Redskin in Canada wrote:crazyhorse1 wrote: I agree with virtually everything you've written here. So, where do we differ?
We differ in that I maintain that there is nothing wrong with scholar and historical research to be conducted which may or may not support the fundamental premises on which the Christian faith is supported. You, on the other hand, give equal credit to a rag that is not only not supported by scholar and historical research to attempt find the TRUTH but it is a deliberate distortion of reality based on fiction with the explicit objective to profit economically.Not as the son of God. And only if speculation and sensationalism is what you are after.crazyhorse1 wrote: It also does not matter that Dan Brown speculates that Jesus was married. It's still more likely he was married than that he rose from the dead.crazyhorse1 wrote: Note: I didn't say he didn't rise from the dead. Considering the world of physics, as we know it today, he might have done both in one reality, neither in another.
Actually, -reality- is one and the same in physics. If -space-time dimensions- or -probabilities- in those dimennsions are the words you are after, that would be quite a different proposition which do not exclude Aristotelian logic and Newtonian physics.crazyhorse1 wrote: I'm sixty three. These matters seem less interesting the older I get. I don't know why. Maybe because I'll find out for sure soon enough, or maybe I won't.
Advanced age often may bring one of the following two choices:
a) wisdom; or
b) cynicism.
And often both.crazyhorse1 wrote: By the way, no artifact has ever been found that has supported the divinity of Christ. You could find the robe, the cave, the spear, the crown, the log book of executions, a first-hand account signed by a hundred witnesses and you would still have nothing.
Oh but that is not true. I have two thousand years of Christianity. I have two thousand years of VALUES backing up not only the relevance of the Bible but the work of God and the foundation of an entire civilization.crazyhorse1 wrote: You know this. And you and both know old myths contain facts that are revelatory of historical periods; it's a bit over the top to claim as much for them as you have in you response.
Oh! the Power of Myth to explain and answer Who? instead of What? I will argue the opposite and suspect that the name Joseph Campbellmay man something to you. And this is central to my argument. The medium is the message. That is why the Bible is so important even if you are not a believer.crazyhorse1 wrote: Incidently, I was raised a Christian and attend Christian churches; I don't accept the NT literally but embrace the teachings of Christ, which form the core of my valvues, political and otherwise. I won an award as a Christian writer a few years backs and if you've followed my posts here you know that I am anti-war with Iraq, anti-corruption in government, anti-death penalty and abortion, anti-tax breaks for the wealthy, pro union, pro health care, pro most social programs for the poor, hate lying in government, pro-law, pro-honoring geneva conventions, etc.
Well, if this is all true, it is nothing short of amazing that the deliberate distortion of beliefs for profit do not offend you. This debate is about a book fundamentally flawed from the most important ethical perspective.
One thing is the creation of different scholar interpretations and even a different serious historical reconstruction of facts on which the Christian faith is supported. And quite another it is the deliberate distortion of those beliefs based on fiction articulated for profit alone.
It's been a while since I read the book, what Christian beliefs are distorted? I know that Brown believes Christ was married and the church was anti-woman, but see these things as ideas, not distortions. Also, it's a bit harsh to say Brown wrote the book just for money. I believe he thinks he's created a fine book expressing an important finding. Also, do you imagine the writers of the Bible weren't paid for their work? What is your source for that?