John17_3 wrote: ↑Sat Oct 05, 2024 4:36 pmThere is no contradiction in scripture, but there is a contradiction in your what you said.
To say that one believes "all scripture is inspired of God", and that he spoke through these me, and then to say that God contradicts himself, is a contradiction.
No, you're reading too much into 2 Timothy 3:16. Scripture being
inspired doesn't mean that it's
inerrant, particularly in historical details.
If each author is
inspired, then God presumably wants you to read what each author wrote instead of you telling the Bible what it can't be. The psalmist and eccleastical teacher ("Qoheleth") are telling us that death is the end of life and experience. The Deuteronomist, however, is telling us that Saul spoke with the late prophet Samuel.
John17_3 wrote: ↑Sat Oct 05, 2024 4:36 pmIf you believe what God says about death, then you would not believe the opposite.
It's either one or the other. It cannot be both, otherwise, you contradict yourself.
Exactly. Yet the Bible says that Samuel spoke to Saul after his death.
John17_3 wrote: ↑Sat Oct 05, 2024 4:36 pmThe contradiction is not with scripture.
I'd actually agree with you. The contradiction only exists if your exegetical method requires Protestant standards of inerrancy. If death sometimes isn't the end of consciousness or the story of Saul and the necromancer is theological fiction, then there's no contradiction. All we can know is that if the verses are
inspired, then God wants you to read and understand them as they are.
John17_3 wrote: ↑Sat Oct 05, 2024 4:36 pmGod clearly states what death is, so when you read 1 Samuel 28:6-25, you should not discard what God says about death, but rather, understand the text, in line with what God says about death.
And at the same time, you mustn't discard what God has told you about Samuel. God told you in so many words that the dead man Samuel spoke to Saul.
John17_3 wrote: ↑Sat Oct 05, 2024 4:36 pmWhen Saul inquired of God, God did not answer him by dreams or Urim or prophets.
- Samuels was a prophet - a dead prophet. So God did not answer Saul.
Before that verse, God hadn't answered Saul. It doesn't say that He wouldn't do so in the future, especially since the narrator later says that He did through Samuel!
John17_3 wrote: ↑Sat Oct 05, 2024 4:36 pmSaul disguised himself, and went to a witch, and said to her. “Consult a spirit for me,” he said, “and bring up for me the one I name.”
- The woman contacted a spirit - a demon - who "brought up the one Saul wanted".
You're starting to change the story to suit yourself. According to the inspired text, the woman brought up Samuel herself ("Whom shall I bring up for you?"). She contacted one spirit: Samuel.
John17_3 wrote: ↑Sat Oct 05, 2024 4:36 pmSaul took the woman's words, and swallowed it, hook, line, and sinker, that it was Samuel.
It was not Samuel. It was, as the Bible said, a spirit - the same spirit Saul asked the woman to consult.
The
narrator, the one you told me was a prophet, told us times that it was Samuel. "And when the woman saw
Samuel." Those aren't the words of the necromancer, but the words of the omniscient narrator. If those are the inspired words of a prophet, then it seems to me that God wants you to swallow them, hook, line, and sinker.
John17_3 wrote: ↑Sat Oct 05, 2024 4:36 pmVerse 15, says, Now Samuel said to Saul, “Why have you disturbed me by bringing me up?”
- Samuel, obviously is in quotations, because this is a spirit that only the woman can see. It is not Samuel. Why is the fully dressed spirit only visible to a woman that communicates with demons, and conjures up wicked spirits?
You're the one that says they're demons and the spirits are wicked, not the Bible. The NWT translators added the scare quotes, not the prophetic author.
John17_3 wrote: ↑Sat Oct 05, 2024 4:36 pmThat question is not hard to answer.
You're making it harder to answer than it should be.
John17_3 wrote: ↑Sat Oct 05, 2024 4:36 pmA good author, and we know many of them, use this same method, of using a name of a person that is believed to be present, though impersonated.
If you are a person, who like me, did a lot of reading in novels, you would see this.
The Bible writer, here did that, centuries before we employed the method.
If you did as much reading as you say you have, you'd also know that authors write to be understood. If you have to change the story to make it fit your own ideas of what it should say, you're not getting the story that the author is telling you.
Furthermore, the literary technique that you're talking about would involve a reveal at some point. There isn't one. If the prophetic author was honest and correct, then the speaker was Samuel the entire time.
John17_3 wrote: ↑Sat Oct 05, 2024 4:36 pmWe cannot ignore the facts.
I absolutely agree with you.
John17_3 wrote: ↑Sat Oct 05, 2024 4:36 pmA who does what you are doing, opens themselves to deception, and delusion, because that person will believe anything, even when it contradicts known facts.
So, which biblical narrator is deceiving me?
You told me that the story is inspired and
you told me that it was written by a prophet. It also includes the late Samuel speaking to Saul. Why God told us that story is an interesting question, but I think we should both agree that changing God's story is the wrong answer.