Mendalla
Happy headbanging ape!!
- Pronouns
- He/Him/His
Which, by the way, is why the presence of people like @Pavlos Maros is important on a site like this.Dialogue rather than diatribe is what will give us a better world.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Which, by the way, is why the presence of people like @Pavlos Maros is important on a site like this.Dialogue rather than diatribe is what will give us a better world.
It happens quite a bit. The thing is, it's then an informed choice. I myself identified as Christian for a few years despite my upbringing. I sought ordination back in the '80's since I was involved so heavily in my church community and had encouragement to do so. I was dissuaded though when I went back to university and my world expanded and I was exposed to different views. Also, I was defeated by the necessity of learning OT Latin or NT Greek.UUs have religious education curricula that do precisely this. It's kind of our thing, really, given that our fourth principle is a "free and responsible search for truth and meaning" and our sources include pretty much all of human thought once you unpack them a bit.
One interesting point: I have known at least one person raised UU who ended up evangelical Christian. So, even someone raised with a fairly rationalist, critical approach to religious and philosophical ideas can be drawn to that tradition.
OT isn't in Latin, it's in Hebrew.Also, I was defeated by the necessity of learning OT Latin or NT Greek.
Aramaic?OT isn't in Latin, it's in Hebrew.Unless you're starting from the Vulgate, which I would not. That's a very out-of-date Latin translation at this point.
I could probably handle NT Greek. I did Attic Greek in my Classics program and they did talk a bit about the differences between it and koine.
That another one. Hebrew, NT Greek, Aramaic. You could probably do a whole university degree just learning the languages used in Jewish and Christian scriptures.Aramaic?
With my mental block resolved, I now recall it was OT Aramaic. Of course I had to dig up and look at my transcripts starting in '89. I actually took only 2 RS courses, plus some other prerequisites because I figured out first term this wasn't going to be my direction.That another one. Hebrew, NT Greek, Aramaic. You could probably do a whole university degree just learning the languages used in Jewish and Christian scriptures.Add Arabic if you want to get Islam into the mix.
No one takes them literally.
Before giving up on the notion, I thought, "Well at least it's a job." That's when I knew it was probably not a good idea.Ooh, and I'm with you Ninj. I too considered ordination in the 90s, prompted by some people in my congregation. I had three insurmountable problems: i) I have not got a pastoral bone in my body; ii) I have spent too much of my life flirting with addiction(s), and iii) Hebrew. I cannot do the back to front, right to left thing (my eyes do not work that way; I have been reading English, very quickly, my entire life minus about 3 years; I have read Lord of the Rings cover to cover in a day, more than once).
You recall incorrectly! Except for a small section of Daniel, the OT was written in Hebrew, not Aramaic.With my mental block resolved, I now recall it was OT Aramaic. Of course I had to dig up and look at my transcripts starting in '89. I actually took only 2 RS courses, plus some other prerequisites because I figured out first term this wasn't going to be my direction.
If it had been, I would have ended up at Huron
Because atheists have no need to do anything of the kind.You recall incorrectly! Except for a small section of Daniel, the OT was written in Hebrew, not Aramaic.
btw, the way, when the Greek Gospels are retroverted to Jesus' original Aramaic, all sorts of corny puns emerge that are lost in translation.
With these puns, Jesus was going for smiles, and so, they illustrate a neglected historical quest--the quest to illumine Jesus' personality as opposed to His character, example, and teaching.
What is sad is that atheists here have no clue how to connect the Gospels with eyewitness testimony or even why Josephus' testimony to Jesus is almost universally accepted by scholars, despite some debate over early Christian scribes slightly altered the Testimonium Flavianum.
In other words, "I (an atheist) have my deeply entrenched beliefs; so please don't confuse me with relevant facts."Because atheists have no need to do anything of the kind.
One could almost read that as your own autobiographical statement. Why would a non-theist need to do such a thing?In other words, "I (an atheist) have my deeply entrenched beliefs; so please don't confuse me with relevant facts."
Well, there is the little matter of the intellectual integrity of atheistic philosophy, especially if one presumes to make critical claims about Christian theism.One could almost read that as your own autobiographical statement. Why would a non-theist need to do such a thing?
the little matter of the intellectual integrity of atheistic philosophy