#2
Post
by openminded » Tue May 25, 2010 12:31 pm
I would say approved-of only, and I really couldn't see it any other way. I'll give my subjective argument for it and then my scriptural one.
Subjectively, I feel as though God would've been more specific about certain things had He "breathed" the scriptures himself. This supposes, however, that God doesn't want Christianity to be able to support different views. The arguments for predestination can be supported scripturally; the arguments against it, likewise. And if you ever want to start a never-ending thread, invite a group of faith-alone believers and a group of works-based believers to debate their positions. Same for trinitarian/anti-trinitarian, liberals/fundamentalists, YEC/OEC, Mormons/non-Mormons, etc etc.
Scripturally, my argument is very simple:
Did Jesus feed the 5,000 (Luke 9:10), or the 4,000 (Mark 8, Matthew 15:29)? note: numbers derived from section titles found in my NIV bible.
If God spoke the words from the Bible himself, then He was off by a thousand. There are other examples of this, and I recall reading a scholarly document claiming that Mark and Matthew agree with each other in details such as the one I just mentioned (while disagreeing with Luke), and Luke and Matthew (I think) agree in order while Mark doesn't.
I believe I'm off on which book relates to which book, but the basic argument is still intact: the gospels disagree every here and there on minor details.
The message is definitely not affected by it, however, and so I hold the belief that God only approves of the scriptures.
Furthermore, the apologetics I've seen on how Noah's flood isn't a plagiarism of the Epic of Gilgamesh fall into the category of wishful thinking, in my opinion. After studying how well the Book of Mormon plagiarizes from the Bible, I just can't accept how only very minor, easily-editable details that can be changed through verbal transmission are preventing an otherwise obvious conclusion that perhaps the inspiration for the story was from their own thoughts about God.