Sunday, November 5, 2023

Lydia McGrew is wrong to say Development Theories of Mark's gospel are "bunk"

This is my reply to Lydia McGrew's YouTube video 

Lydia's video description there says:

Development theories about the resurrection stories usually start with the observation that, if the longer ending of Mark is non-canonical, Mark "doesn't have" any appearance stories. This assumes, further, that Mark originally ended after verse 8 (which I'd say is probably false). But it also treats the alleged absence of appearance stories as if Mark was denying appearances. Not only is this the worst kind of argument from silence, it also runs contrary to other indications right in the undeniably canonical text of Mark itself.

As always, the issue is not which theory of Mark's ending is correct, but which theory of Mark's ending is reasonable.  Lydia is up against a brick wall here.  The fact that most Christian scholars take Mark's long ending to be non-canonical, is entirely sufficient, alone, to render reasonable the person who says Mark originally ended at 16:8.  Since most Christian scholars also believe Mark was the earliest gospel, we are equally reasonable to adopt the theory that the earliest gospel lacked a resurrection appearance narrative.  While the view of the scholarly majority doesn't determine "truth", it certainly determines reasonableness. Few indeed are the instances in which a scholarly majority are so clearly in the wrong that the majority view is rendered unreasonable.  

Some fool will say this doesn't make sense because it raises the possibility that we can be reasonable to adopt an ultimately false theory.  I realize Christian legalists fallaciously think truth and reasonableness are synonyms, but they are wrong.  If they weren't wrong, they'd have to declare the unreasonableness of every Christian with whom they disagreed upon some biblical issue.  After all, to disagree is to assume the other person is "wrong", and the legalist thinks "wrong" and "unreasonable" are synonymous.  Thankfully, most people are not stupid legalists, they realize that truth, especially biblical truth, doesn't always make itself clear to those who sincerely seek it.  Otherwise, the legalist would have to say the reason somebody missed or misinterpreted a biblical truth is because they didn't sincerely seek it during their bible studies.  So the stupid legalist is forced to say unreasonableness and insincere pursuit of truth are two traits that necessarily inhere in every Christian she disagrees with on some biblical matter.  That's fucking absurd.

By the way, Lydia has disabled comments for that video.  I say it is because she is aware of how easy it is to defend the reasonableness of the skeptical position, so instead of admitting that uncomfortable truth, she takes the proper steps to ensure that the best possible rebuttals cannot be linked to her argument, her fans will simply have to google the issues she raises to see if any skeptic has provided a response.

Before launching into her arguments, her summary has her saying she thinks one of the assumptions in the development-theory is "definitely" false.  If Lydia considers herself a scholar, then she should know that in cases where a historical truth has nothing to support it beyond "testimony", there is no 'definiteness' about whether the testimony is true.  Yes, this humble attitude imposed by the non-absolute nature of historiography does indeed clash with Lydia's firm religious convictions, but that's her problem.  The more Jesus wanted his followers to be sure that some testimony was definitely true, the more he wanted his followers to shun the sort of historiography that Lydia and other Christian scholars routinely employ.  Historicity determinations are an art, not a science.

Lydia clarifies that the use of Mark's short ending to attack Jesus' resurrection is "illicit".

Lydia's first point is her admission that the long ending of Mark (16:9-20) is not original to the gospel of Mark.  Fair enough.  But I could refute her even at this early point:  what if she was being prosecuted for murder on the basis of a written bit of testimony that has all of the authorship, genre and textual problems Mark has?  Would she insist on calling experts to testify that such a literary mess can still possibly be historically reliable?  Or would she say such written testimony is so inherently unreliable that no jury could possibly find her guilty beyond a reasonable doubt?

What if the part of the written testimony saying she murdered somebody, was agreed by the experts to not be present in the original?  Would she seek to have experts educate the jury on how the lack of originality in the most important part is negligble?  Or would she say this flaw prevents any jury from finding her guilty beyond a reasonable doubt?

Lydia's next point is to mention that she hasn't read a certain book that argues for the originality of the long ending, but that she is open to changing her mind.   That's fine, but if she doesn't want to be a hypocrite, she must allow skeptics the same freedom to disagree with a position argued in a book and remain open to possibly changing their minds later.  Like disagreeing with the arguments in her books.  However, it is unlikely Lydia would allow this.  She thinks that the fact that she has written several books, puts the skeptics to task and demands either rebuttal, or concession.  Otherwise, she would have to allow that a skeptic could possibly be reasonable to disagree with an argument in her book despite making a choice to avoid that book.  If Lydia can be reasonable to turn away from a criticism of her views, her critics can be reasonable to turn away from her criticism of their views, book or no book.  Fair is fair.

Lydia tries to soften the consequences of the short ending (i.e., no resurrection story = no resurrection in history) by characterizing the short ending as unexpectedly "abrupt".  She does this in an effort to make it seem like the author surely had more to say and simply chose not to say it.  She argues that it seems like there should be something more.  No, the only person who thinks there should be something more is the bible-believing Christian who has already concluded that the resurrection narratives in Matthew 28, Luke 24 and John 20-21 are historically true.  If the person reading Mark is, however, an unbeliever with no vested interest in making the gospels harmonize, or doesn't have knowledge of the other 3 gospels, she will not notice any abruptness in Mark's short ending. Somebody will say God wanted us to read all 4 gospels together, but that's about as historically certain as Luke's preference for spicy food.  You lose.

Lydia next argues that certain information in canonical original Mark creates a probability that there was more to the story beyond the short ending.  That would be a more proper objective way to get a resurrection narrative out of Mark, but those "data points" are hardly convincing.  She says the question is why Mark, having an interest in telling what happened to the women, didn't round off the ending in a smoother fashion.  She argues that the change in style between the abrupt ending and the longer ending implies there was something else that was there.  But that is absurdly speculative.  The change in style only exists because an early scribe decided to append something else to Mark after 16:8.  That is, Lydia is trying to justify a resurrection narrative in Mark on the basis that a later editor adding something.  Her point seems to be that the editor's dissatisfaction with the short ending convincingly argues that he thought the true ending went beyond 16:8.  But it could just as easily be that he added the ending because he didn't like the fact that Mark ended so abruptly.  Trying to get "he knew Mark said more" out of "he added something to Mark's ending" is without force.  She concludes from such "data" that Mark did originally end with a resurrection appearance narrative, but this became lost and replaced by the longer ending in vv. 9-20.  I'm sorry, but this is a very weak justification for saying Mark originally ended with a resurrection appearance narrative.  It most certainly doesn't reduce the reasonableness of those who say Mark never wrote a resurrection appearance narrative.

Furthermore, a standard textual rule of thumb is that the text form producing the difficulties is likely original, because later copyists tend to smooth things out, not complicate them.  So the fact that Mark ends so abruptly is precisely what argues that the short ending is original.  This wouldn't be a rule of thumb if the mere fact that Mark could possibly have smoothed things out in a now lost ending forced reasonable people to forever avoid drawing skeptical conclusions.  The rule of thumb does not have to be an absolute requirement, or infallible, to render reasonable the person who says the more difficult shorter ending is, on present evidence, more likely how Mark intended to end the gospel.

Mark also infamously does not express or imply that Jesus was virgin-born, even though such a story would most certainly support his apparent goal of establishing Jesus as the Son of God.  We are thus reasonable to assume the VB is absent from Mark because he either didn't know about it (implying it is late fabrication), or he thought it was false.  The notion that he simply chose to exclude the VB while believing it was historical truth, is absolutely unacceptable. That would be akin to YOU having evidence that your mother, currently being prosecuted for murder, is innocent, but for reasons unknown, you made no effort to bring that evidence of innocence to the Court's attention.  It doesn't matter that you can dream up reasons for saying silent, we normally do not expect such silence, so until the day that somebody explains why you remained silent in circumstances we'd be expecting you to scream in, we are going to be reasonable to say the reason you stayed silent is because you didn't know of any evidence that your mother was innocent, that's why you didn't say anything.  The point is, the apologists who so aggressively attempt to impute Matthew's knowledge to Mark cannot do so with such force as to render the skeptical position less reasonable.  There is no rule of historiography that obligates anybody to always assume harmony and always exhaust all possible harmonization scenarios before adopting the inconsistency-theory.  Just like when police determine whether probable cause for arrest exists, they are not required to first ensure that all possible evidence of innocence in his alibi is considered or falsified.  They can lawfully arrest and have sufficient probable cause even when there remains a real possibility that the suspect is innocent.  Likewise, we have probable cause to arrest Matthew, Luke and John for lying, upon the probable cause established by Mark's resurrection silence, even if that silence cannot operate to conclusively falsify the resurrection testimony in the other three gospels.  

Lydia then argues that it is an argument from silence, indeed the worst sort, to argue that Mark ends at 16:8 because he didn't know of any resurrection appearance tradition.  Not true.  We are reasonable to assume that the gospel authors did not expect their originally intended audiences to read all 4 gospels together.  They would have realized all the conundrums we see today when trying to do that, and they would more than likely have simply produced their own gospel harmony like Tatian's Diatessaron.  Their refusal to testify in a way that clearly harmonizes all 4 accounts justifies us to say they intended their accounts to be read as stand-alones, or separate from other accounts.  In that case, there is no need for a skeptic to "argue from silence".  Reading Mark separately from the other 3 gospels, the epistemological situation is "Mark ends by saying the women ran from the tomb with great excitement and an anticipation that the disciples will see the risen Christ in Galilee".  The epistemological situation cannot be "why didn't Mark mention somebody seeing the risen Christ?", because that would presuppose that Mark wanted his originally intended audience to harmonize his gospel with other gospels, which is an assumption that cannot be established.  Indeed, the patristic testimony is that the Church in Rome requested that Mark reduce Peter's preaching to writing because they needed such a thing, forcing the logical deduction that they didn't have such a thing previously, thus, Mark was not likely expecting them to read his gospel in the light of some other gospel.  In other words, when we ask why Mark doesn't mention the resurrection appearances we see in other gospels, we are asking a question that would not have occurred to the Mark's originally intended audience.  The question only pops up because Christian apologists of today are aware of 3 other gospels that mention resurrection appearances, and they would rather die than admit the 4 gospels contradict each other. 

Lydia then gives the analogy showing it is reasonable to question one relative's silence if another family member speaks on the same matter and supplies more details. Ok...are Matthew, Luke and John members of Mark's "family"?  No, for as established earlier, Mark in all likelihood did not expect his originally intended audience to harmonize his gospel with another gospel.  So we are not obligated to explain why it is that Mark is silent about a fact that is mentioned in the other gospels.  Such a harmonizing concern is an artificial dilemma not consistent with Mark or his originally intended audience.  It is a problem created solely by people who are so used to seeing all 4 gospels packaged together that they unreasonably demand a harmonization theory.  You lose.

Lydia mocks the fact that skeptics ratchet up Mark's resurrection silence as if it held great significance, but it clearly does possess great significance:  Mark is not silent about mere details...he is silent about the one event that Christians think is the crown of Christianity.  This is why the argument from silence, if we need to use it, operates legitimately here:  it is when you would naturally expect the author to mention X, that you are justified to offer a theory for why he remains silent about X. 

And what Lydia doesn't mention is that the argument from silence, as described above, is still allowed in criminal court cases.  From the U.S. Supreme Court in Jenkins v. Anderson, 447 US 231, 239 (1980):

The petitioner also contends that use of prearrest silence to impeach his credibility denied him the fundamental fairness guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment. We do not 239*239 agree. Common law traditionally has allowed witnesses to be impeached by their previous failure to state a fact in circumstances in which that fact naturally would have been asserted. 3A J. Wigmore, Evidence § 1042, p. 1056 (Chadbourn rev. 1970). Each jurisdiction may formulate its own rules of evidence to determine when prior silence is so inconsistent with present statements that impeachment by reference to such silence is probative.

Once again, reasonableness does not require that we answer questions about how all 4 gospels could possibly be harmonized.  We are reasonable to read Mark in isolation from other gospels and from the concerns of modern apologists, in which case we can accept Mark's ending at 16:8 without issue.  Again, the only people making an issue are those who insist the 4 gospels must be harmonized, therefore, there must be a question as to why Mark doesn't have a resurrection appearance narrative when the other 3 gospels do.  Sorry, that's not an issue for those who lack a harmonizing agenda.

The way Lydia carries on this video, you'd think embellishment didn't exist until after the book of Revelation was published.

What Lydia also neglects to mention is that a purpose of embellishment can be found in some gospel authors, such as my arguments that Matthew has embellished one of Mark's pericopes, see here.

Lydia then says skeptics commit to the premise that Mark itself is already "developed".  Not sure what her point was, but apparently she is arguing that if we skeptics date Mark to 70 a.d., we are likely going to say this was the result of much development, he didn't just sit down and write an entire gospel all at once.  Yes, we certainly do not pretend the patristic explanations of gospel authorship are inerrant.  We have no trouble using redaction criticism to justify classifying the early church fathers as liars or misinformed.  The large majority of Christian scholars similarly reject the patristic testimony that Matthew was written first, in favor of Markan priority.  So apparently, even spiritually alive people do not think something an early church father said is the end of the matter.

Lydia then says a skeptical scholar does not believe the details in Mark 16:1-8 are true.  That is a fundamentalist caricature and hasty generalization.  But even so, we are justified, after all, the original apostles characterized the experience of the women at the tomb as a 'vision'.  Luke 24:23.  No, you cannot trifle that "vision" can still possibly refer to events in physical space-time, because you must combine the vision-descriptor with the other belief of the original apostles, that the resurrection testimony of the women returning from the tomb was "silly talk" (Luke 24:11).  When so combined, it is reasonable to say the apostles meant "only in your head" when saying the women had seen a "vision".

Lydia then asks what point skeptics are trying to make in using Mark to cancel the resurrection testimony of the other three gospels, when in fact skeptics think nearly all of Mark's resurrection story is fiction.  Our point is that we are presuming Mark's historical accuracy solely for the sake of argument.  That is, even if you assume Mark is historically accurate, his silence spells doom for the resurrection appearance narratives in the later gospels.  If you wish, then yes, we could argue against the supernatural and preempt any need to use Mark as a sword.

She mocks the skeptical position because it says Mark makes up angels but requires him to "draw the line" and refuse to make up a resurrection appearance story.  Not at all, Mark is full of fiction and embellishment. We do not allege that Mark "drew the line" at all, we merely insist that the original form of the story simply lacked a resurrection appearance narrative in the first place.  Again, why it is that Mark doesn't mention resurrection appearances is a false dilemma created by apologists who insist on harmonizing Mark with the other 3 gospels.  We would arrive in the same position as the skeptic if we read Mark in isolation, as he likely intended.  Instead of saying "the other 3 gospels have embellished on Mark's more primitive tale", we would simply have no reason to think anybody ever actually saw a risen Jesus.  That makes us lack a resurrection belief just as much as skeptics lack it.

Lydia overlooks other concerns skeptics have with Mark 16, for example:  the women include those who tagged along with Jesus since the time-frame mentioned in Luke 8...but if they heard Jesus predict his own resurrection and saw him do real miracles for at least a year before he died, how are they so sure that he remains dead on this third day, the day he said he would rise?  Why are they seeking to embalm a corpse?  Might it be reasonable for skeptics to infer from such details that the women did not find Jesus' miracles or predictions very credible?  If some of Jesus' own followers didn't find his miracles too convincing, isn't it only a fool who would expect more of somebody living 2000 years after the fact?

Lydia's final argument of any significance is the tactic of saying the content Mark did include, strongly suggest that he intended for the reader to draw the conclusion that a few people really did see the risen Christ.  This is the contention of most apologists including N.T. Wright.  In Mark 16:7, the angel at the tomb says the disciples will see Jesus in Galilee.  I'm not seeing the point.  If I end my testimony in a criminal complaint saying "the mugger then told me to meet him in St. Louis", are the police obligated to think such a meeting actually took place?  Of course not.

The bigger problem for Lydia is why Mark was willing to get so close to saying anybody actually saw the risen Christ, but stops short of providing such appearance-details that were apparently so important to later gospel authors.  We'd surely expect that if Mark thought this future meeting of Jesus and disciples took place, he would mention some details, given how interested he was in promoting the pre-resurrection Jesus.   A risen Christ would deserve an even more detailed treatment.  Lydia will say this is why she thinks Mark's original did describe such appearances, and that ending was lost.  Once again, that theory is not so forceful as to render the skeptical take unreasonable.  For example, the fact that Mark expects resurrection eyewitnesses but doesn't actually narrate them, can also argue that he didn't know of any traditions of disciples actually seeing the risen Christ.  

And the more Lydia pushes the "lost ending" thesis, the more she concedes that significant chunks of important gospel text could be lost so early in the transmission process that the extant ms. tradition cannot document it.  We wonder how many other important bits of gospel text became lost in the very early stages where falsifying or verifying such a hypothesis is now impossible.

Lydia asks why we think Mark is deliberately excluding.  That's merely one possibility.  The other possibility is that the latest resurrection traditions at the time Mark wrote did not say anything beyond the angel's reminder that the disciples would meet Jesus in Galilee.  Lydia doesn't explain why she thinks this type of ending strongly implies the tradition at the time also asserted that the meeting actually took place.  But we know why she pushes that theory:  there are 3 other gospels that say such a meeting actually took place, and god wants Lydia to harmonize all the details of all 4 gospels.  That's why.

Lydia chides the skeptic as harboring a "completely bogus" theory that is "at odds with the text of Mark itself", but a) we are assuming Mark's accuracy solely for the sake of argument, not because we trust that anything Mark said was true history, and b) we do not believe the gospel authors were honest, so we don't exactly lose sleep when we realize one of our theories contradicts some assertion in the gospels.

Saturday, October 28, 2023

My reply to J. Warner Wallace on the gospels as hearsay

This is my reply to an email I received from J. Warner Wallace on October 28, 2023, on the issue of the gospel and "hearsay"?

Are the Gospels Unreliable Hearsay?

Objection:  Confused question.  Hearsay is not "unreliable" by definition.  It is rather a claim to knowledge that is based on another person's assertions of fact.  Lots of hearsay is no doubt true.  But the reason the Courts generally forbid hearsay and require testimony to be based on personal first-hand knowledge is because hearsay increases the probability of jury-misleading far more than Courts feel comfortable allowing.  There are also many exceptions to the hear-say exclusion rule, which again shows that hearsay is not definitionally false stuff.  Unfortunately for apologists, they never justify why they pretend that the rules governing evidence in a modern American court case are the rules bible readers "should" apply to the bible's historical claims. 

Some critics attempt to undermine the reliability of the gospel writers as eyewitnesses,

Most Christian scholars think Mark is the earliest gospel.  They also agree that Mark's long ending is forgery.  Therefore today's unbeliever is manifestly reasonable to infer that the earliest gospel did not contain a resurrection appearance narrative.  Most Christian scholars say Matthew and Luke depended extensively on Mark's text.  So we can be reasonable again to infer that their two resurrection appearance narratives constitute "embellishment".  All attempts to get Mark to somehow admit the risen Christ was seen by others, are not so powerful as to render the skeptical position unreasonable.  Mark's refusal to even mention the virgin birth despite his agenda to prove Jesus was the Son of God, likewise makes us justifiably suspicious that the VB story likely didn't exist until after Mark wrote, since if it existed before Mark wrote, Mark likely would have known about it, and he would hardly have "chosen to exclude" this apparently convincing proof, when in fact all patristic sources agree that his purpose was to exactly repeat previously established Christian truth.  If then Peter was Mark's source, then we raise the spectre of either a) Peter not knowing Jesus was virgin born, or b) Peter of it but thought it false, or c) Peter knew of it but never communicated it to Mark.

The Matthew-author's resurrection narrative refers to the 11 apostles in the third person.  It doesn't matter if one of those apostles could possibly have later reasonably chosen to refer to his own group in the third person, what zealous apologists intentionally forget is that referring to one's own group in the third person is not typical or usual.  If YOU were part of the group you describe as experiencing something, and YOU intend for the reader to take your claims as "eyewitness testimony", we have the perfect right to a) expect that you'll refer to your group in the first person plural ("us", and "we"), and b) not expect you to refer to your own group solely in the third person plural ("they" and "them").  And yet, Matthew was supposed to be a tax-collector, committing apologists to the propositioin that this apostle knew exactly who to word an account so that it properly claims personal knowledge.  He would also have known that some sort of identifying mark was necessary to tie the testifying party to their staements, yet nothing in the history of Matthew's gospel or its manuscripts expresses or implied he ever signed his own alleged testimony, even though the need for a signature or personal touch was paramount in the opinion of other Holy Spirit filled people who were addressing people they previously conversed with (2nd Thess. 3:17).

while others seek to have this testimony “tossed out” as unreliable “hearsay” before it can even be evaluated.

But since the mere existence of the gospels today does not obligate anybody to give a shit about them, smarter skeptics, like me, take the third position that there is nothing to "toss out" in the first place.  The writings of Homer exist...does this obligate us to either deal with them or toss them out?  No.  But regardless, my arguments allow you all the authentic apostolic gospel authorship you want, and allow you to date them to less than 6 months after Jesus died...and I would still prove that those who reject Jesus' resurrection are reasonable to do so.  So don't think the justification for skepticism forces us to resort to hearsay objections.  Far from it.

They argue the gospel accounts fail to meet the judicial standard we require of eyewitnesses in criminal cases.

They would be correct, but again, you've never justified applying modern American criminal law principles to the gospels in the first place.  What exactly do you recommend an atheist do with a Mormon who has failed to make their case?  Keep asking?  Or walk away? 

Witnesses must be present in court for their testimony to be considered in a criminal trial.

Which is one reason why your marketing gimmick of applying modern American criminal court rules to the gospels is absurd.

And it wouldn't matter if you could resurrect Matthew and put him on the witness stand today, most Christians who specialize in actual scholarship as opposed to "apologetics" refuse to credit Matthew with any specific narrative or Christ-saying in the gospel attributed to Matthew, thus we are reasonable to say Matthew is not responsible for the text we call canonical Matthew.  If you read a Christian commentary and notice a statement to the effect of "Matthew authored everything in this gospel", you KNOW you are reading the work of a fundamentalist who is more concerned about apologetics than about scholarship...which is perfectly sufficient to justify tossing the commentary in the garbage.  If you don't trifle to the person who recently received Jesus that just because a skeptical book gets something wrong doesn't justify tossing the entire book, then you cannot trifle to a skeptic that just because a fundamentalist book got something wrong doesn't justify tossing the entire book. 

But regardless, my attack on Jesus' resurrection is so powerful, I don't need to waste time trying to distance Matthew from that gospel.  I could allow his authorship solely for the sake of argument and I'd still be perfectly reasonable and academically rigorous to call the author a liar about Jesus' resurrection.  Yes, I'm well aware of how incapable you are of providing any compelling biblical or patristic evidence that any apostle continued to preach despite seriously believing doing so would likely result in their death.  Goodbye to that piece of dogshit called "martyrdom apologetic".  What screws the patristic evidence is the biblical proofs that the post-resurrection apostles were unwilling to die.

This often presents a problem for me as cold-case detective.

And the problem would disappear just as soon as you stop anachronistically applying a modern American evidentiary standard to a 2000 year old religious book, fool. 

I have a few unsolved cases because key witnesses died and are unavailable to testify in court. Though these witnesses may have described their observations to a friend or family member, I can’t summon these “second level” witnesses into court, as their testimony would be considered “hearsay.”

Then it is your problem that this American criminal evidentiary standard you wish to apply to the gospels (i.e., "Cold Case Christianity") has a standard that would render the gospels inadmissible.  But since marketing gimmicks and word-wrangling are your specialty, I'm sure this wouldn't bother you in the least. 

The statements of friends or family members would be inadmissible because the original witness would not be available for cross-examination or evaluation.

Oh, so did you suddenly discover that certain traits of the modern American criminal evidentiary standard are not good to apply to 2000 year old religious documents?

This exclusion of hearsay testimony from secondary witnesses is reasonable in criminal trials; as a society, we believe “it is better that ten guilty persons escape … than that one innocent suffer.” For this reason, we’ve created a rigorous (and sometimes difficult) legal standard for eyewitnesses.

So did you suddenly discover that certain traits of the modern American criminal evidentiary standard are not good to apply to 2000 year old religious documents?  Or did God tell you that only certain parts of such standard would "apply to" ancient religious documents?

If our spiritual destiny is more important that our earthly circumstances, then the evidentiary standard we apply to spiritual stuff should be even MORE rigorous, since in spiritual matters, getting something wrong can possibly result in eternal conscious torment in the afterworld, which is far worse than merely spending a lifetime in an earthly jail.  And yet Wallace doesn't have the first clue how to draw up evidentiary criteria for spiritual matters where the criteria are more rigorous than those applicable to earthly legal criminal cases.  I guess we have some sort of obligation to bow our heads and acquiesce to the desperate fools who insist that we, who are taking the entire risk of hell, "should" be satisfied with less than perfectly authenticated evidence, even though getting some spiritual bullshit wrong carries far graver consequences that if we were to get some earthly bit of criminal evidence wrong. 

But this standard is simply too much to require of historical eyewitness testimony.

So did you suddenly discover that certain traits of the modern American criminal evidentiary standard shouldn't be applied to 2000 year old religious documents?  Or did God tell you that only certain parts of such standard would "apply to" ancient religious documents?  If you can't justify that standard from the bible, wouldn't that mean your standard has less authority than a biblically necessitated answer?  How obligated are we to believe Jesus was a man?  How obligated are we to believe apostle Thomas was martyred?

If historical testimony is dictating what one must do to avoid spiritual prison, it isn't up to Wallace to decide what should be considered a sufficiently rigorous standard...it's up to the individual person how rigorous the standard must be.  When its MY ass on the line, you don't decide what "should" suffice for me, I do.  If my standard seems too high in your opinion, I don't exactly experience nightmares merely because another imperfect person disagreed with me.

The vast majority of historical events must be evaluated despite the fact the eyewitnesses are now dead and cannot come into court to testify.

Where are you getting that from?  What rule of historiography even gets near telling anybody that they "must" evaluate historical events?  Your apologetics desperation is starting to show.

The eyewitnesses who observed the crafting and signing of the constitution of the United States are lost to us.

A loss that inflicts great damage, since the Courts, like Christianity, have subsequently interpreted the Constitution in a progressive way that departs from the original intention of the fathers, just like modern Christianity departs from the intent of the original biblical authors, or so seems to be the battle cry we hear when equally authentically born again Trinitarians point the finger of heresy at each other. 

Those who witnessed the life of Abraham Lincoln are also lost to us.

And nothing "requires" any adult to care, except for those adults who wish to teach U.S. History.  The modern American who is completely apathetic toward Abe Lincoln is doing nothing unreasonable.

It’s one thing to require eyewitness cross-examination on a case that may condemn a defendant to the gas chamber; it’s another thing to hold history up to such an unreasonable necessity.

And it's another thing to tell an unbeliever that they "should" be satisfied with a less-than-perfect authentication standard for testimony that allegedly has the power to cause them irreversible eternal conscious torment...something much worse than merely a false criminal conviction on earth.  That higher standard for spiritual matters might make your apologetics case impossible to make, but that higher standard remains reasonable nontheless.  Reasonableness isn't limited to whatever supports Cristian apologists.  Reasonableness might possibly be found in something that makes Christian apologists hate their jobs.

If we require this standard for historical accounts, be prepared to jettison everything you think you know about the past.

I'm not seeing the downside.  Ignoring ancient history is about as dangerous as ignoring a jelly stain in a landfill.  When you can prove that any biblical bullshit "applies to us today" (mission impossible), you can talk to me further about the risks of ignoring ancient history.

Nothing can be known about history if live eyewitnesses are the only reliable witnesses we can consult.

And why should anybody outside of historians and Christian apologists give a fuck what might have happened 2000 years ago?  You can't show that anything in the bible "applies to us today". 

If this were the case, we could know nothing with certainty beyond two or three living generations, including two or three living generations of your own family.

That's not a problem for anybody except those who do ancient history as a hobby or job, and and problem for Christians who realize there is no Holy Spirit in the first place, and so their case for Christ really does evaporate once the historical evidence is justifiably marginalized.

Learn more about the nature of eyewitness testimony in the new, updated and expanded version of Cold-Case Christianity.

Shame on you for trying to draw away Christians from their Sola Scriptura security blankets.  If they are serious that the bible "alone" is "sufficient" for faith and practice, that means they don't need J. Warner Wallace's marketing gimmicks anymore than the 4th century church fathers did.

My response to Bellator Christi on bible inerrancy

 See 


https://bellatorchristi.com/2023/10/26/s7e8-inerrancy-does-it-matter/


In case my post gets deleted, here's a screenshot proving the post was made, followed by the actual text:



Text:

What I offer here is not proof that you are unreasonable, but that Christians who reject bible inerrancy are reasonable.

First, I have't studied your own views enough to detect what you think about this, but I will assume that you think inerrancy arises either naturally or logically, or both, from divine inspiration, on the grounds that "god cannot lie" (i.e., Geisler-flavored inerrantism, i,e., "The bible is God's word, God cannot err, therefore the bible cannot err".). So your problem is in explaining why you think the mere fact that the author is "divinely inspired" somehow necessitates that whatever he wrote during such inspiration, was inerrant. You cannot deny that the author of Revelation was divinely inspired, and yet it was WHILE he was divinely inspired that he committed the capital offense of idolatry twice, with the angel rebuking it as a sin that is to be avoided (19:10, 22:8). So if somebody wanted to stay open to the possibility that other NT authors engaged in acts of sin/imperfection while they were in the process of writing the text of their NT books, you could not rationally insist that this is completely out of the question.

Second, if you deny Geisler's version of inerrancy, then you have a version of inerrancy that is far less clearly "biblical", which might require that you stop characterizing as unreasonable those Christians who think inerrancy is modern day Phariseeism.

Third, you cannot theologically separate inerrancy from divine inspiration. You would never say that maybe Romans could be inerrant while also lacking divine inspiration. Since your position views divine inspiration as necessary to biblical inerrancy:

1 - What bible verse or verses most strongly support(s) the divine inspiration of the NT? To make things easy, feel free to provide your proofs in the same order as the order of the NT canon: Proof that Matthew is divinely inspired, proof that Mark is divinely inspired, etc. The less clear the divine inspiration of NT books is, the less unreasonable will be those who reject NT inerrancy. And yet something tells me that when you meet another Trinitarian Christian who denies biblical inerrancy, you think they are not presently experiencing all of the spiritual growth potential that god has made possible for them to presently experience.

2 - Is your inerrancy-favoring interpretation of those NT verses so clear and compelling that those who disagree with you on the point must be unreasonable to so disagree? Or could disagreement with you on the point possibly be reasonable?

3 - Most conservative and fundamentalist churches have a statement of doctrines they consider "essential to salvation", very few of them express or imply that belief in the inerrancy of the NT is essential to salvation. That is an awful lot of spiritually alive people who are failing to notice how crucial the inerrancy of the NT is, reasonably suggesting their view does not arise from ignorance, but from the non-existence of the doctrine in the first place. This renders the outsider reasonable to conclude that rejection of NT inerrancy iis not anymore unreasonable than is rejection of Preterism.

4 - Could a Christian do absolutely everything which Jesus in the 4 canonical gospels required of them, while sincerely believing the whole time that the doctrine of NT inerrancy is false? I say yes, their trust that the 4 gospels correctly convey Jesus' commands, does not demand they assent to gospel-inerrancy, only that they assent to the historical reliability of the gospels. As as I'm sure you are aware, most Christian apologists insist that belief in bible inerrancy is by no means necessary before a person can be reasonable to say Jesus' resurrection is the one theory that best explains the NT evidence..

I'm not saying inerrantists are unreasonable. I'm merely saying those who reject NT inerrancy can be reasonable to do so. Contrary to popular belief, reasonableness for one group does not dictate the limits of reasonableness for another group. And yet the humble attitude that says your opponent could possibly be equally as reasonable as you, is not only nowhere allowed in NT theology, but is explicitly condemned by Paul who seems to think that disagreement with him automatically justifies anathematizing the opponent (Gal. 1:6-9), or insisting that they "know nothing", and worse (1st Tim. 6:3, Titus 3:9-11). That is, if you refuse to become an intolerant bigot in your theological views, you are willfully disobeying apostle Paul's demand that you imitate him (1st Cor. 11:1).

If spiritually alive people cannot even agree on such spiritual things, you can hardly expect spiritually dead people, like me, to manifest more accurate discernment of such spiritual things.

Hope that helps.

==================end





Monday, October 2, 2023

J. Warner Wallace warns against Christians being "teachers" likely because he knows it will create controversy and interest

 This is my reply to an article by J. Warner Wallace entitled


In a prior post, I summarized the studies and publications that describe the flight of young people from the Church. A compelling cumulative circumstantial case can be made to support the fact that young college aged Christians are walking away from Christianity in record numbers. What can we do about it? What can be done?

Blame it on God.  God could have given them a road-to-Damascus experience like he did with Saul who wasn't even a Christian at the time, but very anti-Christian (Acts 9, 22, 26).  If such a spectacle succeeded with such a violent anti-Christian, such experience has even more likelihood of persuading when the people to be convinced are already Christians.  When God doesn't do his best, it demonstrates real limitations of his love.  Just like if you could have saved a drowning child by putting more effort into it, but you solely by choice refrained from exercising all of your ability to save the child, this necessarily implies there was a limit to the amount of love you had for that child.

When you trifle that maybe God knew better than us, then you are admitting that the reason God doesn't do anything about young people leaving the church is because he knows what's best.  If God isn't doing his best to prevent young people from leaving the church, you cannot be more godly than to follow God's lead.  NO, you are not following God's lead with your apologetics bullshit.  In the bible, God's "leading" of somebody caused them to speak infallibly...that's how you got your inerrant bible, remember?  Having fun trying to show anything in the bible saying God in the last days will only inspire his followers to a less intensive extent than he did the original followers.  it doesn't exist.  Therefore, if in fact you carry on Christianity without possessing infallible teaching authority, we have to seriously consider that this is because God wants unbelievers to classify you as a heretic.

Whenever people ask me this question, I always say the same thing. STOP TEACHING YOUNG CHRISTIANS. Just stop it. Whatever Christendom is doing in its effort to teach it’s young, the effort appears to largely be a failure.

Is this the part where the atheist reminds you that god's ways are mysterious, and if you can survive a debate with a "well maybe god....", so can the anthesit?  Like, maybe God is working great wonders through the youth in the church of today, but for his own sovereign mysterious reasons, he doesn't want you to detect it?  How is that any less persuasive than "well maybe god has a sovereign mysterious purpose for allowing evil and we just can't see it yet"? 

In fact, Ken Ham (in his book, Already Gone:Why Your Kids Will Quit Church and What You Can Do To Stop It) found that young Christians who faithfully attended Bible classes were actually more likely to question the authority of Scripture, more likely to defend the legality of abortion, same-sex marriage, and premarital sex, and more likely to leave the church! What’s going on here? I think I know. It’s time to stop teaching our young people; it’s time to start training them. There’s a difference between teaching and training. Training is teaching in preparation for a battle. Boxers train for upcoming fights. In fact, boxers are sometimes known to get fat and lazy until the next fight is scheduled. Once the date has been signed, fighters begin to train in earnest. Why? Because they know that they are going to eventually get in the ring and face an aggressive opponent. We train when we know we are about to encounter a battle. Imagine for a moment that you are enrolled in an algebra class. If the teacher assured you that you would never, ever be required to take a test, and that you would pass the class regardless of your level of understanding, how hard do you think you would study? How deeply do you think you would come to understand the material? How committed do you think you would be to the material? The problem we have in the Church today is not that we lack good teachers. There are many excellent teachers in the Church. The problem is that none of these teachers are scheduling battles.

Then none of those teachers are filled with the Holy Spirit, a perfect reason for atheists to generalize that such teachers are too suspect to justify listening to them on any biblical subject, including evangelism.

Make no mistake about it, there are battles looming for each and every young Christian in the Church today, but church leaders are not involved in the scheduling of these battles.

Because they are not filled with the Holy Spirit, a perfect reason for unbelievers to steer entirely clear of them.  If they cannot even know what God wants them to do with young Christians, we are reasonable to avoid trifling about what they do know, and to view them with enough suspicion to justify absolute apathy toward every other bit of biblical bullshit they spout.  Did Paul ever tell anybody to avoid the parts of a heretic's theology that are wrong, and to pay attention to those parts that are correct?  no.  if they are heretics, they are to be ENTIRELY disregarded, regardless of whether some of their teachings are "correct".  A lot of things Mormons teach about the bible are correct...would you suggest that people disregard the Mormons entirely?  Or would you recommend they put forward effort to disregard Mormon errors and only pay attention to Mormon truth? 

The battles are waiting for our sons and daughters when they get to University (or enter the secular workplace). The Church needs to be in the business of scheduling battles and training our young people for these battles.

Wow, J. Warner Wallace wants young spiritually immature Christians to train for "battle"?  Doesn't your religion teach that spiritually immature people are not supposed to directly battle the devil?  You've shown multiple times that you have no more of the Holy Spirit than any Roman Catholic, and yet you are going to train spiritually immature people for spiritual battle?  LOL. 

Teaching without a planned battle is little more than “blah, blah blah.”

Then Paul's epistle to the Corinthians was "blah blah blah" because not only did he refuse to train them for battle, he was determined to know nothing among them except Christ and him crucified.  1st Cor. 2:1-2.  Knowing nothing but Jesus and him crucified does not constitute "battle teacher".  And yet the fucking fool also told them how to more properly present themselves when manifesting spiritual gifts (ch. 14), never dreaming for a single second that the fact that they were presenting themselves improperly during this Voodoo was a good argument that the Holy Spirit had nothing to do with their manifestations in the first place.

This is the problem with traditional Sunday School programs.

Then unbelievers have been reasonable every single time they denied an invitation to attend a traditional Sunday School.  What fool would trifle that merely because they err about battle doesn't necessarily mean they err about salvation?  It is not  your prerogative to decide what an unbeliever should be satisfied with.  If the unbeliever is unwilling to take any chances on a Christian who manifests no in-filling of the Spirit, that does not represent unreasonableness on her part, that is YOUR problem.  You can refute this argument when you take a razor and slice out of your bible all of those bigoted paranoid statements about how perilously risky it is to become a Christian (viz. you might get a nasty surprise on judgment day, Matt. 7:22-23; just because you start out converting to Paul's gospel is not the slightest guarantee against God cursing you in the future for denying the true gospel (Gal. 1:6-9).  No infallibility? No obligation to give a fuck.

They are often well-intended, informative and powerfully delivered. But they are impotent, because our young people have no sense of urgency or necessity.

Did Jesus exhibit a sense of urgency or necessity when he reclined in that chair as the center of attention at the party Levi threw for him (Matt. 9:10)?  Probably not.   Your hype that Christians need to push evangelism and apologetics as urgent is every bit as much of the marketing gimmick today as it was for any fool preaching the same in the NT.

There is no planned battle looming on the horizon and the battle of University life is simply too far away to be palpable. It’s time to address the problem not with our classes but with our calendar. It’s time to start scheduling battles so our teaching becomes training. Years ago, as a youth pastor, I started taking annual trips to Salt Lake City and Berkeley. Why? I was scheduling theological and philosophical battles to help prepare my young Christians for the larger looming battle they would someday face on their own.

Then why have you put so much effort into avoiding the challenges that skeptics like myself have been confronting you with for years?  Let me know when you are ready to engage with me in a debate just as live as those debates you now claim to have attended in Salt Lake City.  You've deleted my responses for so many years, you know perfectly well who I am and how to get a hold of me.   So accept this battle-challenge, or shut the fuck up, you duplicitous pussy.

If you want to teach your young people theology, there is no better method than to put them in direct contact with people who believe in a very sophisticated heresy.

And if you want to test the skills and knowledge of your chosen apologetics teacher, there is no better method than to put them in direct contact with skeptics who have been challenging such apologists for years. 

Mormons use the same terminology as Christians but deny the basic tenants of our faith.

And Arminians use the same terminology as Calvinists (freewill, divine sovereignty, atonement, preservation, etc) but deny the basic tenants of Calvinism.  You will never explain how it is that somebody could be filled with the Holy Spirit sufficiently to be "saved" but at the same also lack the Spirit sufficiently to remain deceived about such important doctrines as Jesus' atonement and God's sovereignty. 

And you couldn't justify "essential doctrine" from the bible anyway.  Neither Jesus, nor Paul, nor any NT author, expressed or implied that belief in several doctrines were "essential to salvation".  That is merely the by-product of the canonization of the NT, therefore, your "essential doctrine" doctrine is no less an exercise in elevating human tradition to the level of scripture, than Roman Catholicism is. 

In order to dialogue with Mormons effectively, we first have to understand what we believe.

If you were filled with the Holy Spirit, you wouldn't have to understand:

 19 "But when they hand you over, do not worry about how or what you are to say; for it will be given you in that hour what you are to say.

 20 "For it is not you who speak, but it is the Spirit of your Father who speaks in you. (Matt. 10:19-20 NAU)

Was that intended only for first century Christians?  Gee, I wonder how many other teaching of Jesus he did not intend to be mirrored by modern Christians?  How crooked of a road will we encounter if we start trying to answer that question?  Or did I forget that doctrinal division in the body of Christ on what Jesus meant with his sayings, is no more significant to you than division in the church on how to make pancakes?

 Or maybe you suddenly discovered that 1st Cor. 14:25 is false?  Gee, how will Wallace ever correctly balance the magical fantasyland of the 1st century with the undeniably naturalistic reality of the 21st century?  Jesus not only told his original followers to perform miracles as part of their evangelism efforts (Matthew 10:8), he also said future believers were to obey everything he had commanded of the original disciples (28:20).  So because you have never raised the dead nor done a single miracle in your entire life, I have solid biblical basis to say it's probably because God is refusing to bless your efforts (which implies you are a false teacher), or this whole bible-fronting lifestyle is total bullshit.  

No, there is nothing in the NT clearly and unequivocally asserting that in the last days, God will pour out his Spirit upon true believers to a lesser extent than he did the original believers.  You merely speculate otherwise because such speculation is the only basis you have to 'explain' why it is that nobody today can do what the bible says the original disciples did.  And Paul's speculations about "when that which is perfect is come, that which is in part will be done away" do not bother me in the least:  the fact that he was far less clear than he could have been tells me he intended this solely for the originally intended recipients, and you will NEVER make a convincing case that anything in the NT "applies to us today".  FUCK YOU. 

When we train young people in preparation for an evangelism trip to Salt Lake City, we give meaning and purpose to the content of our teaching. In a similar way, our evangelistic trips to Berkeley (where we contact notable atheist speakers and atheist groups on campus) require us to prepare ourselves to answer the myriad of atheistic objections we will inevitably encounter.

Except that you've never even bothered to try answering ME.  I have more powerful arguments against your religion than you'd normally get from college atheists.  Put up or shut up. 

Once again, the content of our teaching in preparation for this trip takes on purpose and meaning when we know the level of our understanding will eventually be tested. If we want to do our young people a service, we need to stop teaching them. It’s time to start scheduling battles so we can turn teaching into training.

What would you say to the Christian couple who want their 6 year old daughter to perform exorcisms?  Wouldn't that qualify as "training"?   or did you suddenly discover that your absolutist language is errant, and there are plenty of exceptions where teaching without training would be preferable?

CLICK TO TWEET These trips are not easy, but they are essential.

No, nothing in the bible requires Christians to take their children to battles with unbelievers.  Fool. 

They require us, as leaders, to become good apologists.

Then you need to step down, because your "apologetics" are laughably weak, as I've demonstrated countless times at this blog. 

They require us, as pastors, to prioritize our calendars to make room for the trip and for the important training that will take place for months prior to the trips.

Can you produce a New Testament verse that tells pastors to take their followers to secular learning centers to train them for battle?  No.  YOU are the heretic.  You cannot manifest miracles, yet you still want 1st century Christianity to be true and applicable in this modern age, when the bible has absolutely nothing to say about whether Christianity would remain binding upon people 1900 years after the first century.   

One last thing; I’ve learned the importance of this approach first-hand.

It doesn't matter, your approach contravenes the biblical model.  What you found in your own experience does not have biblical authority. 

My first year as a youth pastor was perhaps my toughest. As a former designer with a strong interest in the arts, I spent my first year focusing on the artistic nature of the Sunday gathering. I incorporated music, video, art and drama to create compelling Sunday experiences that were more entertainment than content.

Then your level of spiritual immaturity was so great, we'd be reasonable to say its probably because you had never gotten "saved" in the first place. 

The kids who graduated from my ministry that first year were not prepared for what they encountered in college and all but one walked away from their faith. This impacted the way I did ministry from that time on. I began to schedule battles and train young people for these important tests. I don’t think I’ve lost a student since.

You don't have the first clue how many of those who read your Cold Case Christianity crap subsequently fell away from the faith.  But my exposure of the weakness of your apologetics suggests there were probably thousands.  Your repackaging of the "historical reliability of the NT" stuff is nothing but marketing scam run amok, just like your "crime scene" stuff that never answers the question of what makes you think Jesus or Paul wanted their religions to continue applying to people after the 1st century, a question you cannot answer with the bible.  And if you tried to answer it with some NT "prophecy" you think is coming true today, I'd sic the Christian "preterists" on you, and presto, whether any biblical "prophecy" predicted anything happening today, is yet another division in the body of Christ. 

If we want to do our young people a service, we need to stop teaching them.

You are a false teacher.  The bible could not be clearer that the job of the Christian pastor is to "teach":

1 Tim. 3:2  An overseer, then, must be above reproach, the husband of one wife, temperate, prudent, respectable, hospitable, able to teach,

1 Tim. 4:11  Prescribe and teach these things.

1 Tim. 6:2  Those who have believers as their masters must not be disrespectful to them because they are brethren, but must serve them all the more, because those who partake of the benefit are believers and beloved. Teach and preach these principles.

2 Tim. 2:2  The things which you have heard from me in the presence of many witnesses, entrust these to faithful men who will be able to teach others also.

2 Tim. 2:24  The Lord's bond-servant must not be quarrelsome, but be kind to all, able to teach, patient when wronged,

Heb. 5:12  For though by this time you ought to be teachers, you have need again for someone to teach you the elementary principles of the oracles of God, and you have come to need milk and not solid food.

-------------

Your insistence on ceasing to teach and starting to train overlooks and denies the reality spoken of in Hebrews 5:12, that some Christians have fallen behind in their knowledge and must be taught again.  Since they fell behind, they are not spiritually prepared for "battle", so that this verse is forbidding the readers from "training" such immature believers.
It’s time to start scheduling battles so we can turn teaching into training.

And you couldn't produce a NT verse to justify that methodology, to save your life, you scheming mass-marketing heretic.  Why don't we find Paul scheduling battles for his churches to participate in? Are you a liberal who thinks Paul should have scheduled the Galatians to do battle with the Judaizers rather than merely "teach" the Galatians through an epistle?  FOOL.

The NT authors whom you believe wrote infallibly, have never done anything for the church after the first century except "teach", and yet you, despite denying you yourself possess infallible teaching authority, demand that your followers do better than the NT authors did?  FUCK YOU. 

For more information about strategies to help you teach Christian worldview to the next generation, please read So the Next Generation Will Know: Training Young Christians in a Challenging World.

Yeah, because the Holy Spirit's work in the mind of the sincere authentically born again person who is reading the bible,  is not enough.  But try to remember that although my books are not the bible, still, you "need" them.  And remember, your "needing" my books doesn't conflict with your sola scriptura belief that the bible is ALONE sufficient for faith and practice. 

This book teaches parents, youth pastors and Christian educators practical, accessible strategies and principles they can employ to teach the youngest Christians the truth of Christianity.

Because as we all know, not only is the bible the word of a God who always honors his promise to enlighten his true followers, but the bible is also "perspicuous" or clear, meaning, if we are true followers, we can determine what a bible verse means without purchasing the bells and whistles of fools who explicitly disclaim infallible teaching authority...like J. Warner Wallace.

The book is accompanied by an eight-session So the Next Generation Will Know DVD Set (and Participant’s Guide) to help individuals or small groups examine the evidence and make the case.

Because as we all know, not only is the bible the word of a God who always honors his promise to enlighten his true followers, but the bible is also "perspicuous" or clear, meaning, if we are true followers, we can determine what a bible verse means without purchasing the bells and whistles of fools who explicitly disclaim infallible teaching authority...like J. Warner Wallace. 

WRITTEN BYJ. Warner Wallace J. Warner Wallace is a Dateline featured cold-case homicide detective, popular national speaker and best-selling author.

Which can only be a testament that most of today's Christians are abysmally ignorant.  Just like the more popular Benny Hinn is, the more embarrassment to Christianity.

 He continues to consult on cold-case investigations while serving as a Senior Fellow at the Colson Center for Christian Worldview. He is also an Adj. Professor of Christian Apologetics at Talbot School of Theology, Biola University, and a faculty member at Summit Ministries. He holds a BA in Design (from CSULB), an MA in Architecture (from UCLA), and an MA in Theological Studies (from Gateway Seminary).

And despite all of that fancy knowledge, he cannot produce a single bible verse to support the premise that God thinks it legitimate for one of his true followers to try to beef up their teaching authority with references to how they graduated from formal Christian institutions. In the first century, the best learning institution was the original apostles who walked and talked with Jesus...but Paul explicitly disclaimed he had obtained a single thing from them, and in the same verse discounted the significance of their authority. Gal. 2:6.  While fundagelical commentators insist Paul likely obtain plenty of gospel info from the earlier apostles, it remains a problem for them that Paul never actually comes right out and admits that he depended on them for any gospel knowledge.

Wednesday, July 12, 2023

The basic dishonesty of Jeff Durbin and Apologia Church

Jeff Durbin is a 5-point Calvinist apologist who co-pastors a church with Dr. James White.  Durbin also has a YouTube channel, Apologia Studios, and operates the https://apologiastudios.com website.

For years I've been posting comments on the videos Jeff Durbin uploads to YouTube.  Since I'm usually signed in, I always see my previous comments.  No issue.

Then one day I signed out, then went back to the comments, and suddenly, all of my comments from the past few years were gone.  Apparently, YouTube stupidly wants people who are signed in, to have the impression their comments are still present even if in fact the channel-operator has deleted them.  You have to sign out of your email and YouTube accounts, then go back and look, before you notice that the prior comments were deleted in the past.

My posted criticisms of Durbin have never alleged any falsehood about Durbin, they merely point out how Durbin is both incorrect and hypocritical in so many ways despite his natural propensity toward dogmatism.

I am therefore reasonable to conclude that if anybody thinks Durbin is a great apologist, its because he does a consistent job of destroying the evidence indicating how very deceived he is.

Gee, how easy would it be to look smart if you were always  destroying proof that other people were criticizing you?

What if I had a YouTube channel, posted many videos critical of Christianity, and none of the thousands of comments was significantly critical because I constantly delete the criticisms I cannot answer?

Would you continue to rave about how smart of a counter-apologist I am?  I'm guessing "no".

Wednesday, April 26, 2023

My objections to Lisa Cooper and Christian Research Institute about Sandy Hook and theodicy

This is my reply to an article in the CRI Journal entitled

(Was God at Sandy Hook that day?)
Lisa Cooper, Article ID: JAF1422, Apr 3, 2023

To give a Christian apologetic response to school shootings, it is important to address the problem of evil. How is it possible that a perfectly good God who is in control over all things would allow such heinous acts of violence carried out against innocent children?
Easy: you redefine "good" so that it no longer precludes acts that it normally precludes when used in typical everyday speech.  Making us wonder what criteria you use to decide when typical everyday speech is and isn't sufficient to meaningfully discuss "god".
Of first importance is the philosophical answer to this question. By focusing on the well-received argument put forth by Christian philosopher Alvin Plantinga concerning mankind’s free will to do both good and evil, it becomes evident that God can be good even though evil exists.

So apparently Lisa wants us to side with her against Calvinism....when we know that Calvinism v. Arminianism is one of Christianity's more pernicious in-house debates. 

This response, however, does not always reach people who are hurting.

If quoting a bible verse to a grieving person doesn't help them, blame it on God, who often boasts that his word is powerful and sufficient.  Really now, what is the Holy Spirit doing when you quote Romans 9:20 to a grieving mother who responds to her son's murder by questioning god's goodness?  Is the Holy Spirit NOT using that word of God for his own glory?  If he is, then the failure of a bible quote to calm the grieving parents of murdered children probably has less to do with 'wisdom' and more to do with "bible quotes are nothing but hot air in the first place". 

Christian philosopher Angus Menuge offers an existential response to the problem of evil. He uses Jesus’ death on the Cross as a starting point, showing that God knows what it means to have a child die,

He should, God is the one who killed his own son by his own "hand":

 27 "For truly in this city there were gathered together against Your holy servant Jesus, whom You anointed, both Herod and Pontius Pilate, along with the Gentiles and the peoples of Israel,

 28 to do whatever Your hand and Your purpose predestined to occur. (Acts 4:27-28 NAU)

Lisa continues: 

and Jesus, having died for us,

except that Christian Calvinists deny that Jesus died for absolutely all sinners...a point which causes non-Calvinist Christians to deny the Calvinist god's goodness...something us unbelievers can exploit.

has suffered every pain we as humans could suffer in this life.

False, there is no evidence that Jesus ever suffered the pain of losing a biological child or being divorced by a spouse that suddenly became unloving, or became paralyzed from the neck down in an accident and then had to endure the next 50 years of his life experiencing severe depression at his inability to move,  and experiencing the guilt of becoming a significant burden on those who took care of him. 

Further, a biblical approach to suffering

What about unbelievers who don't accept the doctrine of full biblical inerrancy?  Can they correctly interpret a bible verse about God's morality without worrying about whether that interpretation harmonizes with everything else in the bible? 

reveals that, in the midst of all of this pain, God works all things together for the good of those who love Him (Rom. 8:28), even when we receive no direct answer about how this happens.

You know it's true because "the bible says".  My heart is already skipping from the great sense of guilt I have about my sin. 

It is true that our suffering conforms us to the image of Christ.

The hope of the hopeless.  One wonders what orientalisms about morality in the NT would have been different if life in the 1st century hadn't been as rough on Christians as it was.

While we live this side of heaven, we identify with Jesus in His suffering. When He comes again, we will identify with His resurrected and glorified self — perfect and sinless, without sadness or suffering, and forevermore participating in the Son’s holy and loving relationship with the Father.

What about preterism, you know, the eschatological doctrine that says Jesus completed his second coming before the close of the 1st century?  How long does God want me to compare your futurist eschatology with Christian historicist eschatology, before He will start expecting me to discover which one is the truth?  Would John the Revelator agree with most conservative Trinitarian inerrantists of today that his words about the eschaton constitute non-essential theology?  Wow, he sure seemed all fired up about the whole business.

Therefore, in ministering to those affected by gun violence, we are called to a ministry of patient listening and faithful presence.

Would you be exercising patience by informing them that God in Deuteronomy 32:39 and Job 14:5 takes personal responsibility for all human murder?  How would the Holy Spirit use your references to these texts to further His intentions toward the grieving survivors? 

We simply should not try to present fully formed analytical answers to those who are lamenting the loss of a child. What we can do is be present in the day-to-day wrestling, listening to them in their distress, and pointing them to how Jesus has already-but-not-yet accomplished the end of suffering.

"already-but-not-yet"?  I don't think hitting the grieving parents of murdered children with theological contradiction is the best way to "minister" to them.  Perhaps that's because I'm an unbeliever and I don't recognize any force in the "god's ways are mysterious" excuse?

When the news of the Sandy Hook Elementary school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut, was posted on my Facebook account, I was eight months pregnant with my first son. Having grown up in the town next to Newtown, I knew those streets; I knew that parking lot; I knew some of the people in that community. I sat at my laptop, aghast at the live feed.

Aghast at God performing his will (Job 14:5)?  How could something you are supposed to pray for ("thy will be done on earth as it is in Heaven") be something you were 'aghast' at?  Maybe I didn't notice that CRI is so anti-Calvinist that they take the Arminian approach absolutely for granted? 

Aerial views of the school, panicked parents searching the crowds for their kids, kids’ faces flushed red from crying; it was all too much to take in.

Perhaps you are spiritually immature to pray that God perform his will, then find it too much to take when you God starts answering that prayer? 

I kept reminding myself to breathe. All the while, a phrase repeated in my mind: “How can I bring a child into this world?”
People can be so utterly evil. How can I allow this child to exist in a world where sin has so infected people that a twenty-year-old man could think it was a good idea to murder first his own mother and then as many children as he could before turning the gun on himself?

You can't, because you are a good person.  So the only way "god" could allow it is if you redefine "good" so that it doesn't preclude acts that it normally would preclude in typical daily conversation.  Remember:  God must always be a special exception to the rules...that's the only hope you have of salvaging any theodicy.

In the news since that horrific day, December 14, 2012, we see murder after murder, school shooting after school shooting. Educators are heard relaying hiding tactics to news reporters, while others have died protecting students, having used their bodies as human shields.1 According to the K–12 School Shooting Database, since January of 2013, the month following the Sandy Hook shootings, there have been 328 incidents of gun violence on school premises. Not all of these incidents involved an active shooter, but in the active shooter incidents, there have been 132 injuries and fatalities including the shooter, with a whopping 92 of those taking place from 2018 to now.

Then why don't you praise God for acting like God and deciding for himself when it is time to terminate a person's earthly life?  Could it be that there will always be a contradiction between your mammalian desire to preserve life, and your more philosophy that says some higher being is always good whenever he kills anybody?

And yet I, along with the historic Christian church, have the audacity to believe in a sovereign God who rules over all of this? Even more outrageous, I call this sovereign God good!

"Outrageous" is correct.   But in reality the issue is not that you are foolish to call such a bloody god "good", but rather whether unbelievers can be reasonable to say such a god is evil.

First, the philosophical question must be addressed: how can God be good if evil like this exists?

I prefer to first ensure we are talking about a real god before we start wading into the muddy waters of what he is like.  That's how I fuck up most Christian apologists.  If I refuse to discuss the traits of the toothfairy until I am sure she exists, I'm reasonable.  Nothing about the bible's existence imposes the slightest obligation to either refute it or agree with it. 

Next, the practical issue: how can Christians bring the gospel to those who have been affected by school shootings?

In other words, how can we manipulate the grieving surviving family members of murdered children so that these tragedies become opportunities to promote our religion? 

The problem of evil consistently has been an issue for apologetics and evangelism. In America, however, due to the rise in school shootings in recent years, it has become a politically charged national conversation. As time goes on, with each incident, more people have connections to these shootings, and so these attacks have started reaching us on a personal level.

Just tell yourself that the god who takes personal responsibility for causing all murder (Job 14:5) is "trying" to reach those people on a personal level.  Problem solved.  Spiritually mature people always happily praise god when he works his will in the world, since to become upset at what god is doing would contradict the witness of the Holy Spirit, correct? 

In the years since the Sandy Hook Elementary school shooting, I have known two people directly who have been the targets of random gun violence, and four more indirectly (relatives or friends of friends). For me, as for many, unjustified evil has become a serious philosophical prohibition to the spreading of the gospel in our culture.

Then you aren't remembering who you are or what you believe.  Your biblical world view does not allow you to believe in "unjustified" evil.  See Deut. 32:39 and Job 14:5.  If some crazy person walks into an elementary school and shoots dead several kids, your theology does not call this unjustified evil.  Your theology says "God is calling them home". 

Nonbelievers, rather than merely considering whether or not God exists, are now asking whether or not God is simply absent, woefully neglectful, or even overtly evil.

But because the bible says God is "good", there is potential to reasonably conclude that no "good" god would allow such evils, therefore, god may exist, but the biblical description of him is wrong therefore he cannot possibly exist as described. 

And now, due to the prevalence of these shootings, even people who have not been tied personally to an injury or death caused by a school shooting are asking these questions. Christians must be prepared to engage both abstract questions about the nature of God and to practice practical evangelism with tact, proper listening, and continued care.

"Christians must be prepared"?  Where are you getting that from?  I see nothing in the NT indicating anything therein "applies to us today".  Shall I wade through in-house Christian debates on which parts of the NT do and don't apply in 2023 (eschatology, dispensationalism, theonomy)?  If so, what source imposes any moral, spiritual or intellectual obligation on me to so wade?  And how do you know that source is talking about anybody living in the year 2023?

THE PHILOSOPHICAL PROBLEM OF EVIL
If God were truly all-knowing (omniscient), truly everywhere (omnipresent), truly powerful (omnipotent), and truly good (omnibenevolent), why would He not intervene and stop these shootings from happening?

Just tell yourself that "goodness" for god isn't always the same as "goodness" for human beings, and presto, behold the magic that can be achieved by simply defining a problem out of existence. 

He could part the clouds and strike the gunman dead. He could have caused the gunman never to have been born. He could have created a universe in which this shooting did not occur. But He didn’t.

The toothfairy also didn't do anything to stop those murders.  Maybe the toothfairy's ways are higher than our ways? 

He gave us these children, and then He let these precious children die.

Because he wanted them to die (Deut. 32:39, Job 14:5), and you are forced to concede that every act of God is "good".  Sounds like your problem, not mine, it's not even near a problem for unbelievers.  Your only possible explanation would be that God has the right to take life as he chooses, but the fact that such answer is comforting to you doesn't dictate that it be reasonable for unbelievers.

The Logical Problem of Evil
In response to the question of evil and suffering in this world, the Christian philosopher Alvin Plantinga demonstrates in his book God, Freedom, and Evil that there is no logical contradiction in saying that God is good while evil persists. The set of three propositions, “(1) God is omnipotent; (2) God is wholly good; and (3) Evil exists,” is neither explicitly nor implicitly contradictory. 

Sure, if you define "goodness" for God different from how you define "goodness" for human beings.  But all that would prove is that if you give a lawyer long enough, he can turn night into day by clever use of words.  We do not presuppose that "god" exists, nor that he is "good", nor that his alleged power suddenly renders his maximally wise in everything he does.  We interpret Genesis 6:5-6 literally as opposed to your non-literal and knee-jerk reactionary "anthropomorphic" interpretation, which is necessitated by absolutely nothing but a need to make that passage harmonize with everything else in the bible in the name of inerrancy.  We have atheist philosophers who insist your three propositions do result in contradiction.  See J. L. Mackie, "Evil and Omnipotence," Mind, New Series, Vol. 64, No. 254. (Apr., 1955), pp. 200-212.

What’s more, Plantinga sets forth a Free Will Defense, which negates any supposed inconsistency between the aforementioned set of propositions, and shows that any world with significantly free creatures necessarily has potential for those creatures to choose evil. He contends, “A world containing creatures who are significantly free (and freely perform more good than evil actions) is more valuable, all else being equal, than a world containing no free creatures at all.”

Except that there are two biblical paradigms that show that your god could have actually achieved a sinless world full of sinners, i.e., the world is not full of sin because we are sinners, its full of sin because God merely wants it to be that way when he doesn't "need" it to be that way:

a) Numbers 23:26, God causes the pagan prophet Balaam to refrain from cursing Israel, and since it is biblical, however that happened must surely be harmoninous with God's ideas about the need for human freedom.  Therefore if your god is all-powerful, he could similarly prevent similarly unbelieving people today from sinning.

b) Did God take away somebody's freewill in Daniel 4:33?  If I did to you all that was necessary to cause you to start doing what that king did after being cursed by god, would most Christians say I took away your freewill?

c)  In Ezekiel 38:4 and other passages before chap. 40, God's level of sovereignty over the wills of unbelievers is taught with the metaphor that says God puts hooks in their jaws and turns them around.  The mental image of a fisherman forcing a fish into the boat against its will after hooking it, is perfectly consistent with the apparent intention of the metaphor.  

Should you start balking that ancient Semitic people typically exaggerated for rhetorical effect, you throw into question most conservative Evangelical, Reformed and Catholic beliefs about God, each of which rest upon a decidedly literal interpretation of a theological statement in the bible.  If the book of Revelation says God is "omnipotent", is that literally true, or is that just an ancient Semitic exaggerated way of saying God has massive power? 

Other philosophers attack Plantinga's Freewill Defense.  See Justin Ykema, A Critique of the Free Will Defense A Comprehensive Look at Alvin Plantinga’s Solution To the Problem of Evil.


Through his Free Will Defense, Plantinga does not seek to give an explanation of God’s motives behind allowing the suffering or evil that He allows.

Then Plantinga leaves open the logical possibility that "god" has morally bad motives. 

Rather, Plantinga works to find a logical ground for why God does not necessitate only morally upright actions from the people He created.

Good luck finding anything in the bible to support the view that "God does not necessitate only morally upright actions from the people He created."  When you find a bible verse that says God asked anybody to do morally evil things, let me know how you felt about converting to Calvinism. 

In addition to this, he shows that it is logically consistent that those evil actions chosen by significantly free creatures do not reflect the will of God who created them, for, “He could have forestalled the occurrence of moral evil only by removing the possibility of moral good.”

Then how does Plantinga explain God forestalling moral evil, such as Numbers 23, the case of pagan prophet Balaam, whom God restrained from cursing Israel?  Maybe all Christian commentators are wrong, and Balaam's willingness to say whatever YHWH wanted is because he was a true follower of YHWH?  Then what could possibly have made Balak think Balaam was a good candidate for cursing God?  Did Balak go to the wrong tent?

Surely in some Christian circles, Plantinga’s emphasis on significantly free moral action would be considered problematic.

What is the Holy Spirit doing as he flutters above the head of the sincerely praying Calvinist?  Is the Holy Spirit "trying" to make the Calvinist see the light, but the divine intent is held back by Calvinist stupidity?

Or maybe you'd say the divine is held back by the Calvinist's unwillingness to see truth?

Gee, what fool Christian couldn't hurl that accusation at another to account for heresy? 

Luther, for example would say that in matters of faith, no moral action that merits salvation can be done outside of faith in Christ; however, he would affirm that moral action can be done spontaneously in terms of civil action. Plantinga makes no such distinction. The theological concerns here do not undermine the significance of the logical argument that Plantinga puts forth. In showing that God, being good, can exist and rule over a creation in which evil exists, he is not making a systematic theological argument but rather a logical one.

Sure, but if God has mysterious higher good reasons for allowing evil, then it becomes problematic to continue characterizing the evil in question as "evil".  Do we ignore the good that an "evil" brought about, and insist it is still fully evil, merely because of philosophical necessity?  Or only because modern democracy demands that we refrain from reclassifying certain "evils" as good?  Is the murder of a child evil because it breaks a biblical commandment?  Or good because it is God who caused it (Deut. 32:39)?  What would Dr. Frank Turek think of the fool who said the murder of a child is both good and bad depending on whether the perspective is divine or human?  Wouldn't he jump out of his moral absolutist skin and insist that god thinks the murder is evil too? 

Indeed, even atheist philosophers concede that Plantinga solved the logical problem of evil, showing that there just is no logical inconsistency between orthodox theism and the facts of evil and suffering we experience in the world.

But the problem of moral subjectivity and relativism comes to stay permanently just as soon as you say "An act can be evil for us to do, but can be good for God to do".  When we say child-rape is "evil", we usually don't mean "from our perspective", we mean it is absolutely evil period.

 

However, Plantinga acknowledges that his Free Will Defense is not the appropriate response to offer people in the midst of suffering. In the case of real-life evil, misery, and hardship, he calls one to seek pastoral care, not philosophical explanations.

And pastoral care cannot be more spiritual than to quote the bible in an effort to justify god at all costs. 

GOD’S SON WAS MURDERED

Then because it was God's "hand" that caused people to kill Jesus (Acts 4:27), that makes God guilty of murder no less than the truthful statement that it was your "hand" that caused somebody else to murder.  What fool would say "My hand caused that person to commit murder, but I am not responsible for that murder"?

The existential approach put forth by Christian philosopher Angus Menuge in his article “Gratuitous Evil and a God of Love” is centered on the coming of Jesus Christ in history to suffer for us.

Then it can contain nothing but sophistry and illusion, and is worthy only for the flames. 

Menuge argues that discussion of the problem of suffering begins and ends with the person and work of Jesus Christ on the Cross, for “Christ is God’s answer to the problem of evil” (emphasis added).

Except that smart people don't care about a person's attributes, until they become convinced that the person is actually real.  Except in the case of parents who explain tooth-fairies to toddlers.  And the case of Christians who jump at any chance to "show" that their concept of God is free from internal conflict.  And the case of atheists who might be in the mood to toy with apologists.

 

He explains that the problem of evil affects all of our hearts and minds, and “since evil is an immersive, existential condition, God answers by actions of love” (emphasis in original). The answer is therefore not abstract but utterly real, historical, and is revealed in the bloody God-man, Jesus Christ, suffering and dying for us on the Cross.

Hot air.  Dismissed.

God knows what it is like to have His Son die unjustly.

So?  How could it matter that it is possible for God to sympathize with us, when he is the one inflicting all the misery (Deut. 28:15-63?  How could it matter that a man sympathizes with a kidnapped child...if that man is the kidnapper? 

Jesus suffered the pain of a brutal death on the Cross. This is the difference between the Christian God and other gods: God came down from heaven and endured the pain of this world in order to save His creatures from eternal death — the very creatures at whose hands He would die.

Hot air.  Dismissed.

 

This can offer profound comfort for those who have suffered the loss of a child to gun violence, or for those of us who suffer from the anguish of seeing another suffer. The kind of anguish we face in this life is not foreign to God, and suffering is precisely the means by which God accomplished salvation for us.

Mormonism has an excellent track record of providing comfort to those who are grieving. So apparently, the ability of the sophistry to provide "comfort" does precisely nothing to justify pretending the comforting words are "true".


THE NOW AND THE NOT YET

Scripture speaks to the problems of suffering, pain, and premature death, but it even more robustly offers eschatological hope.

So do the Jehovah's Witnesses. 

When discussing the nature of our lives here on Earth, this side of heaven, the distinction between the now and the not yet is imperative. It is true that Jesus died on the Cross to reconcile us, to rescue us, to forgive us, and bring us into union with God; and it is true that those who believe enjoy some of these benefits now, but not to their full extent. The faithful must wait for Jesus’ return to receive them in full.

You just alienated all Christian preterists from the body of Christ.


Life in the now is characterized by suffering. We have been united to Christ in His suffering, not only in that He has suffered on our behalf but that we also, like Christ, cannot escape suffering in this world. Through suffering, furthermore, we are being molded and shaped to be more like Jesus.

Hot air, dismissed. 

However, we must be careful not to assure people of some assumed moral improvement as a result of suffering. In speaking to a parent of a child who had been murdered, we cannot approach them with, “Take heart! God is making you better,” or some such platitude.

Then you disagree with most Christian apologists who rely on God's mysterious good higher purposes to explain evil.   

Menuge condemns this, saying, “When God allows his creatures to suffer, it is not primarily because he has calculated some moral improvement that he can achieve for this life (although that may happen), but because he ‘desires all people to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth’ (1 Tim. 2:4).”

Then according to the reasoning of Menuge and apparently yourself, when God allows a little girl to be raped to death, it is because God ‘desires all people to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth’ (1 Tim. 2:4).”  Nice going.


Jesus says, “If anyone desires to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow me” (Matt. 16:24). The Christian cannot choose his or her cross. “He must leave that to God (1 Pet. 3:17; 1:6), for God alone knows which cross is beneficial and only God gives the strength needed to bear the cross (1 Cor. 10:13).”15 Our understanding is limited (Isa. 55:8–9).

Does God give the strength the little girl needs to endure a rape that ends with her hemorrhaging to death?  If so, what would such a rape situation look like if God had not given her such strength?  Would she have died the second the man threw her on the bed?

We cannot fathom why God has allowed us to endure the specific suffering that we must face.

Sure we can:  God is equally as pleased to inflict rape, kidnapping and parental cannibalism on disobedient people, as he is pleased to inflict prosperity on obedient people.  Deuteronomy 28:15-63, see esp. v. 63, the "delight" is the same in both cases.

 

We are not called to know the intricacies of what God is doing, but we are called to trust Him.

But if the guy in charge is killing people, his followers will either demand to know the intricacies, or they will quit following him.  Is this the part where you tell me that God is always the special exception?

 

And, in that vein, we can trust that God is working all things together for the good of those who love Him (Rom. 8:28).  However, Scripture shows us that the sufferings we endure are for us a promise of the eternal glory awaiting us, and assurance of our union with Christ (Rom. 8:17). Jesus, in His Revelation to John, explains that God Himself will dwell with His people in glory, and that “God will wipe away every tear from their eyes; there shall be no more death, nor sorrow, nor crying. There shall be no more pain, for the former things have passed away” (Rev. 21:3–4). In glory, we too will be glorified. In glory, there will be no more fear of premature death, no more concern to protect our children from violence, and no more mourning.
If you are going to quote the bible to make a point, why waste space with an article?  The bible says God is good, righteous and holy, so shouldn't that be the sufficient answer to anybody's problem with evil? 

EVANGELISM IN A TIME OF DESPAIR

Various philosophical approaches to the problem of evil can and will be entertained by our minds as we consider the impact of school shootings and whether or not God, being infinite in love and knowledge and power, could allow them to happen.

You forgot about another option.  Truth doesn't limit us to giving an answer that will help somebody reconcile reality with their religion.  It doesn't matter if God exists, the only way the "good" god of the bible and real evil could exists is if you redefine "good" so as to allow for crimes that we normally don't allow to be possible with any "good" (i.e., you will redefine "good" solely for the sake of ensuring there's no contradiction between your god and the reality of evil). 

But, there is a point where these approaches wax silent, and ministry begins. There is a moment you find yourself in a conversation about how gun violence in schools has affected a person’s own mind, soul, and spirit.

Sure, it was God, causing the gunman to kill the kids, so it was God who wanted to affect the minds, souls and spirits of the survivors.  Deut. 32:39.

I skip the rest of the article because it is nothing but preaching to the choir.  Lisa's article does nothing to render unreasonable the unbelievers who explain evil by God's non-existence, his apathy, or his evil desire to hurt people.

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