Sidhe said:
Bold by me
Fact is if you read them all, there is only very minor disgareement, but this disagreement would easily be enough to grant them a state apart from the NT, why would you include something that seeks to distance itself from scripture and temples? I think it's logical to presume there lack of inclusion is political, not because of doubts to their authenticity, but hey make up your own mind,one exception the Gospel of the Twelve which I believe was not discovered or rediscovered until after the Bible was written and has the honour of being the oldest Aramaic text(written around the time of Jesus) And perha
ps even therefore the most accurate.
I'd appreciate it if you would write outside of the quote boxes. Even bolding your words, as you did, it's easier, and much clearer if you just type them out the way everyone else does.
The Gospel of Twelve is what's called a
fragment. There is no complete, or even partially complete actual version of it - it's just referenced, so they assume it existed, and so on. Honestly, I don't see any point at all in arguing whether something should be included in the New Testament canon - if we don't have a complete copy of it anyway. Is there a different Gospel you would like to discuss?
I found your explanation for those two quotes from the Gospel of Thomas to be unsatisfactory. The first one just didn't make sense. (Jesus said that what is on the
inside of the body - the soul - is what makes someone good or bad, righteous or unrighteous. Why would what eats you matter? Honestly.) For the second one, Jesus really wasn't a big fan of discrimination; He talked to women who He wasn't related to, in public (A Samaritan woman!) even when that was very unusual. I don't see why He would include such discrimination in His teachings, especially when it doesn't jibe at all with the rest of the Bible.
And sorry, but I'm not going to throw out the rest of the Biblical Canon to keep the Gospel of Thomas.
ironduck said:
Elrohir, you're not going to explain why you don't consider apocryphic scripture reliable but you do consider the authorized scripture included in the bible reliable?
Did I go over this? Ok, once more:
First, because I believe the Bible was inspired by God, and in it's current collection, was put together in the way God wished it to be. Thus, adding to it is, in my mind, not a good idea. You can use other things (Like books by Christians authors) to expand your understanding of the Bible, or help in areas the Bible doesn't specifically address - but those things are not the Bible, and should not be treated as such.
Second, they are quite often dramatically contradictory to one another, and to the rest of the canon. If we include the Gospel of Thomas, why not the Gospel of the Cross? (Which features a talking cross) Where do we draw the line, what is acceptable, and what is not? I believe the Bible is God's Holy Word, and it's not something we should just add to at a mere whim.
Finally, I just don't believe they are God-breathed or inspired. I'm not quite sure how to express this in a logical argument, or in a way that would be meaningful to anyone else, so I'll leave it at that.
Shadow2k said:
Paintings hardly equate to a human life. Your analogy is way too simplified. Either way, just like I stated above...parents aren't allowed to kill their children simply because they created them.
It was an analogy - it wasn't meant to be exact. Of course I value humans above paintings. My point was only this: In the same way that an artist creates paintings, God creates us - we're His creations, why shouldn't He be able to do with us as He wishes?
Parents are the ones responsible for the physical act of creation - but the creation of the soul is God's department, and even the physical one is still a branch of His. You see, He directly created the first humans, and from them everyone else has come. So, in the same way, you could say that the man who put together the car-making machines in a GM factory was partially the creator of the cars those machines make. Same concept.
That bolded part always makes me cringe. Why would you worship a being, regardless of how powerful he is...that acts the way that God does? I don't know what exactly your sect of Christianity believes, but a common belief is that Satan is ruling the earth while we await Christ's return.
Why does it make you cringe? I'm not saying God
wants to kill us, merely that He could, and has every right to if He so wished. I find what I just wrote to be the opposite that you did; it's a sign of God's love for us that He hasn't punished us for our sin.
I'm not part of any "sect", by the way. I could best be described as a totally non-denominational Protestant, which makes me a little hard to classify theologically.
The sinful, fallen world is under Satan's dominion, yes, but that doesn't mean God doesn't interfere where His plans call for it. Satan's power is most definitely not absolute.