MxCake wrote:the funny thing is that our logic is nothing compared to Gods logic what we call logic here on earth God chuckles at as we chuckle at a 5 year olds logic the bible is 100% logic but not human logic. as in it wouldent be "logical" to walk on water to us but to God its more then logic its natural. thats my take on it XD so tell your teacher that the Bible is logic its just his problem he cant understand that logic....ok dont tell him that i dont want you in trouble. XD
but we cant believe blindly and our logic is still important in life you always have to know why you believe what you believe.
Major-Armstrong (post: 1455344) wrote:All I know is the only things that are logical are what God see's as Holy and right and just that and are simply math is nothing compared to God's way of thinking, it bests all of are science ,math you name it God's is better
Kaligraphic (post: 1455441) wrote:Typically when we use "logic" in this sense, we're not speaking of formal logic but of the application of similar principles in human reason. Still, I believe Pascal has touched on something important - that logic (and reason) only function where ideas and their relationships are already defined.
One of the reasons that Christians fare poorly in debates is that we've collectively ceded our idea of "God" to philosophers and theologians, treating Him as an idea to be defined and constructed. We'll pull up ideas like the Ontological Argument, which basically says that there ought to be a god, and think that we've done something clever, without realizing that the very fact that we're arguing the general case means that we've tacitly conceded the specific. We begin to argue history and cosmology, and find ourselves baffled that people don't hasten to accept a god who by our arguments is made about as relevant as the neutrino.
I, personally, prefer a scientific view of God rather than a formulation of just logic and philosophy. Logic may explain, but science is about evidence, and the ultimate evidence for God is simply to meet Him. Can you prove by pure logic that God exists? Hang that, you can't even prove by pure logic that I exist without resorting to potentially falsifiable evidence. Science is about improving our understanding of things bit by bit - and, yes, discarding bits that we've shown are false.
That last bit is the scariest, because a lot of times we wrap our faith up in every doctrine we've ever heard, and if we lose one, we'd have to question all of them. It's scary to give up what we've accepted as a core doctrine, but if we are paralyzed by the fear, we'll never give up our wrong ideas about God to see who He really is.
Even as our logic and our reasoning about God is broken again and again, that does not mean that God is not there - rather, it means that we can discard parts of our image of Him that hide his true nature. To that end, logic and reason should be employed scientifically, as servants in our quest to understand what lies beyond the horizon of our knowledge.
Nate (post: 1455422) wrote:How is God's 2+2=4 better than mankinds 2+2=4?
Also how come everyone says God's logic is better than man's etc. etc. but then really like books like Romans and Corinthians, who were written by a man in prison? Sure, you can say God influenced Paul, but Paul still wrote them. God didn't possess Paul and write the words with His own mind. Paul still used his own logic to make statements about Christianity and the churches. And they're held up as Scripture.
Just throwing that out there.
Kaligraphic (post: 1455441) wrote:Typically when we use "logic" in this sense, we're not speaking of formal logic but of the application of similar principles in human reason. Still, I believe Pascal has touched on something important - that logic (and reason) only function where ideas and their relationships are already defined.
One of the reasons that Christians fare poorly in debates is that we've collectively ceded our idea of "God" to philosophers and theologians, treating Him as an idea to be defined and constructed. We'll pull up ideas like the Ontological Argument, which basically says that there ought to be a god, and think that we've done something clever, without realizing that the very fact that we're arguing the general case means that we've tacitly conceded the specific. We begin to argue history and cosmology, and find ourselves baffled that people don't hasten to accept a god who by our arguments is made about as relevant as the neutrino.
I, personally, prefer a scientific view of God rather than a formulation of just logic and philosophy. Logic may explain, but science is about evidence, and the ultimate evidence for God is simply to meet Him. Can you prove by pure logic that God exists? Hang that, you can't even prove by pure logic that I exist without resorting to potentially falsifiable evidence. Science is about improving our understanding of things bit by bit - and, yes, discarding bits that we've shown are false.
That last bit is the scariest, because a lot of times we wrap our faith up in every doctrine we've ever heard, and if we lose one, we'd have to question all of them. It's scary to give up what we've accepted as a core doctrine, but if we are paralyzed by the fear, we'll never give up our wrong ideas about God to see who He really is.
Even as our logic and our reasoning about God is broken again and again, that does not mean that God is not there - rather, it means that we can discard parts of our image of Him that hide his true nature. To that end, logic and reason should be employed scientifically, as servants in our quest to understand what lies beyond the horizon of our knowledge.
Nate (post: 1455422) wrote:How is God's 2+2=4 better than mankinds 2+2=4?
Also how come everyone says God's logic is better than man's etc. etc. but then really like books like Romans and Corinthians, who were written by a man in prison? Sure, you can say God influenced Paul, but Paul still wrote them. God didn't possess Paul and write the words with His own mind. Paul still used his own logic to make statements about Christianity and the churches. And they're held up as Scripture.
Just throwing that out there.
MxCake wrote:" The Apostle Paul said, "All scripture is given by inspiration of God
TG wrote:Christianity isn't a religion.
Because logic tells me there's a God by proof. I can feel him in my heart. and in everything i do.
TGJesusfreak (post: 1455486) wrote:The way i see it. Religion is a poison. Christianity isn't a religion. it's a relationship with God. Religion is a set of rules to follow to get you to paradise. I like Logic. I choose it over religion anyday.
why? Because logic tells me there's a God by proof. I can feel him in my heart. and in everything i do. Logic tells me that I cant safe myself. Logic tells me that no rules I follow will save me. only having a relationship with God and acceting him does.
so I say faith and logic is the right way. Religion is a MANMADE idea.
MxCake wrote:ok nate here Psalms 68:11 says, "God gave the word, great was the company of those who published it
Nate (post: 1455422) wrote:How is God's 2+2=4 better than mankinds 2+2=4?
Also how come everyone says God's logic is better than man's etc. etc. but then really like books like Romans and Corinthians, who were written by a man in prison? Sure, you can say God influenced Paul, but Paul still wrote them. God didn't possess Paul and write the words with His own mind. Paul still used his own logic to make statements about Christianity and the churches. And they're held up as Scripture.
Just throwing that out there.
Major-Armstrong wrote:God's 2+2=4.... simple numbers can't contain or explain GOD and his math thats why its better than human math
cause human's can't even begin to comprehend(sp) the way god would do math
about the written by a man in prision doesn't make since sure he wrote it in prision but all of it was truly done by god and his will alone not by the man writing the scripture.. just saying
Nate (post: 1455540) wrote:Um...okay. That means what exactly? PS context is important, Psalm 68 is talking about God attacking an opposing army, since 68:12 says "Kings of armies did flee apace: and she that tarried at home divided the spoil."
So please tell me how this in any way, shape, or form has anything to do with Paul's letters to the churches.
Also in response to your edit just now, "The Bible" did not exist until a few hundred years after Christ's ascension, and the Psalms are part of the Jewish scriptures, remember there's a whole separate religion that doesn't like ours that uses those books.
Nate wrote:Unless you're advocating that God possessed Paul's body so that Paul was some sort of avatar for God, Paul wrote them.
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