We have yet another thread running on the historicity issue (yawn ...) but it's been getting quite a bit of attention.
So, let's have ourselves another thread on the divinity issue ...!
I'm in a state of the mind that assents to the proposition that it's make-believe.
What do we have to demonstrate that it's true ...?
The divinity of the person called Jesus of Nazareth
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Post #41
Tcg wrote:
You can't claim success if you aren't talking on the same common ground. You and I have not been on the same common ground since the start. Your definition of evidence is not the same as that claimed to come by faith.tcg wrote:
People who reject unsupported claims.
The only thing you can do is state that it isn't your kind of evidence, which isn't the same as saying there is no evidence at all. And if you were to venture to prove the latter, you wouldn't ever be able to claim success because you can never prove the non-existence of something. The best you could do would be to show (not prove) that you haven't seen particular forms of evidence.
Archaeologists claimed there was no evidence for Nineveh therefore Nineveh never existed. This was a mistake because they could really only say in truth is that they had yet to see evidence for it. Then Nineveh was discovered and their supposed "success" in proving that Nineveh never existed fell to the ground.
Notice the qualifier "by an appeal to human assessments." Why do you
Re:I didn't assess it as non-evidence.
In post 27 you admitted this:
"But the NT never offers proof of its validity by an appeal to human assessments."
I agreed with you then and still do.
insist that that qualifier means no evidence whatsoever?
You need to answer this because it is the fundamental mistake you keep making.
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Post #42
[Replying to post 34 by mrhagerty]
But you are right - your version of "God" certainly does not "coalesce":
https://www.dictionary.com/browse/coalesce
I was asking YOU to demonstrate that the cult propaganda you are using to back your claims CAME from your version of "God".
You have failed to do that.
And you have failed to demonstrate that the claim that your Divine Leader - the person called Jesus of Nazareth - was sired by the mythological (and possibly not even Jewish) biblical deity Yahweh on a human virgin, is anything more than fanciful make-believe.
Because, to date, you have only quoted the Christian-Jewish cult propaganda.
I wasn't demanding ANYTHING of your version of "God".So, you missed my point - God is not in the business of coalescing to demands for proof.
But you are right - your version of "God" certainly does not "coalesce":
https://www.dictionary.com/browse/coalesce
I was asking YOU to demonstrate that the cult propaganda you are using to back your claims CAME from your version of "God".
You have failed to do that.
And you have failed to demonstrate that the claim that your Divine Leader - the person called Jesus of Nazareth - was sired by the mythological (and possibly not even Jewish) biblical deity Yahweh on a human virgin, is anything more than fanciful make-believe.
Because, to date, you have only quoted the Christian-Jewish cult propaganda.
No one EVER demonstrates that "God" exists outside their parietal cortex.
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Re: The divinity of the person called Jesus of Nazareth
Post #43[Replying to post 40 by Don McIntosh]
No one offers a shred that the possibly fictional Jesus character was sired by the mythological Yahweh on a human virgin.
No one ....
It still looks like make-believe to me.
Convincing people that it's true does not mean that it is.Yet Jesus somehow managed to convince a large following of devout Jews in first century Judea that he was divine.
No one offers a shred that the possibly fictional Jesus character was sired by the mythological Yahweh on a human virgin.
No one ....
It still looks like make-believe to me.
No one EVER demonstrates that "God" exists outside their parietal cortex.
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Post #44
I haven't given any definition of evidence.
Re:I didn't assess it as non-evidence.
In post 27 you admitted this:
"But the NT never offers proof of its validity by an appeal to human assessments."
I agreed with you then and still do.
Given that we are humans, your qualifier admits that the NT provides no evidence for humans.
Notice the qualifier "by an appeal to human assessments." Why do you
insist that that qualifier means no evidence whatsoever?
If you are claiming that you do have evidence that demonstrates the divinity of Jesus, feel free to correct my misunderstanding by presenting it.
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Post #45
Tcg wrote:mrhagerty wrote:Tcg wrote:It would have been nice but your written expectations for it in arguments you've made betrayed it for you
I haven't given any definition of evidence.
Wrong again. Evidence for the benefit of humans is not the same as evidence contrived by humans. My statement only included the latter. God is not obligated to serve the needs of evidence defined by humans, as in scientific. God does not have to conform His evidence to scientific evidence just because man choose to limit it to that.Given that we are humans, your qualifier admits that the NT provides no evidence for humans.
You'll first need to tell me what qualifies and doesn't qualify as evidence to you.If you are claiming that you do have evidence that demonstrates the divinity of Jesus, feel free to correct my misunderstanding by presenting it.
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Post #46
[Replying to post 45 by mrhagerty]
It appears time after time after time ...
By Christian after Christian after Christian.
My standard response to it is - just slap whatever it is that you have triumphantly on the pulpit and let it speak for itself.
My Hat of Prophecy is telling me that you will offer nothing that can be independently verified ...
As ANY sort of evidence whatsoever.
ANY sort of evidence whatsoever would have we Atheists tuck our tails between our legs and scurry off to the nearest church to fall on our knees ...
And hand over the first tenth of our family income.
My Hat of Prophecy is never wrong on this one.
This is seen by this Atheist - and others, I suggest - as a standard Christian method to avoid admitting that they have NO evidence of any sort whatsoever.You'll first need to tell me what qualifies and doesn't qualify as evidence to you.
It appears time after time after time ...
By Christian after Christian after Christian.
My standard response to it is - just slap whatever it is that you have triumphantly on the pulpit and let it speak for itself.
My Hat of Prophecy is telling me that you will offer nothing that can be independently verified ...
As ANY sort of evidence whatsoever.
ANY sort of evidence whatsoever would have we Atheists tuck our tails between our legs and scurry off to the nearest church to fall on our knees ...
And hand over the first tenth of our family income.
My Hat of Prophecy is never wrong on this one.
No one EVER demonstrates that "God" exists outside their parietal cortex.
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Post #47
Why? Is this going to change what evidence you present?mrhagerty wrote:
You'll first need to tell me what qualifies and doesn't qualify as evidence to you.
Just present all you have and we'll proceed from there.
If it doesn't qualify, I'll let you know.
To be clear: Atheism is not a disbelief in gods or a denial of gods; it is a lack of belief in gods.
- American Atheists
Not believing isn't the same as believing not.
- wiploc
I must assume that knowing is better than not knowing, venturing than not venturing; and that magic and illusion, however rich, however alluring, ultimately weaken the human spirit.
- Irvin D. Yalom
- American Atheists
Not believing isn't the same as believing not.
- wiploc
I must assume that knowing is better than not knowing, venturing than not venturing; and that magic and illusion, however rich, however alluring, ultimately weaken the human spirit.
- Irvin D. Yalom
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Post #48
"Replying to StuartJ"]
And that is based on the very old idea of humanistic rationalism which says that the only reality or real facts we should entertain are those that science verifies or that can be tested in a court with witnesses.
Unfortunately, Rationalism died a natural death in the 18th cent. but folks like you act as if you didn't get the memo.
It fails because you can never test that science and reason will discover all the truths that will ever comprise reality.
But there's more under the hood in arguments like these - that atheists choose this kind of criteria because they know it will eliminate any propositions of faith, which is horribly artificial at best. It doesn't get you any closer to truth.
Ok So despite the diatribe of emotional outburst, you've disclosed something useful - that your idea of evidence is only that which can be independently verified. Which asks that faith be put into the test tube or on the crucible of newspaper reporting of facts.This is seen by this Atheist - and others, I suggest - as a standard Christian method to avoid admitting that they have NO evidence of any sort whatsoever. . .
My Hat of Prophecy is telling me that you will offer nothing that can be independently verified ...
And that is based on the very old idea of humanistic rationalism which says that the only reality or real facts we should entertain are those that science verifies or that can be tested in a court with witnesses.
Unfortunately, Rationalism died a natural death in the 18th cent. but folks like you act as if you didn't get the memo.
It fails because you can never test that science and reason will discover all the truths that will ever comprise reality.
But there's more under the hood in arguments like these - that atheists choose this kind of criteria because they know it will eliminate any propositions of faith, which is horribly artificial at best. It doesn't get you any closer to truth.
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Post #49
A clearly false claim, since some evidence has already been offered since post #3 and subsequently expanded on. Yet far from 'tucking tail' (which seems a hyperbolic over-reaction in any case) or even just reasonably acknowledging that there is some room for uncertainty here (which would be the appropriate response), the ongoing tone of posts seems to be a triumphant insistence that nothing whatsoever has been offered.StuartJ wrote: ANY sort of evidence whatsoever would have we Atheists tuck our tails between our legs and scurry off to the nearest church to fall on our knees ...
And then, of course, the feigned puzzlement over why anyone would request terms of evidence before embarking on your wild goose chase.
In fact when I first returned to the forum after a long hiatus, literally my first two posts back included a more specific question addressed to you on this very subject which over a week and a couple of reminders later you still have not answered:
Mithrae wrote: The only real answer to many such questions, as far as I can tell, is that we don't know. We might have the sworn testimony of three or four surgeons and medical staff who saw a leg amputated and later regrown, but even then the believers would be mistaken if they supposed that it provided certainty that a miracle occurred. Likewise the apparent certainty that a miracle did not occur seems equally misguided, and leads to (in fact demands) the erroneous insistence of there being "total absence/not a SHRED of evidence" for their occurrence.
For some reason many of us don't like leaving the question open, so we tailor our perception of the available data to match our desired conclusion.
Mithrae wrote: Surely the sworn testimony of three or four surgeons and medical staff who saw a leg amputated and later regrown would qualify as a shred of evidence and then some?
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Post #50
Your Hat of Prophecy was telling you the truth.StuartJ wrote:
My standard response to it is - just slap whatever it is that you have triumphantly on the pulpit and let it speak for itself.
My Hat of Prophecy is telling me that you will offer nothing that can be independently verified ...
You got nothing in return, not even an attempt.
It's record remains intact.
My Hat of Prophecy is never wrong on this one.
To be clear: Atheism is not a disbelief in gods or a denial of gods; it is a lack of belief in gods.
- American Atheists
Not believing isn't the same as believing not.
- wiploc
I must assume that knowing is better than not knowing, venturing than not venturing; and that magic and illusion, however rich, however alluring, ultimately weaken the human spirit.
- Irvin D. Yalom
- American Atheists
Not believing isn't the same as believing not.
- wiploc
I must assume that knowing is better than not knowing, venturing than not venturing; and that magic and illusion, however rich, however alluring, ultimately weaken the human spirit.
- Irvin D. Yalom

