Jac3510 wrote:I don't take it personally, mel, and I don't think there's any worry about being popular. I appreciate what you are trying to say, but I just don't think it holds water in the end.
Second, while your intentions are certainly pious (and that in the best sense, nothing derogatory intended there), your argument is self-refuting. Do you not see that you are trying make an argument--which necessarily is to use reason--to show that reason isn't applicable? Why, if your argument is correct, then it disproves itself, because the very reasoning you appeal to in order to prove your argument is, by your argument, invalid.
If you have a problem with what I've suggested, with God as I have painted Him, then might I suggest one of two paths forward?
1. Consider the possibility that the picture I've painted is actually correct, and your objections are actually misplaced; or
2. Grapple with the reasoning I've provided and point out where you think I have gone off track.
Either of those are fine with me and make for good discussion. And if you're objections are correct and I have said something about God that is not true, then my arguments must be invalid somewhere. You would, then, do me (or others who are reading me) a double favor in showing those flaws: one, to prevent me (them) from speaking falsely about God, and two, to demonstrate for me (them) where the arguments I've put forward are incorrect so that I (they) no longer rely on them. But a well intentioned blanket condemnation of reason (when applied to God) is not acceptable and is, may I very gently submit, actually an unbiblical attitude.
Appreciate your response Jac, and I have read over your repsonses on here as I have read over much of what you have written on various threads past and present and I have a genuine respect but we differ interestingly not so much on theology but delivery.
This is not the first time that you have responded to my posts as 'pious'. This is a mistake. Not that I have any outward objection to piety but it really is a rather poor assertion and assumption to my position. The basis of Piety is religious observance and a desire for religious obligation either you haven't been listening or paying attention but I could never be accused as such.
Being open and not being being 'bound' by any observance whether it be Calvinistic, open deism, indoctrinated into Aquinas theology or any of the like I come to my position based solely on scripture and personal interpretation. Whilst this may indeed be deemed by yourself and whomever as inaccurate it can not be accused as being 'influenced' by piety or a preconvienced ideology.
I am genuinely interested in your position and your take on such but what I require is scriptural evidence.
I am in no way condemning 'reason'. You have misunderstood. Reasoning is indeed biblical when applied accordingly. God has granted us the ability to use intellect and reasoning to determine the world around us. To make sense intellectuality of our set parameters. But here is where you lose me.
Jac said
Do you not see that you are trying make an argument--which necessarily is to use reason--to show that reason isn't applicable? Why, if your argument is correct, then it disproves itself, because the very reasoning you appeal to in order to prove your argument is, by your argument, invalid.
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I have not shown that reason isn't applicable to that which is applicable to us. Knowable.
Your argument is assuming that I am saying we can't reason about God because I have reasoned it as unreasonable.
But what if we have an authority outside of our 'reasoning'
Perhaps said reasoning is held to higher standard, a divine standard.
Isaiah 55:8
"For My thoughts are not your thoughts, Nor are your ways My ways," declares the LORD. 9"For as the heavens are higher than the earth, So are My ways higher than your ways And My thoughts than your thoughts.…
We are not talking about using reasoning to determine whether we take this this turn or that turn in life, whether we would prefer a Vegemite sandwich to a jam sandwich, we are talking about the will and attributes of the Almighty.
Scripture tells us.....
We don't know Diddly squat
His ways are not knowable.
So however profound it may sound to assert that the philosophical argument that we can not use reasoning to counter an argument for an inability to reason may hold weight if not in the light of scripture and the pretty reasonable argument that we do not know the ways of God.
The argument used to prove Anthropomorphisms in scripture as proof towards impassability is actually something I don't entirely disagree with but what I do disagree with is the extent to which it is taken and the rather sloppy understanding of literature and the use of 'reasonable' metaphors.