Quote from: colin_pdx on January 30, 2007, 06:00:02 PM
Kristi:
I never saw the Da Vinci Code. I've read what I posted in books discussing Gnosticism. Go ahead and rip that apart if you'd like, too. In similar vain: "it is amazing that anyone would even attempt to purport it as fact." Again, "What I believe" got flipped to "purport as fact." Lovely. Nice work. And then you state "In fact...except" in the second-to-last sentence. This couldn't get easier.
OK, Colin. Now I understand where you are coming from. Sorry if I came to a wrong conclusion about that. It
sounded like you were going somewhere else.
As I said, you have every right to be a gnostic if you wish and I would defend that right, even if it is not where I am coming from. Some even see gnostic influences in the Gospel of John. We can discuss that sometime if you wish, but I'm afraid that gnosticism is getting pretty far afield of the intention of this topic.
Quote from: katia on January 30, 2007, 06:00:02 PMYet, I respect and honor you for the divine that you are, regardless of the words you use, nonetheless. Do you have anything useful to add?
As I respect you, but not because either of us are divine.
Quote from: colin_pdx on January 30, 2007, 06:00:02 PM
perhaps you may want to cite some of those [studies/books/links/sources] in [greek] and [hebrew] so that we can discuss them. Smiley i'll be listing more of my sources in time.
OK, if you really want them, here are my primary resources:
Biblia Hebraica Stuttgardensia c. 1983 ed. W. Rudolph and H.P Ruger
A Concise Hebrew and Aramaic Lexicon of the Old Testament ed. William L. Holladay c 1971 by E. J. Brill, the Netherlands
Nestle-Aland Novum Testamentum Graece c 1979 Biblia-Druck Stuttgart
A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament and Other Early Christian Literature, 2nd ed. by Walter Bauer, ed. Gingrich and Danker, University of Chicago Press, 1979
And, for a good, concise history of the Christian movement, rather unbiased, I suggest the following:
A History of Christianity In the World: from persecution to uncertainty by Clyde L. Manschreck, c 1974 by Prentice Hall, inc Englewood Cliffs, NJ
I am not sure if any of the above are available online, but they may be. But please know that when I call resources laughable it is because I consider the linguistic and historical skills of the author lacking. I don't mind if you disagree, but I do have a right to voicing an educated opinion.
For a fair discussion and critique of Christianity and its problems in society I like this blog:
http://ceruleansanctum.com/2007/01/busting-myths-about-christianity-assessing-myths-4-6.htmlAs far as whether Christianity itself is a myth, I guess it depends on how you define myth. So I'm not even sure we are talking to each other yet.
For myself, I'll give a really quick overview. This is my story in a nutshell, and it is a bit unique. My background is in science, as is my undergraduate degree. I grew up in a nominally Christian home and was pretty much an agnostic in my early years. I eventually studied paleontology with one of my heroes, then went on to study geochemistry (the study of the origin of the elements) with a leading scientist from the Max Planck Institute. Instead of becoming (as some of my colleagues did) more grounded in agnostic and atheistic thought, I found the explanations of what I studied sorely lacking because none could explain a good reason for the orderliness found in every aspect of the universe. (The laws of thermodynamics predict just the opposite, for example.) This led me to further explorations of the grand unified theory, or GUT. This also proved intellectually fruitless to me in respect to an order in the universe.
So, unlike others, I was intellectually driven to explore God. I was told that Christians especially were stupid, uneducated, and just plain sub-normal. Although I have been appalled at some things that have happened in the church, I also found, to my surprise, an amazing amount of good. And I came across Christian intellectuals the likes of Francis Shaeffer, Dietrich Boenhoffer, Helmut Thielicke, and C. S. Lewis, individuals whose intellect had led them to embrace Christianity. Through a long process I came to embrace it, not only with my mind, but in my heart, not just as some kind of fire insurance, but as a way of life. My studies, including my graduate degrees, have taken a different course since my scientist-wannabe days, but I reject the notion that one much check his/her brain at the door of the church in order to be a Christian. Quite the opposite, I found no such unity of thought in any other religious system. I say this not to offend anyone, for I know others on here disagree. But please do give Christians the right to be heard without being put down as being uneducated or naive because of their faith.
Peace, Please!

Kristi