alissowack;760557 said:
Short version: I don't know.
Again you want me to make a claim for something you feel you have the answer to. You have your presuppositions about God and it would only make sense to you if I "jump on board" to your understanding of God. I wouldn't say that I am evading. My hands are tied. It is where the trail ends for me (and I don't mean the posting).
If anything it is you who feels they have the answer to something(the bible), for which you make claims. You have presuppositions about god and it would only make sense if others 'jump on board' to understand your god, the one you've made claim to.
Indeed you are evading, you are slithering around the question, which was "could you in all truthfullness, say that god would limit itself to one book?". You're hands are tied I can only pressume because if you had answered in all truthfulness you might feel it damages your faith in that one book, gives possible credence to other books, or some other reason.
solid analysis;760687 said:
Simply understanding and accepting what is taught in scriptures is not an act of simplifying God.
How is it not? You think/feel you have found who god is in that one book, you think/feel you have found god's wisdom in that one book, and you think/feel in those teaching is the wisdom of god. What you said in that one post, is exactly what you have done.
solid analysis;760687 said:
My acceptance of the Bible being the truth comes from intense study, research, and careful examination of facts; not just some vague, preconceived idea.
Why have you not "put intense study, research, and careful examination of facts; not just some vague, preconceived idea" into other religious texts? I would gather from previous posts it is because you think/feel the bible is the word of god already, so why bother.
This is essentially what you have said, but using a different object:
You: My city is the only city in America that does things right.
Me: Have lived in the other cities in America to know this is true?
You: No, that is just my belief and in that belief I have much faith.
You could be right, but you could also be horribly wrong^^^^
solid analysis;760687 said:
And sorry, but personal feelings does not constitute proof of whether something is right or wrong.
And if you'd have happened to be born in the middle east, what say you then? The koran or bhagavad gita would the "one" book that is correct or most correct. Beliefs in and of themselves are personal things, though beliefs in and of themselves, do not constitute proof of whether something is right or wrong. So more accurately, on belief through "intense study, research, and careful examination of facts" you believe the bible being truth. It may not be, but you have nothing else to gage it against really because you have not put such intense and rigorous energy into other religious texts.
solid analysis;760687 said:
Neither does personal experiences.
Personal experience is one of the ways we can know if something contains truth. Here is an example:
You: Do not put your hand in the fire, it will get burnt.
Me: *puts my hand in the fire* it gets burnt.
It was through experience that I found what you said had truth in it. If I had not experienced it, I would have to believe what you said was true and then have faith in that belief.
You: Do not put your hand on the fridge, it will get burnt.
Me: Have you ever put your hand on the fridge?
You: No.
Me: Then how do you know it will get burnt?
You: I believe that is what will happen.
Me: *puts hand on the fridge* it does not get burnt.
It was through experience that I found what you said did not contain truth. It is through experience that we are able to learn whether something is truth or not. If you had not experienced personally, truths within the bible, I highly doubt you would give credence to the bible. But like with the fridge burning, you cannot say whether it is actually true or not because you have not experienced whether it is or not, which is my point with other religious texts. You cannot say truthfully they don't contain wisdom or understanding because you have not experienced it, you just believe it. And that's okay, just be forth right and truthful about it.
solid analysis;760687 said:
Personal feelings can be easily manipulated
Only if you have a lack of control over your feelings, only if you are ignorant to the source of your feelings, only if you give no awareness to your feelings.
solid analysis;760687 said:
How often do people find themselves experiencing all kinds of intense emotions during a given scene of an action movie, drama, something they KNOW isn't real? Sure, the feelings are real, but the movie remains not real.
Right, the movie is not real, but the things depicted in movies and shows are most often real things that happen to real human beings. And human being can relate to those things, because they can imagine themselves in those positions in the real world, which really do take place, but people watch it in a movie so they can get close to the experience but at a far enough distance to remain safe.
solid analysis;760687 said:
And coming at religion (texts) from the angle you propose has a man putting his own personal wants and understanding above everything else.
So are you of the opinion that experiencing things to gain understanding is bad? That only personally wanting to experience one thing and the understanding of that one thing is much better? I do not know if you are simply trying to smear me here, but I'd be mindful about the assumptions, they tell more about you than me.
solid analysis;760687 said:
So is that what it's all about? What i want? Me first, everyone else second, and God last? Surely we got things turned around.
Definitely not, keep your eyes one god, at all times.
My overall point, which is getting lost in the posts after posts, is that you and allissowack, cannot in all truthfulness, say that god has limited itself to one book if that is all you've learned from is one book.