I did not, its
this one right here.
From that post:
Oh so I did, my bad. However you will notice with your sources that the ones that are purely translators still do not agree that the word means adultery. We can get as far afield as fornication, sure. But that’s not adultery. Your only sources that say as such are ones that are saying “no, this is what the Bible means, honest”
Oh okay, that makes sense. At that point, you were still under the impression that I was claiming that the word meant "adultery". See below.
As it describes itself: "Strong's Definitions is a collection of unique Greek and Hebrew words and their definition from the Old and New Testament."
And if its a definition from the Bible
1) There's also Thayer's Greek Lexicon, which is a completely different book, and which I notice you didn't comment on.
2) I think you're reading that sentence wrong. That sentence is not saying that their DEFINITIONS come from the Old and New Testaments. That sentence is saying that the WORDS come from the Old and New Testaments, which is the only way that the sentence makes sense. Otherwise, you'd end up with words listed in the book that aren't ever used in the Bible. But we don't see that! Why not? Because the WORDS are from the bible, not the definitions.
Like, if someone were to say "I'm going to paint it blue", but you don't know what "it" refers to, but you see them start painting a closet door, then the guy comes back and says "There, I painted it blue", then "it" must refer to the closet door.
It's the same logic here. Since we can clearly see that all of the words are taken from the bible, and there are no words that aren't found in the bible, we can conclude that "from" refers to "words", not "definitions".
Same problem. Its not defining the word, its defining what it thinks the Bible's usage of the word is.
Why do you think that the Exegetical Dictionary of the New Testament, vol. 3 is basing its definitions off bible usage?
it's literally saying it's a dictionary of the new testament. Which means it's not saying "This is what the word means" it's saying "This is what the Bible thinks it means."
1) You're ignoring the fact that none of the citations on that page come from the bible. How can the bible be used to define the word if the bible isn't even cited when defining the word? Oh, because you didn't even look at the page? Because you just looked at the title and drew conclusions from that? That would explain it.
2) It's called "A Dictionary of The New Testament" that because the words, as with Strong's Definitions, are FROM the New Testament. The authors took the individual words from the books of the bible, arranged them alphabetically, and defined each one.
See above. "The Bible is right because look here the Bible says its right!!" is not a serviceable argument.
Why do you think that the Dictionary of New Testament Theology bases its definitions off of bible usage?
Given you asserted the word meant cheating or adultery
See below re: Cheating
You say the new testament is the ultimate source of morality but, well, several other possibilities exist don't they?
Not as long as we're assuming the premises in post 76.
The question was "Why should you get your morality from the bible?"
The answer was: "Assuming that a person believes that:
1. An omnipotent, omniscient, loving God exists
2. Gave his instructions for humanity in the form of a book
3. Rewards people who follow that book
It should seem obvious. "
Satan messing with the bible should contradict with these premises. If God gave us the book, wants us to follow the book, and has the power to protect his book from corruption, then the book should be invincible.
I can apply those three premises you laid out to the old testament. Or the Quoran. And thats just sticking with the Abrahamic religions, maybe the ultimate book of morality has been the Mabinogion this whole time.
Of course you can! But since you'd be changing the premise, as "God", as I used the word, refers to the "Christian God", you'd be essentially talking about a different topic.
You criticise me for working backwards but thats all your argument is, House.
Nothing you've written in that paragraph demonstrates that this is true. I've been working forward from the premises.
If I'm not allowed to use "backwards thinking" to demonstrate the flaws in the BIble
I never said you weren't allowed to use it. You've just been using it wrong, because you forget that different actions can lead to the same result.
Given your "bag of coins" example, you're observing that a certain coin was drawn from a pouch, and then you're asserting that the whole bag only contains coins of that denomination. You can't prove that unless you look at every other coin in that bag. So when you "work backwards", and I call you out on it, I'm telling you that you need to dump out all the coins on the table and check them all, because if even one of them is a different denomination, you are refuted.
Again, if it's a religious war it's being justified by religion. If its being justified by religion then either the moral example of that religion is wrong, or the people interpreting that religion are wrong. But if the people who wrote the book can't interpret the book accurately, how can any of the book be trusted?
Again:
religion =/= Bible
The Catholic Church =/= Bible
The Pope =/= Bible.
Just because the religion justifies a war, it doesn't mean that the bible does.
Just because the religion demands that every women attend a naked pool party with the pastor, it doesn't mean that's what the bible says.
Also again, the Church didn't write the bible. The bible predates the Church.
So do you admit that you cannot prove that the bible caused the crusades?
Nope. I don't believe there's anything that transcends time culture or context
So, theoretically, there exists a time, or culture, or context in which God "deliberately letting a malevolent entity mess with us ", is moral?
How about genocide? Can that be moral in a certain time, culture, or context?
You say right
here the Bible allows divorce in cases of cheating.
Yes I did, and I've never denied that.
Saying: "The bible allows divorce in cases of cheating" is not saying "The word porneia means adultery". This is just you working backwards again.
If porneia means fornication (which is what I had in mind at the time of that post), then all fornication would necessarily be adultery/cheating, so it would not be inaccurate to say that the the bible allows for divorce in cases of adultery, because there is no act of adultery that is not also an act of fornication.
Whoever specifically mentioned illegal actions?
Both of us.
I explicitly said "illegal drugs" in post
#187 , to which you acknowledged that we were talking about illegal drugs when you said: "How are those two things contradictory? A person isn’t going to avoid trouble just because they overdosed on
illegal drugs in place of taking a suitable amount. This isn’t a rebuttal, it’s nonsense."
We both said "illegal drugs".
But I see something that I missed in post #187, something that might help us past this blocker.
You said "A person isn't going to avoid trouble just because they overdosed on illegal drugs..."
Yes, actually, they will. I thought this was common knowledge, but I guess not.
It depends on the government, but a majority of states in the US have "
Drug Overdose Immunity laws", and some states and countries will even provide you with free
clean needles. I've even read that somewhere, a hospital in some European country will just
give you medical-grade heroin as long as you have a doctor administer it, in their safe and clean environment.
So, now that you know that, are you going to change your answer? Do all these initiatives mean that they condone the use of illegal drugs?
Also, aww, you didn't reply to my last two points. I was genuinely curious to see how you'd try justifying your argument of "the new testament is true because the new testament says its true"
I read that, but I had no idea what you were talking about, since I never said what you accused me of saying, so I ignored it.