harmony wrote:I'm having a hard time understanding why you are not understanding my question.
I do understand your question. I'm asking you how specific you want me to be in my answer.
You said: "There are significant differences between what Smith said and what the 'ancients' I trust said. The major differences involve verification. I can verify enough of what these 'ancients' said in order to provide sufficient basis for rational faith. This cannot be done for Smith."
That's right.
I asked for what could specifically be verified from the ancients you trust, and you've been dancing ever since.
I haven't been dancing. I've asked you how specific you want me to be.
So one more time: what do you mean by "verification"?
By 'verification', I mean identifying evidence which validates (or 'verifies'), claims made 'the ancients' I trust.
You say you can verify "enough." What specifically can you verify?
I can verify:
* Sufficient of the Primary History (Genesis-2 Chronicles), the Secondary History (the rest of the history of the Old Testament), for the basis of a rational faith that it is historically accurate
* Sufficient of the prophets for the basis that they made genuine, successful predictive prophecy
* Sufficient of the history of the New Testament for the basis of a rational faith that it is historically accurate
* Sufficient of the prophecies in the New Testament that they are genuine, successful predictive prophecy
What is "sufficient basis for rational faith"?
It is the point at which evidence becomes so great that 'theory' becomes sufficiently reliable to be treated as fact even though it has not been formally proved true. Take as an example the 'general theory of relativity', which is technically a theory, but supported by sufficient evidence to be treated as fact due to its reliability (you will find people referring to the 'theory of evolution' in the same way). How much evidence does that take? What kind of evidence? That depends on the individual person.
And lastly, why do you trust the ancients' relationship with God more than you trust your own?
I've answered this. I do not trust their relationship with God more than I trust my own.
Why do you believe them when they say they had visions, God visited them, angels visited them, etc.? Because they said so?
I've answered this as well, and the answer was not 'Because they said so'.
Lazy research debunked: bcspace x 4 | maklelan x 3 | Coggins7 x 5 (by Mr. Coffee x5) | grampa75 x 1 | whyme x 2 | rcrocket x 2 | Kerry Shirts x 1 | Enuma Elish x 1|