2003cobra,
First, I would like to respond to your failure to see the paradox with your points regarding "brothers" of Jesus. Your entire argument in this thread has been that there are errors in the Scriptures; yet, for the point regarding Jesus' brothers, you rely solely and heavily on a single word. The application of "brother" to mean siblings is negated by information contained within the Scriptures (specifically, verses which list the parentage of the four listed "brothers," as not being Mary (mother of Jesus) and Joseph). And still, you dismiss the negating evidence, insisting on the single word to have a static and single meaning.
That is the paradox. To restate it, in order to emphasize it: You claim errors exist within the Scripture, and rely on a single word as a defamation of doctrine (Perpetual Virginity of Mary).
Inerrant proof?
No, people don’t write documents we can declare inerrant.
However, if you believe the canonized scriptures to be inerrant, then I have provided the inerrant proof already.
It was a rhetorical question. From now on, if it is helpful, I will distinguish rhetorical questions from actual questions, or answer them myself.
Since the scriptures clearly indicate that Jesus had brothers and sisters, when the myth of the perpetual virginity of Mary gained some followers, this theory was developed to reconcile the scriptures to the myth (perpetuated by the 150 AD aprocyphal Protoevangelium of James).
You have reference twice now the development of "the myth of the perpetual virginity of Mary" gaining followers, yet have not provided proof of the sudden inception of this doctrine.
You can claim that it began in 150 AD, using an apocryphal work, which is dismissed by both Catholic and Protestant scholars (hence, the application of "apocryphal"). Also, the Protoevangelium of James, also called "the Nativity," does not assert the perpetual virginity of Mary, only that Mary was indeed a virgin at the time of Jesus' birth.
There are several quotes from early Christians which support an early belief and acceptance of Mary as ever-Virgin, before 150 AD. If I can find them, I will provided them via a PM, if that suffices.
We will have to disagree on the ability to read Matthew’s statement any other way than the obvious: he was a good man and she was a good woman. When such people get married, they have sex. Matthew’s saying Joseph had no marital relations with her until after Jesus was born is exceedingly clear.
You have simply dismissed evidence found within the Scriptures. Everything from the Annunciation to the Crucifixion.
Frankly, the verses and argument you put forth appear a little silly.
I think you are projecting this analysis, due to the contextual evidence disproving your claim.
My evidence is Scriptural, cross referenced, and contextual to history/culture.
There was also “James the Lord’s brother” mentioned in scripture.
Galatians 1:19 NRS
https://www.biblestudytools.com/nrs/galatians/1-19.html
19 but I did not see any other apostle except James the Lord's brother
This is the James from Matthew 13. He did not believe in Jesus at first. After all, what would it take to get you to believe your brother was the Son Of God? If I recall correctly, he is also called the Lord’s brother in Eusebius. I may be able to locate that, but I will be helping with a grand baby today so time is limited.
Paul was telling the Galatians which James he met with. Not kinsman, brother.
You realize that my argument cross-referenced this verse? (It was when I mentioned there being two James')
If not, we look at sources and weigh them. Hundreds of years after the scriptures say Jesus had brothers and sisters and that Joseph waited until after Jesus was born to have marital relations with his wife, the Roman Catholic Church decided to declare Mary was a perpetual virgin.
Correct, as far as waiting to make the declaration as doctrine. In fact, the first time the RCC could declare anything was 325 AD, because until that point, a large gathering could have led to death, as they were persecuted until that time. Basic historical knowledge.
It certainly appears to be the case from the text. They lied. God dealt well with them. He gave them families. Do you seriously think lying to a murderer to protect innocent people is a sin?
My point here is that you have specifically twisted your phrasing, in order to make your claim connect. The midwives were ordered to murder the Hebrew males. Yet, they feared God, and saved the males. They did this by lying to Pharoh, after the males were born. Then, God blessed them.
You purposefully left out the context of the situation, as well as aggravating information, in order to portray God as rewarding dishonesty. The contextual evidence points to God rewarding belief and subsequent protection of children.
I don’t recall saying scripture is errant. I have said that it is not inerrant. I have said that it has some minor, insignificant errors. I have pointed out a few. I have also said that it is reliable and valuable and authoritative.
You seem caught in the trap of “if it is not perfect it is worthless; if it is not 100% accurate then you can’t beleive anything in it.” That is not the way God has set things up. He has always used imperfect people to do His work.
Look at this logically and critically. If something is not "inerrant," what is it?
I never said that an imperfection renders something worthless. That is your projection.
No, we have multiple witnesses that Jesus had siblings.
You mean the same people who said that Joseph was Jesus' father? Yeah, they seem reliable and knowledgeable, don't they.
Again, though, you are ignoring cultural, historical, and linguistic context/evidence.
I rely on multiple witnesses to establish facts.
I do see the multiple paradoxes for you, however. You demand an inerrant scripture but the scripture you choose as inerrant has demonstratable errors.
Do you wish to progress in the discussion?
Because right here, you claim to rely on multiple witnesses to establish facts, yet you are relying on only a few as a base of faith. Even then, you are claiming that these sources are erroneous. So, the root of this entire discussion come to surface: How can you trust what is said and claimed in the Scriptures?