PaulSacramento wrote:I do understand where you guys are coming from, you guys know I do.
None of that changes that what we are doing is a circular argument.
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What we are honestly arguing from is an argument from the majority.
We are stating that the majority interpret it this way, and as such, it must be that way.
No, Paul, you are wrong on both of these counts. What we are suggesting is
not circular, nor is it an appeal to majority.
Look, you know that 1+1=2. You know that the Declaration of Independence was signed in 1776. You know that too much Tylenol harms the liver. These are facts. We also know that there are some people out there, some through their own fault and some not, who are unaware or ignorant of these facts or even believe contrary "facts." Does, then, the fact that there are people who deny that 1+1=2 mean that the rest of us don't really know it? Is it a mere circular argument to say that we know that they are wrong? Is it an appeal to majority?
The answer is no in all cases. Your posts, Paul, sound like typical postmodern drivel--that we can't really know
anything for sure, so all we can do is qualify that
we believe this or that is to be true but we can't say any more. And that's stupid.
I have no qualms saying the JWs are
wrong. I don't just think they are. I know they are. And sure, they think I'm wrong. But guess what? They are wrong about that, too! Just as wrong as the person who tells me I'm wrong that 1+1=2. It is an objective fact, Paul. There's nothing circular whatsoever here. Either reason is a valid tool or it is not. If it is, seeing "the other side" doesn't mean anything other than the fact that you can empathize with them. But that has absolutely no bearing on the truth value of their claims.
Now, the
fact is that, whatever else a Christian is, he or she is one who believes that Jesus Christ is the Son of God and that all who believe in Him are saved. That's not an interpretation or majority opinion, Paul. It's a fact. It's also a fact that JWs do not believe that (about Jesus and salvation). Therefore, they are aberrant.
There are lots of hills worth dying on. This, Paul, is not one of them. You are trying to be charitable, I get that. But you are mistaken. Your good intentions have led you to say things that are not true, even if you didn't intend them that way. You need to back off on this. There is a difference in bad theology and aberrant theology, and that difference comes down to the gospel. What the gospel is, is absolutely objective, and it is an objective fact that the JWs and other such groups openly repudiate the gospel and do so by proposing other spiritual authorities beyond Scripture. That is what makes them aberrant, and taht is what you need to say. Anything less, or anything different, and you only promote confusion.