And the error of the trinity doctrine. God has words not just one word.
An interesting topic for another thread. Let me know if you start such a thread and need another participant.
And the error of the trinity doctrine. God has words not just one word.
I will indulge you as my foil this one final time.
Matthew 10:1,9-10 (KJV)
Matthew 10:1 And when he had called unto him his twelve disciples, he gave them power against unclean spirits, to cast them out, and to heal all manner of sickness and all manner of disease.
Matthew 10:9 Provide neither gold, nor silver, nor brass in your purses,
Matthew 10:10 Nor scrip for your journey, neither two coats, neither shoes, nor yet staves: for the workman is worthy of his meat.
Mark 6:7-8 (KJV)
Mark 6:7 And he called unto him the twelve, and began to send them forth by two and two; and gave them power over unclean spirits;
Mark 6:8 And commanded them that they should take nothing for their journey, save a staff only; no scrip, no bread, no money in their purse:
Luke 9:1,3 (KJV)
Luke 9:1 Then he called his twelve disciples together, and gave them power and authority over all devils, and to cure diseases.
Luke 9:3 And he said unto them, Take nothing for your journey, neither staves, nor scrip, neither bread, neither money; neither have two coats apiece.
Matthew 10:10 includes a further clarification: Do not acquire a staff as special equipment for the tour of the twelve. Matthew 10:10 often is rendered with "extra" in the verse, as in
Don't take a traveling bag for the road, or an extra shirt, sandals, or a walking stick, for the worker is worthy of his food. HCSB
The word "extra" applies to shirt, sandals, or walkings stick. Naturally the solid KJV rendering catches the "extra" meanings in the pluralizations shown therein.
Mark 6:8 teaches that this did not require that the disciples discard or leave behind the walking stick that they normally took with them wherever they went, while they were following Jesus. The twelve are to go about with the staff they had at the time, but they were not to seek one specially, or make it a condition of their travelling.
For fun see a variety of renderings:
Mark 6:8: https://www.biblegateway.com/verse/en/mARK 6:08
Luke 9:3: https://www.biblegateway.com/verse/en/Luke 9:03
Matthew 10:10: https://www.biblegateway.com/verse/en/matthew 10:010
No "synoptic problem" here or anywhere else in Holy Writ. :AMR1:
Now please feel free to have the last word. I have no time to interact with anyone who denies the infallibility, and plenary verbal inspiration of Scripture. You are trying to function out of your weight class. Your fifteen minutes are up. :AMR:
AMR
How do you know that Jesus is being misquoted?1
You keep making definitive statements, without providing a definitive source. 2
How do you know there are errors? Thus far, you haven't shown any errors, just numerical discrepancies, of +/- 1. Historically and scientifically, that is not enough to label as "error."3
Multiple witnesses. Sure. But, if you have a book full of errors, 4then the source cannot be trusted. So, you are trusting an erroneous source, meaning you can't be certain of anything.
But how do you know there are errors?3 The only way to deduce errors is to compare against a proven error-free source.
How do you know that Jesus is being misquoted? 2Again, you keep making definitive statements without an error-free source.
Why do you keep on using numerical discrepancies of literally +/- 1? 5Why do you not just address the real topic, which is inerrant doctrine? Unless you can provide solid proof, historically and scientifically, of a parallel source, free of error,6 then you are relying on erroneous documents; thus, you cannot accept beliefs based on the material as "Truth."
Perfect. Works for me, and it is organized. Bravo.I will number your comments and questions to assist in addressing them.
Let's progress. See, we are getting places.1) Two documents quoted Jesus. The quotes disagree. At least one is an error.
2) Of course you know I provided definitive sources, the only ones that you will accept: books of the Bible. Matthew disagrees with Mark and Luke. Three definitive sources; at least one misquotes Jesus.
3) Your statement is false and it misrepresents my presentation.
a) Wrong numbers are errors.
b) It is much more than numbers. In one gospel, Jesus told the disciples to take no staff, in another He told them they could take a staff, in a third He told them not to acquire a staff to take. Not numbers — different instructions. In one gospel, Jesus told the disciples to bring a colt. In another He told them to bring a donkey and a colt. Different, contradictory quotes. Not just numbers — errors.
4) This is a standard exaggeration people struggling against the facts to support their man-made traditions frequently use. I say repeatedly that there are a few insignificant errors that do not affect the authority or validity of scripture. Those failing to defend their false doctrine resort to fear mongering. ‘Full of errors’ is the trypical lie people hope to use in getting others to ignore their inability to explain the few insignificant errors.
5) Pointing out that the Bible itself is inconsistent with the way you have padded its resume with the false claim of inerrancy is discussing the doctrine of inerrancy. If it contradicts the evidence in the Bible, and it does, then you have failed.
6) Your claim that there must be an inerrant parallel source to disprove inerrancy is both wrong and ironic — it works against the doctrine of inerrancy. Why haven’t you seen that? Here it is simply (since you spent a post calling me a simpleton, this may be appropriate):
You claim the gospel attributed to Matthew is free of error. You claim the gospel attributed to Mark is free of error. They are parallel documents, both covering the same time and topic.
So we have two parallel and, according to your, inerrant sources that prove at least one has an error. Your own requirement has proved you, and the doctrine of inerrancy, wrong.
Worth even the third time. :up:I will indulge you as my foil this one final time.
. :AMR1:Spoiler
Matthew 10:1,9-10 (KJV)
Matthew 10:1 And when he had called unto him his twelve disciples, he gave them power against unclean spirits, to cast them out, and to heal all manner of sickness and all manner of disease.
Matthew 10:9 Provide neither gold, nor silver, nor brass in your purses,
Matthew 10:10 Nor scrip for your journey, neither two coats, neither shoes, nor yet staves: for the workman is worthy of his meat.
Mark 6:7-8 (KJV)
Mark 6:7 And he called unto him the twelve, and began to send them forth by two and two; and gave them power over unclean spirits;
Mark 6:8 And commanded them that they should take nothing for their journey, save a staff only; no scrip, no bread, no money in their purse:
Luke 9:1,3 (KJV)
Luke 9:1 Then he called his twelve disciples together, and gave them power and authority over all devils, and to cure diseases.
Luke 9:3 And he said unto them, Take nothing for your journey, neither staves, nor scrip, neither bread, neither money; neither have two coats apiece.
Matthew 10:10 includes a further clarification: Do not acquire a staff as special equipment for the tour of the twelve. Matthew 10:10 often is rendered with "extra" in the verse, as in
Don't take a traveling bag for the road, or an extra shirt, sandals, or a walking stick, for the worker is worthy of his food. HCSB
The word "extra" applies to shirt, sandals, or walkings stick. Naturally the solid KJV rendering catches the "extra" meanings in the pluralizations shown therein.
Mark 6:8 teaches that this did not require that the disciples discard or leave behind the walking stick that they normally took with them wherever they went, while they were following Jesus. The twelve are to go about with the staff they had at the time, but they were not to seek one specially, or make it a condition of their travelling.
For fun see a variety of renderings:
Mark 6:8: https://www.biblegateway.com/verse/en/mARK 6:08
Luke 9:3: https://www.biblegateway.com/verse/en/Luke 9:03
Matthew 10:10: https://www.biblegateway.com/verse/en/matthew 10:010
No "synoptic problem" here or anywhere else in Holy Writ
Now please feel free to have the last word. I have no time to interact with anyone who denies the infallibility, and plenary verbal inspiration of Scripture. You are trying to function out of your weight class. Your fifteen minutes are up. :AMR:
AMR
Lon writes:
Nope. You mentioned him as if he weren't an inerrantist.
Lon, I never implied that at all. Go back and read my post. I asked if you were familiar with him, you said yes, then I quoted him saying that putting inerrancy as a core doctrine is a slippery slope.
You have backed away from saying I misread him and was wrong about his position. You have now acknowledged that is false.
Now you have gone part of the way but not all the way to truth.
How do you think I mentioned him as if he weren't an inerrantist.
???
Show me the post. I knew his position. I never misrepresented it. Don’t call your error in reading a sin on my part. This is not honorable.
I understand that you are embarrassed that you misread my posts and leaped to completely unjustified conclusions. But this reaction is unworthy of a Christian.No it is not. YOU implied in 'the context' of errancy. Worse, you simply were throwing heavy-weights around as if you were even in the same room with them. I don't care where you go with this after that. I had to read for depth because there is a whole slough of controversy because of stuff like this and YOU conflated the issue like a little girl gossip when he is trying to distance from the misrepresentations. You can have the last word on this one. I'm not willing to drag Dr. Wallace's name into this any longer. I'm satisfied with what I know about him and am a bit frustrated that gossips still drag his name through the muck.
Cobra read this passage and says its a mistake. I looked. He is right, there were no staffs and suddenly, there are staffs!
Then? There was one donkey colt, and then there were two donkeys!
:doh:
How could I have missed it! He is right!
Wait, it gets better, What Cobra does next is suggest that this is proof 'poof' that the Bible has errors.
Here then is what he claims:
Mat 21:5 “Say to the daughter of Zion, ‘Behold, your king is coming to you, humble, and mounted on a donkey, on a colt, the foal of a beast of burden.’”
Mat 21:6 The disciples went and did as Jesus had directed them.
Mat 21:7 They brought the donkey and the colt and put on them their cloaks, and he sat on them.
<Enter Mark and Luke>
"Now you know Matthew, there was only one colt."
"Oh yeah, I forgets! Ya know I all can't count too good. I don't know whys they had me collectin' taxes. Shucks, I cants even count!"
Next a staff then, poof, no staff!
"You know we were told not to bring a staff."
"Oh yeah, I forgets."
"No, you ruined the point of what we were doing, we were told explicitly not to, and you are saying some did!"
"Oh, you is right. I shor do hope someone smart, not like me, corrects this when they is writing it down."
***********************************************************************************************************************
And there, for the whole world to see, is Cobra's idiocy. He LITERALLY believes the disciples were mentally deficient and couldn't count or follow directs. LITERALLY.
Then? He has the AUDACITY to try and hock his snake oil among intelligent believers who think calling the disciples stoopit and ign'rant is ad hominem, NOT good bible study or conclusion.
:dizzy: :baby:
Worth even the third time. :up:
I shore wishes Cobra wuzzen so smart and I is so dumb!
It appears you are very frustrated by the errors that I have described.
Which is more intelligent, Cobra? To suggest that the disciples were simpletons, or to think, perhaps, they might have been interested in something else? Let me cut to the quick: You don't know. I don't know.Yeah I iz. Mez an dem discipuls was shor stoopit! I'm shore glad thet a smert feller likes youz came along and showed mentally deficient me and the discipuls thet we cud not count very gud. Yoo shore showed us.
Thank you. If this is you, I ask you to do the same because knowing you, you are every bit and more as prideful. A good thing? Yes. Pride is not always bad or poor. Rather, we need to not think 'more highly' than we ought. "As high as we ought?" I think so. I pray these words echo with you and help us both with our rightful and alternately wrongful, big heads, and perhaps at times, where we've been falsely humble. In a nutshell, the walk between pride and false humility is to assess our prowess exactly right. The more we are in Christ, the better. :e4e: -LonI ask you to prayerfully consider if your pride is getting in the way of being truthful.
I'll forgo this and hope the above explains the 'why' very well. The short: You DON'T and CANNOT KNOW there is an error. CANNOT. CANNOT, Cobra! "CANNOT." You 'assume' it. YOU do. Worse, it is an assumption that causes a lot of damage to the texts as well as dumbs them down. I 'assume' the scriptures (and their writers) are better than I. You? You don't realize this, but you 'assume' you are better than they (yes you do, else you'd not 'assume' they made a dumb mistake like this).Lon writes:
You say, "Your claim that there must be an inerrant parallel source to disprove inerrancy is both wrong and ironic — it works against the doctrine of inerrancy." I agree. It does work against the doctrine of inerrancy. That is why I am charging you with providing it. Such evidence would elevate your position above my own.
I did. In the case of Jesus’ words on the staffs, I present two parallel and (according to you) inerrant sources: Mark and Luke.
In the case of Jesus’ words on the ride for the triumphal entry, I provided one parallel and (according to you) inerrant source (Matthew) against two parallel and (according to you) inerrant sources (Mark and Luke).
In the case of the Word of God from the cloud at the transfiguration, I provided three parallel and (according to you) inerrant sources. You haven’t even attempted to explain that error yet.
The 73 books of the Christian Bible.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biblical_apocryphaAfter the Lutheran and Catholic canons were defined by Luther (c. 1534) and Trent (8 April 1546) respectively, early Protestant editions of the Bible (notably the Luther Bible in German and 1611 King James Version in English) did not omit these books, but placed them in a separate Apocrypha section apart from the Old Testament...
Maybe EE had as much trouble getting straight answers as I do.
Well, I am not EE. When I get a chance I will fill out my profile to help clarify. I don’t have much time today to do that, as my wife and I must leave shortly to pick up a grand baby for the day.
It appears you are very frustrated by the errors that I have described. I ask you to prayerfully consider if your pride is getting in the way of being truthful.
lain:And I certainly haven't addressed you as a "simpleton."
meshak quote - "Jesus says to be simpleton."lain:
1) For one who's reading ability and keeping things straight, is shown as subpar, Cobra got this wrong (a mistake, perhaps a simpleton one at that?)
2) Rather than calling him a simpleton, I said his arguing amounts to calling us and the disciples 'simpletons.'
3) I then said such shallow theology is insufficient and simplistic and really beneath, even him (thus simpleton theology).
There is nothing quite like an otherwise intelligent guy trying to assert a less than intelligent propositions :Z (thus simpleton assertions).
I do believe implicitly that it is simpleton theology and beneath all of us, including him (making us all simpletons for it).
-Lon
Which is more intelligent, Cobra? To suggest that the disciples were simpletons, or to think, perhaps, they might have been interested in something else? Let me cut to the quick: You don't know. I don't know.
Do you know why there is a discrepancy? NO YOU DO NOT. Do I know why there is a difference? NO I DO NOT!
Further? NO HONEST PERSON could say there was a mistake because he CANNOT KNOW!!!
ALL he knows is there is a discrepancy. That is it, Cobra! You are being a simpleton! "Error" is an assumption, Cobra. YOUR assumption and it amounts to the disciples being retarded. Sorry. No. You are being a dufus. I realize other great men don't believe in inerrancy BUT YOUR example is a horrible one. Higher Criticism is largely associated with Germans from the 16-19th centuries. Other forms of criticism stemmed from this era and this type of questioning AND concluding. Now while I appreciate an honest inquiry into the text some of these become inane like the ones you've provided.
If you and I had this conversation before, on another forum, I like you and think you are an intelligent man but you've crossed a line here and aren't thinking straight or correctly. There is NO WAY you can bring up these two texts without casting grave doubts on the mental aptitude of the Apostles. NO Way. Further? You are asking 'us' to believe the Apostles cannot remember what they'd gone through. HOW IN THE WIDE WORLD, did Matthew not remember there was only one donkey!!!???? It is impossible Cobra! The intellectual integrity is to rather believe that something is different, and it MUST be purposeful. Me? At that point I'm trying to ask 'why' then, if it was purposeful. As I said, the text doesn't say AND I'm saying you took the low road because frankly: You CANNOT know this is a textual error. Read that again: You CANNOT know.
It is therefore a theological bias on your part. Worse, it makes it look like the Apostles were simpletons. It may have looked good to you on paper, but this is the height of the clown circus it becomes. Which of us, then, is employing the better intellectual process that has the higher road of integrity? Me and all the rest in this thread. You? :nono: Rethink your poor thinking, please.
Thank you. If this is you, I ask you to do the same because knowing you, you are every bit and more as prideful. A good thing? Yes. Pride is not always bad or poor. Rather, we need to not think 'more highly' than we ought. "As high as we ought?" I think so. I pray these words echo with you and help us both with our rightful and alternately wrongful, big heads, and perhaps at times, where we've been falsely humble. In a nutshell, the walk between pride and false humility is to assess our prowess exactly right. The more we are in Christ, the better. :e4e: -Lon
I'll forgo this and hope the above explains the 'why' very well. The short: You DON'T and CANNOT KNOW there is an error. CANNOT. CANNOT, Cobra! "CANNOT." You 'assume' it. YOU do. Worse, it is an assumption that causes a lot of damage to the texts as well as dumbs them down. I 'assume' the scriptures (and their writers) are better than I. You? You don't realize this, but you 'assume' you are better than they (yes you do, else you'd not 'assume' they made a dumb mistake like this).
This picture of the table of contents of the 1611 KJV might help your;https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biblical_apocrypha
The apocrypha has never been considered as scripture
To the op there are 66 books of scripture.
I haven’t attacked the Bible or the gospel. I have discredited a false, man-made doctrine about the Bible.I don't think you're Evil Eye. You're like him. A deceiver. I think you're Sonnet. First you attacked the Gospel, and now you attack the Bible, itself. You haven't changed, so don't bother with some fake "profile".
lain:
1) For one who's reading ability and keeping things straight, is shown as subpar, Cobra got this wrong (a mistake, perhaps a simpleton one at that?)
2) Rather than calling him a simpleton, I said his arguing amounts to calling us and the disciples 'simpletons.'
3) I then said such shallow theology is insufficient and simplistic and really beneath, even him (thus simpleton theology).
There is nothing quite like an otherwise intelligent guy trying to assert a less than intelligent propositions :Z (thus simpleton assertions).
I do believe implicitly that it is simpleton theology and beneath all of us, including him (making us all simpletons for it).
-Lon
As to whether I know an error exists, any reasonable, honest person will agree that two documents quoting Jesus from the same event will say them same thing OR at least one has an error.