second thoughts. I found out that in a debate, Farrell Till had made a huge anachronistic mistake, especially arguing that guilt really did exist in biblical times (I consider this very unlikely given that the ancient Mediterranean was an honor-shame societ). This made me wonder if his arguments about Mark 2:26 were indeed mistaken. I recall having panicky sensations and made some dumb mistakes. I even recall if I gave up on the Mr. Turkel too easily ( I recall embarrassingly having expressed this on Till's discussion list and he got the misleading impression that I was pulling their legs the whole time about having deconverted). I eventually came to conclude that the only way I was going to resolve any remaining questions is if I became a Bible scholar. So I decided to do just that.

It's been four years since I deconverted. Since then, I have managed to stabilize myself. I have discovered what I believe to be several more errors and contradictions along the way, not to mention failed prophecies. The resurrection narratives contradict, the virgin birth narratives contradict, Peter's denail accounts contradict. Jesus made a mistake about men being with David. Yahweh's land promise failed and there never was an eternal kingdom for King David. As of today, I consider myself an atheist. I disbelieve that any gods exist and I consider myself an agnostic about the supernatural, generally speaking. I no longer have second thoughts. My second thoughts were just those and nothing more. It wasn't easy giving up on Christianity and the faint fear that I was going to go to Hell. I had second thoughts and there were nights I recall having cried myself to sleep begging Jesus to forgive me and take me back. However, the next morning I realized that I was still a Deist and still a skeptic. I was tormented by second and third thoughts.


Then came the point of no return! I recall reading a book on biblical inerrancy which was edited by Norman Geisler, called Inerrancy. I read an essay called "Higher Criticism and Biblical Inerrancy" by J Barton Payne. I read the following in a passage which took me aback:


"Put more concretely, until a scholar becomes willing to accept the lordship of Jesus Christ over his life and thought, it is futile to try to argue him out of Wellhausen's literary analysis of the Pentatauch, which, to the naturalistic mind set, is the only viable option" (pg. 111)

This struck me like a bolt of lightening! I thought to myself , Why does a scholar need to accept the lordship of Jesus Christ in order to be persuaded to abandon Wellhausen's Documentary Hypothesis in favor of the traditioanl Mosaic authorship? If the Pentatauch was written by Moses for the most part, then shouldn't historical evidence alone be enough to convince any scholar, regardless of where his/her religious commitments lie? Why does one have to be willing to accept the lordship of Jesus to be able to consider the traditional authorship claims? If the Bible was divinely inspired or if the traditional Evangelical claims about the Bible were correct, then shouldn't historical evidence by itself be enough to persuade a scholar to accept it? Why does one have to become a Christian first or be willing to accept the gospel? But reality came crashing down on me like a ton of bricks and I had a profound realization: Christian biblical apologetics is based on historico-grammatical method while Higher biblical criticism is based on the critical-historical method. The former presupposes biblical inerrancy while the latter presupposes that natural claims require natural forms of evidence and supernatural claims require supernatural forms of evidence. Higher biblical criticism didn't rule out the possibility of miracles or the supernatural, it rightfully demanded evidence of such in porportion to the strength and type of the claims made. You claim something supernatural happened, you need supenatural forms of evidence to back it up!

I recall after having read this chapter (as gross and appalling as it was to stomach such antireason and antiintellectual crap like this!) I went online and reread Price's essay "By This Time He Stinketh". What an eye-opener it was! It all made sense now! I clearly concieved of the difference between biblical apologetics and biblical criticism! The former supposes its conclusions first and looks for evidence to back it up, having already decided in advanced what is allowed to be true and what is not, while the latter started with the evidence and sought to follow it honestly, whereever it went! I decided that biblical criticism, based on the critical-historical method is the only intellectually honest way of approaching the biblical texts. If I was going to be a Bible scholar, I was going to devote myself to being an advocate of biblical criticism and a staunch defender of the critical-historical method. I devoted myself to just that. I had reached the point of no return and I walked confidently through the door. I could never go back to fundamentalism, never go back to Evangelical Christianity, and never go back to apologetics. I had entered the door and passed the point of no return!

The Religious Right needs informed opposition as well as Christian evangelists. Even if I was wrong and the Christian faith was true, I could never became a Christian again. Not after what I went through.

Am I happier now? Absolutely! Have I made some mistakes and errors of judgement? Sure. But I have realized that I am human and I must rely on my powers of reason. No personal deity loves me or will help me. It's up to me to love myself and love others. I can do so because I have discovered reason.

Matthew Green

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The Three Things About Evolution That Revolt Creationists The Most

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I suspect there's more than just logic behind the way some Christians react to the idea of evolution. There's also a conscious or unconscious revulsion to evolution going on, THREE of them in fact:

REVULSION #1 "I ain't no Monkey's Uncle!"

"1996 presidential contender, Pat Buchanan, said something along the lines of `You may believe that you're descended from monkeys, but I believe you're a creature of God.' I guess that Buchanan hadn't considered that one of the basic tenets of Christianity is that God is the Creator of everything, including `monkeys.' It seems to me that one of the basic reasons behind the so-called `creationism' is the feeling that somehow parts of God's creation are not worthy of being our ancestors."
TOM SCHARLE

However, Christians like C. S. Lewis were not threatened by the thought of a species of thinking religious animal:

"When the rationality of the hross tempted you to think of it as a man... it became abominable--a man seven feet high, with a snaky body, covered, face and all, with thick black animal hair, and whiskered like a cat. But starting from the other end you had an animal with everything an animal ought to have... and added to all these, as though Paradise had never been lost... the charm of speech and reason. Nothing could be more disgusting than the one impression; nothing more delightful than the other. It all depended on the point of view."
C. S. LEWIS, OUT OF THE SILENT PLANET (a Christian science-fiction novel)

And certain ironies arise from denying so vehemently that one is not a "Monkey's Uncle," while affirming that humanity was created from the "dust of the earth," because, isn't it just as respectable to be a "modified monkey" as "modified dirt?" Or as Will Rogers put it during the Scopes Monkey Trial in the 1920s:

"The Supreme Court of Tennessee has just ruled that you other states can come from whoever or whatever you want to, but they want it on record that they come from mud only!... William Jennings Bryan tried to prove that we did not descend from the monkey, but he unfortunately picked a time in our history when the actions of the American people proved that we did... Some people certainly are making a fight against the ape. It seems the truth kinder hurts. Now, if a man didn't act like a monkey, he wouldn't have to be proving that he didn't come from one. Personally I like monkeys. If we were half as original as they are, we would never be suspected of coming from something else. They never accuse monkeys of coming from anybody else... You hang an ape and a political ancestry over me, and you will see me taking it into the Supreme Court, to prove that the ape part is O.K., but that the political end is base libel... If a man is a gentleman, he doesn't have to announce it; all he has to do is to act like one and let the world decide. No man should have to prove in court what he is, or what he comes from. As far as Scopes teaching children evolution, nobody is going to change the belief of Tennessee children as to their ancestry. It is from the actions of their parents that they will form their opinions."


REVULSION #2 "If you teach people they're monkeys, they'll act like monkeys."

A second revulsion is related to the question of the origin of ethical values. Ethical values like "forgiveness," are assumed to be mysterious and sublime ideas that we owe primarily to a few millennia of Judeo-Christianity. However as Frans de Waal pointed out:

"Monkeys, apes, and humans all engage in reconciliation behavior (stretching out a hand, smiling, kissing, embracing, and so on), so such behavior is probably over thirty million years old, preceding the evolutionary divergence of these primates... Reconciliation behavior [is thus] a shared heritage of the primate order... When social animals are involved...antagonists do more than estimate their chances of winning before they engage in a fight; they also take into account how much they need their opponent. The contested resource often is simply not worth putting a valuable relationship at risk. And if aggression does occur, both parties may hurry to repair the damage. Victory is rarely absolute among interdependent competitors, whether animal or human."
FRANS DE WAAL, PEACEMAKING AMONG PRIMATES (see also, Morton Hunt, The Compassionate Beast: What Science is Discovering About the Humane Side of Humankind; and, Alfie Kohn, The Brighter Side of Human Nature: Altruism and Empathy in Everyday Life; and see especially the chapter on "Kindness" in de Waal's latest work, OUR INNER APE.)

One irony of this particular revulsion is pointed out below:

"Creationists criticize evolutionists for the demeaning idea of `coming from apes' and say that man is more noble than that, and then have sermons where man is called a miserable worm worthy to be burned eternally in hell."
WILLIAM BAGLEY


REVULSION #3 "Do we have an eternal soul, or not? Animals don't."

A third revulsion is related to the fact that animals die and we assume they never rise again, so if we are directly related to animals then maybe our lives will also cease with death:

"We do not like to be reminded of the ways in which we resemble animals. We sinners like to think our motives are more holy than those of animals. And since we generally assume animals cannot have eternal life with God, thinking about animal deaths and about our own place in nature frightens us."
ED FRIEDLANDER, CHRISTIAN PERSPECTIVES ON EVOLUTION

A similar doubt is given expression within the pages of the Bible:

"I said to myself concerning the sons of men, God has surely tested them in order for them to see that they are but beasts. For the fate of the sons of men and the fate of beasts is the same. As one dies so dies the other; indeed, they all have the same breath ['...all in whose nostrils was the breath of the spirit of life' Gen. 6:17; 7:15,22, both man and beasts] and there is no advantage for man over beast, for all is vanity. All go to the same place. All came from the dust and all return to the dust ['...till you return to the ground, because from it you were taken; for you are dust, and to dust you shall return' Gen. 3:19]. Who knows that the breath of man ascends upward and the breath of the beast descends downward to the earth?"
ECCLESIASTES 3:18-21

And an irony of this revulsion is pointed out below:

"A preacher thundering from his pulpit about the uniqueness of human beings with their God-given souls would not like to realize that his very gestures, the hairs that rose on his neck, the deepened tones of his outraged voice, and the perspiration that probably ran down his skin under clerical vestments are all manifestations of anger in mammals. If he was sneering at Darwin a bit (one does not need a mirror to know that one sneers), did he remember uncomfortably that a sneer is derived from an animal's lifting its lip to remind an enemy of its fangs? Even while he was denying the principle of evolution, how could a vehement man doubt such intimate evidence?"
SALLY CARRIGHAR, WILD HERITAGE

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Why Do Some People Hate Frank Walton?

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Frank Walton complains about being harrassed by atheists in the comments section here, when he said:

Since having gone public with my website and blogsite I had threats hurled at me, racist comments made against me because of the color of my skin, my wife's name and our home address and phone number publicly published on a website and blogsite (I have this all documented by the way). I received one threat (via e-mail) so disturbing (he talked of raping my wife and lynching me) I had to call the police to see if we can find the guy.

Not only that but agnostic Ed Babinski has hounded me for not giving out personal information about myself (where I'm from, what school I go to, my major, etc.). I told him that I didn't want to give out said information because I crave a certain amount of anonymity. It's for my protection from any fundamentalist atheist who may lash out at me or harass me. Guess what? Babinski didn't care. Instead of respecting my privacy, he continued to send me e-mails over and over and over again requesting personal info about myself. He went so far as to go to a Christian forum and accused me of "avoidance apologetics" and to provoke some personal information about myself!
[To read Ed's response see Ed's side of the story].

Poor Frank Walton. There's just something about him that causes atheists to hate him. He maligns and disrespects and berates us at every opportunity. Then when he reports how mad atheists get over his tactics the story gets even further twisted to make it sound much worse than it really is. He may have a persecution complex for all I know. He wants to be hated for Jesus' sake, so he hates. He hates those who attack his God, and any tactic including lies and exaggerations and half truths in defending his God from our arguments is his mission. He brings most all of it on himself, and I do not believe him when he claims he's been persecuted like he says he has, either. I believe he's a fabricator of the truth and a liar.

The truth is that atheists and Christians alike can bring people to hate them for being offensive and for personal attacks. People cannot take personal attacks for long before they get mad. And in this sense Walton brings it on himself. It's just hard to ignore someone who is this obnoxious and this stupid.

So here's Walton's strategy everyone: Provoke atheists by calling them names, by sidetracking conversations, by quoting them out of context, by belittling and berating them, and when they finally respond he plays the sympathy card. Even a puppy dog can be provoked to bite back, Walton.

I know I should ignore him, but it's just tough to do, since he constantly dogs my steps. His tactics deserve to be exposed for what they really are...sick. No one on his website is as stupid or as vile as he makes them out to be. Furthermore, anyone who will reasonably discuss what we write here at Debunking Christianity receives a polite discussion in return, as everyone who regularly reads my Blog knows full well. It's just that when it comes to us here at DC Walton and some others of his ilk personally attack us. I expected it. But I don't like it. There is a fortress mentality among some Christians that when they see us attempt to debunk their faith it's seen as a serious personal affront to themselves and to their God. We don't see ourselves intending anything personal here. We just disagree, that's all.

Walton's whole tactic is to poison the well.

Once Walton was so bad that he was forced to remove objectional material from his website.

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"Loving Our Neighbor" Means Loving Atheists Too!

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One of the most intelligent Christian blogs can be found on our sidebar under Christian links called CADRE Comments . In a recent post BK condemned beating, shunning, and threatening atheists. We are your "neighbors" whom Jesus said should be loved.

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Jesus on Getting to Heaven

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Jim Lippard at The Secular Outpost pointed out something kinda funny for us at YouTube here, on what Jesus said to get to heaven.

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Bayes' Theorm Part 2: The New Testament as History

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In my last post, I introduced Bayes’ Theorem and utilized it the assessment of the plausibility of an ESP claim. In this post, I will use it to examine how historians could assess the resurrection of Jesus if they were to use the New Testament as they would any other text found from that era. However, in this post, I am not going to detail the constituent historical evidences. That will have to wait for future posts.

Christian apologists often state that historians should treat the New Testament merely as any other document that they may find from that era. Then test the books according to the standards of historical research to see if they are, in fact, reliable. The one caveat added is that one cannot presume that miracles are impossible. That is what I will attempt here. This post will not presume that the canonization of the Scripture is indicative of divine preservation and approval. The assumption of divine preservation seems to be outside the normal considerations of a historian.

There are three main hypotheses I will consider. The first is that Jesus was resurrected from the dead on the third day. His resurrected body had properties previously unseen in history. In short, this is an event that requires a supernatural cause. The second hypothesis is that the reports of these events are either legends or an author mistakenly reported a legend as history. In either case no resurrection occurred. The third hypothesis is that the resurrection is historical, the authors are passing a record of true events, and those events can be explained by natural causes.

The assessment of initial probabilities needs to be understood in terms of background assumptions. Keep in mind that one can initially assess the plausibility of a hypothesis, compute a new plausibility based upon evidence, and the resulting assessment may be considered a "prior" for a new assessment based upon other evidence. In other words the a priori values are based upon experience and evidence. If someone thinks my prior assessments are unjustified, feel free to show how I should make my initial assessment.

My initial assessment of the plausibility of a real resurrection in the absence of evidence would be very low. As in my previous post, I am initially skeptical of claims requiring a supernatural cause. I do not think they are impossible. In my lifetime I cannot think of any event that could potentially require a supernatural cause. I have seen magic tricks that I can’t explain, but the magicians didn’t claim to use supernatural powers. It certainly doesn’t seem unreasonable for a historian to think (in the absence of evidence) the probability a reported event requires supernatural cause is one in a million 10-6.

If one were to receive historical books from about 2000 years ago, what is the likelihood that the books were passing off a legend as history? I suppose that my initial probability would be low. I expect most people to honestly pass on what they know. However, there is a great deal of precedent for having an expectation of fraud in a religious work. There was a Christian forger who attempted to pass off a third letter to the Corinthians and was caught in the act according to the church father Tertullian. In the New Testament, the writer of 2 Thessalonians 2:2 is warning of a false letter. Either Paul has knowledge of fraud or 2 Thessalonians itself is fraudulent. In either case, fraud is known to occur in religious writing. False teaching seemed to be rampant according to Paul. For examples see Galatians 1:6-9, 2 Corinthians 11:4, and 1 Timothy 4:1-3.

Further, the Gospel of Thomas, Gospel of Peter, and Acts of Peter are examples that Christians presume are pious fraud. The fact that the NIV Bible notes that Mark 16:9-20 is not in the earliest and most reliable manuscripts (and other verses believed to be interpolation) is also indicative that some early Christians may have felt justified in passing on pious fraud.

There are other examples of works of fantastic claims from that era. Apollonius of Tyana reportedly was half god and half man, healed the sick, raised the dead, and at the end of his life ascended to heaven. There were ceremonies commemorating the ascent of Romulus (the founder of Rome) into heaven after he was murdered by the senate and rose from the dead.

Even noted historians reported unbelievable events. Josephus recorded in the Jewish Wars that a cow gave birth to lamb; a bronze gate (that was so large it required 20 men to move) unbolted itself and opened itself at midnight. Herodotus recorded many obvious legends as well such as the temple of Delphi magically defending itself and a mass resurrection of cooked fish. Richard Carrier gives much more context in Chapter 5 of the book "The Empty Tomb." In light of this data, it seems reasonable that a historian would have an a priori expectation of fraud at least as high a 1 in 10.

My a priori value for the natural/default hypothesis is the higher than the other two. However, the probability of the data (a resurrection) is so implausible on this hypothesis, that I will ignore it in my calculations, (just as I ignored it in the second calculation in the ESP post.)

The historical evidence for the resurrection comes primarily from the four Gospels and the letters of Paul, particularly 1 Corinthians. In my previous post, I went to the trouble to calculate the probabilities of each data on each hypothesis. In the case of two hypothesis, it is only necessary to compare the relative explanatory strengths of the hypothesis. For this initial argument, assume that the Resurrection hypothesis has twice the explanatory power of the Legendary hypothesis. So if the probability of observing the historical evidence on the Legendary hypothesis is Z the probability of observing the evidence on the resurrection hypothesis is 2.0× Z. (As I stated previously, detailing the evidence will have to be done later.)

These assessments are summarized in the table below. From the values in the table, one can utilize Bayes' Theorem to assess the plausibility based upon the evidence.

Hypothesis P(Hypothesis)
a priori
P(Evidence|H)
HResurrection 10-6 2.0× Z
HLegend or Deception 0.1 Z
HDefault 1.0 - 0.1 - 10-6 negligible


Putting these values into Bayes' Theorem gives:
P(HR|E) =         P(E|HR) P(HR)        
         P(E|HR)P(HR)+ P(E|HL)P(HL)+P(E|HD)P(HD)

P(HR|E) =         2× Z× 10-6       
           2× Z× 10-6 + Z × 0.1 + 0.0
P(HR|E) ≈ 0.00002

Thus it seems very plausible to think that the Gospel writers were passing off a legend (either knowingly or unknowingly). Note that even if the resurrection hypothesis does a better job of explaining all the observed evidence, belief in the resurrection may still not be warranted. This is because we have observed both deceit and legendary development in similar settings. In order to avoid this conclusion, one would need to have data that is extremely implausible on the legendary hypothesis.

One example of evidence offered is given by the rhetorical question "Would the disciples have died for a lie?" A problem with this rejoinder is that one would have to show that the reports of martyrdom could not be part of the legendary development. The New Testament does not record the deaths of eyewitnesses other than James (Acts 12:2), and it is not clear what charges he died for, or if recanting could have spared him. Books that do record the apostles deaths (such as the Acts of Peter), seem to have legendary characteristics, even according most Christians. Belief in reports of martyrdom is susceptible to the same "deception" hypothesis that had the effect on the assessment of ESP.

This assessment can again be characterized by the parable of the boy who cried wolf. Even if the events are historical, the fact that so many have made fantastic claims makes rejection of all reported supernatural claims reasonable. This problem seems inherent to establishing very unusual claims on the basis of testimony, particularly hearsay.

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What We Have Here is a Failure to Think Critically!

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I once came across an article that stated how the smell of crayons has actually been observed to momentarily reduce blood pressure in adults by several points. Many other smells which were associated with our early childhood experiences, the article said, can have the same noticeable effects. And I don't think there are many of us who would deny that those cosy feelings that come over us when we think back to the good old times make us feel better. The days before car payments, electric bills, and eviction notices certainly bring back some excellent memories for me!

I was never a deprived child. I had my share of good things and great times. One such time was my eighth birthday when I decided to celebrate at Chucky Cheese and watch the singing, dancing puppets, along with every other grade-schooler pal I brought with me. That year I received a special toy. It came right on top of my birthday cake. It was a little action figure, an alien robot with two great big claws for hands and two small yellow eyes. It came to be my favorite toy. Clawbot, I called him!

As I played it out, Clawbot was from a far away world and had powers beyond the imagination. He came from a race of the most technologically advanced beings anywhere. His metal was invincible. He could walk around in the sun and it wouldn't even come close to damaging him. He could be standing on the moon and reach down and rip it apart with his mighty claw hands. He was invulnerable to all manner of attacks...sound, heat, mental, magical, electrical, you name it, Clawbot could not be stopped! My little friends and I would get into spats over how unfair I was being because I would never let clawbot lose any battle to their own made-up superheros. Ah, precious memories!

You know, I think if I looked hard enough, I'd find clawbot stashed away in some box in my attic. Perhaps I'll have to take a look one day.

Clawbot may have had a big place in my heart, but as I got older, he kind of seemed a little silly to me. I mean, first off, if clawbot was the product of a technologically advanced alien race, more advanced than humans with the ability to manipulate their environment, why would Clawbot have been constructed with claws - very awkward and clumsy appendages to manipulate anything - much less be able to use buttons, controls, tools, or weapons, things an advanced species would no doubt use? How would Clawbot, who stood six feet tall, pull apart a planet or a moon? Wouldn't the ground just give way around him where he was trying to pull? How would he even have the reach to pull such a large object apart? And then, why and how would the creators of clawbot make him invincible? Since he was a robot, he required software of some kind to be operational. What happens if clawbot malfunctions and goes haywire? How will his creators keep control over him? How will they get in his head and modify the program to correct the problem? And if they can correct a faulty clawbot, doesn't logic dictate that clawbot could be "hacked" by those who are smart enough to figure out his program codes and manipulate him for evil purposes? And what about clawbot's invincible metal? How is metal invincible seeing as how the elements that make the different metals are themselves created in stars? All metals can be superheated and are destructible, otherwise there would have been no way for them to soften up clawbot's metal and get it on him in the first place. Why didn't I realize these things? Why didn't I catch these oddities as a child? Perhaps it was for the same reason I didn't catch the logistical oddities of the Santa Claus story.

For a while there, I never wondered why, but then matured enough to begin asking why Santa Claus never visited Jewish children, even though many of them were obviously very good like those of any other race. Could Santa be racist? I often wondered why Santa's handwriting so closely resembled dad's on the neatly wrapped presents we got -- amazingly, packaged in the same casings you see them in when you buy them at your local toy store! I also had plenty of questions as to how a fat man fits down houses with chimneys with fires still burning in them, and houses with very small chimneys that only a squirrel could fit through. And what about those houses with no chimneys at all, or what about my friend Brian's house with two big Doberman guard dogs who could hear the slightest peep of an intruder? How could he get in? And how could he hit all those houses inside of one night anyway? The unsatisfying, catch-all answer to these questions was, "He's magic!" But as a little kid, it was good enough for me!

The older I got, the more problems I began to see. As I matured, my critical thinking skills developed. Objections that never occurred to me before were now impassible barriers to belief. I could no longer believe in those things anymore. They were far too infantile to even be considered by rational adults.

Now how would you react if you met a grown man or woman today who still believed in Santa, or their own version of Clawbot? You would not only be shocked, but you would feel downright sorry for them, knowing they didn't mentally develop like they should have.

Well, you've met not one such person, but scores of them. Chances are, your neighbors and most of your friends believe in God, the grown up's version of Santa. This adult version of Saint Nick has just as many, if not more logical problems than the original child's version, and just as unsatisfying an answer as to how this "Santa" has his powers--God is magic too! Miraculous, magical, call it what you want. Even as adults, believers in this Santa, just like their children, are admonished not to think too much or ask too many questions. Come to think of it, a "miracle" is just a word that means, "Don't think, quit trying to explain how it happened, and just accept that it did!" So in case you were wondering why neither Santa Claus in the North Pole, or God in heaven can be detected by radar and located to be bugged to death with questions from the media and their fans, don't ask! You already know you'll get an answer like, "He's magic!"

Some world we live in where we find fully grown adults, sometimes genuinely smart, successful people who still seek the comforts of childhood fantasy. They remain ignorant and uninformed, believing in a position just as unbelievable as that of Santa Claus. And just like small, elated little children, awaiting a fat man in a red suit to come and drink milk and cookies after leaving lots of great stuff, these adults refuse to think critically, not because they can't but because they won't. They refuse to scrutinize the world. It does not occur to them that life demands caution against ignorance and misinformation, and that being ill-informed allows us to see that much less of the real world and prevents us from standing in awe of what really deserves our veneration -- the natural order with it's incredible complexity and splendor. These people have chosen not to see the world as it really is. They would rather have the more flattering delusion of self importance to the cold, hard truth of an indifferent existence. Yes, the old adage is proven true, Ignorance is bliss!

Funny how life turns the tables on us though. Years passed, and sure enough, I found myself on the receiving end of the ignorance, now that Clawbot's legacy has long since ended.

As I found myself watching a little cousin of mine play the Hulk, I mockingly squared off against him as a genie. I quickly turned the hulk into a light-bulb. My cousin confidently said, "But he can break out!" I then tried to get him to understand that if you are the light-bulb, you cannot break out of yourself! But my efforts were to no avail! I had to have my genie lose that fight! Clawbot was back, just in a different form, this time fighting against me, no doubt because I had eaten the forbidden fruit of knowledge!

(JH)

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The Religious "Off" Switch

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I used to delight in asking my Christian brothers and sisters why they believed the things they said they believed. The most common answer was simply, "That's what I've always been told." That always disturbed me. You could pull a wisdom tooth with a piece of string easier than you could get a straight answer out of most of these people. I decided it was my purpose, indeed my calling, in life to teach the foundations of Christianity to all these people who didn't seem to know why they were even believers in the first place. I wasn't exactly successful.

But I tried for 18 long years to instill a love for God's word in people who claimed to love him wholeheartedly but weren't terribly interested in any of the reasons why. My religion was my life, I was a man of God. I was anointed, Spirit filled, chosen and called for the work of the ministry. I loved the life. I loved the purpose it gave me. I had no desire to question it or ever leave it.

Then one morning I had a stroke.


Oxygen deprivation can do horrible things to your body and your brain. It can kill you (which I obviously avoided), it can maim you, it can make you forget how to walk, it can leave you unable to speak or communicate, it can paralyze you and basically ruin your entire life. In my case, it left me able to move, to speak, and to function, but with the added joy of never ending pain. It cost me my job of 23 years and destroyed any hope of having any kind of retirement. It changed the way I think and the way I feel; I have no emotional reactions to anything except an incredibly intense but fleeting anger. I literally lost the ability to care about anything. Add intense pain that never lets up (for 8 miserable years now) and you have a seriously distorted view of life that you never expected or wanted.

But even stranger than any of that, you discover that your faith which you thought was unshakeable was not only shaken but eliminated entirely. As simply as flicking a light switch but with some profound complications. You soon discover no one believes you or has the slightest idea what you're trying to tell them. Certainly no pastor or holy man has an explanation other than an attack of Satan. I felt that God had abandoned me.

But one thing hadn't changed. I still wanted to know why.

I began reading things I never would have looked at before on the internet (this was 1998.) They would have caused doubt and doubt is something no man of god can allow himself to have or even consider. Doubt destroys faith. It brings guilt and condemnation. It ruins your fellowship with god. Doubt cannot be allowed. But I was already convinced that god tossed me to the dogs and then checked out of my life altogether, I couldn't find him anywhere.

There had to be an explanation and the proverbial test of faith was unsatisfying. Jesus promised to be with me always but apparently he lied or he wasn't talking to me in the first place. So I started reading things; things written by people who were religious but had opposing doctrines to my own. Surprisingly they made sense in some regards even though I never would have considered them before. Gradually, I started moving into the secular realm. Then one day I discovered an atheist blog written by an intelligent young man who had gotten free of Jehovah's Witnesses. I found his deconversion story inspiring and began to seek after others.

A major breakthrough occurred when I found EbonMusings and started reading all his articles. One of them made references to people who had religiou