houndawg wrote:JoltinJoe wrote:
Look, Jeff, I can waste my breath with you. I explained many times, a long time ago, that the Bible is a revelation of mankinds's evolving understanding of its relationship with "What Is"and the nature of "What Is," culminating in the revelation of the Incarnation.
You refuse to accept this; instead you want to view the Bible as some comic book story about a great super hero with a bad temper sometime, and refuse me any right to claim otherwise. You laugh at people who treat the Bible as history; but you insist I must treat is as a strict historical account.
So, we're done. Mark asked a question and wanted me to answer it. So I did.
"Evolving" is the key word Joe. Where once we walked or rode donkeys, now we drive cars and fly. Cosmology has moved many orders of magnitude beyond the Bible in the attempt to understand the nature of what is. The Bible of today is CERN's Large Hadron Collider. Stay tuned for new Revelations. Or if you prefer, keep riding the donkey.
Funny you should say that, because many scientists believe that the Hadron Collider will eventually demonstrate the existence of dimensions imperceptible to the human senses. Note that Christian philosophers and theologians, and their philsophical forbearers, like the Platonists and Neoplatonists, have argued for many, many centuries that there are imperceptible realities which we do not tangibly experience through our human senses.
The religious outlook which you reject is some grammar school version of faith. That you apparently do not grasp that the existence of religious faith, on a mature level, reflects some greater "evolution" of personhood causes you to view all people of faith as unthinking rubes -- when it is, in fact, you who needs to catch up.
I am CERTAIN that there are things which are real which cannot be seen, heard, felt, smelt, or tasted. Said another way, not all which is real can be perceived through our five senses. In fact, from a rationalist's perspective, there is no reason to believe that all which is real can be experienced in one of five ways.