Blessed be the LORD my strength which teacheth my hands to war, and my fingers to fight:
My goodness, and my fortress; my high tower, and my deliverer; my shield, and he in whom I trust; who subdueth my people under me.
I personally believe that if you diligently study the bible the only logical conclusion is that the three in one trinity does exist.
Mr. SmartyPants (post: 1440897) wrote:I disagree. One can study the bible diligently and come to any sort of conclusion which they want. Factors such as context of scriptures during its time, context of scripture in our time, factors which we already presume (i.e. the Bible's inspiration and what that may mean), as well the finiteness of ourselves and how language will inevitably distort reality.
I have no problems with you nor anyone believing in the Trinity. I encourage you to embrace this belief if it is your belief. Nonetheless, I think this belief only exists in your mind based off of previous ideas which people already take granted for (language being a big one). I think one ought to have a belief, yet still embrace uncertainty.
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:I make the assertion that you cannot know anything about God, Jesus, or any form of spirituality. Instead, it's all entirely revealed to you by God. And this revelation is ultimately subjective. So ultimately, "subjectivity is truth" because that's all we are able to work with. Reason is far too limited for us to "know" anything by it.
goldenspines wrote:Its only stealing if you don't get caught.
Peanut (post: 1440898) wrote:This is true and it also reminds me, once again, of the importance of tradition within our own faith. The trinity happening to be one of them from our own need to explain how Jesus is God without being polytheistic.
Peanut (post: 1440898) wrote:I know this is a point where we have a fundamental disagreement on in which neither of us can say anything to change the other's mind. But I think you need to look at the wording here a little more closely. If revelation is all subjective, what is to stop me from saying God has revealed that I am to enact his holy judgment for him, starting with you? I think you would agree with me that even if revealed truth is filtered through our own subjectivity, there are still certain interpretations and theological beliefs that are completely false and can be rejected.
Peanut wrote:This is true and it also reminds me, once again, of the importance of tradition within our own faith. The trinity happening to be one of them from our own need to explain how Jesus is God without being polytheistic.
Mr. SmartyPants (post: 1440900) wrote:Oh you're correct for sure. And you make a very valid point. Honestly at this point it's not something I've exactly reconciled yet. But this line of thinking is something that I'm beginning to really appreciate. There's a lot of Kierkegaard/Barth in this which I'm sure you're aware. XD Perhaps I'm just applying far more skepticism than they have.
I guess me saying that "revelation is subjective" is actually a criticism of proponents of revelation, while still maintaining it as revelation. I dunno, man. There is no doubt that my own beliefs are still incomplete, haha. I just love Kierkegaard! XD
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:This is also very true. While I believe that traditions can be ultimately deconstructed, there is still a necessary value in them. Why that is so is something I'm not quite sure of though...
goldenspines wrote:Its only stealing if you don't get caught.
Peanut (post: 1440905) wrote:Just throwing something out here which sort of popped into my head, but why can't it be both objective and subjective? I'm not sure how that would exactly work (maybe the flawed filter idea or something else) but I really don't think Theology, or most of the humanities for that matter, is entirely subjective or entirely objective. I think its somewhere in the middle.
Well, we have to be careful with these deconstructions of tradition since ultimately our entire religion (and all religions for that matter) reduces to traditions passed down from one generation to next with some additions.
Mr. SmartyPants wrote:One can study the bible diligently and come to any sort of conclusion which they want. Factors such as context of scriptures during its time, context of scripture in our time, factors which we already presume (i.e. the Bible's inspiration and what that may mean), as well the finiteness of ourselves and how language will inevitably distort reality.
Mr. SmartyPants (post: 1440915) wrote:Maybe because we can't ever know the object? All that S<->O does is try to prove that there IS an object, and nothing about it. However, I think it's only a negative proof. He doesn't prove an object. He only disproves pure subjectivity (or attempts to, I suppose).
But man. I don't really know. XD
goldenspines wrote:Its only stealing if you don't get caught.
Peanut (post: 1440987) wrote:To pull a Davis, you are differentiating here and relating to said object. Therefore proving S<-->O. XD
Nate (post: 1440739) wrote:Another, which is obviously less popular in Christianity, is that God is talking to other gods. This sounds weird, but remember that in the OT, there is no statement that there are not other gods. It only says not to worship those other gods. There actually are a few places where the OT does imply other gods exist, just that God is above these other gods. Remember that we're only reading a translation of the original text, and translations always lose meaning. From what I've read, the verse where God is talking and says "Let us create man in our image," the noun used there is a generic noun for any god, not the usual names of God that the Jews use.
TopazRaven (post: 1441244) wrote:It might be a bit late to be posting a response to this particular piece of information, but oh well. I'm reading through the OT right now and this is something that I noticed and rather confused me a bit. In Exodus when Moses is trying to convince the Pharaoh to let the Hebrews go whenever he used the staff to show them God's miracles it is said that either the priest or the Pharaoh's gods would perform the same acts, such as creating a snake when the staff turned into a snake or changed water to blood, though not to the same extent that Moses had through God. Doesn't this prove then that in least Egypt's gods where in some sort of existence? If they where can they really even have been considered 'gods'? They may have been beings higher then humans, but definitely lower then God. For it is God that created the world and everything in it and God who is the most powerful being ever. I don't really think any of these other gods actually existed, but I am a person who takes great interest in Egyptian, Greek and Roman mythology.
Edit: Considering I am in no way worshipping these gods and don't even think they actually exist is it safe to say this interest of mine is not dangerous then? I like learning about other cultures and such to begin with.
goldenspines wrote:Its only stealing if you don't get caught.
Mr. SmartyPants (post: 1440897) wrote:That Dude, I think that instead of quantifying it as truth, that it is more appropriate to hold the trinity as a mystery.
I disagree. One can study the bible diligently and come to any sort of conclusion which they want. Factors such as context of scriptures during its time, context of scripture in our time, factors which we already presume (i.e. the Bible's inspiration and what that may mean), as well the finiteness of ourselves and how language will inevitably distort reality must be accounted for.
[edit]This all plays a big part to the analysis of scripture, and theology in history has never come to a reconciliation. For example, some theology discredits all of the miracles in the gospels, saying that they are no longer necessary because myths are no longer needed to expound on beliefs of human nature anymore. Therefore, to understand the gospel existentially is to "demythologize" it (Bultmann). As long as humans are finite, I do not believe we ever will. But for me, this is why faith is so beautiful. Because there is so much uncertainty to it. And what is faith without uncertainty? Not faith at all, I say.[/edit]
I have no problems with you nor anyone believing in the Trinity. I encourage you to embrace this belief if it is your belief. Nonetheless, I think this belief only exists in your mind based off of previous ideas which people already take granted for (language being a big one). I think one ought to have a belief, yet still embrace uncertainty.
I make the assertion that you cannot know anything about God, Jesus, or any form of spirituality. Instead, it's all entirely revealed to you by God. And this revelation is ultimately subjective. So ultimately, "subjectivity is truth" because that's all we are able to work with. Reason is far too limited for us to "know" anything by it.
But that's just me. I could be entirely wrong. In the end, I don't even know. My belief in God is ultimately only foundational on the fact that I already presume God's existence.
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