Philip wrote:Philip wrote: The reality is, you either believe Scripture is true - which means means it is also HISTORICALLY true as well - or you don't.
Hugh: No. That is a false dichotomy, which if maintained leads to continuous reductio ab absurdam conclusions which severely weaken the authority of scripture without contributing to the understanding of science at all.
Hugh, where and when Scripture is making a historical statement of actual events, and if Scripture is God's word, then those words must be true.
Quite so. But what about this?
The question needs to be: Is the passage meant to be factual/historical, scientific, or symbolic, allegorical, metaphorical - or some combination - and do we have an accurate understanding it of its intentions and its historical/cultural/religious/spiritual /specific event or subject's context?
Have you decided that your understanding of the story of Noah's ark is accurate? And mine is inaccurate? If so, I beg to differ, and inquire politely why your interpretation is better than mine.
And whether we UNDERSTAND God's word (properly, as to whether meant to be historical, scientific, symbolic, poetry, etc.) or not - it is STILL unquestionably true. Otherwise, you are rejecting what God says is true. There not Scriptural truth and then some other kind. Now, it depends upon what Scripture is referencing. But the story of the ark - if it's God-given - and Jesus confirms it, and yet you deny it - well, you're rejecting God's word given through Moses and that is confirmed by Jesus.
Ah. The nub seems to be that you think Jesus said it was historically true, and therefore it must be. But of course that would be a great mistake. Jesus knew better than most the power and influence of a well-turned story, and there is no reason to suppose that his teaching about Noah depended any more on historical truth than his own parables. Furthermore, in the verse immediately before the mention of Noah we find Jesus specifically disassociating his human side from his divine side, in saying "But of that day and hour no one knows, not even the angels of heaven, but My Father only." Some translations even add "not even the Son" or something similar to demonstrate this theology more clearly. As such, his pronouncements as a 1st century Jew do not necessarily reflect divine omnipotence.
And it is given as straight-forward, historical fact of real persons and real events.
So are most of the unhistorical stories.
So, you either believe it or not.
Yep.
But it does mean that actual man named Noah built an Ark and loaded it with gathered species, the world/region, whatever - however far the scale, and at whatever time.
Nope.
If you don't believe what is written, you have a problem with Scripture as either being God's word and understandable in what it plainly says.
No, I don't.
And that is a view that Scripture is untrustworthy. If Scripture is God's word, how can it not be trusted?
How indeed?
It seems to me that every time you see something that is SCIENTIFICALLY dubious or unsubstantiated, you dismiss it possibly being historically true?
No, no, you overreach yourself. Me? Dismiss something merely because it is dubious scientifically? Certainly not. Reject the likelihood of a literal reading when the scientific evidence is overwhelmingly against it? That's more like it.
You would appear to think 1) we can figure out complex, ancient things just from science alone, and 2) that the denial that the miraculous is done across Scripture - sometimes on a very large scale. When Scripture says an ancient dead rabbi was actually God in the flesh and that you MUST believe He was and is God, that He lived as a man and was crucified, Resurrected to life, etc. - why believe such a fantastical thing? Why MUST we believe that to be saved? Is hell merely symbolic? Heaven? These are not scientifically discernible things. You have FAR too much faith in science and your own rationalism. You seem to claim Scripture is true but that it can't possibly mean what it actually says. Was it written for our understanding or not? Yes, it contains mysteries and the miraculous - which we should expect from a God whom was capable of creating a universe from nothing.
Alas, your understanding of what I believe is based on prejudice rather than reading what I say. I have too much faith in Science? Nonsense; I have exactly the right amount of faith in Science. No, the truth of Scripture does not rely on a literal interpretation of every story. Yes it was written for our understanding, but not as a straightforward history book.
"... but God chose the foolish things of the world, that he might put to shame them that are wise; and God chose the weak things of the world, that he might put to shame the things that are strong;"
Name one. People occasionally use this quotation to justify their inability to maintain an unjustified position against rational refutation. I trust you are not doing the same.