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George
Senior Member Joined: 14 April 2006 Status: Offline Points: 406 |
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zulqarnain, This is in response to your latest post to me. The single homogenous belief system that you mentioned was in existence from the very first days after the resurrection of Jesus from the cross. The gospel was preached orally for years. Matthew, Mark, Luke and John as well as other books in the New Testament represent it. In considering the New Testament we have tens of thousands of manuscripts of the New Testament in part or in whole, dating from the second century A.D. to the late fifteenth century, when the printing press was invented. These manuscripts have been found in Egypt, Palestine, Syria, Turkey, Greece, and Italy, making collusion unlikely. The oldest manuscript, the John Rylands manuscript, has been dated to 125 A.D. and was found in Egypt, some distance from where the New Testament was originally composed in Asia Minor). Many early Christian papyri, discovered in 1935, have been dated to 150 A.D., and include the four gospels. The Papyrus Bodmer II, discovered in 1956, has been dated to 200 A.D., and contains 14 chapters and portions of the last seven chapters of the gospel of John. The Chester Beatty biblical papyri, discovered in 1931, has been dated to 200-250 A.D. and contains the Gospels, Acts, Paul's Epistles, and Revelation. We can determine some of the very Christian beliefs by the Creeds. Most of my information about the early Christian creeds comes from the book, "The Historical Jesus" by Gary R. Habermas. There is also a mention of the creed in 1 Corinthians 15 in Lee Strobel's book, "The Case For Christ." Strobel's book is all interviews with noted historians and scholars and Craig L. Blomberg remarks on this creed. Habermas mentioned the works of Oscar Cullman, "The Earliest Christian Confessions" as "one of the classic works on this subject." I don't have that book but plan to try and get it. It was published in 1949. One of the earliest creeds in this one: 1 Corinthians 15:3 For I delivered to you first of all that which I also received: that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, 4 and that He was buried, and that He rose again the third day according to the Scriptures, 5 and that He was seen by Cephas, then by the twelve. 6 After that He was seen by over five hundred brethren at once, of whom the greater part remain to the present, but some have fallen asleep. 7 After that He was seen by James, then by all the apostles. 8 Then last of all He was seen by me also, as by one born out of due time. This creed is considered pre-Pauline and is recognized as such by virtually all critical scholars across a very wide theological spectrum. How do they know that it is old and pre-Pauline? 5. Other indications of ancient Hebrew narration include the triple usage of "and that" along with the two references to the Scripture being fulfilled. Now think, if the crucifixion was as early as 30 AD, Paul's conversation was bout 32 AD. Immediately Paul was ushered into Damascus, where he met with a Christian named Ananias and some other disciples. His first meeting with the apostles in Jerusalem would have been about 35 AD. At some point along there, Paul was given this creed, which had already been formulated and was being used in the early church. It is also important to realize that this creed represents eyewitness testimony and to keep in mind that it is pre-Pauline. By mid-second century Gnosticism was in full swing. Also prevalent were the fanciful books�I call them folklore�Jesus speaking as an infant. His first words were: "Mary, I am Jesus the Son of God, that word which thou didst bring forth according to the declaration of the angel Gabriel to thee, and my father hath sent me for the salvation of the world." Others have Jesus killing his playmates, making clay birds that could fly, blinding his teacher (or killing him, can't remember which), bringing a classmate back to life who fell off a roof; another has Mary doing miracles with Jesus' bath water after she gave him a bath; another has Jesus coming out of the tomb with his head touching the heavens and a talking cross following him. All folklore. Bart Ehrman is a sad case. Essentially he thought that the Bible somehow came down on a string from heaven. When he found out that it hadn't, he became close to an agnostic. His conclusions are being misused. Ehrman gave his permission to use this quote: "I do not think that the "corruption" of Scripture means that scribes changed everything in the text, or even most things. The original texts certainly spoke at great length about Jesus' crucifixion and resurrection. The issues involved in the corruption of the text usually entail nuances of interpretation. These are important nuances; but most of the New Testament can be reconstructed by scholars with reasonable certainty -- as much certainty as we can reconstruct *any* book of the ancient world." I've talked to Bart 4 or 5 times. He told me that the corrections in the NT need not affect anyone's faith and he agreed that Bruce Metzger was a perfect example. You can read an review of his latest book here: http://www.bible.org/page.asp?page_id=3452 And another here: http://www.tektonics.org/books/ehrqurvw.html It seems to me that you would be much better off if you accepted that the text of the Bible and the Koran have both had human hands involved in its history and based your arguments on that fact instead of trying to discredit the Bible. We are fortunate that we have so many copies of the NT in order to do textual criticism, unlike Islam who during the time of Ultman, all variant copies of the Koran were burned. Even if a Christian decided not to be a Christian based on their interpretation of it the NT that does not mean that they should embrace Islam and the Koran. The Koran has to be able to stand on its own. I would venture a guess that if Bart did a textual analysis of the Koran he would come to the same conclusion that he did of the New Testament. In other words, he would not become a Muslim. Edited by George |
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George
Senior Member Joined: 14 April 2006 Status: Offline Points: 406 |
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zulqarnain, All of these so-called errors have been addressed on a website that apparently this site does not allow Christians to link. I suggest that either withdraw your post or talk the Moderators into letting me give you rebuttals from the site that addresses them. |
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zulqarnain
Groupie Joined: 24 April 2006 Location: Pakistan Status: Offline Points: 94 |
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I am sorry George if yu misunderstood me. read my next message after this |
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zulqarnain
Groupie Joined: 24 April 2006 Location: Pakistan Status: Offline Points: 94 |
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George what you have mentioned about the history, lets not discuss that. If it's right or wrong, I'm not bothered. You said there are human hands invloved in the Quran too. Yes of course-BUT not in editing the original text, but copying the Arabic from word to word.
If the Bible had the original Hebrew text existing, i would not have a problem accepting it, as in Islam, you cannot be a Muslim unless you believe in the Book revealed to Jesus. |
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zulqarnain
Groupie Joined: 24 April 2006 Location: Pakistan Status: Offline Points: 94 |
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forums.understanding-islam.org/ community/archive/index.php?t-2437.html
This is the link to the argument in text. |
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George
Senior Member Joined: 14 April 2006 Status: Offline Points: 406 |
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I read it and do understand what you are saying. |
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zulqarnain
Groupie Joined: 24 April 2006 Location: Pakistan Status: Offline Points: 94 |
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Tell you what George. Now this is not going to WASTE your time. There are a number of questions asked by Christian Missionaries listed on the irf.net website. On the webpage, if you go all the way down. there's a "Q&A on Islam" click on that. Scroll down, then "qustions asked by christian missionaries".
I'm not saying or forcing you to accept Islam. I'm only trying to erase the misconceptions and misunderstanding. The reason that why I refer to famous scholars/websites is that you should have the best answer available. It's upto you you wether yoo want to accept the Quraan. I did not ask you to do it. |
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George
Senior Member Joined: 14 April 2006 Status: Offline Points: 406 |
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One of my posts has been deleted in this thread. You claim scientific "errors" in the Bible. My post along with links, said that the same claims have been made against the Koran. In the final analysis we all have answers to any allegations against our Holy Books. You can find "Muslims scholars" who refute some of what is presented in the Koran (interpretations); you can find "Christian Scholars" doing the same against the Bible. You would do well to compare what people like Naik and Deedat say against Christianity with the rebuttals from the Christians and you can readily find them on the Internet. The difference between the Bible and the Koran is that the Bible was written by human beings who were 'inspired by God' (Theopneustos), thus they would use human speech and human ways of explaining how they figured out how the universe worked. If a humansays the universe was created in 6 days, that's no big proble, since the Bible's truth does not depend upon it's divine authorship. The Koran however is supposed to be written by a perfect God. The problem does not exist for the Bible, since it is and always has been the work of human beings. Edited by George |
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