Tuesday, March 05, 2013

Throw Momma from the train

Atheism has no moral floor. Ethically speaking, atheism is a bottomless sinkhole.

Atheists complain about how they are not trusted. Atheists complain about Christian ethics.

Well, here’s a graphic example of post-Christian social ethics. You can’t make this stuff up:


Forward Thinking: What Do We Owe Our Parents?

Given that one of the ten commandments orders children to honor their parents, Christianity seems to emphasize filial duty. Leaving Christianity means I no longer believe I have a divinely-mandated obligation to my parents.

I want to invite readers to discuss this question in the comment section and to invite bloggers to respond on their own blogs.


Pigtail Guy says:

By default? By law? By commandment? A child owes its parents nothing.

parents who choose to have a child are the ones who accept responsibility for raising, and indeed mentoring the child. The child has no choice in the matter, and is basically stuck with her parents until she comes of age, or until society deems her parents abusive and decides that they are not fit as parents.

The child does not owe her parents merely for bringing her to life or for adopting her.


Alexander Cherry says:

Having a child is a great and deep wrong. All of us would be better off were we not born. So, parenthood is in many cases simply paying reparations. And offspring should owe NOTHING for those reparations. There is no obligation, nor should there be, apart from the obligation that we should feel towards any person (well, any person with which we have a history – there’s no escaping that).


smrnda says:

Instead of *my parents* I prefer to think of ‘what do I owe older people?’ For one, I should be willing to pay taxes so that those too old to work can get by, and perhaps enjoy a few years at the end where they no longer have to work. I strongly prefer using government welfare to take care of the elderly for several reasons.

In my own case, I live very far from my parents, and given that they had children late, there’s no real direct assistance I can provide them. My brother doesn’t even live in the same country as our parents. So in the case of our family, us helping out our parents isn’t feasible at all, and since we can’t do it, I’d prefer to turn my money over to the government and have them do it.


Rosa says:

Yes.

I am way more able to take care with someone else’s parents, who never did anything to me, than with my parent. I am so happy there are people who are not me, who are not conflicted or stressed out in helping him, to do it (the government, in the form of Social Security, and also my stepmother).


TKB says:

I’m inclined to agree that a child does not owe anything to their parents, not legally, morally, or any other sense of ‘duty’. Parents who have the choice to have children or not.


rizarosette says:

Children owe their parents absolutely nothing. Parents become parents for their own selfish reasons (whether they see it that way or not). Respect, Love, Kindness, are all things that we EARN. If I respect and love my mother, it’s because she has qualities that I deem respectable and loveable, NOT because she was able to squeeze a baby out- anyone with the proper parts can do that.


Rosie says:

My parents did everything they did out of love and good intentions, but what I experienced was trauma. So, do I owe them for their love and good intentions, despite their rather profound ignorance? Or not, since from my end it indeed looks to have been both disrespectful and harmful?


Rilian says:

Nothing.
We owe our parents nothing. They chose to have children. Well, we owe them the same as any other person — just don’t attack them out of nowhere or anything. But if you want to go away and never talk to them again, no one should try to convince you otherwise.

http://www.patheos.com/blogs/lovejoyfeminism/2013/03/forward-thinking-what-do-we-owe-our-parents.html/comment-page-1#comment-145674

Why science cannot explain why anything exists

"Why science cannot explain why anything at all exists" by Luke Barnes is worth reading.

The Conservative Roman Catholic “Yuck” Factor

Finally, the “leadership” in the Roman Catholic Church is being called to account, and it’s none-too-soon:

The media responses to the final order to disclose all the files of predator priests and descriptions of the 10-year saga that preceded the court's decision on Jan. 31 do not come close to telling the full story of the nightmare that led up to that day. The last major act, Archbishop Jose Gomez’s meaningless censure of Mahony and Mahony’s whining retort on his blog, is all about them and not about the real core of this almost incredible decade of events. At the heart of it all are the victims of Los Angeles priests, several hundred men and women. Yet the legal battle that went on and on not only overlooked them but continued to heap pain on their already scarred souls. … The real cost of his hat was in people.

There were 508 victim/survivors as plaintiffs in the cases that eventually were settled in 2007 for $660 million. They had been put through agony during the months and years they were manipulated, lied to and revictimized before any of them went to court. Then the first phase of the nightmare began…

The weight of the news is just too oppressive to bear for some conservative Roman Catholics, who, finally, again, are perceiving a “yuck” factor associated with all of this, and it’s being brought to light amid stories of this current papal resignation and upcoming conclave.

For example, uber-Catholic-convert and First Things editor is Staying Home from the Conclave, and recommending that other tainted Cardinals do the same:

I wish some of the other Cardinals would give up the privileges of their office and refrain from attending the conclave. Cardinal Mahony offers a good example. The most generous thing we can say for his work as archbishop of Los Angeles is that it involved egregious errors of judgment. I’d like to be charitable, but I’m inclined to think much worse. The same holds for Cardinal Danneels of Belgium.

Cardinal O’Brien isn’t the only precedent. Pope Benedict XVI’s resignation was historic, and it was not prompted by any accusations of misdeeds and misconduct.

Still, if the underlings are tainted, shouldn’t the boss be held accountable? Not in the wonder-world of Roman Catholicism. Reno again:

… it would be a good witness for our age if a few of the Church’s princes accepted the fact that the best service they could provide to the Church is to acknowledge the damage they’ve done by staying home….

Meanwhile, the conservative Roman Catholic LifeSite News “details” a Huge homosexual underground in the Church. Not that not that that’s something we didn’t know about before. But that conservative Roman Catholics are bringing it up now points again to that “yuck” factor.

Of course, they are stuck with it now – it’s been enshrined into dogma. Note how the Catechism of the Catholic Church has given practicing homosexuals in the priesthood (and higher) a license to practice, practice, practice, while only gradually approaching the “Christian perfection” of “chastity”, to which they are called:

Homosexual persons are called to chastity. By the virtues of self-mastery that teach them inner freedom, at times by the support of disinterested friendship, by prayer and sacramental grace, they can and should gradually and resolutely approach Christian perfection.

See also: “Dung in their faces”: “All the dignity which ye pretend shall be abolished”.

The Vatican vs the heresy of “Americanism”

Roman Catholic “Social Teaching” today seems to be the one bright light among the darkness of the sex abuse scandals for contemporary Roman Catholics, but in reality, according to Paul Bassett, it is a very recent invention, learned, it seems from Roman interactions in the good old US of A:

On Faith, Freedom and Roman Catholic History

[The] “mystical equality of all people” [written of by the Roman Catholic writer Joseph Pearce] is an innovation in 20th century Catholic anthropology. The Roman Church has historically been built on a caste system. So it was the Protestants who had to call Rome back to the doctrine which Mr. Pearce finds so dear.

The most blatant evidence for this caste system is the ruthless treatment that Jews received at the hands of the Roman Church. Professor David Kertzer describes the extent of this abomination:

Where the popes acted as temporal rulers, as they did in the Papal States until the States’ absorption into a unified Italy over the period 1859-70, discrimination against Jews was public policy…The popes and the Vatican worked hard to keep Jews in their subservient place…and they did all this according to canon law and the centuries-old belief that in doing so they were upholding the most basic tenets of Christianity.

So Pearce’s “mystical equality of all people” is historical amnesia within the context of the Roman Church.

He made the nails

Dale Crum plays “Obadiah” – not the OT prophet, but the man who forged the nails that held Jesus to the cross:



This is part two of three videos that have been posted at YouTube. As I noted earlier, Dale has been a life-long friend of mine, he’s made my children laugh, and he’s been a tremendous witness to the Lord throughout his life.

Dale is a member of a small Presbyterian church in Memphis; he is available to perform Obadiah for church groups, youth groups, school groups, and other special functions.

Contact: DALE CRUM 901-552-8213; email obadiah.dalecrum@gmail.com

Monday, March 04, 2013

Corporate election

Traditionally, Arminians subscribed to conditional election based on foreseen faith. That understanding of election would still involve individual election as well as soteriological election.

In dealing with Rom 9, another tactic was election to service, which would be a non-soteriological category.

Contemporary Arminian scholarship generally favors corporate election. That would still be soteriological election, but somehow avoids individual election (according to Arminian proponents).

Let’s play along with the Arminian corporate elective interpretation for the sake of argument. It would still be the case that, in OT times, God corporately elected Israel, in contrast to not electing the Gentile world.

Wouldn’t that still be discriminatory? By Arminian standards, if God’s corporately elected Israel, while he conspicuously did not corporately elect the pagan world at the same time, isn’t that unfair? You still have God conferring a soteriological opportunity on one people-group, while passing others by.  

As deserts are with sands

Jim Hamilton has preached a five-sermon series addressed mainly to college students on the theme of "Finding Your Place in God’s Story."

Secular mysterians

Atheists accuse Christians of resorting to mystery as a last-ditch excuse for our irrational faith in Christianity. And I do think some Christians prematurely play the mystery card.

However, it would be a big mistake to think this appeal is limited to Christians. Atheists do the same thing when they find themselves in a bind. That’s how they deflect Christian criticism. For instance:


There might be perfectly good reasons why you can’t imagine a solution to the problem of consciousness. As the philosopher Colin McGinn has emphasized, your very inability to imagine a solution might reflect your cognitive limitations as an evolved creature. The point is that we have no reason to believe that we, as organisms whose brains are evolved and finite, can fathom the answer to every question that we can ask. All other species have cognitive limitations, why not us? So even if matter does give rise to mind, we might not be able to understand how.


Notice that this is viciously circular. The inability to explain an evolutionary theory of consciousness is chalked up to…evolution!

Moo on Galatians

Doug Moo's forthcoming commentary on Galatians in now available for preorder. We already have Schreiner's recent, magnificent commentary. Moo's should be another magisterial contribution. And it ought to provide an exegetically astute, up-to-date defense of sola fide.

Bungling the Resurrection

Devoted atheist Jeff Lowder left some belated responses to me, so I’ll be picking up where we last left off.


Hays misses the point of the "Atoms" side of the Dilemma here. (Aside: Certainly the Gospels do attribute supernatural abilities to the body of the Risen Jesus! Craig and all the Christian writers on the Resurrection (R) state this themselves repeatedly.

Jeff is committing a popular blunder by confusing the abilities of Jesus with the abilities of a body. For instance, even before his death and resurrection, Jesus could walk on water. That doesn’t mean Matthew, Mark, and John (who record the event) thought he could walk on water because he had a specially-accessorized body with hidden floatation devices. Rather, he could walk on water because he had the ability to perform nature miracles, of which that is one among many.


 Craig states in Assessing the New Testament Evidence... that the body of the Risen Jesus can materialize and dematerialize at will and go into other dimensions. Hays may not like this.

Jeff has an intellectually lazy and logically fallacious habit of citing someone’s opinion, as if that settled the matter. But Craig’s opinion is only as good as his supporting arguments. 


But he's given no argue[sic] that would refute the exegetical arguments of Resurrectionists.)

Demonstrably false.


 The point is that somehow Jesus had to get out of the tomb…

Jeff is being silly. Suppose, before he died and rose again, someone tried to trap Jesus in a cave by blocking the entrance with a boulder. Given what the Gospel writers thought Jesus was capable of doing, does Jeff suppose Jesus would be unable to escape? Remember that according to the Gospels, Jesus performed amazing nature miracles. And that just scratches the surface.


…get into Jerusalem

Since Jesus was entombed in Jerusalem, he didn’t have to “get into Jerusalem” to be there for Easter. He was already there.


…get into Galilee

Why does going to Galilee require a special kind of body? Jesus and the disciples made trips to Galilee before he died and rose again.


…and ascend "up" into "Heaven"

That’s a popular misinterpretation of the Ascension.

i) To begin with, walking on water involves a principle of levitation. Yet that’s something the Gospels say Jesus could do in his premortem body.

ii) Jesus didn’t go up to heaven like a rocket. Rather, he was taken to heaven by the Shekinah. The “cloud” in the Ascension account is the Shekinah (e.g. the pillar of cloud in Exodus). Even liberal commentators like Howard Clark Kee catch the allusion. The Shekinah was the vehicle, not the body of Jesus.


…and appear to Paul in heavenly visions of light.

The premortem body of Jesus could become luminous. Has Jeff forgotten the Transfiguration?


A body made of atoms cannot do these things.

That’s an assertion in search of an argument.


 A body made of atoms cannot be immortal (forgetting about incorruptible). There is no fallacy of composition here. A body of atoms can be taken completely apart. A body that has been taken completely apart is no longer living (and no longer a body); it is mortal.

Jeff keeps confusing what hypothetically can happen with what will happen. Why does he constantly commit that modal fallacy?


Of course, Hays will say that God can step in on a completely ad hoc basis and work a continuous string of special miracles to (1) keep the mortal body of Jesus from being taken apart, e.g., by the same parties who gave him over to be crucified or by the Romans themselves…

Jesus wasn’t crucified because he was unable to defend himself. He always had the divine power to defend himself against any and all physical adversaries. Jesus voluntarily allowed himself to be crucified.


 ...and to (2) get Jesus out of the tomb and "up" into the clouds and then through them into "Heaven." And that is right. But what Hays overlooks is that it will then no longer be R that is doing the explaining of the NT Easter traditions--it will be these myriad of ad hoc auxiliary hypotheses that will be doing all the work. Thus, Hays does nothing to undermine the "Atoms" side of the "Atoms or Schmatoms" Dilemma.

There’s nothing ad hoc about interpreting the phenomena which Jeff cites according to a biblical worldview or the narrative viewpoint of the gospel writers. To the contrary, Jeff is the one who’s imposing an alien grid on the data.


Craig is a scholar of the Resurrection, and has undertaken detailed word-studies and exegesis of the key passages of 1 Cor. 15 in his book Assessing. He also makes extensive use of other Pauline scholars.

His book was published 24 years ago. And his sources are however much older than the publication date–not to mention the lag time between submission of a MSS and eventual publication.


 Hays, in contrast, keeps referring to one book by Eerdmans.

Jeff seems to have difficulty counting higher than 1. Actually, I’ve referred to several books and authors in the course of my debate with Jeff.


It seems as though Hays has found a book -- one favorable to his interpretation versus numerous others which are unfavorable -- to support his point. Hays offers no proof that 1 Cor. 15 is using "raised in power" as a divine passive.

"Sown in weakness" is not a divine (or human) passive.

Be definition, that’s a passive construction, both in English as well as the original Greek verb. Does Jeff not know the rudiments of grammar? Does he not know what the passive voice is?


Hays offers no prove that the divine passive is "standard construction in Biblical usage."

Well, it’s really not my responsibility to compensate for Jeff’s ignorance. The “divine passive” or “theological passive” is standard category in NT Greek grammar, viz. Dan Wallace, Blass-Debrunner-Funk.


 Even if he were right, it would not follow that Paul is following suit here. Hays offers no proof that 1 Cor. 6:14 uses "raised in power" as shorthand for "raise us up by his power."

I’m interpreting Paul by his own usage in the very same letter. And it’s not unusual for a writer to use a more detailed phrase earlier, then use a shorthand phrase later.


Clearly, they do not mean the same thing.

Another fact-free denial.


Note that Hays fails to explain or defend his interpretation.

Jeff keeps issuing patently false denials.


Again, Craig and other experts on the Resurrection disagree in their interpretation of 1 Cor. 15.

Where’s the argument?


 From the fact that "doxa" is contrasted with "dishonor" it hardly follows that it means "honor."

Jeff is irrationally contrarian. Does he not grasp the rhetorical significance of antithetical parallelism? Paul is trading on the honor/shame dialectic at this point in the argument.


Hays is not responding to the point. He is simply trying to be funny: "trotted out that movie." It is clear that Hays here is missing the point of the comment. It's pointing out the low prior probability of Hays' view. I'm sure that the authors of the Eerdmans commentary upon which he relies have never studied inductive reasoning and haven't the faintest idea what prior probabilities are.

i) Jeff is changing his argument in mid-stream. He originally cited the movie to illustrate the difference between resuscitation and resurrection. Now he’s suddenly saying the real point was about prior probabilities.

ii) Moreover, Jeff is merely asserting the low prior probability of my view.

iii) How does Jeff know ahead of time what to place in the prior probability column and what to place in the posterior probability column?

For instance, suppose I ask you the odds of Secretariat winning the Kentucky Derby or the Belmont Stakes? Well, you might say, given his performance record, that the odds are good.

But what if his jockey was bribed to throw the race? What are the odds in that case?

Furthermore, unless you already know whether or not the jockey was bribed, how can you probabilify the outcome? How do you allocate the prior and posterior probabilities given that uncertainty?


Granted, 1 Cor. 15 is silent on much. But it doesn't follow that it is silent on glorification. "Doxa" is not the only term used there. It uses "immortality," "power," "glory," and "imperishability."

And I’ve discussed those terms.

 It says that "flesh and blood," i.e., "human nature," i.e., destructibility, cannot inherit the kingdom of God.


Really? That’s not how I construe 1 Cor 15:50. I take Paul to mean mortal human beings can’t raise themselves to new life. “Flesh and blood” is a Semitic idiom for human mortality. Dead men can’t raise themselves from the dead. Aging, dying men can’t reverse the curse. Only God can raise the dead or lift the curse. 


Ultimately this is a Red Herring. Suppose that Hays is correct in everything he says here. None of it is crucial to the "Atoms" side of the "Atoms or Schmatoms?" Dilemma, for exactly the same reasons as given above.

Whenever I refute Jeff’s arguments, that suddenly becomes a red hearing.


But is Hays right in what he says here? "Aphtharsia" is translated, not as "immortality" (there is a different Greek term for that), but as "imperishability." This word choice was not arbitrary.

Using different synonyms for emphasis or stylistic variation.


Perishability is (like corruptibility) the ability to decompose. When food perishes, that is exactly what it does. When dead flesh perishes, that is precisely what it does. Aging, injury, sickness, and death are all -- equally -- forms of "perishing." "Perishing" (like "corruptibility") is a process that takes place on the organ, tissue, cellular, organelle, and macromolecular level. Thermal energy (which all atoms have) is constantly causing molecules in normal living bodies to decompose -- to perish -- and the body is constantly having to replace these. That's ultimately why we have to eat. It's not that dead bodies decompose and living bodies don't. The truth is that both bodies are constantly undergoing decomposition. The difference is that a living body is also constantly replacing decomposed macromolecules and organelles with newly manufactured ones, whereas dead bodies cannot. Thus, there is no misstep here. Imperishability is a far stronger concept than immortality. That which is imperishable is, ipso facto, immortal; but not vice versa. One hardly needs to consult a Greek lexicon to see this. The translators of the Greek NT already have.

i) Jeff continues to commit the word-concept fallacy. Whenever Jeff encounters an explanation he lacks the know-how to understand, he ignores the objection and presses ahead with his original, uncomprehending objection.

ii) Apropos (i), it’s wildly anachronistic to gloss Paul’s Greek usage in terms of thermal energy, macromolecules and organelles, &c. that’s not exegesis.

iii) Paul is talking about the ways in which people normally die, due to Adam’s fall. Adam died of old age. Abel was murdered.

In a fallen world, some people die of old age or disease. Some people die in war. Some people are murdered. Some people die from famine. That sort of thing.

For different reasons, that won’t happen in the new Eden. Glorified bodies won’t be subject to senescence or terminal illness. There won’t be murder or war causalities.

The saints won’t starve to death. Eschatological prophecies speak of agricultural abundance.


    If, as Hays says, the Risen Jesus is only "immortal" but not "imperishable,"…

I never denied that the imperishability of the Risen Jesus, as Paul understands the term. Rather, I deny Jeff’s anachronistic, unscholarly understanding of the term.


…then, assuming that he is still and will forever be alive, God has had to, is, and will forever have to intervene every femtosecond (or less) to keep the Risen Jesus from dying, aging, etc.

No, it would just mean the glorified body has the capacity to continuously regenerate or rejuvenate. Even our mortal bodies have that capacity to some degree. But we eventually lose that ability due to senescence


At least if He keeps the same laws of nature we have now! This is ad hoc since nothing in the concept of "resurrection," according to Hays, requires that God so act.

Of course, Paul doesn’t frame the resurrection in reference to natural laws, so Jeff is the one who’s guilty of interjecting ad hoc considerations. That’s another one of Jeff’s anachronisms.


Furthermore, to explain the gospel Easter narratives, e.g., Jesus dematerializing/ materializing, or, as Hays idiosyncratically suggests, becoming invisible/visible…

Luke specifically says Jesus become “invisible” (Lk 24:30). That’s what the Greek means. Nothing idiosyncratic about my interpretation. Maybe Jeff can’t read the Greek NT in the original, but that’s not my problem.


…God will have to intervene on an ad hoc basis, since R alone will not do the job.

As I already pointed out, Jesus doesn’t need God to intervene on his behalf. Jesus has divine power in his own right. As the Incarnate Son of God, Jesus is omnipotent. Jesus could make himself invisible before the Resurrection, had he so desired. Indeed, there’s textual evidence that he did so. 


Unfortunately for Hays, the laws of nature, specifically, quantum mechanics, are incompatible with the kind of predestination he has in mind.

Well, that’s monumentally ignorant on Jeff’s part.

i) Jeff is confusing the theory of quantum mechanics with the interpretation of quantum mechanics. But there are competing interpretations of the theory.

ii) For instance, Steven Hawking is a positivist. He favors an antirealist interpretation of quantum mechanics. That would be consistent with predestination. Cf. S. Hawking & R. Penrose, The Nature of Space and Time (Princeton University Press, 2010).

iii) Then you have the many-worlds interpretation. That’s both realistic and deterministic. An Everett universe (i.e. multiverse) is entirely consistent with predestination. In fact, Don Page, who’s a world authority on quantum cosmology, has made that connection explicitly. Cf. D. Page, “The Superb Design,” D. Marshall, ed. Faith Seeking Understanding: Essays in Memory of Paul Brand and Ralph Winter (William Carey Library 2012), chap. 15.


Note, moreover, that the predestination hypothesis is yet another ad hoc device that must be "glued onto" R in order for the (alleged) facts of Easter to be explained.

To the contrary, I was responding to Jeff’s Humean definition of divine protection. That’s an ad hoc definition which Jeff glued onto my counterargument. I was responding to Jeff on his own terms. He’s the one who smuggles auxiliary, suppressed premises into his deceptively simple argument.


All the stuff about being "bitten by a Taipan, eaten by a crocodile, or fell into a lava flow" is just icing on the cake. That Hays focuses on this, instead of the dilemma itself, shows that he fails to understand it.

I focus on Jeff’s objections. Whenever I rebut his objections, Jeff suddenly decides his objections were beside the point.


Again, Hays simply fails to understand the "Atoms or Schmatoms?" Dilemma. It has nothing to do with the biblical "prooftexts." That issue is simply a red herring that Hays is using to divert the attention of those reading this blog from the real issue -- the non-existent explanatory power of R.

Jeff can’t even keep track of his own argument. He’s been prooftexting his model of the Resurrection. Jeff has to have a model of the Resurrection to attack the Resurrection. Otherwise, there’s nothing specific for Jeff’s objections to fasten onto.


It has already been shown above that the fallacy of composition is not being committed here. Hays fails to get the point that because atoms are not indestructible, bodies made out of them cannot be either. Here the properties of the parts -- atoms -- does hold for the whole -- the body. The "atoms" body is made out of organs, themselves composed of tissues, which are, in turn, made of cells, which once again are made of organelles, which, ultimately, are made of macromolecules, molecules, and ions. If the latter are widely separated from one another, the body will die and be decomposed. Furthermore, even if the molecules were not taken apart, they would eventually decay into their sub-atomic constituents, thereby destroying the body.

i) Once again, Jeff is committing the fallacy of composition. I already corrected him on that point. The fact that a body undergoes continues cell replacement doesn’t mean the body is self-destructing.

Jeff is prejudging the nature of physical identity, as if physical identity requires identical constituents rather than identical patterns. Yet the level of physical identity lies, not in the parts, but the whole. Preservation of the same pattern. Organizational continuity.

A body is a particular organization of matter. As long as you preserve the same internal organization over time, the same structural relationships between constituents, it’s the same body.

ii) Moreover, glorification involves discontinuities as well as continuities.


Atoms aren't alive? Duh! Hays misses the metaphor. Say you could transfer the same person to a different body. That wouldn't be RESURRECTION of the body. That would be -- literally -- REINCARNATION! Atoms are defined as "mortal" by contemporary physics.

i) If it’s just a metaphor, then why does Jeff go on to say atoms are “defined” as “mortal” by contemporary physics?

ii) Jeff is also trading on equivocations. For instance, is a duplicate body the same body? If a new body replicates a previous body, that’s quite different from reincarnation.


 "Schmatoms" aren't defined as anything other than not being atoms. They aren't defined as immortal. Hays again misses the point.

Jeff said atoms are mortal. He contrasted that with schmatoms.


Angels don't have bodies? Where does Lk. 20-34-36 say that? This is an eisogetical figment of Hays' imagination.

I didn’t limit my analysis to Lk 20:34-36. There’s also the contrast that Jesus draws between a body and a ghost in Lk 24.


Ask any Christian whether he would serve a "risen" Jesus would can age, get sick, be lanced by the Romans again, be blown to smithereens by an H-bomb, etc. Ask any Christian whether he himself would want such a body. End of argument.

i) Aside from Jeff’s resort to the ad populum fallacy, I never suggested that the risen Jesus can sicken or age.

ii) Conversely, I don’t think that when Mary Magdalene encountered the Risen Lord in the garden, he resembled Ben Grimm / The Thing from the Fantastic Four. That’s not in the Resurrection accounts.

iii) H-bombs pose no threat to God Incarnate, whether in his premortem or postmortem body. 


    Irrelevant response. To say that resurrection bodies (somata pneumatika) are indestructible is not to say that they are made of spirit. Obviously, "pneumatikon" refers to the agency of the Holy Spirit, or, as Craig states, to the adaptation of the bodies for the world of the Spirit.

In which case it doesn’t tell you anything about the composition of the glorified body.


    It is a sound inference. If the Risen Jesus was composed of atoms, then he was either resuscitated, and so still looked like Jesus, or his atoms were rearranged into some other form, so that he no longer looked like the premortem Jesus, e.g., he became Alien-Jesus or Beast-Jesus, the result being that the disciples would no longer recognize him. They might well flee from him as Alien-Jesus or Beast-Jesus. They might hang around him as Jim-Morrison-Jesus, but they wouldn't come to believe that he rose from the dead. Thus, at the very best, "Atoms-Jesus" is a straight resuscitation-Jesus. Otherwise R can't explain the postmortem appearances of the Risen Jesus -- or will need to be supplemented with ad hoc miracles by God.

After all this time, Jeff has done nothing to advance the argument. He recycles the same false dichotomies, in defiance of the counterarguments. Jeff has nothing in reserve. He’s mentally rigid. Unable to adapt to new challenges. He keeps reciting his cue cards, while wearing earplugs to screen out the rebuttals.


    It begs the question to say we've had no experience of those who've returned to life again? Hummm. How many resuscitated or resurrected bodies have Hays, Lowder, Cavin, and Colombetti seen, so that they can study their properties? The answer is ZERO!

That’s utterly unresponsive to what I actually said.


And those NT statements about the postmortem abilities of Jesus are just the point -- they are utterly incompatible with "Atoms-Jesus"!

Jeff continually disregards the premortem abilities of Jesus.


So now Hays is forced, once again, to turn to "Schmatoms," i.e., "X-Man"-Jesus. But we know absolutely nothing about this Jesus! So he cannot be invoked as an explanation for the empty tomb and postmortem appearances of Jesus!

Jeff is spinning like a top. I was never forced to turn to schmatoms.


    Bottom line: It is clear that Hays has not taken the time and trouble to understand what the "Atoms or Schmatoms" Dilemma is saying. His constant appeal to 1 Cor. 15 is a red herring.

I’m not the one who introduced 1 Cor 15 into the discussion. Jeff did that. I’m responding to Jeff’s appeal.


He misunderstands how his "fix it" or "patch-up" jobs on R are equivalent to a host of ad hoc "auxiliary supplementary hypotheses" for R.

One of Jeff’s problems is that he gets caught up in a role. He’s so busy play-acting that he’s forgotten it’s just a role–like a child who imagines he’s safe behind the walls of his cardboard castle.

He acts as though this is a card game, where we make up some artificial rules, then play by the rules. But that has no bearing on reality. Reality isn’t confined to Jeff’s made-up rules.

Kevin Vanhoozer on the inerrancy of Scripture

http://www.theologynetwork.org/christian-beliefs/the-bible/getting-stuck-in/the-inerrancy-of-scripture.htm

“Pope Leo the Great”

“Pope Leo the Great” (pope from 440–461 AD) probably gave a fuller impetus to the medieval papacy than any other pope from the first millennium.

J.N.D. Kelly, “The Oxford Dictionary of Popes”, (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, ©1986) says of Leo:

An energetic and purposeful pontiff, Leo infused all his policies and pronouncements, especially his anniversary sermons, with his conviction that supreme and universal authority in the church, bestowed originally by Christ on Peter, had been transmitted to each subsequent bishop of Rome as the Apostle’s heir. As such, he assumed Peter’s functions, full authority, and privileges; and just as the Lord bestowed more power on Peter than on the other apostles, so the pope was ‘the primate of all the bishops’, the Apostle’s mystical embodiment.

Leo confidently asserted his authority everywhere in the west… (pg 43).

J. Michael Miller, The Divine Right of the Papacy in Recent Ecumenical Theology, described the “process” by which Leo was able to attribute Peter’s “functions, full authority, and privileges” to himself:

Easter Apologetic Resources

During the last few Easter seasons, I put together posts indexing Triablogue's material on issues related to Jesus' resurrection:

2009
2010
2011
2012

The 2009 post is foundational to the others, so it should be consulted first. These index posts will link you to book reviews, reviews of debates on Jesus' resurrection, responses to objections to the resurrection, and a large variety of other material. Some of our e-books linked on the right side of the screen address the resurrection as well.

Since the 2012 post linked above, we've written many other posts on resurrection issues. What I want to do in the remainder of this post is provide some links to our latest material on the resurrection.

Sunday, March 03, 2013

Bele and Lokai






“Let That Be Your Last Battlefield” was an episode of the classic Star Trek series. It was a heavy-handed political allegory of the civil rights movement, involving racial animosity between an alien who was white on the right side and black on left side versus an alien who was black on the right side and white on the left side.

Reading Lutherans and Dispensationalists reminds me of Bele and Lokai. Lutherans interpret Jn 6, Lk 22:19 (par 1 Cor 11:24), and Jn 3:5 literally, but interpret Ezk 40-48 and Rev 20 figuratively. Dispensational Baptists interpret Ezk 40-48 and Rev 20 literally, but interpret Jn 6, Lk 22:19, and Jn 3:5 figuratively. Amillennial Lutherans resort to premil hermeneutics when they interpret Jn 6, Lk 22:19, and Jn 3:5 while premillennial Baptists resort to amil hermeneutics when they interpret Jn 6, Lk 22:19, and Jn 3:5. Lutherans warn you that unless you take their prooftexts literally, you’re on the primrose path to liberalism while Dispensationalists warn you that unless you take their prooftexts literally, you’re the primrose path to liberalism. 

"...but would you let your daughter marry one?"


 

 
Jerry Walls shared a link.
Yesterday
PITY THIS POOR GUY...

And just to be clear, I love Calvinists. In fact, I briefly dated a Calvinist one time, but I would not marry one (on the grounds that it would be hard to share a life of ministry with anyone who does not believe God truly loves all persons and desires all to be saved.

This is like the old quip about “I’m not racist! Some of my best friends are black. But would you let your daughter marry one?”

Or, “I’m not anti-Semitic! Some of my best friends are Jewish. But would you let your daughter marry one?”

It’s also like the old quip about “Don’t believe anything that comes before the but.”

Jerry Walls believes in God’s unlimited love, but Jerry’s love for Calvinists is quite limited. Jerry fully loves only those who share his all-loving theology. He loves everyone equally–except for all those who don’t make the theological cut.


Forbidden knowledge

Precognition is a common theme in science fiction as well as sword & sorcery literature. To take a stock example, a character has a premonitory dream.

Let’s discuss this on fictional terms, then consider this from a realistic perspective. A premonitory dream generates a prima  facie paradox. If the character is previewing what will happen, then there’s nothing he can do to prevent what he foresees from happening.

However, that seems incoherent. For doesn’t that very preview give him a chance to interject himself into the chain of events and redirect the outcome? Yet we then seem to be caught in a causal loop. What he foresees prompts him to change what he foresees. But then, he wouldn’t foresee it in the first place.

Screenwriters often gloss over these paradoxes, but is it possible to make that scenario coherent? There seem to be two related ways.

First of all, perhaps a character foresees what will happen, but key details are omitted from his dream. He sees the outcome, but not the events leading up to the outcome.

If he tries to intervene, his intervention may not introduce a new factor into the chain of events. Rather, that may have been part of the causal pathway all along. But because his dream left him in the dark regarding his own role, his intervention is not an additional factor. Unbeknownst to him, he was always going to be a necessary participant. Moreover, the premonitory dream is, itself, a contributing cause to its own fulfillment by motivating the character to unwittingly contribute to its realization.

Second, the “future” he sees may be ambiguous. Is he previewing the actual future, or a possible alternate future? More precisely, is he seeing what would happen if he does something? Conversely, is he seeing what would happen if he does nothing? Will his action cause the premonition to eventuate? Will his inaction cause the premonition to eventuate? The dream itself may not furnish that crucial, differential information. Perhaps this a premonition of what would have happened had he acted on the premonition. Unless this is a premonition of what would have happened had he not acted on the premonition.

So there’s lost opportunity if he makes the wrong decision. And the dream poses a dilemma, for the dream itself doesn’t tell him which is which. He’s confronted with a forced option, and there’s no way to quantify the odds. Ignoring the premonition may be risky, or maybe the real danger lies in playing his part in the scripted outcome.

Let’s shift to a real-world situation.  Suppose someone dabbles in divination. According to Scripture, that’s forbidden knowledge. Prying into the future is morally prohibited. But, of course, many people do it anyway.

Suppose, as a result of their occultic activity, they have a premonition. And suppose it’s “true”–in the trecherous sense that I just discussed.

BTW, this isn’t just hypothetical. We have an actual case of this in Scripture, where a pagan king gets the right answer using three different convergent divinatory techniques (Ezk 21).

However, there’s a sense in which this can be divine punishment. You learn the “future” by forbidden means, but you don’t know what to do with your knowledge. Maybe that’s guiding you into a trap. You allow yourself to be drawn ever deeper into the enchanted forest until you are hopelessly lost.

The angels of the churches

16 In his right hand he held seven stars, from his mouth came a sharp two-edged sword, and his face was like the sun shining in full strength…20 As for the mystery of the seven stars that you saw in my right hand, and the seven golden lampstands, the seven stars are the angels of the seven churches, and the seven lampstands are the seven churches. (Rev 1:16,20).

One contested issue in the interpretation of Revelation is the identity of the angeloi of the seven churches.

i) On one interpretation, the “angels” are couriers. That would seem to fit the epistolary context. John is writing letters to them because they will deliver the letters to their respective churches.

ii) However, everywhere else in Revelation, angelos means “angel” in the technical sense of the word. So it would be confusing if they are human in this particular instance.

In addition, the passage alludes to Danielic angelology (Dan 8:10; 10:13-14,20-21), as well as the stellar imagery (12:1-3). So, again, that doesn’t fit the courier interpretation.

iii) But what sense does it make to say Jesus is telling John to write to angels? Aren’t the letters for the benefit of church members? Isn’t that the target audience? Would why John addresses these letters to angels?

However, that objection overlooks the fact that this is part of John’s vision. This is something he is told in his vision. In his vision, Jesus is dictating these letters to John, which are written to angels. We need to distinguish the world of the vision from the extramental world of the seven churches. There is, of course, some sort of correspondence between the two, but lots of things happen in John’s vision that doesn’t literally happen in the real world. The relationship is analogous.

iv) Assuming the angelloi are angels, what is their function? On one interpretation, they are guardian angels. On another interpretation, they are heavenly counterparts to Christians. These aren’t mutually exclusive interpretations.

However, if they are guardian angels, in what sense are they guarding the churches? On the face of it, they don’t protect church members from persecutors.

Likewise, why would Christians need angelic counterparts? That has a nice literary symmetry, but what’s the practical value of that symmetry?

There’s a temptation on the part of commentators, even conservative commentators, to treat a text at a purely textual level, as if the world of the text is a self-contained literary world, with intertextual relationships, that doesn’t have to make sense in the real world. It only has to make sense on its own terms, within the framework of the literary narrative.

But if Revelation is true, then we need an interpretation that’s realistic. An interpretation with some real-world application. Although Revelation is a fictional narrative, it is meant to refer to a real-world situation.

I’d suggest the heavenly angels of the seven churches are counterparts to fallen angels. That would also fit with the Danielic background. Remember the spiritual warfare between Daniel, the “Prince of Persia,” and the archangel Michael. The “Prince of Persia” is an evil, territorial spirit.

By the same token, churches have inhuman, invisible adversaries as well as human, visible adversaries. Demons attack churches. Undermine churches from the inside out.

Yet, in the nature of the case, we’re normally oblivious to this generally indetectible enemy. And even if we were aware of demons, humans are no match for fallen angels. They have abilities we lack.

It would make sense, therefore, if churches have angels that do battle with demons. If, in some measure, angels protect churches from demons.

This would usually occur behind the scenes. We’re just as oblivious to angels as we are to demons. Unless angels and demons manifest themselves to humans (e.g. possession, apparitions), it’s a background condition we take for granted. Not something we discern.

v) What’s the significance of the seven stars? As one scholar notes:


In antiquity, the “seven stars” are often used to represent the seven “planets” (Sun, Moon, Jupiter, Mercury, Mars, Venus, and Saturn). Though these seven planets were almost universally accepted in the Hellenistic and Roman world, there were three different planetary orders…the later “Chaldean” order, which came to dominate late Hellenistic astronomy…[and] the astrological, horoscopic order. D. Aune, Revelation 1-5 (Word 1997), 97.

According to another scholar:


Finally, with respect to the “seven stars” explained at Rev 1:20, in Hellenistic literature a grouping of seven stars refers to either the seven planets…or the seven stars that form the Bear constellation.

I do propose, however, that astrological associations with cultic objects or mythic episodes were more widespread in Greco-roman religions of the late first-century CE…and that the author and the audience of the Revelation were familiar with the connections between astrological and other religious traditions.

Evidence of Christians associating with astrology is present in the NT letter to the Colossians, a church in the same geographical area as the seven churches in John’s Revelation. The author of Colossians intends a strategy to encompass the Colossians’ situation in such a way that they acknowledge Christ as the true divine mystery (Col 2:2), that they not worship angels (Col 2:18), and that they subordinate ta stoicheia tou kosmou to Christ (Col 2:8,20). References to “worshiping angels” and the “elements of the universe” most likely contain associations with astrology, and the writer of Colossians intends that the Colossian Christians subordinate such aspects of their religion to Christ (Col 2:8-9,15,20; 3:1-4).

John of the Revelation engages in much the same kind of strategy in Rev 1:20: by identifying the lampstands and the “seven stars” not with astrological mysteries…but with the mystery of the churches, the text in Revelation serves the illocutionary function of repudiating those other texts in that particular ideological cluster. As Krodel comments, “The identification of the stars with the angels brings about an ironic reversal. Whereas for Hellenistic people, the stars represent fate, chance, and immutable cosmic order, the vision narrative in its interpretation discloses that these stars relate to the church, to those small, insignificant groups of Christians in Asia Minor. They influence the world’s fate and destiny because they are in the right hand of Christ.”…John’s strategy is to allow in his inaugural vision an association with astrological speculation, but in the revealing of the mystery, to establish unambiguously the supremacy of Christ–and members of Christ–over astrological forces, including angels. There is reciprocity between heaven and earth, but the expected power structure–from the viewpoint of astrology–is reversed in the mystery. L. Thompson,  “Mooring the Revelation in the Mediterranean,” E. Lovering, ed. SBL 1992 Seminar Papers (Atlanta: Scholars Press, 1992), 649-50.

If this analysis is generally correct, then Rev 1:16,20 is part of John’s polemic against astrology and astral fatalism. Both John and Paul are ministering to converts from paganism, whose cultural and religious background included astrology. However, the stars, as well as astral spirits, with whom they were popularly associated, have no power over Christians, for Christ holds the stars in his right hand. He has broken the yoke of astral fatalism.

Astral religion was an ancient error:


And beware lest you raise your eyes to heaven, and when you see the sun and the moon and the stars, all the host of heaven, you be drawn away and bow down to them and serve them, things that the Lord your God has allotted to all the peoples under the whole heaven (Deut 4:19).

And astrology was even more oppressive. Moreover, it wasn’t just a pagan affair. Astrology penetrated Judaism. Cf. J. Charlesworth, “Jewish Interest in Astrology during the Hellenistic and Roman Period,” W. Haase, ed., ANRW, II.20.2 (Berlin - New York: Walter de Gruyter, 1987), 926-950.

And in our proud, scientific age, many men and woman are still in bondage to astrology. 

The Darwinian delusion

We are biological creatures, collections of molecules that must obey the laws of physics. All the success of science rests on the regularity of those laws, which determine the behavior of every molecule in the universe. Those molecules, of course, also make up your brain — the organ that does the "choosing." And the neurons and molecules in your brain are the product of both your genes and your environment, an environment including the other people we deal with. Memories, for example, are nothing more than structural and chemical changes in your brain cells. Everything that you think, say, or do, must come down to molecules and physics.

True "free will," then, would require us to somehow step outside of our brain's structure and modify how it works. Science hasn't shown any way we can do this because "we" are simply constructs of our brain. We can't impose a nebulous "will" on the inputs to our brain that can affect its output of decisions and actions, any more than a programmed computer can somehow reach inside itself and change its program.

And that's what neurobiology is telling us: Our brains are simply meat computers that, like real computers, are programmed by our genes and experiences to convert an array of inputs into a predetermined output.

Psychologists and neuroscientists are also showing that the experience of will itself could be an illusion that evolution has given us to connect our thoughts, which stem from unconscious processes, and our actions, which also stem from unconscious process…Our feeling of personal agency is so overwhelming that we have no choice but to pretend that we do choose, and get on with our lives.

Thousands of gods

Over the past ten thousand years there have been tens of thousands of religions and thousands of gods. Which one is the right one? To believers in each one they all appear unique. To an anthropologist from Mars they all look the same... . This clever book gives you the intellectual firepower you need when engaging believers, pointing out, for example, that they are religious skeptics, too—of all those other faiths. Some of us go one faith further in our skepticism. You will, too, after reading this testament to the power of reason.

–Michael Shermer

This is Shermer’s blurb for the “new” book by John Loftus. It’s also a good illustration of how infidels are self-deceived by their intellectual pride.

From his own perspective, the “power of reason” is simply the brain of an ape. A 3-lb lump of meat that evolved by trial-and-error.

Moreover, it’s demonstrably false that believers generally think their religion or their god is unique. To begin with, religions are traditionally polytheistic, so there’s nothing unique about being a god in a polytheistic faith. You have plenty of competition in a crowded field for that distinction.

Moreover, traditional religions are often syncretistic. Hinduism is syncretistic. Roman religion is syncretistic. Their gods are not unique. You can substitute one nations gods for another in the pantheon. Roman gods for Greek gods, or vice versa. Interchangeable gods. A war god. A sex goddess. Ishtar. Aphrodite. Venus. Mars. Ares.

Furthermore, atheists typically propound an evolutionary theory of religion, according to which religion was originally animistic. The gods were simply personifications of natural forces, like sun gods, fire gods, and storm gods. Well, aren’t all sun gods, fire gods, and storm gods cut from the same cloth?

Finally, atheists also distinguish between anthropomorphic conceptions of God, like Zeus or Thor–and philosophical conceptions of God, like Thomism or perfect being theology. So they wouldn’t all look the same to a Martian anthropologist.