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@Lemming
Why even include the Old Testament, if it has no bearing on Christianity?
yep
Why even include the Old Testament, if it has no bearing on Christianity?
And if you can find a Christian pastor that is following the recommendations from the Old Testament priesthood
10 days later
PGA2.0 428 to 3RU7ALFirst, it is not based on me. I appeal to a source of revelation outside myself, a necessary personal knowing and revealing Being. What are you appealing to with your statements?Amoranemix 911[a] 3RU7AL is appealing to his preference and you are appealing to your preference. [b] You are blaming atheists for having only their preferences, but you have nothing more. [c] All would you have extra, if your god were to exist, would be an additional option to prefer : You could prefer your god's morality, [d] while atheists can't. [e] Polytheistic religions have an even bigger advantage though.PGA2.0 1119[a] If God did not exist or if I failed to interpret His moral laws correctly, yes, it would be just another preference, but that is my whole argument, isn't it?[657] I argue that the biblical God is God and that He has revealed and given evidence in His revelation, also by the created order. I argue the implausibility and even the contrary's impossibility, all the while asking atheists to give their evidence. For instance, I continually ask you why your moral preference is any better than any other moral preference and how you determine this?[658] To this query, I get many people playing tiddlywinks instead of playing the game before us - Go.[b] Again, providing you can prove the biblical God is not God or is not necessary.[659] You have not done that. All you have done is assert that the biblical God is an invention.[c] This is not true to a God who has revealed the truth about right and wrong. With such a God, I have an objective (universal and according to what is the case) standard and appeal.[d] The atheist is wrong in such a case. Again, why should I prefer your moral preference? It is based on nothing concrete and fixed.[e] Polytheists hold many contrary views since their gods hold different views. Thus, only one god, if any, can be the true view. That one God, Christians argue, is the Christian God and with good reason.
PGA2.0 431 to 3RU7ALSome people cannot be convinced because it runs contrary to what they want to believe.[105]There is proof available in and for the Christian worldview that is most reasonable.[106] It comes from what is necessary for there to be morality. How is yours anything other than opinion?Amoranemix 911[105] as everyone who has debated Christians, you in particular, knows well.[106] [a] Says who ? [b] You ? Why should skeptics believe you, [c] a fallacy king who cannot support his claims ?PGA2.0 1119I am willing to reason with you and, in fact, have been.[660] For instance, with morality, please provide me with a suitable and necessary alternative that is more than your preference or group preference. Show me why it is the actual case or more reasonable to believe.[661][106] [a] The argument is based on evidence from the Bible, history, logic, and philosophy via what is necessary for morality, a necessary Being. You are not that being. The subject of this thread addresses which worldview is more compelling, more reasonable.[b] Because what I believe is more reasonable and plausible to believe.Morality requires intelligent beings.Morality requires a fixed, objective, universally applicable revealed source for the right to be known.[662][c] Better than the fanciful emperor who has no clothes.
PGA2.0 431The evidence is convincing and justifiable.[107] Christianity has what is necessary. I can make sense of morality. Show me your belief can too.Amoranemix 911[107] See [106].PGA2.0 1119Again, you avoid showing me you have what is necessary for morality.[662] It again avoided showing me it is capable of making sense of morality.[663]
PGA2.0 431 to 3RU7ALYou are evading the question, trying to turn it back on me to escape explanation. It is a ploy I have witnessed for those who have nothing to offer use.Amoranemix 911I know the feeling. On debate.org I have debated a guy who forgot to answer hundreds of questions. ;)I did not forget. I got to the point where I saw answering your posts was a futile process, the workload required too much (a barrage of detailed posts with complex explanations), and I felt it an unfairly one-sided discussion.[664] You have a habit of not justifying your own position but mainly challenging mine, a one-sided dialogue where I am required to do all the leg work and where you get to evade questions or justification.[665] Do you think that is fair? IMO, your main purpose seems like that of some other atheists I have encountered who have an agenda - make Christians look bad.[666]
PGA2.0 431Argumentum ad populum. Truth is not true just because the majority think so.[108] What is good is so whether you believe so or not.[109]Amoranemix 911[108] Your fallacy of choice : the straw man. 3RU7AL did not rely on that erroneous principle. Whether everyone is an Orthodox Jew does in fact depend on the popularity of certain beliefs.[109] Your god on the other hand seems to think something is good because he believes it. I suggest you tell him the error of his ways.PGA2.0 1120"If, and only if, everyone agrees" is an appeal to popularity.[667] He reasons that everyone has to agree for something, such as biblical morality, to be true. Then he says that we would all be Orthodox Jews in that situation, which is another fallacy, a haste generalization.[ . . . ][109] No, He knows something is good because goodness is one of His attributes, part of His nature. He knows all things, which is another attribute of His nature.
Polytheist-Witch, wrote: There is no priest rules in the Bible. #1463
atheism is inherently illogical because a universe does not pop out of absolute nothing for no reason.
Best known as 'The Jim and Tammy show' the 1974 TV show 'The P.T.L. Club' was a Christian program hosted by a religious couple; its name stood for "Praise the Lord." Luckily, viewers quickly discovered this show had nothing to do with God and everything to do with scams and money.
And if a universe couldn't POP,Then a GOD couldn't POP.
Though maybe a universe went BOOM BANGA BANG.And a GOD POPPED into someone's head a few billion years later.
No, God has always existed.
Everything that begins to exist needs a cause for it's beginning.
No, God has always existed. The universe did not.
No, God has always existed.So you can unequivocally prove this then?
71 days later
13 days later
Your decalogue is indistinguishable from a (really old) personal preference or opinion.PGA2.0 432Your assertion, not mine. Back it up.Amoranemix 911Can you provide/support such distinction with more than bald assertions ?PGA2.0 11203RU7AL made a claim. It was his statement, not mine. It is his onus to back it up as anything more than an assertion.Can you prove "it" (his statement of it - the Decalogue - being indistinguishable from other older personal preferences) is not the case with anything other than bald assertions? How does he back that up? Is he going to appeal to the Code of Hammurabi or another god? Please give me some proof that those codes or accounts did not borrow from the biblical account or that such gods are more reasonable to believe in by the evidence for them.[668]I am appealing to logic and what would philosophically have to be the case. If you disagree, then provide another justifiable reason or argument (set of premises).[669][ . . . ]
Amoranemix 911[a] So you chose God and his morality. [i] A choice, assuming free will, is subjective.[b]That your god is necessary for morality is something you have yet to prove. My worldview allows me to explain why you haven't done so yet, because I base it on reality.So, you choose according to what you believe meets you preference and your preference is the moral standard of someone who has what is necessary for morality. But what if Kim Jong Un or Bashar Al Assad has a different preference ?PGA2.0 1120[a] He first chose me to be born again in Christ. It begins with Him. Morality makes sense with God. It is reasonable to believe that morality comes from mindful beings, and a necessary being who is omniscient, omnipotent, omnibenevolent, immutable, and eternal meets the requirements.[i] A choice for humans is subjective. We do not know everything. Thus we make a judgment. But if God has revealed, we can know what is objective provided; we correctly interpret His revelation.[b] There is an objective standard of appeal, provided the biblical God exists. It is not subjective if such a God exists, has revealed, and I correctly interpret His revelation. Agree or disagree?keep asking you questions that you fail to answer.[670] Be honest with yourself and others and stop hiding what you believe. I am not the only one giving an account here. Do you realize that?[671] It requires two of us to test each other's worldviews. Here are some more questions concerning this very subpoint.Is a mind necessary for morality? If so, is that mind your mind? Yes or no?[672]If you did not exist, would morality still be possible? If so, why is your mind the necessary mind for morality's existence, or can you say it is?[673]For you to know with certainty, would omniscience provide the answer? Yes or no?[674]For morality to exist, does the law of logic, the law of identity apply? (A=A) If not, whose idea of the moral right is actually true to what is the case, or is there no actual case and how do you know?[675]If there is no fixed, unchanging standard - a best - then what do you use to compare goodness or rightness to?[676]If morality is not eternally true (truth is always the case), then how can you say something is morally right or wrong? If it is not always the case that something is right, then it can change and what was once true is now false regarding the same principle.[677] That begs why is the "now" better than the "then"? How do you get better in such a case? Who gets to determine that?[678]Again, if moral values are not eternal, unchanging, they are inconsistent with logic. They fail the law of contradiction, the law of identity, and the law of excluded middles.[679]
Amoranemix 911 to SkepticalOneSo a good script for evasion seems to be:1. Miss the point with a nonsensical response.2. When confronted, admit your mistake.3. Accept the congratulations!PGA2.0 1120I've lost the greater context, so I will respond to what is available.Point three - Thank you! I realize you are the only one who can't be wrong or misunderstand something!!!All communication requires that we get the meaning the other person is conveying to understand them correctly. Misapplying a term or not understanding it can result in a misunderstanding. You seem to think I am not allowed that benefit. Are you so perfect, or is this your way of beating up on me?
Amoranemix 911[a] Although you have failed to answer his [3RU7AL] question, [b] you suggest that something that has what is necessary for morality, is moral (benevolent). [c] Why would that be so ?[d] You also claim that a fixed foundation is required for morality. Can you prove that ? (Repeating how bad it is without such foundation and repeating fallacious questions do not constitute proof.)[e] You also seem to be under the impression that asking something gives the recipient of your request the duty to fulfill it. However, that is not so according to the [f] moral standard of most of your recipients.PGA2.0 1120[a] I have answered how I know many times before, till I am blue in the face. I find the evidence in the Bible is reasonable and compelling to believe, and in an example like prophecy, it is confirmed on many accounts by external historical evidence. I have also argued philosophically, ontologically, metaphysically, morally, and epistemological for my case.[b] In the biblical case, yes.[c] As I have said before, I don't argue about other gods, so my theistic argument is about a specific God I deem meets the requirements of what is necessary, as explained in the biblical revelation/writings.[d] If something does not have a fixed identity, how can you say it is what it is? I think it is self-evident. Do you believe that some things are self-evident?[e] I am under the impression that you cannot fulfill my questions or requests, so you avoid them.[670] It, to me, shows the moral and epistemological bankruptcy of your atheistic position. It can't make sense of itself with anything other than assertions and calling the kettle black.[f] What moral standard? Are you speaking about your preferences? How are they moral? Justify them as moral. Do you think that just because you can make something up, that means it is moral?
PGA2.0 1130 to FLRW[About the age of the universe]Who should I trust? You? Your data? The language above is unsure.