DonCameron wrote:Hi Bart,
Bart wrote:I personally think the star may have been the (1) planetary alignment I mentioned which fits the time frame, or it may have been (2) a comet, (3) a nova or (4)many other things which occur in the normal course of the creation.
What is your thought about Matthew's statement about how that 'star'
"went ahead of the astrologers
until it came to a stop above where the young child was"?
Have you ever heard of any of the natural phenomena that you mentioned above behave like that?
This is one of the reasons why I look to a supernatural source of the light from that 'star' rather than a nature source.
Don
I don't have a clear explanation as to why the star "stopped". It's been a mystery to many for over 2,000 years.
The point is, neither do you.
Attributing it to Satan is an interesting and maybe even a possible theory.
My natural events as possibilities fall into the same category but with a subtle difference. The astronomical events of that time window are known and so there is a clear fact which can tie to the wording of the text. Drawing from an unrelated text to create a synthesis in this instance stretches things a bit further.
There's nothing in the text to directly support what you're seeking to infer. It seems to me there's perhaps more of motivation to impugn the popular tradition of the star (which we've both agreed is historically unsupportable) and make it even more unpalatable or tainted. Jehovah's Witnesses, who reject Christmas as a Christianized pagan ritual, would clearly have a motive to heap as much as they can on those traditions in order to make their own position look even better.
I'm not saying you're consciously doing that, but this may be somewhat of an example of what I've said before that the organizational incongruities that you noted in the Watchtower Organization did not come out of a vacuum. I think you have to examine the same type of rationalizations and mistakes that you realized were happening and caused you to leave, and ask yourself if those same or similar elements are at play in the way they interpret and read the Bible in other instances. There may be more of a tie there than what you realize.
Taking a passage which plays upon Satan appearing as an angel of light and tying it to this passage is completely unsupported by the text and very poor hermeneutics.
It's an example of a methodology that I've observed many times with JW's to be honest, although it certainly isn't exclusive to them and Christians of all brands have indulged in at to varying degrees at different times. It's pretty much a theory in search of evidence. It takes two unrelated passages, draws a fact or concept from each which are then employed to arrive at an independent conclusion that is not clearly presented in either passage. Voila. You have a new "truth" manufactured.
Asserting that because the impact of the Magi resulted in the slaughter of the innocents that the star itself which led them must have been a direct result or work of Satan, because Satan can appear as an angel of light begs many questions if you're going to employ that type of hermeneutic. It's a non-sequitur. As a method it leaves the field wide open for anyone to take any pair of passages they want and say what they want. It is the essence of "eisogesis" or reading into the text what you want it to say instead on exegesis, which elevates the text as primary and demands that the text be allowed to speak for itself and determine its own facts, and truth.
Is what you're suggesting possible? Yes. Many things are possible. It's the nature of man to want to understand things more clearly and in the absence of a clear answer, theories will be presented to help explain. It's a result of our curiosity and part of how we learn and catagorize and organize facts to bring meaning from the world around us.
I don't have a problem with doing it with issues in Scripture, as in this case where we try to explain an unanswered question. The bottom line however is that God didn't see the need to answer that question in this passage. So, to me, that means it's not particularly important.
The speculation doesn't necessarily harm anything, but the problem is that sometimes these "speculations" get used and presumed to be the Gospel Truth and incorporated into other logical threads to build more from it. Then we're several degrees removed from the truth and building castles in the air.
Dogmatism is the comfortable intellectual framework of self-righteousness. Self-righteousness is more decadent than the worst sexual sin. ~ Dan Allender