Why the Bible? (Religion)

by George Jelliss ⌂ @, Crewe, Thursday, September 11, 2008, 20:50 (5711 days ago)

I've largely avoided responding to edinburgh4's posts because they consist of little but quotes from a version of the Bible and his or his pastor's interpretation of them. It baffles me why anyone would base their entire philosophy on absolute belief in this text. It is after all just a compilation of books by various authors and editors. Some of it is literature, poems, biased history and fanciful myth, and much of it written in language now difficult to interpret. - Personally I have greater respect for the philosophical literature that has come down to us from the ancient Greeks. In many ways it is the basis of our modern scientific democratic freethinking culture. - Outside the Bible itself there is very little historical evidence that many of the participants in the stories, such as Moses, David, Solomon or Jesus, ever existed, or that many of the events described there ever took place, any more than did King Arthur or Robin Hood or Sherlock Holmes. - The video "Evidence for a Young Earth" is just a regurgitation of some of the usual creationist claims that have been repeatedly answered by scientists. It just seems the creationists never read these responses, and come out with the same old stuff time after time.

Why the Bible?

by David Turell @, Friday, September 12, 2008, 02:36 (5711 days ago) @ George Jelliss

Outside the Bible itself there is very little historical evidence that many of the participants in the stories, such as Moses, David, Solomon or Jesus, ever existed, or that many of the events described there ever took place, any more than did King Arthur or Robin Hood or Sherlock Holmes.
> 
> The video "Evidence for a Young Earth" is just a regurgitation of some of the usual creationist claims that have been repeatedly answered by scientists. It just seems the creationists never read these responses, and come out with the same old stuff time after time. - The Israeli effort to show that the Old Testament is in part an accurate history has turned up many proofs that people like David and Solomon existed: I've toured the City of David excavations just outside the wall of the Old City. Remnants of Solomon's Temple have been found. A few years ago the tumbled-down walls of Jericho were uncovered. But proving 'Moses taking the tablets' is not possible, and just makes a nice story. Re' the NT, Josephus certainly clearly referenced Jesus, making his existence likely. 
But George is absolutely correct in his assessment of the OT Bible, with authors writing stories that had been told and re-told over hundreds of years before being recorded as written statement in an ancient language with a tiny vocabulary of less than 3,000 base words, forcing each base word to have multiple meanings. I've pointed out in other threads that the Sea of Galilee is really a 5x13 mile lake, the 'sea' a mistranslation of the Hebrew 'yam', which really to any body of water, from puddle to ocean. - And the NT Bible is the same: it contains a first Gospel, written according to experts about 60-80 years after the cruifixion. Again finally writing down orally transmitted stories many years later. Both Bibles finally set up as compendia of selected material, with many more writings available than were selected, through committees of human beings who are not infallable. - And finally, I view Young Earth Creationists as equivalent to members of the "Flat Earth Society" or to those who think we never reached the Moon. Real science sets out to understand the reality we experience, not to promote a desired idea as to what should be correct, twisting and turning evidence to fit a preconceived idea based on a bible story mistranslated in the KJV. 'Yom' means any length of time, from a moment to an eon. Gerald Schroeder's books best explain how to understand Genesis and the Big Bang.

Why the Bible?

by Carl, Friday, September 12, 2008, 16:31 (5711 days ago) @ George Jelliss

Christianity exists, so something started it. I think that Jesus existed as a man (or men), because it is unlikely that such a strong movement could have arisen spontaneously so quickly. Also, some event probably triggered the evangelizing, but nothing supernatural. David mentions King Arthur. There were probably real people and events at the base of the legend.
As far as the OT, I'm not sure. It was the writings of primitive shepherd priest passed on orally and then in writing over centuries. Who knows how much is based on some kind of fact.

Why the Bible?

by BBella @, Saturday, September 13, 2008, 06:37 (5710 days ago) @ George Jelliss

It baffles me why anyone would base their entire philosophy on absolute belief in this text. It is after all just a compilation of books by various authors and editors. Some of it is literature, poems, biased history and fanciful myth, and much of it written in language now difficult to interpret. > - I can understand where edinburgh comes from as I too believed almost verbatim as he does now from a very early age. This happened to me just as it is happening to him...this is the faith handed down by the "fathers" that we are taught to search and study the scriptures to prove to others and to ourselves "where" our faith comes from....a book, "The Word of God." What I didn't understand then that I understand now, is that I was taught to "use" these scriptures to justify a belief I had already been indoctrinated with since childhood, and not the other way around. I found later, I was able to use this book to verify any and every other doctrine I later chose to believe as well. This was realized in hindsight. I did not purposely move from church doctrine to church doctrine to prove this, but if I had, I would have obviously found what I was looking for. This goes back to what I have observed within my own experience over the years...I can prove whatever I choose to believe with whatever I choose as evidence to prove it with.

Why the Bible?

by George Jelliss ⌂ @, Crewe, Sunday, September 14, 2008, 08:20 (5709 days ago) @ George Jelliss

I recently came across this excellent atheist site.
The essays (which continue over several pages) with the titles 
"Let the Stones Speak" - on the archaeological evidence, and
"Choking on the Camel" - on whether Jesus ever existed 
are particularly good. - http://www.ebonmusings.org/atheism/index.html - The main passage in Josephus referring to Jesus is generally agreed, even by christian experts to be a pious forgery, and in any case Josephus was born in 37AD. When I referred to contemporary commentators I was thinking of people like Philo or Seneca who were alive and in the area at the time of the supposed events. They are totally silent on the subject.

The Horrors of Religion

by George Jelliss ⌂ @, Crewe, Sunday, September 14, 2008, 08:33 (5709 days ago) @ George Jelliss

Oh dear, I didn't expect anyone to start taking those quiz questions seriously! I've changed the heading of this section of the thread since we seem to have departed considerably from the original subject. - I thought Hell was an adaptation of the Greek Hades. Judging from the story of Orpheus I imagine it was more like a musty cave in the ground, on the other hand it was also presumably the abode of Vulcan (or Hephaistos) whence the fire and brimstone.

Why the Bible?

by George Jelliss ⌂ @, Crewe, Sunday, September 14, 2008, 23:32 (5708 days ago) @ George Jelliss

BBella: This goes back to what I have observed within my own experience over the years...I can prove whatever I choose to believe with whatever I choose as evidence to prove it with. - This is exactly what is wrong a religious upbringing. First you choose what to believe, then you seek out evidence to confirm the belief and try to ignore anything that counts against it. I was brought up in the English empiricist tradition, as exemplified by science and the detective story, that you look at the evidence first and then you decide what you believe.

Why the Bible?

by David Turell @, Monday, September 15, 2008, 00:44 (5708 days ago) @ George Jelliss

This is exactly what is wrong a religious upbringing. First you choose what to believe, then you seek out evidence to confirm the belief and try to ignore anything that counts against it. I was brought up in the English empiricist tradition, as exemplified by science and the detective story, that you look at the evidence first and then you decide what you believe. - Not exactly, George. We all grow up with parents who, if religious, give us an introduction to their religion, really an indoctrination. Most stay with that result, but some of us do think and study and make other choices. I come from a Jewish family, not very religious, but as first-born male grandchild had a Bar Mitzvah. Later I became agnostic until I began my study of cosmology, particle physics and evolution. That you and I have come to different conclusions from (I assume) the same studies, in part relates to childhood teaching but also to adult logic.

The Horrors of Religion

by David Turell @, Monday, September 15, 2008, 00:50 (5708 days ago) @ George Jelliss

I was encouraged by dwh's describing a kinder form of Christianity in his acquaintances. The Christians I meet seem to be of the born-again variety, who's attitude is "I don't make the rules. Everyone has the same choices available." But, religion in the US is more of a private matter, so I just may not be talking to the more mellow variety of Christians. - I find that the Born-Again Christians I know in Texas are of two general types. Those who 'witness' and try to convert you, and the 'true' born-again who witnesses only by living a life that emulates Jesus. That latter group are really the true and proper born-agains and they are the vast majority in my area.

Why the Bible?

by George Jelliss ⌂ @, Crewe, Monday, September 15, 2008, 12:23 (5708 days ago) @ George Jelliss

Perhaps I was exceptionally lucky in not being brought up in a strongly religious family. My mother was mildly religious, in that I understand she taught at Sunday School before her marriage, and we were never able to persuade her of evolution in preference to the Adam and Eve story. However her favourite religious book was Pilgrims Progress and, coming from the Lancashire area she was a strong supporter of the Cooperative movement, and thought a lot of the social reformer Robert Owen. My father was a sceptical atheist involved in the trade union movement, an avid reader of H. G. Wells, and detective stories, and engaged in an Engineering trade requiring geometrical understanding (reading blueprints). Consequently I was left to make up my own mind on most issues from an early age, and fortunately had an excellent local library, one of those built by the philanthropy of Andrew Carnegie, in which to indulge my thirst for knowledge. It was only when I went to Grammar School at age 11 that I really encountered Religious Instruction and daily religious assemblies with hymn singing, and the occasional church ceremony. Trying to sort out all this theological rubbish caused me a great deal of unnecessary intellectual anguish. Fortunately, in my readings in the library, I found people like Bertrand Russell, A. J. Ayer and other rationalists to guide me on the right lines.

The Horrors of Religion

by dhw, Monday, September 15, 2008, 13:49 (5708 days ago) @ George Jelliss

Carl: "I was encouraged by dhw's describing a kinder form of Christianity in his acquaintances." - You came on the scene at the tail end of a long and interesting series of discussions with Mark, who is a Reverend and who very sadly appears to have abandoned us. You may recall contributing to the thread relating to the sermon which he sent us. Here are a few quotes from his post under "How Do Agnostics Live?" (June 19 at 16.27): - "You refer to the stories of Noah, Sodom & Gomorrah and John 3:18 ["he that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God"]. This raises the issue of how to read the Bible, which could itself fill several threads." [It has!] - "I do not take all such OT stories as historical fact. The Bible doesn't claim to be an inerrant piece of history in the sense in which we now understand history." - "The faith cannot be understood by studying the Bible in isolation from the church and its traditions of interpretation. The church existed before the Bible." - "[John is not] discussing the issue of those who have not heard of Jesus, so the church at its wisest does not force his words to apply to contexts which were not considered. If that were done with John, then one would have to say that everyone BC is lost, and it is absurd to believe that John thought this." - The church in the UK is split into all kinds of factions, some more liberal than others. Bear in mind that the above are statements by a "professional" preacher, i.e. paid by the Christian church to spread the word. Of course, he phrases his beliefs very carefully, but you and I might say this actually means that some of the stories in the Bible are a load of old cobblers, and the rest is a matter of interpretation. From then on, see BBella's perfect formula!

The Horrors of Religion

by Mark @, Wednesday, September 17, 2008, 21:51 (5705 days ago) @ dhw

dhw, 15/9/08: "Bear in mind that the above are statements by a "professional" preacher, i.e. paid by the Christian church to spread the word." - Pure ad hominem.

The Horrors of Religion

by dhw, Thursday, September 18, 2008, 09:31 (5705 days ago) @ Mark

Dhw, 15/9/08: Bear it in mind that the above are statements by a "professional" preacher, i.e. paid by the Christian church to spread the word. - Mark: Pure ad hominem. - You seem to have misunderstood the context of my post on 15/9/08. I referred to your professional credentials only in order to add weight to your rebuttal of Edinburgh4's literalist interpretation of the Bible. For instance, he insists that John 3:18 means all non- Christians, including those born BC, are doomed, whereas you say categorically, "it is absurd to believe that John thought this." My post was an attempt to encourage Carl still further by citing you as a representative of what he called "a kinder form of Christianity". - Ad hominem? Honi soit qui mal y pense.

Why the Bible?

by dhw, Monday, September 15, 2008, 15:10 (5708 days ago) @ George Jelliss

George has referred us to an interesting atheist site called ebonmusings. - I read the (rather long) essay called 'Choking on the Camel', which sets out a stimulating thesis that Jesus never actually existed. The main arguments seem to be that there are no eyewitness accounts, contemporary historians barely mention what should have been world-shattering events, the famous Josephus passage is a forgery (convincingly argued, in my view), the gospels ... written long after the events ... clearly build on their predecessors, and how do narrators actually know what happened if they weren't there and had no written records to consult? The author believes that Paul's epistles only refer to a spiritual, not a physical Christ (Paul's only personal contact having been through a vision). - Since Edinburgh4 is the only contributor to this site so far to take the Bible literally, I suspect that most of us will agree that many of the stories are fictional or at best symbolic. The idea that Jesus never actually existed goes one step further. The argument is sometimes circular. If the miraculous events claimed by the gospels were just fiction (as we non-Christians believe), it's hardly surprising that contemporary historians didn't mention them. Nor is it surprising that the comparatively few eyewitnesses did not include an historian. There were others also claiming to be the Messiah, so why should outsiders bother about one more? Only the eyewitnesses would have been convinced. But the fact that later writers embellish a story doesn't mean that the main character didn't exist. Tiddlers turn into whales, given enough story-telling fishermen. It's surprising that the author doesn't mention St Peter, who is said to have been an eyewitness, to have met St Paul on more than one occasion (and quarrelled with him), and to have been crucified under Nero (who certainly existed). I'm in no position to argue about history, but since Peter was the 'rock' and provides the human link between Christ and the church, I find it hard to believe that either he didn't exist (whereas Paul did) or his story revolves round events that never happened (i.e. Christ's human life and death). The virgin birth, the miracles, the resurrection, the three-day darkness ... as far as I'm concerned, they all sound like the product of the propagandists. But I'm not convinced that Christ and his contemporaries were fictional, or that the latter suffered their appalling martyrdom for what they believed to be a fictional character. - The author finishes with praise for the "freedom and enlightenment of atheism". I think he's confusing religion with theism. We all agree that there is some colossal creative force out there. What we don't know is whether it's conscious or not. Even the main religions, despite their myths and symbols, may yet have an element of truth in them, so the self-congratulating "enlightenment" might be a bit premature.

Why the Bible?

by David Turell @, Tuesday, September 16, 2008, 18:33 (5706 days ago) @ dhw

The virgin birth, the miracles, the resurrection, the three-day darkness ... as far as I'm concerned, they all sound like the product of the propagandists. But I'm not convinced that Christ and his contemporaries were fictional, or that the latter suffered their appalling martyrdom for what they believed to be a fictional character.
 
> We all agree that there is some colossal creative force out there. What we don't know is whether it's conscious or not. Even the main religions, despite their myths and symbols, may yet have an element of truth in them. - I'm not sure how far we should go on this website debating the truth or falseness of all the fables of Christianity. I agree with you that Jesus (real name Joshua ben Joseph, to illustrate how much of the real story got changed in the process of creating written records decades after the fact) probably lived as a charismatic opponent to the corruption going on in the Temple at that time. He was a purist who preached exactly the same message as Rabbi Hillel (who did exist) did a century earlier. That is the same Hillel for whom the Jewish college organizations in this country are named. - I am convinced that the followers of Jesus invented stories to create a religion about him.

Why the Bible?

by Carl, Tuesday, September 16, 2008, 19:28 (5706 days ago) @ David Turell

I have a question for the scholars among us. How common was literacy in first century Galilee? Who among Jesus' associates would have been expected to write.

Why the Bible?

by David Turell @, Tuesday, September 16, 2008, 20:15 (5706 days ago) @ Carl

I have a question for the scholars among us. How common was literacy in first century Galilee? Who among Jesus' associates would have been expected to write. - The following site estimates 1.5%-3.0% literacy. Note the author is an Israeli expert. http://faculty.biu.ac.il/~barilm/illitera.html#[29] Not a surprising finding when one considers the literacy rate in 3rd World countries today.

Why the Bible?

by Carl, Wednesday, September 17, 2008, 02:24 (5706 days ago) @ David Turell

The low literacy rate of 1.5% to 3% could explain the absence of a written record by Jesus' followers until several decades after his death. There was no one to take notes. It's possible that Matthew, the tax man, might have had some rudimentary writing skills, but probably no one else did until the Christians began to attract an educated following. A question though, is when the Jews studied the Torah, was the Rabi and others able to read, or had they memorized passages.

Why the Bible?

by David Turell @, Wednesday, September 17, 2008, 09:36 (5706 days ago) @ Carl

A question though, is when the Jews studied the Torah, was the Rabi and others able to read, or had they memorized passages. - From my readings, and I am not an expert, the Rabbi guarded the Torah and often carried it to the meetings for services. Guarded because the Torahs were handwritten on goat or sheepskin by scribes and contained the complete five books. Thus they were very valuable. It appears that the scribes were very accurate as shown by the complete scroll of Isaiah found at Qumran by the Dead Sea,age first century. It is almost 100% the same as the Masoretic Text developed from a number of scrolls a few hundred years later, the basis for Jewish Bibles now. The Rabbis could read. The 1.5-3% literacy figures suggest that only Rabbis, priests, and some government officials could read. Scrolls when worn out were ceremonally buried and replaced by another copy. This ancient Hebrew is written in shorthand, consonents only, with accent marks, and as I have mentioned in other threads contained close to 3,000 base words with about 10,000 meanings available when prefixes or suffixes were added. A very limited vocabulary, which is the language Israel started with when Hebrew was revived as the language of the State of Israel. And this is why the KJV was poorly translated. Words had to have several meanings in order to express what the writer desired to convey. Context of the sentence implied meaning to a word.
In fact the meanings are still open to interpretation. There is a recent book," In the Beginning of", by Judah Landa, 2004, which retranslates the first 11 chapter of Genesis to show that it fits current science, that is, quantum theory, cosmology, etc. His purpose was to allow fundamentalist Christians and Jews to continue to accept the Bible as the Word of God and not in conflict with current accepted science.

Why the Bible?

by dhw, Wednesday, September 17, 2008, 11:12 (5706 days ago) @ David Turell

David refers us to a recent translation of the first 11 chapters of Genesis by Judah Landa. "His purpose was to allow fundamentalist Christians and Jews to continue to accept the Bible as the Word of God and not in conflict with current accepted science." - By coincidence, here is a snippet from today's Guardian: "Announcing a conference next year on the 150th anniversary of Charles Darwin's The Origin of Species, the Vatican said yesterday that evolution was compatible with the Bible." The article concludes: "The church does not read Genesis literally, saying it is an allegory for how God created the world." - If I may quote David Garrick, who was also prone to making dramatic announcements: "Wonders will never cease."

Why the Bible? Historical battles confirmed

by David Turell @, Thursday, December 08, 2022, 20:00 (510 days ago) @ dhw

Careful magnetic studies:

https://bigthink.com/the-past/earth-magnetic-field-biblical-stories-ancient-cities-dest...

"According to the Bible, Gath was one of the main Philistine cities and the home of Goliath the Giant. Its destruction is glossed over, described in less than one verse of the Bible, in the book of 2 Kings.

"Archaeologists have long worked to figure out what happened to the ancient city of Gath, and just as important, when it happened. But dating sites like this is no straightforward task. Recently, a team of scientists led by Yoav Vaknin of Tel Aviv University tried a new method to date archaeological digs like Gath: They used the Earth’s magnetic field.

***

"The history of changes in the magnetic field is recorded in rock. Perhaps the most well-known record is etched in stone at the mid-Atlantic ridge. Here, new seafloor is constantly being created as the tectonic plates spread along fault lines as long as the ocean. As these molten rocks orient themselves, cool, and solidify, they record the direction and intensity of the magnetic field. A search of the seafloor allows us to read the history of the Earth’s magnetic field itself.

"Surprisingly, this method can also be used for archaeological sites like the one at Gath. If rocks at these sites become hot enough, they too can align to show the intensity and direction of the magnetic field. Such heat can be generated during military actions, when widespread destruction is common.

"According to the Bible, Gath was one of the main Philistine cities and the home of Goliath the Giant. Its destruction is glossed over, described in less than one verse of the Bible, in the book of 2 Kings.

"Archaeologists have long worked to figure out what happened to the ancient city of Gath, and just as important, when it happened. But dating sites like this is no straightforward task. Recently, a team of scientists led by Yoav Vaknin of Tel Aviv University tried a new method to date archaeological digs like Gath: They used the Earth’s magnetic field. Their results recently appeared in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Many archaeological sites illustrate the brutality of Hazael’s campaigns. They tell the stories of how entire cities were destroyed, and Gath was one of these. Massive destruction is evident at the site, showing a long siege trench, fallen buildings, and human remains.

"Different approaches to date these sites lead to different conclusions. But one element in the destruction of these cities could help researchers. The battles were extensive and terrible, with widespread fires blazing at over 600° C. This heat baked the mud bricks in the cities, and aligned them with the Earth’s magnetic field.

"Vaknin and his team realized this, and they knew something else about the Earth during this time. While the magnetic field is continually changing, there are periods during which it fluctuates more quickly. This period was one of them, with fluctuations measuring twice as strong as their current propensity. “The dating resolution depends on the rapid fluctuations, so I am lucky to work on this period,” Vaknin told Big Think.

"In short, the scattered fragments of ruins held the information researchers needed to determine exactly when these cities were destroyed.

"To use this data, the team gathered the information the mud bricks held about the direction and intensity of the Earth’s magnetic field, and they combined it with knowledge of other events whose timing is precisely known. These events are known as chronological anchors, and unfortunately, Vaknin says, they are rare.

“'The 701 [BCE] Assyrian campaign is my favorite example,” Vaknin says. “When the historical sources and the archaeological record match (more than 1000 arrowheads found in the destruction of Lachish, for example) — Bingo! We have an anchor.

“'We then compare the magnetic results from these anchors to those from other finds whose dates that are not as well known but are roughly dated to the same periods, according to other dating methods.”

***

"Piece by piece, the destruction of other sites has come into focus — some were leveled by the Babylonians, others by the Assyrians. Their method has allowed the team to trace the contours of the region’s chronology, suggesting the timeline of the falls of various parts of Judah and Jerusalem.

"Especially in this part of the world and for this period of ancient history, geomagnetic dating is more precise than radiocarbon dating. This is thanks to the number of archaeological sites paired with the swiftness and strength shifts in the magnetic field. But the method can be used anywhere rocks were heated enough to align with the Earth’s magnetic field."

Comment: this tells us the history of material events in the Bible are true. The stories about individuals are problematic.

Why the Bible?

by Mark @, Monday, September 15, 2008, 15:22 (5708 days ago) @ George Jelliss

Jesus didn't exist?
It is possible, and easy, to be sceptical about anything, but it seems harder for sceptics to be sceptical about their scepticism.

Why the Bible?

by dhw, Tuesday, September 16, 2008, 10:30 (5707 days ago) @ Mark

Mark: "Jesus didn't exist? It is possible, and easy, to be sceptical about anything, but it seems harder for sceptics to be sceptical about their scepticism." - Welcome back to the fold! In your absence, I took the liberty of quoting you in order to prove to Carl that not all British Christians believe in the literal truth of the Bible, as advocated by Edinburgh4 (The Horrors of Religion, 15 September at 13.49). However, the question remains wide open as to how much of the Bible (including the NT) can be taken at face value. The essay 'Choking on the Camel', to which George kindly drew our attention, is a serious piece of scholarship which raises major issues about the very foundations of Christianity. I've indicated why I still believe that Jesus was a real person, but you are much better qualified than I am to respond!

The Horrors of Religion

by Carl, Monday, September 15, 2008, 16:07 (5708 days ago) @ George Jelliss

This may be old news to everyone else, but I found a video of Richard Dawkins lecture at Berkley at the Richard Dawkins web site.
 http://richarddawkins.net/article,2989,Richard-Dawkins-Lecture-at-UC-Berkeley,Richard-D... was my first opportunity to hear him, and he does seem mild mannered, which agrees with what George said.
I haven't had time to watch it all, but what I have watched is enjoyable.
He did avoid the probability trap on his scale-of-one-to-seven agnostic analysis. I know I am being pedantic, but probability requires quantification. If you knew there were one hundred universes and forty nine of them had gods, then we could accurately say that the probability of God existing in our universe was .49, which would make us agnostics. But in a population of single universe where god is true or false, it doesn't make sense to discuss probabilities. I understand that it is just a shorthand way to discuss perceived likelihood, which is intuitive.

Why the Bible?

by David Turell @, Monday, September 15, 2008, 18:51 (5707 days ago) @ George Jelliss

George has referred us to an interesting atheist site called ebonmusings. 
 
> I read the (rather long) essay called 'Choking on the Camel', which sets out a stimulating thesis that Jesus never actually existed. 
>The virgin birth, the miracles, the resurrection, the three-day darkness ... as far as I'm concerned, they all sound like the product of the propagandists. But I'm not convinced that Christ and his contemporaries were fictional, or that the latter suffered their appalling martyrdom for what they believed to be a fictional character.> - I've also read "Choking on the Camel", and appreciate George pointing out the website. - If you google "Hebrew word for virgin" you will find Christian apologist websites that try to justify the Greek translations of Isaiah that introduced the 'virgin birth' concept. Also there are Jewish Biblical scholars who point out that The Book of Isaiah uses the Hebrew word for 'maiden' in the prophesy that the Christian world uses as the supposed announcement of the coming of Jesus and the specific word for virgin five other times in other places in his writings. Remember that the entire Book of Isaiah was found in the Dead Sea Scrolls, and dates to a time around that of Jesus. The Jewish scholars are adament that 'virgin' is a mistranslation of 'maiden', granting that maiden can imply virginity, since there was an explicit word for virgin in the Biblical writings at that time.

Why the Bible?

by David Turell @, Tuesday, September 16, 2008, 20:54 (5706 days ago) @ David Turell

If you google "Hebrew word for virgin" you will find Christian apologist websites that try to justify the Greek translations of Isaiah that introduced the 'virgin birth' concept. Also there are Jewish Biblical scholars who point out that The Book of Isaiah uses the Hebrew word for 'maiden' in the prophesy that the Christian world uses as the supposed announcement of the coming of Jesus and the specific word for virgin five other times in other places in his writings. Remember that the entire Book of Isaiah was found in the Dead Sea Scrolls, and dates to a time around that of Jesus. The Jewish scholars are adament that 'virgin' is a mistranslation of 'maiden', granting that maiden can imply virginity, since there was an explicit word for virgin in the Biblical writings at that time. - I though I should add to this comment the exact way Isaiah is translated in a Jewish Bible in regard to the supposed prophesy about Jesus, granting that there is a messianic tradition in Judaism, not yet fulfilled: Isaiah 7:14, "Therefore the Lord Himself shall give you a sign: behold, the young woman shall conceive, and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel." - And again, consider that Isaiah uses the specific Hebrew word for virgin in several other parts of his book, but not in this verse.

The Horrors of Religion

by George Jelliss ⌂ @, Crewe, Monday, September 15, 2008, 19:21 (5707 days ago) @ George Jelliss

A more impressive video of Richard Dawkins is this one from 2006. - http://richarddawkins.net/article,303,Reading-of-The-God-Delusion-in-Lynchburg-VA,Richa... - Particularly impressive is the patient way he answers hostile questions at the end, mostly by students from Liberty University, a hot-bed of creationism.

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