Two
items appear below:
1 The
Bible — a Church Creation
2 The
Bible is God's Creation
The Bible – a 'Church
Creation'
Bob Potter
"Which is it: is
man one of God's blunders, or is God one of man's blunders?"
Friedrich Nietzsche (1886)
(Investigator 145, 2012
July)
The
notes that follow
were provoked by the 'collected writings' of Anonymous, regularly
appearing in the pages of the Investigator and
specifically by a comment in "Biblical 'Bloomers' Pruned" (Investigator
143) where he remarks on "the Septuagint's use of the word 'virgin',
despite everyone knowing that virgins don't give birth".
Anonymous
is incorrect on
two counts: firstly, only in relatively modern times have the details
of the physiology of reproduction been understood — hence almost
all 'saviours' in all the ancient mythologies were believed to have had
virgin mothers; belief in 'immaculate conceptions' was universal in
almost every cultures. Pliny, Virgil and St Augustine believed
mares could be fertilized by the wind – as indeed did Australian
aborigines, according to their folklore. When perusing universal
legends, one should substitute for impregnation by the 'Holy Ghost',
bathing in the sea, rain, sun, moon, eating cherries, a lotus flower, a
swallow's egg, almonds, pomegranates, bilberry, a worm; in the case of
Rebecca, Jacob's mother, fruit of the mandrake. Plato's father and
mother were warned by Apollo in a dream that their child would be
virgin-born – as were Joseph and Mary warned in Biblical myth. Having
said all that, the second major objection to the 'collected writings'
of Anonymous is his implied assumption of the Bible as a 'unit
ultimately explainable only as a 'gift' to humankind from the
supernatural Creator.
Historically,
mankind has
adopted new gods as easily as today's generation selects a new car.
Romans adopted Etruscan gods and later identified them with Greek gods.
All peoples share the same sky, one moon, one sun, one hypothesized
'rain-maker', one 'thunderer'. All seas taste of salt; raindrops
are 'fresh'; every river has a source and every crop requires moisture;
all of us are 'born of woman' and must eventually die. It would be
amazing if there were not great resemblances between Roman, Greek,
Asian, African, American religions (the work of J G Frazer springs to
mind). Essentially all peoples desire from what we in the 21st Century
do — health, wealth and maybe, in several senses, 'immortality'.
Early
Rome was tolerant
of outside religions, its public figures often seeking 'divine' from
the East or anywhere. A Jew might have his synagogue in Rome and
practice Judaism there – many did. Romans might become Jews or
choose, instead, to worship Isis, Mithras, Orpheus or Christ. Many Jews
became Romans as did Josephus who went to Rome in 63 AD and became a
Roman citizen; best remembered for his Wars of the Jews and Antiquities
of the Jews. All these differing faiths were tolerated provided
they 'rendered unto Caesar that which was Caesar's' and did not flaunt
their religion in ways considered detrimental to State and/or society.
Rome was as tolerant toward a 'new god' as most today are toward a new
pop star.
A
'contra' example of
Roman toleration was their attitude toward the Druids. Long-whiskered,
white-gowned Druids, as portrayed in our art galleries did not fit in
with the Roman occupation of Gaul. Claudius rounded them up for
allegedly roasting human beings in wicker cages as part of their
religious practice. Human sacrifice was against Roman law. Claudius
followed Tiberius in 'persecuting' the Druids, expelling their
'remnant' to Britain. The oldest descriptions of this 'Gaulish faction'
are in the writings of Caesar, Cicero, Tacitus and Pliny the Elder
(from whom we learn of their 'religious usage' of oak and mistletoe).
Officially the Druids were accused of 'stirring up sedition' and
obstructing the legitimate business of the Roman governors. The Druids
left no records of their own, so we have no evidence 'from their point
of view'. The sect disappeared from history in the Second century
AD.
While
Claudius was
conducting his ethnic cleansing in Gaul, his fourth wife, Agrippina,
was grooming her son Nero for the throne! Today, Nero's fame is usually
associated with his alleged persecution of the Christians (it is
claimed he used members of the sect as human torches to light his
garden!) but this remains a disputed area of research and many
contemporary historians contradict Christian accounts. Ascending the
throne at the age of 17 years, Nero certainly acquired a reputation for
excessive violence against perceived opponents, on one occasion
organizing the summary execution of 400 slaves. He personally organized
the poisoning of his mother (allegedly involved in a plot to remove her
son from office) and kicked one of his pregnant wives to death. It is
possible the accounts of his persecution of Christians, which sometimes
include the executions of Peter and Paul, were embellishments created
several centuries after Nero's suicide, in 68 AD.
Historical
presentation
is largely determined by 'the authority' writing the record. The
Israelites were always ready with their promises to Jahweh, their
'war-god': "If Thou wilt deliver this people into my hand, then I will
utterly save nothing alive that breatheth." (Numbers 21:2) Jericho is
'devoted' and a curse is laid on its site to prevent its being rebuilt.
David, his "favourite" smote every male in Edom; and from Rabbah
"brought forth the people that were therein and put them under saws,
and under harrows of iron, and under axes of iron, and made them pass
through the brick kiln, and thus did he unto all the cities of the
children of Ammon." (2 Samuel 12:31) The brutality of the Israelites,
as recorded in these 'scriptures', is ever excessive – one is amazed
there are those who would share this 'holy book' with young children,
today. In Judges 19:29, one reads: "…he took a knife, and laid hold on
his concubine and divided her, together with her bones, into twelve
pieces, and sent her into all the coasts of Israel". If we found this
extract in a Taliban textbook, or in Himmler's speech to SS officers,
we would hardly treat this text as 'moral guidance'. Can we sympathize
with Saul's behaviour, when he "took a yoke of oxen and hewed them to
pieces and sent them throughout all the coasts of Israel" (I Samuel
11:7) to call Israel to arms, as fulfilling a 'covenant'? When Titus
destroyed Jerusalem in 70 AD and took thousands of Jews to Rome, there
is no record of any Roman displaying such fiendish cruelty as the
biblical David.
Paul
generally got a
square deal from the Roman authorities (he was proud of his 'Roman
citizenship'). It was the Jews who were after him, perceiving him as
traitor and renegade. In Rome, he was acquitted on his first trial.
Christians may have become a persecuted sect in and around 250
AD, but within fifty years they had become the state religion under
emperor Constantine (323 – 337) and sixty years after that, succeeded
in wringing from the dying Emperor Julian the admission, Vicisti
Galilae! (Julian had devoted a lifetime of active support to pagan
philosophy and fought hard to rescind the favours Constantine afforded
Christians.) This 'victory for the Galilean' clearly demonstrates
Christianity was as surely 'an historical product' the Magna Charta!
From the
fabled days of
Numa (who succeeded Romulus as king of Rome), Rome had her college of
priests or pontiffs. Emperor Augustus assumed the role of Chief Priest
or Pontifex Maximus, as the popes or papas are still styled.
Early in her career, Rome began formally to adopt certain Greek gods –
but only after they had been approved by the College of Pontiffs and
authorized by the Senate. Because Greek was the 'language of culture'
practically all Romans were familiar with Greek mythology and readily
accepted Greek gods and mythical anthropomorphic beings – even after
the Greeks had relegated some of them to the nursery – and fitted them
into their beliefs.
The net
result was Rome
now had a state religion, its essence being to remove the world in
which mankind lives (the world where people were 'at home',
exploring life, manipulating objects, hunting, growing grain, fishing)
out of their hands and placing it in charge of 'heavenly
hands' humans were unable to 'train, control or slap'. The world no
longer belonged to humanity — they were relegated to paying homage to
those invisible, supernatural 'hands' situated in the heavens above. To
these 'invisible hands', magnificent temples needed erection, then
'handed over' to 'priests' or Vestal Virgins for administration. These
priests needed food and lodging in addition to which some 'hands' liked
the odour of roast pork or beef; occasionally, human blood was neither
inappropriate nor offensive. The population acquired a new stance
vis-à-vis the unseen 'hands' — fear, 'gratitude', respect,
veneration.
Rome's College
of
Pontiffs became a state institution; the function of its officers
as definite as today's government ministries. They attended to business
matters, but were neither preachers nor moralists – they belonged to no
'church', had no 'Bible', no credo. They were not trying to make people
moral, sober or righteous, or to 'save souls', cure disease or 'wash
away' sins. Absolutism in any form of human relationship is unnatural
and makes for madness and arguably some Caesars had gone mad. Nero not
only persecuted Christians but slew and banished philosophers and made
it a crime to philosophize. Domitian (81–96) crucified scribes who
copied any work criticizing him. Tiberius 'put down foreign religions',
pulled down the temple of Isis, crucified her priests, expelled the
Jews and proselytes and drafted young Jews into the army. Anything or
anybody with opposing opinions was perceived as threatening the
status quo – hence 'treasonous'. Rome might be 'eternal' but the
Empire was changing! Two hundred years of 'peace' had gone — with it
went rationalism. The old 'philosophy' was being replaced by
'revelation'.
In many
respects
civilization had reached its 'peak' with pagan Imperial Rome; with
Christian Rome it sank into a thousand years' sleep, appropriately now
known as the 'Dark Ages'.
Whereas the Greek mathematician Eratosthenes calculated the diameter of
the earth to be 7,850 miles (his error was no greater than about fifty
miles!) and correctly calculated the tilt of the earth's axis, the
advent of Christianity ensured any person arguing in this fashion
(hence contradicting the 'Biblical evidence') was liable to death at
the stake – for heresy. Likewise, a sufferer from epilepsy in ancient
Greece, who sought advice from the 'founder of medicine', Hippocrates
(460-370 BC), would be referred to his work On the Sacred Disease,
where the opening paragraph reads: "With regard to the disease
called Sacred; it appears to me to be nowise more divine nor sacred
than other diseases, but has a natural cause from which it originates
like other affections. Men regard its nature and cause as divine
from ignorance and wonder, because it is not like other diseases…."
In roughly thirty of today's pages, the author identifies the origin of
the problem in the human brain — his text would be readily
understood by any trainee doctor today. A follower of Hippocrates,
living in the 'Dark Ages', who talked this sort of nonsense before the
Church inquisitors would experience the flames of the pyre – the Church
was emulating the Lord Jesus by banishing multitudes of devils from
afflicted sinners.
All that
mankind had
learned through thousands of years of toil were now renounced in the
name of a Saviour sent to bring, not peace, but a sword, into the
world. It is important to note, however, from the moment of its
inception, there never was just one 'true' Christian belief – as
pointed out earlier, this is the second reason why the 'collected
writings' of Anonymous inspired me to compile these notes. Mr A's
writings imply 'one Christian belief', 'one Holy inspired book' – the
Bible. I need hardly highlight what we know from everyday experience —
today, two thousand years after the 'miraculous birth' of Jesus, there
are still thousands of differing churches and ecclesia, each claiming
exclusive powers and privileges, each claiming to be the only true
church. If a proverbial Martian arrived on earth today intent on
becoming a 'Christian', how would she go about it, whose word would she
accept as authoritative? Every church would say, "ours; our Bible is
our authority".
Many
articles in the Investigator
(not only Mr A!), leave the reader with the impression there is just
'one Bible', 'one Authority'. To the Greek fathers, Ta Biblia
meant 'The Books'; but the Latin fathers used the word biblia, not as a
neuter plural but as a feminine singular. The Saxons did not use the
word Bible for the Scriptures, but Ge-Writ. Myles Coverdale,
first to publish a complete Bible in English, calling it Biblia. John
Rogers first used the word Bible for the Scriptures in 1537. Whatever
it is named, the Bible is a book only because it is printed as a book.
The early Christian fathers regarded it neither a unit nor a book,
Jerome, for example, in the fourth century, called it Bibliotheca
Divina, the Divine Library – which is exactly what it is, a library
of books.
Hebrew
writings appear
relatively late in history – the Moabite Stone (in the Louvre) was
erected about 850 BC, as a tribute to the god Chemosh and celebrating
victory over revolting Israelites (not quite the way II Kings 3:5 puts
it!). This and other monuments bearing Hebrew inscriptions gives hint
of Hebrew writing at the time of the 'Kings'. Three centuries before
the Christian era, Alexandria had become the intellectual centre of the
world; the city had sufficient Jews for there to be a Jewish quarter –
they worshipped in an old Egyptian temple remodelled after the
Jerusalem temple. They spoke Greek, had their own priests and kept up
their Jewish rites but were unable to read their Scriptures until they
were translated into Greek during the years 280 – 130 BC. This is known
as the Septuagint Version, or simply LXX, because tradition claimed
seventy (or seventy two) men did the translating. (When the mythical
team of seventy did their translating, not all the OT was yet in
existence – Ecclesiastes, for example, was written about 200 BC, Daniel
and parts of Zechariah, still later.) This was the only version of the
Hebrew Scriptures available, not only in Alexandria but of the entire
Mediterranean world. The LXX was the Bible of Jesus, of the early
disciples, apostles, gospel writers and the early Christian church – it
is still the official 'Old Testament' of the Greek Catholic, the
Abyssinian, Egyptian/Coptic and Armenian, Eastern Orthodox churches.
For many centuries Jews objected to the many translation inaccuracies
of LXX and offered their own 'accurate' (?) translations. The
discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls has contributed to research regarding
these texts. (I have previously touched on doctrinal 'inventions'
arising from flaws in the LXX Versions — Thoughts on
Fundamentalism in Investigator 137).
There
are many
'Christian' Bibles – a fact overlooked by many of our fundamentalist
friends, who have their own 'Authorized' Versions of an original
'revealed' manuscript. A Bible is a library of sacred books; if a book
is 'sacred' it is canonical – intended by the Almighty. A canon
is good only if it is straight; that is what the word means, a straight
rod, measurer, determiner. But obviously there must be a human official
or 'committee' somewhere, given the authority to pronounce judgement —
hence the revealing admission from St Augustine (in 397 AD) that he
would "not believe in the Gospel if I had not the authority of the
church for so doing".
Unfortunately, God provided no revelation conveying 'authenticity';
today there are at least eleven canonical Bibles. Not all of Israel's
early 'books' were canonized – there are references to twenty-five
other texts in the extant OT – the early church believed all
the books had been lost during the Babylonian captivity until 'divinely
inspired' Ezra dictated ninety-four Books to five scribes in forty
days; an impressive 'miracle' firmly believed by many of the early
fathers — Clement, Tertullian, Jerome et al!)
The
study of the
discrepancies discussed in the previous paragraphs is necessarily a
matter for scholars with expertise in the old languages. More
accessible to the general enquirer, are the differing 'versions' within
the canonical texts accepted by any specific Christian community. The
contradictory accounts of Noah's flood is probably the most commonly
discussed with Creationists; perhaps more instructive is the handling
of the Ten Commandments. Researching Christian fundamentalism, thirty
years ago, I was surprised to learn most 'believers' are unaware there
are several incarnations of these commandments.
Those of Exodus 20 and Deuteronomy 5 are much the same, but the one in
Exodus 34 (which purports to be the most recent listing!)
spoken to Moses by Jahweh to replace the earlier broken tablets,
differs in several ways from the earlier version commonly incorporated
into today's Christian services. The reason for ignoring the later (and
therefore, logically, preferred listing) is easy to guess –
God's 're-write' is too 'Jewish'. Had today's Christ followers been
committed to the later version, Christians would be celebrating Jewish
festivals, sacrificing their 'first born' animals and forbidden to cook
young goats in their mothers' milk. Finally, the later version would
have exonerated us all from the fearful dilemma regarding 'taking the
Lord's name in vain', whatever that might mean! How many Christians
ever think about how the Church authority re-edits the words spoken by
Jahweh and decides which of the alternative versions is appropriate for
services of worship.
Moving
on to the New
Testament.
The earliest copy, dating from the fourth century is in the vaults at
Vatican City. Interestingly, not one of the six oldest and best
manuscripts, all in Greek, and dating from the fourth and fifth
centuries was used for translating the King James Version. The
establishment of the Canon came after centuries of debate, determining
what Christian belief actually was. Once 'determined', the texts
automatically became 'inspired'. The NT canon has four Gospels, chosen
from dozens. Four, because (said Irenaeus) there are four cardinal
points. There were also four influential churches: Jerusalem (Matthew),
Rome or Alexandria (Mark), Antioch (Luke), Ephesus (John). In addition
to the canonical four Gospels, the Testament includes the Acts of the
Apostles, twenty Apostolic letters and the Apocalypse.
No
Gospel was written by
an eye-witness of the scenes and events narrated. The two statements of
John (19:35 and 21:24) are later additions to the text. With just one
exception, no Christian writer quotes any of the Gospels before 150 AD
– that exception being Papias, who about 120 AD mentioned the story of
Mark and the sayings of Jesus. Mark was written sometime between 60 and
70: Matthew, not before 70 and probably between 80 and 90; Luke between
80 and 100; John about 130; the Apocalypse in 93 AD.
The
first three
(so-called synoptic) Gospels do not agree except where they would
naturally be expected to differ – in a series of long phrases.
Most scholars agree the authors of Matthew and Luke had a copy of Mark
before them as they wrote together with a common additional
source. The last twelve verses of Mark are later additions – one
critic appropriately characterized Matthew as a "second edition of
Mark, revised and enlarged". The Gospel of John was written neither by
John nor a contemporary of the other three. It was the work of a
theologian saturated with the theosophy of Philo, a Jew. He probably
knew of the other Gospels, but never hesitated to contradict them.
As
'evidence', John is
worthless; Luke at best a third-hand witness; Matthew and Mark
second-hand – we know nothing of their authority. Neither Mark
nor Luke knew anything of Peter's primacy; the "Thou art Peter" in
Matthew was a later interpolation. The three synoptics simply echo
words and traditions repeated long after the death of the supposed
Messiah and compiled by individuals influenced by Paul's preaching. The
alleged happenings are hearsay evidence that would never be accepted in
any court of justice today. St Augustine summed it up well (see above)
– the authority for authority being the church!
As
suggested earlier,
Christianity was as surely 'an historical product' as was the Magna
Charta. The destruction of Jerusalem by Titus in AD 70 ended two
centuries of political unrest in the Eastern world and profoundly
affected the fate of religion. The Messiah who had been expected to
lead a rebellious people to victory was replaced by a Messiah who was
crucified, not for rebellion, but as proof of God's infinite mercy to
mankind. Congregations that had been organized to hold believers
together to await a physical kingdom, now of their own accord grew in
strength and conviction of the second coming of the Messiah: the
Kingdom of God being 'at hand', this very generation! (Mark 9:1).
Myths
multiplied,
congregations grew, but still the Kingdom of God failed to appear.
Eventually, from the mass of apocalyptic material available, Faith
created a Kingdom yet to come. Mankind's major tasks on earth during
these 'final years' were to serve their God, obey his commandments (and
those of His Holy church – as St Augustine explained: "…for any man
who does not hold the unity of the Catholic Church , neither baptism,
nor alms however profuse, nor death met for the name of Christ, can be
of benefit for his salvation") and so save one's 'soul' – nothing
else mattered; poverty is glorious, material life valueless, compared
to the salvation yet to come. Faith justifies all, anything – no matter
how foolish, vile, cruel, savage, insane, unjust all for the 'glory of
God' and the welfare of one's soul. Bishops assassinated one another
along with salutations to the Children's Crusade, the murder of
Manicheans, Albigenses and Huguenots; thousands of witches and heretics
hanged and burned at the stake. The slaughters have been moderated in
today's Western world, but even there, Greek, Catholic, Lutheran and
Protestant priests and sects urge nations to slaughter one another with
modern diabolic scientific devices (today, pilot-less 'drones' et al),
all accompanied by the war-cries of patriotism, all 'doing the Lord's
work'. (Readers will recall, a decade ago, each day, George W Bush
received his 'war despatches' from Iraq, headed with a Biblical verse
substantiating he was fulfilling God's personal revelation to him, to
"go get those weapons of mass destruction!")
Christ
conquered Rome as
its ancient world Empire was in decline. One can but wonder if the
'discovery and recovery of religion' in the USA during the last half is
likewise a symptom of the 'decline' of the modern 'American era'?
THE BIBLE is GOD'S
CREATION
(Investigator
146, 2012
September)
Anonymous
INTRODUCTION
In The
Bible A Church
Creation (#145) Dr Bob Potter aims to refute the notion that "the
Bible as a unit [is] ultimately explainable only as a gift to humankind
from the supernatural Creator." His attack ranges across doctrine,
ethics, history, and apologetics.
VIRGIN BIRTH
Dr
Potter began by
disapproving of my comment: "The Septuagint's use of the word 'virgin',
despite everyone knowing that virgins don't give birth, shows that the
translators recognized, two centuries before Jesus came, that the
prophecy referred to someone special i.e. Messiah." (#143)
Potter
refers us to
people (including Australian Aborigines) who didn't recognize sex as
necessary for pregnancy: "only in relatively modern times have the
details of the physiology of reproduction been understood…"
My
comment "despite
everyone knowing" referred to the translators of the Septuagint and
Israelites generally. They knew from the Old Testament (OT) that sex
precedes pregnancy. Jesus' mother knew this too, evidenced by her
words: "How can this [pregnancy] be, since I am a virgin?" (Luke1:34)
That sex is ordinarily necessary for pregnancy is a point the Bible got
right but many others got wrong!
ETHICS
Potter
says "The
brutality of the Israelites, as recorded in these scriptures, is ever
excessive" and he's amazed that people "share this 'holy book' with
young children." Potter cites the Book of Judges where a priest's
concubine was raped until she died. Potter says "we would hardly treat
this text as moral guidance."
In
newspapers I've read
of acid thrown into people's faces, girls tortured by rapists, and
mothers exploiting schoolgirl daughters as prostitutes. Newspapers
don't report such behaviour as "moral guidance" for imitation but imply
its illegality. The theme of Judges is the importance of having a
central law-enforcing authority and what happens without it: "In those
days there was no king in Israel; all the people did what was right in
their own eyes." (21:25; 17:6)
Without
law-enforcement
everyone invents his own rules, producing a might-makes-right society
of idolatry and atrocities. Children in church recognize Judges as
history and understand that slave raids and killing are not for
imitation. Although even the heroes in Judges were imperfect they
trusted God, desired peace and hated oppression and those sentiments we
can adopt. But for ethical guidance and rules there are other Bible
chapters.
Potter
says: "When Titus
destroyed Jerusalem in 70 AD…there is no record of any Roman displaying
such fiendish cruelty as the biblical David." Potter is wrong and
should read Josephus' Wars of the Jews. Also, what "fiendish
cruelty" of David did Amalakites, Philistines and others not institute
first? David lived amidst a mix of plundering and
kidnapping-for-slavery tribes regularly destroying Israelite villages.
On one occasion Amalekites kidnapped all the wives and children of
David and his men and we read: "Then David and the people with him
raised their voices and wept, until they had no more strength to weep."
(I Samuel 30:4) This pattern of war and terrorism had gone on for
centuries and to stop it required destroying the perpetrators. We know
from history that evil regimes don't stop their evil until defeated by
someone stronger. The Judges-and-David environment should make us
consider the Nazis in Russia, the Taliban in Afghanistan, and Uganda
under Idi Amin, and ask ourselves, "What would I do in such
circumstances?"
The
Bible teaches peace
and mentions it or synonymous ideas over 600 times — from the Garden of
Eden, to "nation shall not lift up sword against nation" (Isaiah 2), to
"death and pain will be no more". (Revelation 21) Israelites were
commanded to "love" their neighbours including foreigners (Leviticus
19:18, 34) and Christians to "do good to one another and to all". (I
Thessalonians 5:15)
HISTORY
Potter
implies that
Christianity's early history is wrong e.g. "Christians may have
become a persecuted sect in and around 250 AD".
Standard history books
mention serious local persecutions by Nero (54-68), Domitian (81-96),
Trajan (98-117) and Marcus Aurelius (161-180), and the first
Empire-wide persecution in 250AD. Historians also accept the New
Testament as reliable at least in outline. Michael Grant (A History of
Rome, 1978) for example says: "One of those who received John's baptism
was Jesus — an unquestionably historical happening, since the early
church would have dearly liked to omit it (seeing that Jesus was
supposed to be sinless) but could not because of its authenticity." (p.
260)
Pliny
(62-113), governor
in Asia Minor, wrote to Emperor Trajan in 112AD on how to treat
Christians. Trajan answered that Christians should not be hunted down,
but if someone is accused of being Christian he has to prove his
innocence or be executed. (Bettensen 1967)
CHURCH CONDUCT
Potter
mentions
Hippocrates' medical explanation for epilepsy and claims that "Dark
Ages…Church inquisitors" would have burned people who gave such
scientific explanations.
Church
policy often
differs to the Bible. Jesus declared "Woe to you when all speak well of
you" (Luke 6:26) implying that the Church would become popular but
would then not properly represent God. Church failure, however, does
not excuse individuals since they still have the Bible and the example
of Jesus and Paul (I Peter 2:21) — just as the presence of corrupt
officials in government doesn't excuse lawbreaking by civilians. The
Bible teaches that each individual will be judged by his own conduct.
(II Corinthians 5:10)
Potter
next states
erroneously: "All that mankind had learned through thousands of years
of toil were now renounced in the name of a Saviour sent to bring, not
peace, but a sword, into the world."
Actually,
much of what
the Greeks discovered the Church did not renounce but accepted and
preserved. The Church merely added little to it. When the Roman Empire
ended war followed almost everywhere, and invasions criss-crossed
Europe for 600 years. But as stability returned it was in
Church-dominated areas that universities (Naskins 1965) and modern
science began.
Jesus'
statement that he
came "not to bring peace, but a sword" (Matthew 10:34) is not, as
Potter suggests, a sanction for violence but refers to intra-family
conflict when some family members accept Jesus and others oppose.
Verses 37-37 make that plain — "one's foes will be members of one's own
household." Jesus rejected the literal use of swords (John 18:10-11)
and taught: "Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called
children of God." (Matthew 5:9)
ONE INSPIRED BOOK?
Dr
Potter objects to "one
Holy inspired…Bible" because "thousands of differing churches" claim to
be "the only true church."
We
actually have similar
divisiveness in science, politics and society. The frontiers of every
scientific discipline are full of dispute. Do we therefore reject
computers, medicines, skyscrapers, clothing, cars and dentistry while
we wait for perfection and full agreement? If not how do we choose?
People make decisions based on information they have. If any decisions
are bad such as buying a dud computer most people prepare better next
time.
The
Bible includes
difficult prophecies (Daniel 12:5) and difficult doctrines (II Peter
3:16), besides being a "living" book which interacts with people
individually (Hebrews 4:12), and also attracts "deceivers" who
misrepresent it for profit or power. (Jude 4, 7-13) These circumstances
preclude full agreement.
Potter
next argued "the
Bible is a book only because it is printed as a book… God provided no
revelation conveying 'authenticity'; today there are at least eleven
canonical Bibles. Not all of Israel's early 'books' were canonized –
there are references to twenty-five other texts in the extant OT…"
Reference
in the Old
Testament to "twenty-five other texts" does not mean those texts were
wrongly excluded. How many books does the Encyclopaedia Britannica
refer to without those books forming part of the Britannica? Does every
book quoted have to be reprinted in full in the publication that quotes
it? No.
In #127
I investigated
the "New Testament Canon" because Dr Potter (in #126) listed 23
"gospels" that never made it in. I presented criteria by which people
today can test whether the correct books are included in today's
Bibles. The criteria are:
The
consistency criterion
involves complex logic. Critics, for example, claim Jesus
misinterpreted the OT four times in one sentence — in Mark 2:26.
Analysis, however, showed Jesus correct and the critics wrong. (#113
and #114) Similarly, critics declare the four resurrection narratives
irreconcilable. Several Internet sites fail to reconcile them despite
using 10,000 words. In #144, however, I presented a simple harmony in
1400 words.
The
early Church would
likewise have been unable to reconcile difficult problems in logic. The
fact that many "discrepancies" have now been solved corroborates which
"Scriptures" belong together.
Potter
claims:
"No Gospel was written
by an
eye-witness of the scenes and events narrated… John 19:35 and 21:24 are
later additions to the text. With just one exception, no Christian
writer quotes any of the Gospels before 150 AD… As 'evidence', John is
worthless; Luke at best a third-hand witness; Matthew and Mark
second-hand – we know nothing of their authority. Neither Mark
nor Luke knew anything of Peter's primacy; the "Thou art Peter" in
Matthew was a later interpolation..."
To check
whether John
19:35 and 21:24 are later additions we go to the textual critics, the
specialists who compare the ancient manuscripts and list all
variations. A list of "Various Readings" is in the Englishman's
Greek
Concordance of the New Testament which shows that John 19:35 and
21:24
are not later additions except possibly for several words which I've
underlined:
He
who saw
this has testified so that you also may believe. His
testimony is true, and he knows that he tells the truth. (John 19:35)
This
is the disciple
who is testifying to these things and has written them, and we
know that his testimony is true. (John 21:24)
The added words
do not
affect the "eye-witness" claim which is also stated in I John 1:1-4.
Christ's appointment of Peter (Matthew 16:18) is likewise not a "later
interpolation".
Quotes
from the New
Testament appear in writings of the "Church Fathers" from the early 2nd
century onwards and are quoted by them as final authority. Therefore
criteria like the five above must already have operated. Ignatius
(35-107), Bishop of Antioch, authored seven letters quoting 19 of the
NT's 27 books. Polycarp (69-166), Bishop of Smyrna alluded to the NT 40
times. The Muratorian fragment, which dates from the late 2nd century,
lists 23 NT books.
To
answer conspiracy
theorists who claim everything is 4th-century fraud — i.e. the NT,
Christian history, 2nd century Church writings, and corroborating
archaeology, was all planted — we have manuscripts from before the 4th
century including:
•
The
Chester Beatty papyri which are 3rd century manuscripts of eight OT
books, the
four Gospels, Acts, Paul's letters, Hebrews, and Revelation.
•
The
Bodmer papyri which include an almost complete manuscript of John from
about 200AD and 80% of a 3rd century copy of Luke.
•
P52 —
a John Rylands papyrus dated 120-150AD, which has words from John 18.
Portions
of the Jewish
Talmud originally written in the 2nd century refer to Jesus, his
disciples, his healing miracles, his crucifixion and the Christian
belief in a virgin birth. (Hoffman 1984)
PROOF OF THE BIBLE
Potter
calls the Bible
"hearsay evidence that would never be accepted in any court of
law". Let's ask a lawyer.
Salmon P Chase (1808-1873) was a founding member of the Republican
Party, governor of Ohio, promoter of equal rights for Blacks, US
Senator, Secretary of the Treasury, prime organizer of the national
banking and modern bank-note system, and Chief Justice of the Supreme
Court, whose annotated volumes on the Statutes of Ohio became the
authoritative reference for Ohio's judicial system. Chase examined the
Bible as he would a court case:
"It
was a
long, serious, and profound study: and using the same principles of
evidence in this religious matter as I always do in secular matters, I
have come to the decision that the Bible is a supernatural book, that
it has come from God." (Goldman 1948)
We can even
"cross-examine" the witnesses (i.e. the Bible-writers) by testing
whatever biblical statements are still testable — which is what I've
done for years in Investigator Magazine. Hundreds of statements
are confirmed in such disciplines as geography, history, ethics,
archaeology, psychology, zoology, entomology, astronomy, oceanography,
futurology, genetics, ornithology, logic, medicine, anthropology,
hygiene, and child rearing.
CONDUCT
Yet
another Potter
objection is: "Faith justifies all, anything – no matter how foolish,
vile, cruel, savage, insane…"
The
Bible has the
specific doctrine that many pretenders would exploit Christ's name for
evil purposes — the "vile, cruel, savage" therefore don't reflect
Christ.
Atheistic
Communism,
however, lacks an equivalent doctrine. Therefore its killing of 100
million victims in the 20th century suggests the ideology itself,
atheism, tends to make people "vile, cruel and savage".
Potter's
problem with
President Bush and "weapons of mass destruction" in Iraq is dubious
since Saddam may have transferred his weapons programs to Syria. In
2007 Israel destroyed a nuclear bomb plant in Syria, and Syria also
possesses an extensive chemical arsenal.
Another
reason for the
Iraq invasion was Saddam's mass killing of Iraqi people — up to 4
million. James Rose, reviewing the book The Responsibility to
Protect (2011), writes: "The UN … has struggled to come to grips
with
the fundamental flaw in international diplomacy: state sovereignty.
Dating back to the 17th century, the notion that national borders, no
matter how artificial or porous, are sacrosanct, and that national
interest, no matter how narrowly defined, trumps global collectivism,
has undermined virtually every effort to unite the world in common
international polity…"
The 20th
century saw
countless political victims in many countries scream for help and not
get it. Had Saddam not been deposed, Potter would now be arguing,
"Faith justifies anything, even letting dictators kill millions."
DARK AGES and RECOVERY
Potter
also blames the
"Dark Ages" on Christianity. The Dark Ages, however, were Rome's legacy
— Rome had the power to prevent them.
Why Rome
fell is still
debated. One factor, however, was the Coliseum and 70 other
amphitheatres. The cost to keep these going, including capture of
animals and shipping, totalled 5% of the Empire's resources. If the
modern
world spent 5% of GDP solely to destroy people, animals and the
environment it would self-destruct too. The Christian Church stopped
the slaughter in the 4th century but it was too late to save the Empire:
Consider
Britain. Young
(2010) says the departure of the Roman legions produced "apocalypse",
"meltdown", "unmitigated disaster". In 400AD the British had central
government, theatres, baths, writing, travel, trade and schools. Twenty
years later Britain had split into warring tribes and "Cities emptied
when the food stopped getting through." Central government vanished;
roads, aqueducts and defensive structures broke down; barter replaced
money. And into this chaos came the raiders — Picts, Irish, Saxons and
Vikings.
Most of
Europe
experienced similar upheaval from Goths, Vandals, Huns, etc. Not total
"meltdown", but almost continual war and massacres. Christians suffered
too — in Jerusalem, for example, Persians massacred 4500 in 614AD.
William
Boyd (1950)
writes: "It was inevitable that culture should languish and decline in
such troubled times. In the parts most exposed to invasion, indeed, it
died out altogether. In Ireland…the ancient schools almost wholly
disappeared." (p. 126)
A basis
for recovery was
established by the social/educational/legal reforms of Charles the
Great, Otto the Great, and Alfred the Great. Even in the worst
centuries: "There always remained monasteries and cathedrals where
learning was cherished…"
Boyd writes: "The explanation of this
remarkable recovery is to be found in the essential strength of the
civilization built up by the joint efforts of Church and State from the
ruins of the Roman Empire. Not a little of the credit must be assigned
to the constitutional and educational reforms by which Charles brought
a partial unity of purpose to European life." (Boyd p.126)
Later
came modern science
the "fathers" of which were Christian (Hooykaas 1974), and countless
social reforms and ministries for the public good. For example:
- The
abolition of
widow-burning in India was a Christian initiative;
- "The
establishment
of the Institute for the Deaf [in France] was the culmination of thirty
years work by two Catholic priests, the Abbe Charles Michel de I'Epee
(1712-89), and the Abbe Roch-Ambroise Sicard (1742-1822)…" (Mirzoeff
1992)
- Henri
Danant
(1828-1910) wanted medical care for the war-wounded and authored In Memory
of Solferino (1862). His work resulted in the
International Red
Cross.
- Marianne
Cope
(1838-1918) tended leprosy sufferers on Molokai Island off Hawaii for
35 years. (Wikipedia)
- Australian
nurse
Judy Steel opened a health clinic and literacy classes in Uganda. Her
story is told in Mama Jude (2009).
- The idea of
an age
pension for ordinary civilians is implied in I Timothy 5:9 where the
Church was required to support needy women members aged over 60.
Dr Mangalwadi in The
Book That Made Your World (2011) shows that: "the Bible transformed
the social, political, and religious institutions that have sustained
Western culture for the past millennium".
CONCLUSION
The
Bible is "The Word of
God". This is proved by science and by the Bible's positive impact:
"Those who are wise will shine like the brightness of the sky, and
those who lead many to righteousness, like the stars..." (Daniel 12:3)
REFERENCES:
Barrymore, K. The
Advertiser, July 6, 2012, p. 5
Bettensen, H. 1967 Documents
of the Christian Church, Second edition, Oxford, pp 3-4
Boyd, W. 1950 The
History of Western Education, Fifth edition, Adam & Charles
Black
Bruce, F.F. 1960 The
New Testament Documents, Inter-Varsity
Genser, J. & Cotler,
I. 2011 The Promise of Stopping Mass Atrocities in Our Time,
Oxford
Goldman, S. 1948 The
Book of Books An Introduction, Jewish Publication Society, p. 194
Grant, M. History of
Rome, Weidenfeld and Nicolson
Hoffman, R.J. 1984 Jesus
Outside the Gospels, Prometheus
Hooykaas, R. 1974 (Second
printing) Religion And The Rise Of Modern Science, Eerdmans
Mangalwadi,V. 2011 The
Book That Made Your World, Thomas Nelson
Mirzoeff, N. History
Today, Volume 42, July 1992, pp 19-25
Naskins, C.H. 1965
(Seventh printing) The Rise of Universities, Cornell
Rose, J. The Weekend
Australian Magazine, April 21-22, 2012, p. 22
Young, S. BBC History
Magazine, March 2010, pp 44-48.
Atheists
and Skeptics versus defenders of
the Bible on this website: