

And that, brothers and sisters, is the kind of foolishness you get people who insist on denying biblical theism. A good illustration of any as the length people will go to avoid acknowledging basic truths.Proinsias wrote:I don't think you are hearing me. Preference for ice cream is a moral issue
One - all the gods spend time fighting each other for dominance and control and that happens in Norse myth - therefore, since they do, heaven's bliss can never happen.FallenFromGrace wrote:I'm a Christian, I suppose you could say. I've been going through lots of doubts lately since I've started looking into it though. I have a friend who's part of the Norse Religion. He keeps trying to show me that there are many gods. Why can't there be multiple gods? Why only one?If you have any answers on this, it would be appreciated. Thanks.
Which is no indication of the Bible's God teachings found within Scripture being followed by such people - meaning, they are either not believers in Him or are in serious error and misunderstanding of what His teachings are for their conduct and treatment of others. However, and only in specific circumstances as directed, the Israelites were instructed by God to destroy various Canaanite armies and their cultic sites. But a clear understanding of such situational and time-specific directives will make one realize that such directives cannot be universally applied - say, as to Muslim mosques, various temples, the Crusades, etc.We've also had many hundreds of years of worshipers of that certain gods worshipers going about and deliberately destroying any and all works of every and any other belief they can/could get their hands on. (Up to and including some in today's world) Turning their holy buildings into rubble, or worse leaving nothing but a ash stain in the ground or converting them into their own paces of worship.
So, we're to believe that Greek gods followed long ago, who have been unable to protect and perpetuate their teachings and desired practices (so that they have survived and are still followed), of whom NONE of their followers even still exist - to assert that these are credible evidences of gods with god-like miraculous powers? Those so-called gods either never truly existed or clearly didn't have any power of sustaining what their supposed powers were - and would appear to be dead and forgotten. No, such is merely evidence of gods that only existed in the minds of those who made images of them with their own hands, or that just blindly followed them.I'm pretty sure none of the Greek mysteries survive to the modern day. We simply have no idea (Other than pretty much the names of their gods) as to what specifically they claimed or worshiped.
Would mere mortals be able to completely destroy and eradicate the information and instructions important to a REAL god? How weak is that? Such "gods" couldn't even protect their own words or their own followers - with the results being neither that neither they, their followers, or their words are any longer remembered, known, followed or found. Sounds like pretty impotent gods. No prophecies or historical evidences are available to examine, no followers, no nothing. This is all laughable when compared to Christianity, the Bible, and what is historically known about Jesus and His contemporary followers ... not to mention the evidence we find in the lives of millions of joyful Christians today.So...to say 'There is no proof" is pretty disingenuous when groups have gone around deliberately destroying said information.
Well...you also have the now non-existant Celtic Christianity and the almost current extinction of Coptic Christianity in Egypt. While these are/were 'just' two 'sects' within the larger umbrella of Christian belief, one should perhaps watch for stones whilst in a glass house?Philip wrote:So, we're to believe that Greek gods followed long ago, who have been unable to protect and perpetuate their teachings and desired practices (so that they have survived and are still followed), of whom NONE of their followers even still exist - to assert that these are credible evidences of gods with god-like miraculous powers? Those so-called gods either never truly existed or clearly didn't have any power of sustaining what their supposed powers were - and would appear to be dead and forgotten. No, such is merely evidence of gods that only existed in the minds of those who made images of them with their own hands, or that just blindly followed them.Thadeyus wrote: I'm pretty sure none of the Greek mysteries survive to the modern day. We simply have no idea (Other than pretty much the names of their gods) as to what specifically they claimed or worshiped.
So...the Roman Catholic church's suppression of the many gospels and its instance that only following four of the possibly twelve? This seems to be 'Just the work of men' but, by your criteria, holds the most sway? So.....'bottoms on seats' is your defining measurement of worship, then? Interesting.Philip wrote:Would mere mortals be able to completely destroy and eradicate the information and instructions important to a REAL god? How weak is that? Such "gods" couldn't even protect their own words or their own followers - with the results being neither that neither they, their followers, or their words are any longer remembered, known, followed or found. Sounds like pretty impotent gods. No prophecies or historical evidences are available to examine, no followers, no nothing. This is all laughable when compared to Christianity, the Bible, and what is historically known about Jesus and His contemporary followers ... not to mention the evidence we find in the lives of millions of joyful Christians today.Thadeyus wrote:So...to say 'There is no proof" is pretty disingenuous when groups have gone around deliberately destroying said information.
Well...you also have the now non-existant Celtic Christianity and the almost current extinction of Coptic Christianity in Egypt. While these are/were 'just' two 'sects' within the larger umbrella of Christian belief, one should perhaps watch for stones whilst in a glass house?
Respectfully, you are seriously uninformed about how the Bible was formed and of the process involved. TRUE Christianity and God's teachings flow from what was in the original manuscript writings of the Bible, written down as inspired by God. And so God is the ultimate Author of Scripture and He miraculously guided its transmission. The early church, WAY before what became to be considered the Catholic Church was in place, had a very strict criteria to DISCOVER what books were to be considered God-given and what other so-called "gospels" were in direct contradictions to it. They had a rigorous process and criteria for this discovery process and also rightfully did not include what did not meet the criteria. But the CHURCH did not determine what should go in the Bible, but only affirmed what had already been given it.So...the Roman Catholic church's suppression of the many gospels and its instance that only following four of the possibly twelve? This seems to be 'Just the work of men' but, by your criteria, holds the most sway? So.....'bottoms on seats' is your defining measurement of worship, then? Interesting.
I thought of answering you myself but I'm not charitable enough to work with people like you.Philip wrote: Respectfully, you are seriously uninformed about how the Bible was formed and of the process involved.
Indeed you did.Thadeyus wrote:We've strayed from the original poster's comments and question.
Yes, but I would still listen to what Philip wrote to you because he is providing actual historical facts & information to you instead of the misinformation you believe or disinformation you are attempting to pass along.Thadeyus wrote:We've also rambled across a couple of different points within our replies to one another.
Your initial point is making an argument from ignorance (Thats a fallacy), and the kicker is that you assumed that polytheism is true and that the claims of Christian (Monotheism) is false which you've indirectly proposed. Thats begging the question (Another fallacy)Thadeyus wrote:My initial point was that...With out the knowledge of said disappeared faiths beliefs. We have no way of knowing of where to even begin to look for any veracity of said beliefs and faiths.
Of course might does not make one right. If you read more carefully, you'd learn that Philip wasn't using that as his conclusion but rather that his faith has survived MANY conquests by very large civilizations while others did not.Thadeyus wrote:Saying that "Other beliefs are wrong...Because they weren't 'strong'/'successful' enough to survive into the present day" Is not really a valid/ (Am trying to think of a better descriptive word than 'valid'...And failing atm) /Supportive reply/comment.
Argument from ignorance. We absolutely could dismiss polytheism if they contradict the claims of Christianity or simply by examining the monotheism of Christianity. Go back up and read Jac's post. Read it very carefully.Thadeyus wrote:What I am trying to say is that one can't really 'dismiss' other beliefs if there isn't even grounds for knowing what those beliefs were.
You're not understanding his point. If the truth can't even survive when a civilization falls and new ones rise through the ashes or rubble, then its pretty safe to say it doesn't much truth to it at all. For example, the greeks discovered the mathematical tables, yet their civilization crumbled and we're still using their findings today. Math was literally their religion at several points.Thadeyus wrote:Your reply seemed to me a more "Survival of the fittest belief." ...Or "They who have the biggest congregation wins."
and our reply to you is that you are severely misinformed about early Christianity and what is Christianity today. You seem to think that pretty much anything that attempts to assimilate or add on to Christianity is valid Christianity or adds to their OWN credibility. We know what isn't Christianity because we examine the genuine in order to identity counterfeits.Thadeyus wrote:"Current Christianity is demonstrably different to that of the past. So...was ancient Christianity false?"
Thadeyus wrote:Your reply seemed to me a more "Survival of the fittest belief." ...Or "They who have the biggest congregation wins."
My point about Christianity surviving the centuries, warfare, etc. had more to do with the capabilities of our God Who sustained it, whose Word has lasted, miraculously protected until the present - representing, by FAR, the largest and oldest number of ancient manuscripts, and from around the world, His Church constantly adding to its numbers, His prophecies, many of them having been validated as true, were known until their accurate fulfillment - often many centuries after they were made. So if a God can supposedly create a universe but He can't protect His transmitted Word, His followers, His Church, and that His true followers aren't still around as a joy to the world as seekers of peace and good will as those of Christianity's God is - as, comparatively, evidence for any other so-called "god" is essentially non-existent. Many civilizations have SAID such gods were all powerful, the reason for the world's existence, etc. - and yet their followers have all disappeared, their religious texts all lost, their influence non-existent, evaporated in the dust of history - and so what does that say about any supposed evidence that such any such god or gods were truly a god to begin with? And yet the love inspired by the God of Christianity transformed the Roman empire, not by warfare, but with the love of Christ. And God's Church is still expanding. Compare that to Islam, mostly spread by the sword, conquest and threat of death (even still!).You're not understanding his point. If the truth can't even survive when a civilization falls and new ones rise through the ashes or rubble, then its pretty safe to say it doesn't much truth to it at all. For example, the greeks discovered the mathematical tables, yet their civilization crumbled and we're still using their findings today. Math was literally their religion at several points.