POI wrote: ↑Tue Jul 29, 2025 4:45 pm
RBD wrote: ↑Tue Jul 29, 2025 4:22 pm
POI wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 12:51 pm
Below, is another example of a gripe I often ultimately encounter when debating Christians:
otseng wrote: ↑Tue Jun 17, 2025 7:17 am
Here is additional evidence skeptics place a higher bar on anything the Bible claims to be true compared to extra-Biblical claims
Well, there is a reason for this....
In applying the historical method, there are a couple of key considerations, when examining the Bible:
- Does the source present with a possible political or religious bias? YES
- Does the source present with unfalsifiable claims which defy naturalism? YES
In applying the historical method, there are a couple of key considerations, when examining the Bible detractors:
- Does the source present with a possible political or ideological bias? YES
- Does the source present with unfalsifiable claims which defy spiritualism? YES
POI wrote: ↑Fri Jun 20, 2025 12:51 pm
For debate: Can the Bible still be an independent and reliable source of historical events, in spite of the above
apparent violation(s) to the historical method?
Can the Bible still be an independent and reliable source of historical events, in spite of the above ideologically
apparent violation(s) to the historical method?
Does the OP provide an adequate response to
Otseng's gripe, as to why skeptics and doubters more-so scrutinize claims, if they should come from the Bible, verses from some other source(s)?
The simple observation is that the self-concluding 'questions', can rightly be demanded from both sides. Especially when from ideologically-driven claims of historical violations in the Bible, that are never proven.
The objective skeptic is not interested in claims of factual error, but only proof of factual error. Questions based upon claims alone are only ideological diversions from the facts, that can be proven or disproven.
POI wrote: ↑Tue Jul 29, 2025 4:45 pm
Before you answer, allow me to post a follow up quote made to another interlocutor in this thread. This is the some of the doubter's perspective, which is why we ask for supporting sources to back up the Biblical claim(s):
(from the skeptic's perspective in post 13):
The skeptic is warranted to proceed with extra caution, regarding any claim which is made from 'the Bible' <verses> some other 'sources'. Why? Because from Genesis to Revelation, it is a) utterly filled with all sorts of 'supernatural' claims, b) the Gospels greatly conflict with one another, as well as c) being compromised by "the church".
AND:
This collection of claims is so heavily compromised, as well as being riddled with so many supernatural unbelievable claims, the entire collection, via "the Bible", is instead to be completely dismissed. Which is often times why skeptics ask for non-Biblical source(s) to back up any claim from 'the Bible.
[/quote]
These are not 'doubters' and 'skeptics', but confirmed accusers of Bible conflict, compromise, and unbelievability. Rather than demanding proof from the Bible, they are properly demanded to prove Bible conflict, compromise, and unbelievability.
The challenge here, that needs to be understood, is not whether all the Bible can be physically proven true or not, since some of Bible requires spiritual faith. The only verifiable challenge is to prove whether all the Bible
can be believed or not.
There are two physical criteria to do so: First, the factual record in the Bible, that can be fact-checked against any known outside sources. And second, any conflict within the Bible, that can be fact-checked by objective study of the Book itself.
So long as no inconsistency within the Book is found, nor factual record proven false, then the whole Book
can be believed, including those things that cannot be physically fact-checked, but only spiritually accepted.
Whether someone chooses to believe the whole Bible or not, is irrelevant to the physical fact-checking that can be done.
Conclusion: If anyone demands
all the Bible be proven true, then simply prove
any of the Bible can't be true.
Unless any of the Bible is proven false, then anyone has the
reasonable right to believe it all. And no one can
factually say it can't all possibly be true. Unbelief doesn't prove anything.
Many fair challenges to Bible inerrancy are given, and no doubt more can be given. But
I personally have found none of them sufficient to prove the Bible record is proven false or inconsistent.
Demanding outside proof of a record, does not disprove it. And relying on personal interpretation of certain writings to appear inconsistent, does not prove inconsistency.
I do not have any gripe against any honest skeptic demanding outside proof, in order to justifiably
believe the Bible record. My only gripe is anyone demanding I prove the whole Bible by outside sources, in order for
me to justifiably believe it. Also, I have no gripe about anyone else not believing any or all of the Bible. My only gripe is when they ideologically say
no one can justifiably believe it either, because they
claim Bible error without ever proving it.