mattrose wrote:
You're making a common mistake here. I see atheists (and Christians, but especially atheists) make this mistake often. It is the mistake of assuming that because there are multiple 'possible' interpretations there must also be either an unlimited number of possible interpretations OR that all the possible interpretations are equally plausible.
Then I have communicated poorly. What I intended to say was that no single interpretation can be the correct one. Even if a given passage only has five or so.
mattrose wrote:
The reality is that a text properly understand only allows for a limited number of POSSIBLE interpretations and those interpretations are more or less PLAUSIBLE than each other. Now, of course, people can argue about which interpretations are possible or more plausible... but in such cases they are either right or wrong. The interpretation of a text is not completely (or even mostly) relative. It must be shaped by the immediate and broader context of the passage and the meanings of the words utilized.
So, how is a text properly understood? What is the methodology? Hermenutics is a beginning, but anyone familiar with this discipline should also admit that a significant amount of interpretation falls on the reader due to the deliberate vagueness of the original texts.
mattrose wrote:
I humbly submit that you are simply wrong to insist that what is known as the substitutionary model of the atonement is the ONLY or the PRIMARY interpretation of the meaning of the cross. There are numerous models, all of which accept the phrase 'Jesus died for our sins'. You are, apparently, only familiar with the substitutionary model and, so, you're critiquing something about Christianity that many Christians throughout history haven't even believed in! You are very welcome to start a thread if you'd like to learn about other models of the atonement. Briefly, I'll simply tell you that I do not believe that the purpose of the cross was to appease an angry God.
That's fine, but whatever the problem was that got solved, bloodletting and torture were the vehicle for the problem to be solved right?
mattrose wrote:
Your assumption (based on the patriarchal language of the time) that Jewish women were slaves for life is not necessary from the text. You are correct that non-Jews could be slaves for life. But the bigger issue here is that you are projecting modern ethics regarding slavery on the ancient world. God actually agrees with you that these laws were inadequate. God was working progressively through history. You makes the common atheistic (and sometimes Christian!) mistake of assuming that the Bible is a FLAT book in which all parts are equally relevant. Christians believe in progressive revelation. The laws given to Moses were steps in the right direction given the culture at the time, not the end-goal.
Please look at Exodus 21 in whichever version of the bible you think is the best translation. This covers several laws and includes the freedom to beat slaves to death, provided they take a few days to die. It also explicitly states that women only get to go free if they are abused in certain ways or given to the purchaser's son as a wife.
Now as to the bigger issue, you are correct. I view slavery, any kind of slavery, as an abomination. This view is well supported by the ethical system I have outlined elsewhere. You say that men of the time were not capable of understanding this? I say hogwash. If god is powerful surely he has the ability to either make it clear slavery is an abomination, or to compel lack of slavery through fiat as it does with so many other rules, like the admonition against eating shell fish, or wearing mixed fabrics. The simple fact is that the bible repeatedly endorses slavery in both the old and new testaments. That is one of the reasons that the problem of evil is such a hurdle for claims that god is all loving, all just and all wise. The two concepts do not mesh.
Exodus 21
I don't mean to be mean, but you really don't know what you're talking about here. I'm guessing you've read some comments on these types of passages from other atheists without really bothering to understand them in their historical context.[/quote]
I've read the bible, many translations, and apologetics websites, as well as counter apologetics websites and engaged with believers. Your insistence on my ignorance does not sit with the evidence. You can go and read this stuff for yourself. If you want to claim I have taken it out of context please supply the context under which it is better for one person to own another than for both to be free. I see the "that is out of context" claim a lot but no one ever provides the context.
mattrose wrote:
....
As usual, atheists simply come up with the harshest possible interpretation of the text and reject it. It's a straw man.
Not at all. I see you bending over backward to excuse what I believe you know is immoral teaching. I am conveying the clear meaning of the texts. I'm providing you chapters, not verses, with which to interpret and willing to take your decision, not mine, on which translation should be adhered to. You have already had to walk back on your claim that slavery was limited in duration. You should, after reading Samuel, admit that Jewish women didn't get the same limited term as men.
mattrose wrote:
Again, you simply don't have an awareness of literary genres found within the Bible. There is a military literary genre that uses exaggeration and hyperbole (much like today, an athlete might say 'we destroyed/annihilated' those guys). We still have military and competitive genres today... so I'm not sure why atheists struggle so much to understand that Scripture might speak in these ways as well. The reality is that the common people in Canaan had (and seemingly took) every opportunity to leave the land before Israel got there. Military strongholds remained (like Jericho). Battles ensued (in which the Israelites were out-numbered and out-weaponized).
I'm tempted to post all of 1 Samuel 15 for you here. Go take a few minutes to read it. The story has Samuel speaking for God about God's desire for the genocide. Saul is described as killing everyone, but keeping some of the cattle. This ends Saul's reign as king. You claim this is a genre of hyperbole. What is the context clue for that revelation? Why do you know this passage is hyperbole? Was god regretting making Saul king also hyperbole? I've engaged with this story specifically with believers, and reviewed pastors, priests and apologists dealing with it and you are the first person ever to suggest it's hyperbole to me or to any of the others I've seen engage this topic. Where are you getting that information?
mattrose wrote:
I'll respond to your Lot & Jeptha interpretations together because they are equally uninformed and in just about the same way. Here, you're making the common mistake of assuming that Judges is a book of human heroes. I don't think you have the slightest understanding of the purpose/meaning of the Book of Judges. It's a book about the downward cycle of sinful Israel. They got worse and worse. And this includes their leadership. Over and over, God DID withdraw support during the time of the judges... so I don't really know what you're talking about. The only 'hero' in the Book is God who continually gives the people another chance despite their terrible behavior. Plus, I just flat-out disagree with you that Jepthah's daughter actually was sacrificed (the text doesn't say this), but since you're so far from understanding Judges to begin with, I don't know if it's worth grappling with the details. Bottom line, you've consistently shown that you are aware, only, of the worst possible interpretations of Scripture. You've rejected them just like I have.
mattrose, The text is clear on Jeptha. "Jephthah the Gileadite was a mighty warrior." = Hero. I'm taking this from the NIV version of Judges 11. Here are verses 29-31 which mark both that the spirit of god was with Jeptha, so still a hero, and the specifics of the deal Jeptha offered to god.
"29Then the Spirit of the Lord came on Jephthah. He crossed Gilead and Manasseh, passed through Mizpah of Gilead, and from there he advanced against the Ammonites. 30And Jephthah made a vow to the Lord: “If you give the Ammonites into my hands, 31whatever comes out of the door of my house to meet me when I return in triumph from the Ammonites will be the Lord’s, and I will sacrifice it as a burnt offering.”"
Now, that looks to me like Jeptha was hoping it would be a dog, or some other non-human creature. If he had a dog he could reasonably expect it to beat people out of the door.
Look here at verse 32,
"32Then Jephthah went over to fight the Ammonites, and the Lord gave them into his hands. 33He devastated twenty towns from Aroer to the vicinity of Minnith, as far as Abel Keramim. Thus Israel subdued Ammon."
This shows that Jephthah won, not on his own but through the intervention of God who gave the Ammonites to him. Now look how Jephthah reacts when his daughter comes out.
34When Jephthah returned to his home in Mizpah, who should come out to meet him but his daughter, dancing to the sound of timbrels! She was an only child. Except for her he had neither son nor daughter. 35When he saw her, he tore his clothes and cried, “Oh no, my daughter! You have brought me down and I am devastated. I have made a vow to the Lord that I cannot break.”
That is not the wail of someone who will have his daughter become a priestess, or nun, or holy person. This is a parent realizing that he has to destroy his child.
That brings us to verse 39
39After the two months, she returned to her father, and he did to her as he had vowed. And she was a virgin.
I'm using the NIV for these quotes. If you disagree with that translation I'm willing to look at another. My understanding from listening to apologists is that the NIV is a better translation than the KJV due to a better understanding of the original language. You are correct that the bible does not say, "And his daughter was burned". It instead confirms that he did what he vowed, however he vowed to offer a burnt sacrifice. If you want to dispute this you can't just tell me I'm wrong. You need to offer some kind of evidence.
mattrose wrote:
Yes, a lot of times God's displeasure with a situation is immediately made known (in the Book of Judges this is made obvious by the fact that God kept giving them into the hands of their enemies). But, again, you show a general level of ignorance for the Bible-stories that you reject. Jesus didn't beat up any people in the temple story!
He overturned tables and drove them out. You can accuse me of hyperbole, but not by much. In either case it directly shows what I intended, god is not subtle about making his displeasure known in the bible.
mattrose wrote:
So how do you determine which horrible things are just history and which horrible things are actually the will of god? Why do you think the ones that are just history are in the book without commentary on why those things were bad to do?
That is actually a good question, but I think there are really good answers. First, identifying literary genre is important (you made this mistake with the Book of Judges, assuming that it was a collection of hero stories rather than a depiction of Israel's moral decline). Second, it is important to read confusing Scriptures in light of less confusing ones (you made this mistake with regard to Jephthah, assuming that he killed his daughter when the text is ambiguous on the matter even though elsewhere in the Law of Moses child sacrifice is specifically and clearly forbidden.... but, again, even IF Jephthah DID sacrifice his daughter, that is clearly not an endorsement due to the nature of the Book of Judges and that clear biblical law opposing child sacrifice!. Third, and most importantly, we are helped in interpretation by progressive revelation. Jesus is the fullest revelation of God. In Jesus it is revealed that God is love. So anything that cannot be reconciled to Jesus/love (or at least making progress toward Jesus/love) is clearly not endorsed by God. Christians interpret the Old Testament by the light of Christ.
You are cherry picking. I'll be the first to agree with you that the bible is contradictory. However I believe, with some evidence, that this is because the new and old testaments were not written together, but that the new was added, many many years later as a rebooted version of Judaism. I am forced to take what you say here with a large amount of salt given how clearly wrong you are about Jephthah. Essentially you are rejecting every part of the bible that does not mesh with Jesus as love. So the slavery, the genocide, the existence of hell, you have to relabel it all as historical because it's not about love, it's about fear and obedience. However it leaves me very confused. If the tale of Jephthah is just historical context why does it describe God as taking an active hand in the deal? Was that author wrong?
mattrose wrote:

I'm not in shock at all. I've read the passages you mentioned many times. I've actually been a Bible-teacher for more than 10 years. I have a master's degree in theology. The objections you have raised are common, but they are uninformed. They are straw-man arguments against Christianity. I am a little surprised that you are not aware of this b/c most people who claim to be atheists with an online presence have since realized that these harsh interpretations of Scripture are unnecessary interpretations. Either you haven't had enough dialogue with informed Christians or you've purposefully dismissed these counter-arguments. If the latter, it could be because you have a vested interest in not recognizing the truth of Christianity OR it could be because you really don't think the atheistic interpretation of the passages is wrong. If that's the case, we just disagree. I'd only ask that you admit that Bible scholars might actually know more than you do about how to interpret the Bible.
I'd be glad to talk more about the evidence for Jesus' existence when you have time. Thanks for the ongoing dialogue. It has always been an encouragement to my faith to discover that the arguments against it are so weak. In other cases, the issues raised by atheists cause me to think about something I haven't thought much about and can dig into. In every cases so far, it has built up my faith to dig into these so-called problem areas. So when I say I appreciate this dialogue, I really mean it!
I don't know that I would call these arguments against Christianity, so much as arguments against the validity of the bible as more than a book. Most Christians don't read their bibles, they get only what their teachers select for them. I respect that you have a master's degree in theology, but that leaves me shocked both at your ignorance of the degree of slavery and at your insistence that the story of Jephthah doesn't end is a burnt offering of his daughter. I've encountered both before, and from far less studied persons. However once I actually am forced to cart out the verses the person is usually very unhappy because they got their information from one of the apologetics websites that lies. Did you forget that the slavery was not as you initially described it? Do you now see that Jephthah's daughter was indeed killed? If not can you support your position with scripture, or with some researched source? I'm also enjoying our talk. However I find it very frustrating to be told repeatedly I'm ignorant based apparently only on your authority.
You can tell me all you like that I am ignorant, and I may well be. However with no additional source to study from I can't just take your word on it. You say God is love, and I agree the Bible says that. However it also says that God created evil. It talks about lots of things that God does that are not consistent with love, which I see as reason to doubt it as a credible source of information on god. It looks to me like you have chosen the nicer bits and believe they invalidate, or moderate, the nasty ones. I can see now, how you make that interpretation, with your love litmus, but I do not see why you feel that set of verses is more credible than the others.