Wednesday, January 31, 2024

What, Except a Person in Fiction, Does Saruman Refer To?


If Tolkien hadn't explicitly stated that he hated allegory in all its forms, perhaps one could have considered that Saruman in his work was an allegory for a specific personality type. Tolkien Lore and myself have some opinions on which one.

Character Study of Saruman: Tolkien’s Portrait of the Modern Politician
Tolkien Lore | 29 Jan. 2024
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yG0cAOWzexU


Not just the modern politician.

What about the people who inform politicians so they look commpetent?

What about modern physicians or criminologists or teachers? ...

"And not just politicians, this also applies to bureaucrats" (19:28)

Thank you! At last!

A little overview:

a) eugenics
b) euthanasia (of people)
c) psychiatry getting more and more reasons to lock people up or to control people not actually locked up
d) abortion and contraception pushed on potential parents they don't view as sufficiently "responsable"
e) forensic psychiatry (whether transfers from prison or preferring "obligation of treatment" as the say in France or "Rättspsykiatrisk vård" / "treatment in forensic psychiatry" as a specific "consequence" (påföljd) over prison sentences that would normally be of finite and predefined durations
f) feminists trying to keep young out of marriage
g) alt right wanting to keep all young in work rather than education
h) leftists (the ones G) are reacting against) wanting to prolong education as long as possible and for as many as possible
i) people involved in alcohol or drug abuse treatment wanting to overstate the number of cases that actually need their services
j) including but not limited to people presenting each and all on the street as probable abusers who therefore shouldn't be given money
k) Malthusians (whether in general, as Ehrlich, or mostly for coloureds, as KKK or Margaret Sanger)
l) cult experts who are ready to target a man as the last cult victim or next cult leader, because he writes on Young Earth Creationism
m) the kind of wise men who after every school shooting say the solution is not abolition of practical quasi school compulsion, but to abolish arms
n) the kind of people who think unless you are a Mensan, you should have no say in politics even by vote, and no say in running your own life
o) did I mention med personnel who as wannabe shrinks (or perhaps even as shrinks, Dr. Med Psych. Spec.) judge people as delusional or cannabis addicts if they enjoy Tolkien?
p) people who think that morals can be judged by experts (not meaning successors of the Twelve, meaning people like sociologists and so on) and eager to assume someone else's idea of what's good (for him or in general or in justice between him and the other party) is worthless if he's not an expert.

(f and g are two sides of a coin, I saw Brett Cooper defending a 14 year old at work, in itself perfectly acceptable, while forgetting the parallel issue of young marriages, and while overstating her case in a way reminiscent of the Communist manifesto making work not just one optional way of getting a livelihood).

0:31 I think it was the Netherlands, in fact.

7:33 Saruman of many colours ...

Somehow, when it comes to multicoloured, I am less reminded of Joseph before he was sold, than of rainbow flags.

7:50 Just a beginning. Transhumanism. Whether Musk and Hariri are as yet as bad as Saruman or not, transhumanism in and of itself is very evil, and they may already be used by men more evil than they are.

8:30 In fact, I do not claim to be the ultimate expert in every field, if you have come across that claim. I do claim to be a decent amateur expert in many fields, excluding Slavic languages and soccer, as well as rugby (whichever of these someone prefers calling football, I know NY means rugby and Rioe de Janeiro means soccer, by that term).

I most definitely don't think Tolkien was overall condemning every kind of Renaissance man, like he was certainly not condemning a man who was expert on wine, cheeses, decent economy, undecent economy, French monarchs and revolutionaries, even if he complained of his non-expertise in Anglo-Saxon lore, before he copied the anachronisms in Farmer Giles.

I don't think a sane man would imagine Chesterton cast as Saruman.

9:08 I think the wisdom of Saruman may be compared to, if not identical with, the wisdom Annatar gave Ar-Pharazôn ...

10:08 I'm reminded of how Mark Shea criticised Marco Rubio for not being sure whether the earth was created thousands or millions / billions of years ago.

I was a pretty big fan of Mark Shea up to that point. More than that, I recently found his new blog, where he ... well, see m) above, and didn't validate my dissenting comment under the post.

10:41 I happen to know a certain Laura Ingalls Wilder, with her husband Alonzo, were among the founding fathers or mothers of the Libertarian party.

10:53 I tend to look such things up (a thing you can do online, but not while talking in real time), here is Aleppo:

"Aleppo ... is a city in Syria, which serves as the capital of the Aleppo Governorate, the most populous governorate of Syria.[8]"

I think you have a point, especially in a country where there are people who couldn't tell Sweden from Switzerland (though a certain Dynamic Duo may have improved since then) or where a fellow Catholic just quoted Jeremias 17:9 in a KJV version, as if that had any authority with us Catholics (the Douay Rheims does not say the heart is "deceitful and desperately wicked" but more like "erratic and [utterly] mysterious").

I mean, having a president who's qualified for Mensa isn't quite like having a population that is. Not that that is a prerequisite for freedom and dignity (I just added n) to the list above).

12:44 I'm subtly reminded of people who don't want my writing to be my writing, as I intend it, but rather my writing to be sth they could show off as their underground politician.
They both tend to leave my surroundings physically reminding me of what they think are a gaffe, and adjudge that question on items which I definitely don't agree with.

Case in point, they seem very upset (judging from readers' statistics) over my preferring Tolkien and CSL over Isaac Asimov, both as entertainment and as the edutainment I profited from back when I needed to get educated.

16:29 It obviously is meant to set the scene for the actual point.

Men are not as wise as elves, true enough on the premise, elves are no longer going to dominate men, true, so, that logically leaves two options, and it's very instructive how Saruman simply overlooks one of them:

  • men can govern themselves with considerably less competence
  • someone else can step in for the elves. Which is where Saruman sees a cue for himself.


16:48 It does tell you (and Gandalf agreed) what choices are about to be made, one way or another.
The huge problem is, Saruman is the kind of guy who faced with the other alternative would go "you can't really mean that

" (unless as Saruman they can be even more mean).

18:33 I am sorry, but I'm afraid you are overestimating politicians here.

Lots more than 1 -- 10 % are real heretics who really want to push bad agendas, because they have already in their hearts dismissed God's view and they have called good evil and evil good.

You know, the kind of people a certain Adolf came among when he wasn't painting, poor chap! And even they were not as bad as Lenin's party.

19:59 Yeah, pretty much. A degree passing for competense, or sometimes a successful carreere in certain movements.

I'm reminded of such a guy in the department, back then of "Ecclesiastic affairs", who sent Swedish teachers to Rostock (East Germany, Stasi territory) rather than anywhere in "reactionary" West Germany.

Obviously many of his underlings more directly involved with teaching share this outlook even today in Sweden.

Tuesday, January 30, 2024

Hear Miss Simone Zimmerman


New Film Examines American Jews’ Growing Rejection of Israel’s Occupation
Democracy Now! | 22 Jan. 2024
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GuBnzzGmH7c

I Was Trying to Have a Rational Reply to Tovia Singer ...


I Was Trying to Have a Rational Reply to Tovia Singer ... · ... He Seems to Prefer Apocalyptic Threats Via Paula Wallace

Though some might consider that's like hoping for figs from a thistle.

The video was claiming that Jesus did not fulfil Daniel 9.

Daniel 9 Demonstrates that Jesus Couldn't be the Messiah -Rabbi Tovia Singer
Tovia Singer | 28 Jan. 2024
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p57CiVtdHFY


2:24 How did sin end with Jesus?

  • From Eve and Adam on, sin had continued with every man
    Mary and Jesus are the first two persons with human flesh to be sinless.

  • From Adam on, mankind due to sin has had to die.
    Jesus paid for Adam's sin, so we can be resurrected.

  • From Adam on, mankind due to sin has been excluded from Heaven.
    Jesus paid for Adam's sin, so we can get to Heaven.

  • From Adam on, people have basically remained in guilt, even when God forgave, there was no ontological change.
    Jesus gave forgiveness of sin, so that a sinner who is baptised or who repents as an adult and goes to confession is a new creature.

  • From Babel on, lots of sins have dominated society. Slavehunt being one of them, and Exodus 21:16 says this merits death penalty. Abortion, among pagans.
    Christianity has ended abortion and slavehunt, not as features of bandits, but as things in civilised society.

  • From some time after Babel, demons have misled people after people into not just false belief, but also worshipping what one should clearly see is not God. Like Apollo of Delphi.
    Christianity ended paganism.

  • Since sin was Satan's victory, mankind was Satan's property since Adam sinned.
    Since sinlessness is God's victory, we have a chance to be God's property instead.


2:50 The answer is yes.

Ryvon Krygier in his planned speech for Notre Dame, where he shouldn't have been received, challenged on Isaias 11.

I have answered the challenge, and been ignored.

The Greater Israel actually was there in the 1st C. Christian Jews, Samarians, Galilaeans, Edomites, Moabites and Ammonites, as well as Egyptians and people from Mesopotamia.

The central population of that are Palestinians. The Muslim Palestinians are basically Christian Palestinians who became Muslims, and Mitsrahi Jews who became Muslims, a very early population of Yanissaries and Dönmes. Some later became the Druz. The Christian Palestinians however started out as such in the first century, and are therefore the world's oldest population of Marranos.

So, yes, Jesus actually did accomplish Isaias 11.

3:58 Catholic Comment here:

Ver. 24. Seventy weeks (viz. of years, or seventy times seven, that is, 490 years) are shortened; that is, fixed and determined, so that the time shall be no longer. (Challoner)

This is not a conditional prophecy. Daniel was solicitous to know when the seventy years of Jeremias would terminate. But something of far greater consequence is revealed to him, (Worthington) even the coming and death of the Messias, four hundred and ninety years after the order for rebuilding the walls should be given, (Calmet) at which period Christ would redeem the world, (Worthington) and abolish the sacrifices of the law. (Calmet)

Finished, or arrive at its height by the crucifixion of the Son of God; (Theod.) or rather sin shall be forgiven. Hebrew, "to finish crimes to seal (cover or remit) sins, and to expiate iniquity."

Anointed. Christ is the great anointed of God, the source of justice, and the end of the law and of the prophets, (Acts x. 38. and 1 Corinthians i. 30; Romans x. 4.; Calmet) as well as the pardoner of crimes. These four characters belong only to Christ. (Worthington)
_____________________________________

Ver. 25. Word, &c. That is, from the twentieth year of king Artaxerxes, when, by his commandment, Nehemias rebuilt the walls of Jerusalem, 2 Esdras ii. From which time, according to the best chronology, there were just sixty-nine weeks of years, that is 483 years, to the baptism of Christ, when he first began to preach and execute the office of Messias. (Challoner)

The prophecy is divided into three periods: the first of forty-nine years, during which the walls were completed; (they had been raised in fifty-two days, (2 Esdras vi. 15.) but many other fortifications were still requisite) the second of four hundred and thirty-four years, at the end of which Christ was baptized, in the fifteenth of Tiberius, the third of three years and a half, during which Christ preached. In the middle of this last week, the ancient sacrifices became useless, (Calmet) as the true Lamb of God had been immolated. (Theod.)

A week of years denotes seven years, as Leviticus xxv. and thus seventy of these weeks would make four hundred and ninety years. (Ven. Bede, Rat. temp. 6 &c.; Worthington)

Origen would understand 4900 years, and dates from the fall of Adam to the ruin of the temple. Marsham begins twenty-one years after the captivity commenced, when Darius took Susa, and ends in the second of Judas, when the temple was purified. This system would destroy the prediction of Christ's coming, and is very uncertain. Hardouin modifies it, and acknowledges that Christ was the end of the prophecy, though it was fulfilled in figure by the death of Onias III. See 1 Machabees i. 19; Senens. Bib. viii. h�r. 12; and Estius. From chap. vii. to xii., the changes in the East, till the time of Epiphanes, are variously described. After the angel had here addressed Daniel, the latter was still perplexed; (Chap. x. 1.) and in order to remove his doubts, the angel informs him of the persecution of Epiphanes, as if he had been speaking of the same event. We may, therefore, count forty-nine years from the taking of Jerusalem (when Jeremias spoke, chap. v. 19.) to Cyrus, the anointed, (Isaias xlv. 1.) who was appointed to free God's people. They should still be under the Persians, &c., for other four hundred and thirty-four years, and then Onias should be slain. Many would join the Machabees; the sacrifices should cease in the middle of the seventieth week, and the desolation shall continue to the end of it. Yet, though this system may seem plausible, it is better to stick to the common one, which naturally leads us to the death of Christ, dating from the tenth year of Artaxerxes. (Calmet)

He had reigned ten years already with his father. (Petau.)

All the East was persuaded that a great king should arise about the time; when our Saviour actually appeared, and fulfilled all that had been spoken of the Messias. (Calmet, Diss.)

Ferguson says, "We have an astronomical demonstration of the truth of this ancient prophecy, seeing that the prophetic year of the Messias being cut off was the very same with the astronomical." In a dispute between a Jew and a Christian, at Venice, the Rabbi who presided....put an end to the business by saying, "Let us shut up our Bibles; for if we proceed in the examination of this prophecy, it will make us all become Christians." (Watson, let. 6.)

Hence probably the Jews denounce a curse on those who calculate the times, (Haydock) and they have purposely curtailed their chronology. (Calmet)

Times, &c. (angustia temporum) which may allude both to the difficulties and opposition they met with in building, and to the shortness of the time in which they finished the wall, viz. fifty-two days. (Challoner)
_____________________________________

Ver. 26. Weeks, or four hundred and thirty-eight years, which elapsed from the twentieth of Artaxerxes to the death of Christ, according to the most exact chronologists. (Calmet)

Slain. Protestants, "cut off, but not for himself, and the people of the prince that," &c. (Haydock)

St. Jerome and some manuscripts read, Christus, et non erit ejus. The sense is thus suspended. The Jews lose their prerogative of being God's people. (Calmet)

Christ will not receive them again. (St. Jerome)

Greek: "the unction shall be destroyed, and there shall not be judgment in him." The priesthood and royal dignity is taken from the Jews. (Theod.)

The order of succession among the high priests was quite deranged, while the country was ruled by the Romans, and by Herod, a foreigner. (Calmet)

Leader. The Romans under Titus. (Challoner; Calmet)
________________________________________

Ver. 27. Many. Christ seems to allude to this passage, Matthew xxvi. 28. He died for all; but several of the Jews particularly, would not receive the proffered grace. (Calmet)

Of the week, or in the middle of the week, &c. Because Christ preached three years and a half: and then, by his sacrifice upon the cross, abolished all the sacrifices of the law. (Challoner)

Temple. Hebrew, "the wing," (Calmet) or pinnacle, (Haydock) the highest part of the temple. (Calmet)

Desolation. Some understand this of the profanation of the temple by the crimes of the Jews, and by the bloody faction of the zealots. Others, of the bringing in thither the ensigns and standard of the pagan Romans. Others, in fine, distinguish three different times of desolation: viz. that under Antiochus; that when the temple was destroyed by the Romans; and the last near the end of the world, under antichrist. To all which, as they suppose, this prophecy may have a relation. (Challoner)

Protestants, "For the overspreading of abominations he shall make it desolate, even unto the consummation; and that determined, shall be poured upon the desolate." (Haydock)

The ruin shall be entire. (Calmet)


"and everlasting justice may be brought;"

The justice of Christ is everlasting in two ways.

  • It's the justice of God, a man who has this justice has "everlasting life" as the NT paraphrases it.
  • It's the definive law. Some laws of Moses were dispensations as the best that could be had at the time, like allowing divorce bills, and are abolished, and some laws were figures that now are replaced by the truth itself.


"and vision and prophecy may be fulfilled;"

Not only does the writing of the NT contain several remarks on prophecy fulfilled, but the Catholic Church has an exegesis on basically all of the Old Testament, including things that you didn't know had that kind of prophetic meaning on top of the historical one.

"and the Saint of saints may be anointed."

His anointing being then transmitted to the Apostles and to the Episcopate, this is the constitutive fact about the Catholic Church.

5:01 Yes, if the Gospels had began with a false narrative it is inconceivable that the Resurrection would have happened.

And if the Resurrection had not happened, the Church would not have begun.

It's easier for a community to tell itself lies about other communities than to do it about oneself. I don't mean things like misproportionate importance or things like that, I mean straight off lies, like changing name, adress, life story, sequence of events etc of founder.

If you ask us to believe the Resurrection didn't happen, you are basically asking us to believe the US didn't begin with George Washington making a Declaration of Independence.

It's not like the cherry tree story. George Washington didn't know Benjamin Franklin or Gilbert de Lafayette back when he was six, and he had no idea he would protest against George III about taxation.

Now, you could perhaps imagine a fraud about the Resurrection. Except a fraudster wouldn't decade after decade put himself into danger of martyrdom from [AD] 33 to 68, as Peter did. And if you pretend Peter was a dupe, who was the fraudster? The Church not remembering him would be extraordinary, like the US forgetting John Adams between George Washington and Thomas Jefferson.

Hrvatski Noahid
@hrvatskinoahid1048
Any Gentile who accepts the Seven Noahide Commandments, and is careful to observe them, is truly a pious individual of the nations of the world, and merits an eternal portion in the future World to Come. (And with this merit, the person will be included in the Resurrection of the Dead). Your idol is not special.

Hans Georg Lundahl
@hglundahl
@hrvatskinoahid1048 Totally irrelevant.

My point was not about morality, but about history.

Hrvatski Noahid
@hglundahl The point is your hero's resurrection is not unique.

Hans Georg Lundahl
@hrvatskinoahid1048 I take it you are comparing Jesus to:

  • Hercules
  • Krishna and Rama
  • Romulus
  • Buddha


and a few more.

I happen to know their stories sufficiently well to know, no, the Resurrection really is unique. In each of these cases, there is a historic community who considered itself as descending from the hero or from those who knew him, spiritual or physical descent or both, and in each of these cases, I am willing to grant the main outline of the story.

None of these have died on a Cross (or otherwise) and been buried and then appeared to people who had also seen the tomb empty. With Hercules, Krishna, Rama and Buddha, we have a funeral pyre. With Romulus we have a disappearance, plus one man having a dream claiming Romulus appeared to him.

So, the Lord of Life and Death, Whom we know the God of the Old Testament as being, has not given any of these the kind of endorsement He gave to Elijah or Elisha.

You may answer, what about Hercules and Alkestis?
  • Well, we know the Phoenicians had contact with Greeks, we know the boy Elijah raised was in Phoenician territory, we know the Phoenicians were willing to identify their Baal with Hercules and so were the Greeks, so:
  • I find it probable, that Phoenicians attributed the raised boy to Baal, rather than to the true God, and I therefore find it probable this "story about Baal" became a story about Hercules;
  • who actually lived before the Trojan war in 1180 BC, while our earliest full length source about Alkestis is a tragedy by the Classic Attics, giving sufficient time for the tradition about Hercules to be contaminated by another tradition.


If you say "what about Dionysus?" I reply, the story of Dionysus was the story of Moses told at several distortions removed. How Dionysus challenges Pentheus matches how Moses challenged the Pharao for real.


5:17 Isaias 2?

I didn't see "world peace" but I did see international adherence to God.

16 And upon all the ships of Tharsis, and upon all that is fair to behold. 17 And the loftiness of men shall be bowed down, and the haughtiness of men shall be humbled, and the Lord alone shall be exalted in that day. 18 And idols shall be utterly destroyed. 19 And they shall go into the holes of rocks, and into the caves of the earth from the face of the fear of the Lord, and from the glory of his majesty, when he shall rise up to strike the earth. 20 In that day a man shall cast away his idols of silver, and his idols of gold, which he had made for himself to adore, moles and bats.

Why are idol worshippers called "pagan"? Paganus means "villager" ... well, that's where idols and their cults survived for some time when ROME cast away his idols of silver and of gold.

Where was Paul from again? Do you see a hint in verse 16?

Now, verse 17 has sth to say on Franziskanergruft and Habsburg burials, as compared to Nebuchadnezzar. At least these verses are ACCOMPLISHED in known historical fact.

Isaias 3

1 For behold the sovereign the Lord of hosts shall take away from Jerusalem, and from Juda the valiant and the strong, the whole strength of bread, and the whole strength of water. 2 The strong man, and the man of war, the judge, and the prophet, and the cunning man, and the ancient. 3 The captain over fifty, and the honourable in countenance, and the counsellor, and the architect, and the skillful in eloquent speech.

Also known as Matthew 5

4 Blessed are the meek: for they shall possess the land.

From when Jesus founded the Palestinian nation, by reuniting Jews and Samaritans (Acts 2 and 8), to the present, Palestinians have been under foreign domination, and pretty content with it.

The precise fact some present as pseudo-proof they didn't exist for all this time, is real proof they had no own army all this time (prior to PLO and Hamas and all that).

ACCOMPLISHED.

Isaias 4 directly prophecies the Church.

ACCOMPLISHED.

Zacharias 9.

9 Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Sion, shout for joy, O daughter of Jerusalem: BEHOLD THY KING will come to thee, the just and saviour: he is poor, and riding upon an ass, and upon a colt the foal of an ass. 10 And I will destroy the chariot out of Ephraim, and the horse out of Jerusalem, and the bow for war shall be broken: and he shall speak peace to the Gentiles, and his power shall be from sea to sea, and from the rivers even to the end of the earth.

Accomplished in the Palm Sunday entry of Our Lord, and also in Palestinians having no army and consisting of both Jews and Samarians since the early Church.

Note he shall speak peace to the Gentiles doesn't mean the Gentiles will always be peaceful, but it means the Gentiles will be aware of angels singing (as it is written on St. Nicolas du Chardonnet in Paris) et in terra pax hominibus bonae voluntatis meaning both that people of good will will have a peace that surpasses the understanding of the word, and that desiring peace is a requisite for being a man of goodwill.

And his power shall be from sea to sea, and from the rivers even to the end of the earth." Refers to the omnipresence of the Catholic Church.

ACCOMPLISHED.

Zacharias 10.

I'll not quote verses this time, but the Roman Catholic explanation, as a subtitle under the chapter number:

"God is to be sought to, and not idols. The victories of his church, which shall arise originally from the Jewish nation."

Hrvatski Noahid
@hglundahl Worshiping a person is idolatry.

Paula Wallace
@paulawallace8784
As Isaiah tells, King David's progeny, a mortal man of flesh and blood comes at the End of the Days, he will be ANIMATED BY THE FEAR OF THE LRD!

Hans Georg Lundahl
@hrvatskinoahid1048 Is Ha Shem one person or three persons?

Either way, you worship a person.

Hans Georg Lundahl
@paulawallace8784 He showed that animation while cleansing the temple twice, one time just at the beginning of His carreere, one more time after Palm Sunday.

Hrvatski Noahid
@hglundahl Nope. The main prohibition against idol worship is not to serve one of the creations, be it an angel, a spiritual power, a constellation, a star or a planet, one of the fundamentals of the physical creation, a person, an animal, a tree, or any other created thing.

Paula Wallace
@hglundahl Preventing those who traveled a far distance to go to the Temple to offer their Sacrifices, destruction of personal property and causing a disturbance in a sacred place shows the animation of his narcissistic ego, just as the Palm Sunday incident, the very Opposite of Zechariah's Humble, Peace Speaking Donkey rider.

Paula Wallace
@hglundahl The definition of the word "Person" is a human being.
The CREATOR is NOT a Person, to worship a Person is to be an Idolater.

Hans Georg Lundahl
@paulawallace8784 I don't see where you get it from to say "the creator is not a person" .... do you believe He has not will or knowledge?

Hans Georg Lundahl
@hrvatskinoahid1048 "a person ... or any other created thing."

Who says a person needs to be created?

Are you denying the Creator to have or be a Mind?

Hans Georg Lundahl
@paulawallace8784 "Preventing those who traveled a far distance to go to the Temple to offer their Sacrifices,"

He didn't.

The merchants were preventing Gentiles from praying where they had a right to pray.

Jesus was chasing them away. Not the people trying to sacrifice.

Paula Wallace
@hglundahl The Merchants sold animals to Jews who traveled a far distance to the Temple, according to the Greek Tall Tales he caused a public disturbance and trashed other people's property all due to his narcisstic ego, that is IF he existed, which I don't.

Paula Wallace
@hglundahl Again, the definition of the word "Person" is a human being, a created creature, NOT the CREATOR!

Hans Georg Lundahl
I don't buy your definition of person @paulawallace8784.

If you define person away from the Creator, you open up for the godless Kabbalists who regard "God" as a primary force of reality, but not a conscious one.

So sorry for you, if your translation mistranslates, not my problem, since I'm a Catholic.

The people who had travalled far away could have bought animals outside the temple precinct. The temple authorities preferred saying "oh no, you can't pay sacrificial animals in denarii" ... and the Roman authorities said "you can't get shekels outside the temple precinct" — both made a profit of this arrangement, which was impious.

It blocked the Gentiles for whom the space had been made, outside the temple.

BOTH made another kind of profit too, namely by keeping Gentiles Pagan, the Temple authorities dealt only or mainly with Jews who were already used to them, while Pilate avoided soldiers becoming Proselytes.

Is Tovia Singer a purveyor of English tall tales because he speaks in English?

He's less Jewish than either Matthew or John, since he's visibly Ashkenazi.

Paula Wallace
@hglundahl So show me a dictionary that doesn't define the world "Person" as a human being.

Paula Wallace
As your posts reflect, you do not know Gd, Scripture, His Son nor His coming instrument of His Will, King David's progeny, much less the deep esoteric teachings of the Kabbalah, which is only for those who know Gd and His Eternal Truth intimately.

Hans Georg Lundahl
@paulawallace8784 Here is the answer to two of yours, already saved on my blog, but apparently deleted here:

[see above]

Now for more answers:

// So show me a dictionary //

1) Dictionaries are not the ultimate go to for true meaning of words.
2) There are probably plenty of dictionaries that have "human being" as at least one of the meanings. The Swedish Nordisk Familjebok has five articles on the concept:

Person, en menniskas yttre väsende - 1111-1112
Person. 1. Gramm., namn på den grammatiska kategori, som betecknar något af de tre förhållandena den talande, tilltalade och omtalade - 1111-1112
Person. 2. Teol. - 1111-1112
Person. 3. Filos., ett ursprungligt och sjelfständigt, sjelfmedvetande och fritt väsende - 1111-1112
Person. 4. Jur. Se Juridisk person och Moralisk person - 1111-1112


Article 3 refers to phil. an original, independent, self conscious and free being.
Article 2 obviously refers to the Blessed Trinity, since it's in Theol.

// much less the deep esoteric teachings of the Kabbalah, which is only for those who know Gd and His Eternal Truth intimately. //

Thank you very much, Our Lord Jesus Christ did away with esoteric teachings about Himself and the Trinity, insofar as Esoteric, and the ones left to you now are contaminated by your infidelity.


5:16 bis OT prophecy you claim Jesus did not accomplish is pretty fun stuff.

If you ever see any son or daughter of yours convert to Catholicism, they will tell you it's as fun as looking for the hidden matsa.

5:55 It's very striking you have basically no historic epistemology.

Given that lack of historic epistemology, how would you answer Matt Baker if he said exactly the same thing about Moses?

I mean the Matt Baker who's in "Useful Charts" and who's religion has more to do with Mendelson than with Amram's son.

Hrvatski Noahid
The Jewish people have an unbroken historical tradition to the very time of Moses.

Hans Georg Lundahl
Yes, we have that as the Catholic Church, @hrvatskinoahid1048 .

We also have an unbroken historical tradition to the very time of Jesus Christ.

Thanks for bringing up a bit better epistemology than Tovia Singer showed.


6:06 "pull out the camera"

Red Sea crossing?

6:12 "all the nations would serve him"

Jews, Samarians etc as given in Isaias 11.

Romans and Greeks.

Egyptians and Ethiopians.

Carthaginians like St. Augustine. That involves Berber populations of North Africa.

Armenians.

Irish, Anglo-Saxon, Frank, Briton, Norse, Finnish.

Pole and Lithuanian.

Ukrainian and Russian (at least those of Novgorod prior to Tatars).

Iroquois, Huron, Nahua, Quechua, Aymara, featuring both French Jesuits and Spanish Conquistadors. The Guaraní, featuring Spanish Jesuits.

Somewhat more of a minority in Chinese, Korean and Japanese people, but still, definitely present.

Sitting Bull not only died a Catholic, but actually converted Buffalo Bill before he died. So, add Sioux to the list or Lakota.

Please, have you ever read any geography?

And obviously a lot of Spanish Jews also converted. They are called Marranos. I like to think of myself as a Nordic Marrano, even if most of them are Lutheran or Pentecostal and I am Catholic.

Speaking of Pentecostals, Gipsies are often Catholic too. Speaking of Gipsies, Goa, Pondicherry.

And a Pakistani parliamentarian who was killed a few years ago, after 2000, for stepping up for religious freedom. Also a Catholic Christian.

I've certainly missed some, wait, Malawi and Nigeria, before I forget them. French Indochina. The last president of South Vietnam was a Catholic, his brother was the famous bishop Thuc.

If all the nations would serve him ... we do know.

6:20 I don't know exactly what Christians you frequent (though you mentioned Calvinists, that's a bad frequentation, if yours), but Catholics would point to most prophecies you mentioned as already fulfilled and already identifiable in known historic and geographic fact.

6:38 Holy of holies is a truth claim about anyone.

Let's say you identified the Messiah tomorrow.

How would you know it? It's a truth claim.

When you state that the Christian version of prophecy X is a truth claim you can't verify, how about checking whether your own hope of a fulfilment is a truthclaim you can't verify, or we would have to take your word for it?

But His anointing, as mentioned, has a relation to the anointing of His first twelve bishops. Which has a relation to the anointing of bishops up to this day.

In one of the prophecies I went through there was something about stones.

The last High Priest of the Old Testament we consider validly at any time of his life a High Priest of the most High, is Kaiaphas. The first of the New Testament is Petrus, a k a Kephas.

The one stone has not been left on the other (I'm supposing Hebrew original for Kaiaphas means stone, just as much as Aramaic original for Kephas), but the two stones have remained separate to this day. And of the Jewish High priests, after a certain time, no more stone was left to put on stone ... unlike the Christian ones.

Ah, yes, Zachary 9:16 And the Lord their God will save them in that day, as the flock of his people: for holy stones shall be lifted up over his land.

Refers to the papacy, which has persisted to this day.

7:07 The devil doing well today, nearly agreed.

The ending of sin is taken away, as Catholicism is pushed out of society after society.

However, it's not about the devil feeling fine, it's more about his raging, since he knows his time is short

Pope Leo XIII more than 100 years ago saw Satan and Jesus in a vision. Satan asked Jesus for 100 years to end the Catholic Church. I believe they started 1917, with the Russian Revolution.

I believe they ended in 2017, with a sign in heaven matching Apocalypse 12. Featuring constellation Virgo as the woman clad in the sun. One could not observe it from here, since the Sun was between, but one could verify the predictable astronomical positions of everything involved.

7:46 Would you mention one falsifiable claim that you pretend He didn't do?

I have seen lots of falsifiable claims He did do. We would have had another world history if He hadn't.

... He Seems to Prefer Apocalyptic Threats Via Paula Wallace


I Was Trying to Have a Rational Reply to Tovia Singer ... · ... He Seems to Prefer Apocalyptic Threats Via Paula Wallace

Here is my comment at the 8 minute mark. As you can see I have not singled out Jews. They are just one of the categories that go to Hell as non-Catholics.

Tovia Singer didn't think me worth a reply from him. If he thinks I am likely to agree with Paula Wallace, he's wrong. Since Paula Wallace is his fan, I suppose that he shares her views.

8:07 Is there no way of testing if non-Catholics go to Hell?

First, you'd agree there are lots of idolaters who are non-Catholics and as idolaters go to Hell. All the gods of the gentiles are demons.

Now, what about Abrahamic? I would say that Jew, Muslim, Protestant and Freemason, the more serious stuff, not semi-pagans like Justin Welby or Mendelson or Nasr Hamid Abu Zayd or Grand Orient, but I mean like Nahmanides and Maimonides, like Beza and Cromwell, like Omar and Ahmed Yassin, like Albert Pike and the guys who want revenge for Jacques Molay, they are going to Hell. They have made slavehunt so easy by idolatrous claims for parents, employers and statesmen.

They have also shown disrespect to women, starting with Judaism as the Bulls of Bashan, confer Samarians, earlier on the Cows of Bashan, who held even very bad women in too high regard.

That Mendelson and Welby and company are going to Hell is pretty obvious. They don't believe in God. I don't mean they don't believe in the true God. I mean they don't believe in the God they believe in.

How many does that leave? Catholics, perhaps Orthodox and Pentecostals too, depending on what patience God has with more technical distortions of theology.

Paula Wallace
@paulawallace8784
As Scripture reveals, those who choose to be wicked will like the Last Beast be no more, annihilated.

The Heathen Christian Hell of eternal torment with it's Devil and lake of fire, is like the carnal idol of flesh made in the Image of Man Jesus, they are but fabrications of Heathen Man, found nowhere in Scripture.

Paula Wallace
As Jeremiah prophesied, the Gentiles will come to see that they have inherited only Lies, Emptiness in which there is nothing of any avail!

Paula Wallace
Christianity is the Last Beast, Enemy of Gd and His Chosen.

I answered
but my answer was made invisible.

I start getting an uncomfortable impression Jews like this want to silence me, whether it's because they want to "give me another chance" or because they take me for the Armilus (Jewish version of Antichrist figure).


Meanwhile, my answer is by now means irretrievable.

Paula Wallace, by Scriptures, obviously referred to the Old Testament.

And they shall go out, and see the carcasses of the men that have transgressed against me: their worm shall not die, and their fire shall not be quenched: and they shall be a loathsome sight to all flesh
[Isaias (Isaiah) 66:24]

Carcass may suggest something having no conscience. But think again. Worms do not stay eternally at a carcass they have already eaten up, and flames can't be fuelled forever by an already incinerated corpse.

The final beast is a composite one, as we see from Apocalypse 13. Judaism is one of the 4 leopard heads.


Above was reposted.


I answered
and the first answer is visible again

Hans Georg Lundahl
@hglundahl
@paulawallace8784 look here:

And they shall go out, and see the carcasses of the men that have transgressed against me: their worm shall not die, and their fire shall not be quenched: and they shall be a loathsome sight to all flesh
[Isaias (Isaiah) 66:24]

While carcass suggests it could be dead people without conscience of anything, the worms that do not die tell a different tale, as well as the fire that is not quenched.

Let worms get at a corpse, after some time it's a skeleton, and the worms either move away or die from starvation.

Let fire get at a corpse, sooner or later it will be burned to ashes.

The Gentiles have already seen they had inherited emptiness when the turned to Christianity.

Those who have turned away from Christianity are once again inheriting emptiness, and will see that on judgement day.

The last beast is a composite, as we see from Apocalypse 13. Judaism is one of the leopard heads.

Carbon Dates Are Different


Babel and Carbon Dates: Babel in Carbon Dates · Carbon Dates Are Different

How does radiometric dating fit with the Bible?
New Creation Clips | 22 Jan. 2024
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OGk9nR52IL0


1:03 It can be noted, this is not just any method, this is not K-Ar or U-Pb or Th-Pb, this is Carbon 14.

Why can we be so much more sure about the halflife?

If we look at the carbon 14 content in samples from 500 years ago or 1000 years ago, we can see that it matches 0.5(500/5730) or 0.5(1000/5730). If not exactly, there could be wiggles in carbon 14 content of the atmosphere, at least pretty much or roughly speaking. And, from such times, we do have historically dated examples.

Why can we be sure of the original content being around 100 pmC, when it comes to something from 500 or 1000 years ago? The atmosphere is acting as one sample. Plus obviously the values.

If we had no decay studies in recent samples, like from 1950, one could imagine that the halflife were twice as long, while the carbon level has been going up, instead. For doubling the halflife, the going up would be 80 -- 100 pmC in the last 3000 years. This would cause a bulge (or deviation from real dates), but not bigger than bulges or wiggles we see anyway. But so far, no, no big flaw in the method, since the reinterpretation would allow us to have the same values in the samples.

1:31 This second one, match of geologic column with K-Ar or U-Pb dates, is moot.

Many discordant dates are thrown out. In bio-stratigraphy, as opposed to litho-stratography, there simply often enough isn't any column.

3:50 Another difference about C14 is, there is no measurement of daughter isotopes. You just measure the C14 in relation to C12.

Now, whether C14 decays to N14 or to C12 has been somewhat diversely answered over the years, I think no one really knows.

10:13 As I recall the RATE team and as you basically confirmed, they have done very little on Carbon 14.

My solution is, from the Flood to 3200 years ago, the C14 content was raised from 1.628 pmC in 2957 BC (it will be marginally lower with a more recent, Masoretic, date for the Flood) to c. 100 pmC, in 1180 BC (I have previously considered another level of Troy as the relevant one).

With my Biblical timeline, the one of Historia Scholastica, and of Martyrologium Romanum for Christmas Day, the C14 production would have had to happen at c. 10 ~ 11 times the present rate between Flood and Babel, supposing this to be Göbekli Tepe, and some more during Babel.

The increased radioactivity was how God lowered the lifespans, or part of it. It also produced the Ice Age.

With a Masoretic timeline the different levels would take a 25 times faster production of C14, or better of final addition into the atmosphere.

Another factor that would also increase the rate of production would be if it were instead of to Göbekli Tepe, to the Ziggurat of Ur, as David Livingston and Bodie Hodge believe.

This is because this Ziggurat is more recent, in its carbon dates, as well as its real history and that means there would have been fewer extra years, i e a higher carbon 14 level already reached.

Monday, January 29, 2024

"Scripture Cannot Be Broken" DIS-Proves Protestant Sola Scriptura


Everyone's favourite Ruslan is unduly uncritical of every Protestant's favourite Gavin:

The REAL Reason Why I'm Not a Catholic or Orthodox Christian...
Bless God Studios | 24 Jan. 2024
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rdp9ZcMp6i8


2:20 He presumes that the Jewish Sanhedrin, up to Condemning Jesus was fallible.

Can you prove it?

For instance, can you prove that any given instance of the Jewish Sanhedrin, prior to the Crucifixion, deciding a thing in due form falls under what Jesus calls moral error in Matthew 15 or Mark 7?

2:46 He calls Apostolic Tradition and Apostolic Succession, and Papacy and Councils "post-Apostolic" ...

Read Matthew 28:20. The Apostles were told:
  • they had to teach all nations (see previous verses) all truths
  • they had therein the assistance of Jesus being with them at all times.


The people who personally heard these words have died, unless perhaps St. John the Beloved has been taken up like Henoch and Elias. This means that Jesus is working through His Apostles on Earth right now physically through other mortal people than the ones hearing this.

This means episcopacy and papacy and councils and the Apostolic Tradition that they guard are Apostolic, not post-Apostolic.

You must admit there is some organ that is today strictly speaking Apostolic in God's eyes, rather than post-Apostolic. Pretending that the NT Scripture is the only candidate for this that's left is pretty ad hoc. And it's certainly not in the 27 books of the NT either.

3:49 The Proof text given makes the Bible ontologically unique compared to other writings.

It doesn't pretend that the Church doesn't share an equal uniqueness compared to other communities.

II Peter 1:21 is no proof text for the Bible having an ontological uniqueness lacking to the Church.

Some like to consider that the uniqueness lies in Scripture being "Theopneust" ... indeed, Genesis and Apocalypse are Theopneust in a way that the Iliad or the Aeneid are not. And we have a proof text for that.

We also have a proof text that the Apostles, in their flesh and blood, were Theopneust. John 20. Verse 22. Who breathed on them? God. They received Whom? God. By what? By breathing.

That's the exact ontological uniqueness that the Church retains, Matthew 28:20, all days up to Doomsday.

4:03 Were the Apostles engaging in Divine Speech?

See Acts 5. Verse 3.

But Peter said: Ananias, why hath Satan tempted thy heart, that thou shouldst lie to the Holy Ghost, and by fraud keep part of the price of the land

Ananias wasn't trying to cheat the book of Moses, or lie to the book of Acts, he was lying to Peter.

4:16 "Cannot be broken" ...

If he called them gods, to whom the word of God was spoken, and the scripture cannot be broken;
[John 10:35]

What were the previous words of the passage? John 10.

31 The Jews then took up stones to stone him. 32 Jesus answered them: Many good works I have shewed you from my Father; for which of these works do you stone me? 33 The Jews answered him: For a good work we stone thee not, but for blasphemy; and because that thou, being a man, maketh thyself God. 34 Jesus answered them: Is it not written in your law: I said you are gods?

The Protestant complaint against infallible Church is that it is "self idolatry" ... what was the Pharisaic complaint against Jesus, again?

In fact, it's not in the Torah, it's in the Psalms, so, Jesus is here showing the habit of calling all of the Tanakh "Torah" ...

I have said: You are gods and all of you the sons of the most High.
[Psalms 81:6]

If you read the psalm, it's an exhortation to judges, not to angels.

This means, King David is saying the Sanhedrin and similar judges are divine.

The things they were judging wrong on (according to the psalm) were single cases, not doctrinal issues.

If even a Sanhedrin of the Old Covenant was divine, how much more so a Council of the New Covenant?

4:53 You seem to equate Church authority today with "modern prophets" ... a Catholic would not make that equation.

St. Bridget telling a Swedish king to go on a Crusade against the Heathen in Novgorod or the seers of Fatima telling people to pray the Rosary and do penance for those who are not doing penance for themselves, these were prophets. They did not hold Church authority.

And obviously, they were prophets like Debbora was. In Scripture.

There was also an authority over the Christian Church in Scripture and if you believe that it is no longer there, you contradict Matthew 28:20.

Jesus is here adressing Peter, Andrew, James, John and seven more. This is clear from verse 16. He is adressing the highest level of authority he instituted within the disciples, whether you count that as "the twelve" (who were there minus Judas the traitor) or as "Peter" (who was after all one of the twelve and was among the hearers of these words).

Another sign He is giving this promise specifically to Church authority and not to all faithful in the Church simply as faithful, without any other distinction is, previous words:

Going therefore, teach ye all nations; baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.

A nation so taught and so baptised becomes part of the Church, but is even so distinct from its teacher and baptiser. Armenians are not all of them Gregory the Lightbringer. And obviously, Gregory the Lightbringer is the one who was most principally doing what Jesus here told the Apostles to do.

Now, wiki has this very interesting passage:

"After discovering Gregory's true identity, Tiridates had him thrown into a deep pit well called Khor Virap for 14 years. Gregory was miraculously saved from death and released after many years with the help of Tiridates' sister Khosrovidukht. Gregory then converted the King to Christianity, and Armenia then became the first country to adopt Christianity as a state religion in 301 AD. Gregory, the Illuminator, then healed King Tiridates, who the hagiographical sources say had been transfomed into a boar for his sins, and preached Christianity in Armenia. He was consecrated bishop of Armenia at Caesarea, baptized King Tiridates and the Armenian people, and traveled throughout Armenia, destroying pagan temples and building churches in their place."


Basically makes him the Armenian (and earlier) equivalent of St. Patrick.

"Patrick studied in Europe principally at Auxerre, but is thought to have visited the Marmoutier Abbey, Tours and to have received the tonsure at Lérins Abbey. Saint Germanus of Auxerre, a bishop of the Western Church, ordained him to the priesthood.[41][42]"


Not just that, according to the French wiki:

"Une tradition tout aussi incertaine, la Vita sancti Patricii de Muirchú, le fait se rendre ensuite à Auxerre auprès de saint Germain, où il devient diacre puis évêque39. La durée de son séjour en Gaule (au maximum de 415 à 432) est sujette à débat24."


Why were Patrick and Gregory the Illuminator bishops? Why were they in Gaul and Caesarea when they became so?

Well, because there is this thing, that the bishops are what Jesus spoke of when promising to be with the Eleven all days meaning, like you become a man by being procreated by a man and a woman going back to Adam and Eve, you are a "man of God" (technical term!) by being ordained by a bishop going back to Jesus and the Eleven. Gregory and Patrick were in Caesarea and Gaul because ordination and episcopal consecration were not available in Armenia or Ireland. They were not available because the so far entirely pagan countries were not containing any local diocese where the Apostolic Succession was perpetuated.

5:39 Here I was just asking whether Mark 7 (Matthew 15) actually speaks of formal decisions of the kind mentioned in Matthew 23.

Do you have any proof of this, or is this like Trent says we must believe three things concerning Adam (obviously as a real and individual person, not personification of a larger group), in Session V, 1546; but lots of Catholic priests (or supposed such at worst) teach it's OK to believe Adam and Eve were not the only people on earth when they incurred Original Sin.

There is a difference between the formal decisions of authority and urban legends spread by men in authority.

So, could the Pharisees in Mark 7 have cited a formal decision of the Sanhedrin that the washing of hands before a meal always obliged, even if it was impractical, like when you are on a road, or were the Pharisees expressing their collective "personal" prejudice in Mark 7?

In the latter case, you have no disproof of the Sanhedrin having been infallible up to condemning Jesus. In the former case, you maybe should start digging into the evidence for that, rather than just throwing it around.

6:28 While Tovia Singer accesses an Oral Law that's by now since soon 2000 years adulterated by the rejection of Jesus, perhaps you could ask him if the Oral Torah says:
  • one must wash the hands no matter where one is, even if one has no water, before eating
  • or, if one cannot, one must be unclean so as to be unfit to receive religious teaching.


That was basically what the Pharisees were insinuating in the Mark 7 situation. But did they have a formal decision of the Sanhedrin for it?

Is it in the Mishna as part of the Traditions from Moses on Mount Sinai?

6:38 Note, in Galatians 1:8, St. Paul is appealing to the Depositum fidei, but not to Scriptura.

He is in fact, in context, "the one we preached to you" appealing to precisely Oral Tradition / Traditio non scripta.

7:04 Yes, the Church does.

The Apostles were Theopneust. John 20. They were entrusted with all truth to all nations, via their successors. Matthew 28.
The Church (not the Scriptures) are Pillar and Ground of Truth. I Tim 3.
The Oral Tradition (not the Scriptures) test the words of possible "pillars of the Church". Galatians 1.
Tradition, whether Oral or written in a Canonic Book, is the faith one must stand fast by. II Thess. 2.
Scripture perfects a "man of God" who has received Oral Tradition about the faith in Jesus Christ. II Tim 3.

To state that the Church does not have anything even comparable to Scripture as infallibility is concerned is to contradict Scripture.

A Proestant could argue "yes, oral tradition in the Apostolic age was certainly binding, but by now it's so diluted, we need to look solely to the NT books as genuine expressions of it" — an argument I have seen made. But that in itself contradicts the promise in Matthew 28:20.

7:13 "these were given directly by the Apostles"

Stating their successors are not just in some jurisdictional way, but ontologically, inferior to them is to contradict Matthew 28:20.

"while the Scriptures were being written"

And we know for a fact that the tradition on OT Exegesis which Paul gave Tim and Jesus gave the Disciples on the road to Emmaus is not among these writings, except in very small portions.

If you add up the NT passages that say ... Matthew 1:22—23, John 19:36—37 ... you will not have the subject of 12 km worth of walking or 32 km worth of walking, whichever was the distance they were making. (60 stades or according to one manuscript 160 stades).

This furthermore shows that the arrangement God intended for this time in relation to ensuing times of the Church do not involve the plan of "everything is sooner or later written down, or it's fallible, in retrospect".

Note also, he presents this as a common sense argument, he does not cite any Scripture, OT or NT, for it.

7:20 "we don't have these oral traditions"

This is the disputed point. I say Gavin Ortlund here contradicted the promise of Christ.

"already in the II C. Christians disagreed on basic historic facts"

Two solutions, each applicable on diverse matters:
1) one solution is, the historic fact is so "basic" that it's not doctrinal, therefore is not the point of infallibility
2) and another solution is, the disagreeing people were divided into one faction faifthful and another faction inattentive or unfaithful to tradition, but tradition won, because that's what God wanted for His Church.

7:23 "like the date of Easter"

W a i t ... no, that's not a historical fact.

It's a historical fact that Jesus was crucified on a Friday within the Jewish Easter and rose on a Sunday / Lord's Day / 1st day of the week, also within it.

It's a historical fact that the Jewish easter is tied to the evening after the 14th day of Nisan.

It's a very simple calendaric fact, that you cannot commemorate both equally, because the Hebrew month of Nisan is not tied to week days.

You cannot both have Maundy Thursday on a Thursday each year, and on the 14th of Nisan each year. Different choices were made. By the time of Irenaeus, the different choice in Rome and in Asia minor were "traditions" with a small t, neither of them was Apostolic Tradition in the doctrinal sense.

This means Gavin Ortlund overlooks very basic distinctions between knowledge and commemoration, or between doctrine and disciple.

7:35 I think the difference there "still is" refers to on whether Maundy Thursday and Easter Sunday were 14th and 17th Nisan (as Catholics claim, and I think Armenian Apostolic agree) or they were 13th and 16th Nisan, since Caerularius claimed Jesus was crucified on the 14th.

Caerularius claims [about]:
And it was the parasceve of the pasch, about the sixth hour, and he saith to the Jews: Behold your king.
[that /it]
a) happened on the sixth day hour of Good Friday
b) "parasceve of the pasch" refers to the 14th of Nisan, not to any Friday within the Pasch.

As a consequence he condemned as Judaising heresy, also shared by the "accursed Armenians" / Monophysites to use unleavened bread.

There are three solutions. For the Roman Catholic view.

a) the Last Supper was done first or second night hour and the above judgement by Pilate was about midnight, which is what sixth night hour would mean
b) or "parascheve of the pasch" refers to a Friday within the Jewish Easter
c) or Jesus and the Temple started Nisan on different days, Jesus saw the new moon one evening earlier than the Temple.

And even this is not dogma. The only thing that's dogmatic from the Catholic point of view is that both leavened and unleavened bread is, in reference to each rite, valid matter for the Eucharist. Cardinal Humbert did not ask Caerularius to celebrate in unleavened bread, but to punish the crowd that had committed sacrilege about Hosts in unleavened bread present in Constantinople due to priests of the Latin rite. That's what Caerularius refused.

7:54 It is very ironic that when he pretends to analyse that the NT shows no hint of post-Apostolic infallibility, he screenshots Titus 1, which gives us the precise mechanism by which Apostolic Tradition is usually transmitted correctly to later generations.

8:02 He bases lots of weight on that Augustine quote.

He pretends that "later councils" correcting "earlier ones" proves that "ecumenical councils were not infallible to St. Augustine."

Does the Latin of this period have words for "explicitate" or "complete" (as in complete a message already given by adding extra information)?

I don't think so. So his use of "correct" should arguably simply say that the later council adds info left out in the earlier one. There were exactly two councils at his time. Nicaea I, Constantinople I.

There is no doctrinal point at which Constantinople I says "no, Nicaea I was wrong" ... there are points at which it said "we must add this" ...

So, even if Augustine when writing this imagined there was a point on which Nicaea I was wrong, on which Constantinople I corrected it, this would have been a personal opinion not brought out by the facts.

It's also ironic that in pretending there are no Infallible Authorities after the last Apostle died, none left to us except NT books, he is not quoting any NT book, he's giving a series of quotemines from Tradition. [actually just precisely one quotemined quote]

8:12 Here, Gavin Ortlund presumes that II Vatican Council is a real Council of the Church.

Or that counting it as such is the Catholic position.

8:33 "can be misinterpreted by virtually everybody for 100's of years"

This is not the sole reception of the Council of Florence.

There were theologians holding to the position of St. Thomas that a person who has been insufficiently instructed is not accountable for missing the one true Church, and under certain circumstances might gain forgiveness for the sins he's accountable for. But nevertheless, insufficient instruction and simply being incapable of thinking it through like someone with Down's, is not supposed to be the situation of an adult whom one is talking to. An adult in 19th C. Norrland countryside, well, that's possible. But an adult you are reaching over the internet, who gives intelligent content. No. Dito if you hold a learned correspondence by letter with James VI and I or with an Eastern Orthodox.

B U T, again, this critique of Councils or Traditions is equally a critique about Scripture. While it would still be infallible, it would have also been misinterpreted, on precisely Ortlund's view (and specifically about the Church), for centuries.

8:41 "fallible human beings" / "God and His word"

Any NT book:
  • was written by the hand of someone who, as the person he was, was a fallible human being;
  • was accepted as God's word by at first one and then more local Churches, also consisting materially of persons who, as the persons they were, were fallible human beings.


This is not the Atheist argument that the Bible isn't the word of God.

It's more like "either you're Atheist or you're Catholic or you're inconsistent" ... Kristi Burke simply took Gavin Ortlund's outlook, also obviously, Ray Comfort's outlook on the Council of Trent, or of Florence, and then applied the exact same logic to the writing of Luke or Ephesians.

Yes, Luke, like Eugene IV, was:
  • human
  • still "in via" — i e not yet having died
  • therefore in and of himself fallible.


If we admit God could grant him infallibility, for the occasion of a Gospel giving infallible and inerrant truth, why would or could God not grant a council the same, for a very comparable purpose? If God couldn't or wouldn't grant the council or the Pope that, why was St. Luke special?

9:15 "not the only authority, but the only infallible authority"

Well, sounds like a copout to me.

Now, is it the only authority that's:
  • binding
  • on all?


Or can other authority also be, fallible or not:
  • binding
  • on all?


If a JW says "why should I believe the Trinity, the word is not there in the Bible, and you said yourself that Nicaea and the Creed have no infallible authority" can you say he is still bound (and as long as he remains JW, condemned) by it?

If no, how can you define Christianity?
If yes, how is that humane, unless God grants infallibility to the authority that's binding on all?

9:35 So, you are a fallible human person. Charles Taze Russell was a fallible human person.

Why should your testing of the Trinity whether it's in Scripture or not be worth more than his?

Or good people going to heaven when they die (after purgatory, which it seems you and he agree to deny, for most except a few real diehard saints)?

Or hardened sinners going to extinction rather than eternal torment?

I have an answer. St. Athanasius and a few more, totalling 318 for the bishops, had Apostolic succession from the men on whom God breathed in John 20:22.

They did not have personal infallibility for every move they do in private, but they had infallibility collectively, especially when confirmed by the legates of Pope St. Sylvester.

10:35 The same goes obviously for whether the Rosary or your prayer app is best for getting transformed inside out, by God.

Saturday, January 27, 2024

Babel and Carbon Dates: Babel in Carbon Dates


Babel and Carbon Dates: Babel in Carbon Dates · Carbon Dates Are Different

Evolutionists Will HATE This Video . . .
Answers in Genesis | 2 Dec. 2022
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ey98tT84PKA


36:01 Ah no, that's not post-Babel.

Cave art is mainly carbon dated 20 000 to 13 000 BP, Babel aka Göbekli Tepe to 9600 to 8600 BC, so this is before Babel, during Noah's remaining lifetime after the Flood.

It could be by Noah and his wife.

PyroBen
@Pyr0Ben
It's possible that shortly after the flood, it took some time for C14 levels to build up and stabilize to what we have today, making objects post-flood and shortly after appear older than they are

Hans Georg Lundahl
@hglundahl
Not just possible @Pyr0Ben ... certain.

Before the Flood, C14 rose very slowly, probably because lots more CO2 was in the atmosphere, just as there was much more O2 and proportionately less N2.

After the Flood, the C14 was formed ten times more rapidly than now.

It had slowed down to present production rate (at least comparable) and reached roughly speaking stability by 1179 BC, when Troy fell.

PyroBen
@hglundahl how do you know that?

Hans Georg Lundahl
@Pyr0Ben I did the maths.

It's at least one possible model, if you want to propose another one, go for it, we'll compare the strength and weakness of each.

If it's the "ten times faster" etc you ask about, otherwise, please be more specific about what you mean by "that"!

Hans Georg Lundahl
Oh, @Pyr0Ben ... if you meant on a more general level any given thing I obviously give signs of thinking I know, and which you consider you don't know, I learned a thing or two about drawing out implications from a certain C. S. Lewis and that's a habit that sticks with me.

If A is a known truth and B is a known truth, and A and B strictly imply C, I'll consider C a known truth as well.

PyroBen
@hglundahl I'm just interested in knowing more about your theory and how you came to that conclusion. No need to get defensive

Hans Georg Lundahl
@Pyr0Ben OK.

Back in 2016, I mentioned things like U-Pb being flawed due to possibly more relevant Pb being originally in the sample and added sth about the lines of your first comment. This was on a campus, the same where back then and now I enjoy access to a university library. I got the reply, if carbon 14 had needed to go up that fast, all vertebrate life on earth, anything except spiders would have been nuked.

I had some time previous to that been complaining why CMI, AiG, Kent Hovind didn't have any attempt of calibrating the « how much older than it really is » from century to century of real time. So, I decided to « kill two birds with one stone » (I like birds, I prefer the Swedish and German saying!). Calculating how quickly carbon 14 had risen would also imply calculating how many extra years a given real year would typically have.

I actually started out with the idea that anything from the Flood could be anything between 20 000 BP and 50 000 BP in carbon dates, as per what CMI presented as a ball park. You know the carbon dated Triceratops horridus page. But that was not viable as one value, so I decided to use the medium value of the dates for the single value.

Let’s be clear on one thing. The last three thousand years, carbon 14 has been roughly speaking stable in the atmosphere. If we suppose it has gone up from 80 to 100 pmC instead, then the halflife would need to be double. I don’t exclude this other hypothesis, but I work from the hypothesis 5730 years is the correct halflife, roughly speaking resulting in pmC values matching those for samples of the last 3000 years, the biggest « twiggle » being the Hallstatt plateau.

When I started, I was ready to give only the last 2500 years stability – fall of Jerusalem for Nebuchadnezzar to present. I was making a very clumsy try, adding extra years rather than calculating rising carbon 14 levels. On this version, Abraham came to get the time period of Göbekli Tepe. This made me look out twice later on when I met Göbekli Tepe in other media, on a more advanced stage of my research.

Yes, Göbekli Tepe was chronologically speaking pretty ideal for Genesis 10~11 Babel, and other criteria started to line up as well. If Graham Hancock believed someone had received visits from space ships, I saw the same similarity to a rocket launch and reread Genesis 11:4. « a tower, the top of which shall reach into heaven » … what would they have called a rocket back then ?

So, later on I started to use beginning and ending carbon dates in the archaeology for Göbekli Tepe as beginning and end of the Babel project, from 350 to 401 after the Flood, i e from death of Noah to birth of Peleg. This is btw LXX minus second Cainan chronology for Genesis 11. If you use Masoretic or fuller LXX or Masoretic plus second Cainan, Göbekli Tepe will still be a good midpoint between Flood and Genesis 14. Abraham was c. 80 (older than 75, younger than 86), so his birth date and then 80 years later matches, I first thought « end of chalcolithic must be 3200 BC in carbon dates » but then found out reed mats from En Geddi had been carbon dated to 3500 BC. The archaeology of En Geddi and the chronology of Genesis 14 are linked through the work of one Osgood. If he had given more attention to carbon dating, he might have started doing the work I am doing. He left it to me, so to speak.

Genesis 14 = carbon dated « 3500 BC » is the most sure I am of anything in my tables. But Babel = Göbekli Tepe is not far behind.

The way I did the tables (after a certain time) was take points A and B of a given stretch where they have known Biblical and carbon dates, calculate the carbon levels from the extra years, let carbon level A decay according to the time A to B, deduce this from the carbon level B, divide this « replenishing of carbon 14 » concretely in that time by what « replenishing of carbon 14 » would normally be now, conclude the « how many times faster » from that and then apply across the smaller divisions between A and B.

PyroBen
@hglundahl I won't pretend to understand most of what you're saying, but it sounds super cool. You should make a video on it! I'll go ahead and subscribe to your channel so I'll see it :)

Hans Georg Lundahl
@Pyr0Ben I have a better idea.

I'm not a videast, I write on blogs, how about visiting my blog here:

Assorted retorts from yahoo boards and elsewhere
https://assortedretorts.blogspot.com/


Tomorrow this dialogue will be up there, with some links to other material I made on it.


a) Latest and Very Latest versions of my tables:

Have you Really Taken ALL the Factors into Account? · New Tables · Why Should one Use my Tables? · And what are the lineups between archaeology and Bible, in my tables? · Bases of C14 · An example of using previous · Difference with Carbon 14 from Other Radioactive Methods · Tables I-II and II-III and III-IV, Towards a Revision? · The Revision of I-II, II-III, III-IV May be Unnecessary, BUT Illustrates What I Did When Doing the First Version of New Tables

b) not all that is radiometric is carbon!

Do You Believe Homo Sapiens Underwent a Neurological Mutation to Us?

Isn't There a Geological Column in Laetoli, and Aren't the Footprints Proof of Human Ancestors? · Human Ancestor or Human during Flood? · These Footprints Look Human to Me?

c) my very first attempts, in French:

1) Datation de Carbone 14, comment ça carre avec la Chronologie Biblique, 2) Correction de la table, taux de C14, et implications, 3) Multiples échecs de trouver une meilleure table que les précédentes, 4) Une hypothèse à ne pas retenir, 5) Encore un échec ... C14 ... et un double, probablement (mais je serais bref), 6) Examinons une hypothèse qui se trouve contrefactuelle un peu de près, 7) Un essai, décision de demander l'aide à un professeur de maths, 8) Avec un peu d'aide de Fibonacci ... j'ai une table, presque correcte, 9) Une table peut-être évitable ou contournable?, 10) Et les autres méthodes radioactives?


36:50 I think you can guess Nimrod's pre-Babel aka pre-Neolithic, activity.

Mammoth hunters would probably be "mighty hunters before the Lord" both in the most sentimental sense, someone really good at hunting animals, and in the worst sense, someone good at human headhunting, at forcing other people to work for him - since Mammoth hunt arguably was dangerous team work.

39:07 Now, that child post-Babel is, as per the Ice age setting more likely to be pre-Babel but post-Flood, like remaining 350 years of Noah's life after the Flood.

The linguistic idea of calling him Jabed (applying Germanic sound shift to Japheth) is pretty bad other than as an injoke for anyone this far back - it is probable the sound shift happened somewhere around 500 BC, simultaneously in the Germanic family (counting as Indo-European) and in Hungarian and Etruscan (probably related) as well as in Phrygian, perhaps a bit earlier.

Evolutionist Talking Point : "Creationists Don't Know What They are Talking About"


Creation Trick: Fake It!
Creation Myths | 25 Jan. 2024
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PFTMuU0eGiI


0:32 I am a Creationist.

I consider at the Flood in 2957 BC, the carbon 14 level was 1.628 pmC, meaning it's carbon dated to 39 000 BP (tephra of Campi Flegrei).
I consider at the fall of Troy in 1179 BC, the carbon level was 100 pmC, meaning the relevant layer of Troy is carbon dated to 1180 BC +/- x.

I consider the time between saw a rise of carbon 14 resulting from an addition of C14 to the atmosphere up to 10~11 times faster than now, for the decades after Younger Dryas (the decades of Babel / Göbekli Tepe) even faster than that.

Would you mind telling me on what level I am faking that?

2:45 Excuse me, is that the guy from Standing for Truth who used to be in Med School?

They are often enough ignorant on non-medical subjects. And they seem to have surnames like Dunning or, in more German cases, Kruger.

It's not about Creationist, it's about Med School student on non-Med subject.

4:08 You pronounce it Hoo-vinn, not Haw-vinde. It's a Norwegian name.

4:21 "what mechanisms of evolution don't work?"

Well, for one the category would involve creating new functional genes by mutations.

For another the category would involve creating multigene functions or cell types, like the retina of the cichlids has ten relevant genes, getting at the cells of the retina (that's non-technical, I know) during different stages of the gestation (not sure if you can say that for non-viviparian creatures), and since on the population in a Mexican cave TWO of the genes have a mutation, the retina is totally blind, though eyes actually develop.

I am pretty sure, when you get to different kinds, the genes from one kind would partly involve genes for cell types that don't exist in the other and partly involve genes for extant cell types, but at parameters (alleles) that would be lethal to the other kind.

Creation Myths
@CreationMyths
De novo gene formation has been directly observed.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@hglundahl
Creation Myths; namely?

Creation Myths
Hans-Georg Lundahl; Nyonase and anti-freeze proteins in arctic fish are two examples that come to mind immediately, but if you google "de novo genes" you'll find countless examples in the literature. We've gotten really good and finding the non-protein-coding regions that taxonomically restricted genes came from (within groups that creationists acknowledge share common ancestry, so no "well you're assuming common ancestry" nonsense, thank you).

Hans-Georg Lundahl
Creation Myths; "Nyonase and anti-freeze proteins in arctic fish"

When you say "has been directly observed" you actually meant it hadn't been directly observed, since you don't have ancestral populations + the original form of what became those genes.

You don't mean "directly observed" you actually mean "concluded with Evolutionary certainty" which is sth different.

Speciation really has been directly observed on Galapagos, among finches. The new species being a hybrid shows the barrier to reproduction between two other supposed species was not a complete one.

But when "directly observed" would profit your narrative, it lacks. You put in something else than "directly observed" into the epistemic slot of this.

"finding the non-protein-coding regions that taxonomically restricted genes came from"

How do you know those are not devolution in the non-coding versions?

Creation Myths
Hans-Georg Lundahl; "How do you know those are not devolution in the non-coding versions?"

Read the rest of that sentence.

Do you think "directly observed" means "we literally sat and watched it happen"? Because if that's your standard of evidence I have bad news for you regarding creation...

(Question: do we have the ancestral versions of the sequences I'm talking about? yes, yes we do. Google it.)

Hans-Georg Lundahl
Creation Myths; "Do you think "directly observed" means "we literally sat and watched it happen"?"

That's what happened with the new species of finches on the Galapagos. One year it wasn't there, the next year it was.

"yes, yes we do. Google it"

You seem unwilling to argue in your own words that the ancestral versions that are non-coding are really ancestral to the functional genes.

At a minimum, what paper gives the best argument for that?

"Because if that's your standard of evidence I have bad news for you regarding creation..."

Not really if we since then have literally watched God do sth really qualifying Him as God or Moses as His prophet (ten plagues, Red Sea come to mind).

Obviously, God watched Himself create. And if you think Aliens could have pulled off the Exodus, check the Resurrection.

Robert Adsett
@robertadsett5273
Well, since it’s highly unlikely that the exodus happened…

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@robertadsett5273 On the contrary, that it didn't happen and was recorded at whatever point in time as happening, and became the collective memory after not being so, is unlikely.

Robert Adsett
@hglundahl so we agree exodus probably did not happen?

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@robertadsett5273 No, a collective probably doesn't get a false memory like that.

Robert Adsett
@hglundahl what memory? All we have is a story that was passed down orally until it was written down. When that story has none of the external evidence you would expect to find it is unlikely to be true. (collectives also don’t have memories, people do and they only last as long as they are alive at most. And those memories change over time as shown by memory studies on memories of 9/11)

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@robertadsett5273 "what memory?"

Collective memory.

"All we have is a story that was passed down orally until it was written down"

According to the Exodus account, one main participant actually did some writing.

Now, supposing (which I don't agree) that this is an insert to make the collective memory more credible, we still have the fact that the Exodus event was remembered as a real event, that really was part of the people's collective story some definite time ago.

"When that story has none of the external evidence you would expect to find it is unlikely to be true."

Collective memory as opposed to collective assignment to fictional sphere is definitely one external evidence. The most consistently found one, when we go this far back.

"collectives also don’t have memories, people do and they only last as long as they are alive at most."

By "collective memory" I do not mean a collective faculty of memory, I mean those in the collective generally remember being told of it as a genuine part of their past, so it's collectively held memory content.

"And those memories change over time as shown by memory studies on memories of 9/11"

Nevertheless, undisputed parts of the "collective memory" in the sense I mean are :

  • planes were hijacked
  • Osama Bin Laden was blamed for planning it, and he was in Afghanistan at a certain moment
  • planes crashed and buildings fell (disputed whether they fell because of the planes or sth else was involved)
  • many people died while in the buildings falling from too great a height, while standing to close to things that fell, while suffocating in the rubble ....
  • Bush Jr. responded by an ultimatum to Afghanistan, that led to war, as the Mollah's refused to cooperate.


Robert Adsett
@hglundahl again, since you answered what memory with memory without detailing what you’re talking about. What memory? It can’t be exodus since it’s a story not a memory.

To have undisputed facts, you must have evidence.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@robertadsett5273 "It can’t be exodus since it’s a story not a memory"

That's YOUR very late come assessment.

"To have undisputed facts"

You misconstrue "undisputed" with "undisputable" ... my evidence is that the status of the story as precisely memory is not in fact disputed early on.

@robertadsett5273 Like in 9/11 ... there are parts of the collective memory that are undisputed.


4:31 The mechanisms (with viable offspring permanently exhibiting the results) are:

  • chromosomal and local mutations (cross-overs, reduplications, possibly fusions, changing an A to a T or U ...)
  • selection
  • specific pressures involved in the selection (perhaps you like to take this as part of previous)
  • genetic drift (a random selection of genes that become more or less prominent in a population)
  • hybridisation (combining chromosomes from different populations that are already dissimilar)


For non-mammals / non-birds certainly you can add polyploidisation
  • plants and salamanders can exchibit tetra and octoploidy
  • fish, lizards and mosquitos exhibit triploid fertile examples, with parthenogenesis
  • I think mosquitos exhibit monoploidy as well. I could be wrong.


A tetraploid mammal either doesn't exist, period, or if it does, it's the Red Viscacha Rat (not red, not a Viscacha, not a rat ....).

(Was it Viscacha? I think so. Anyway, the Viscacha was not the tetraploid candidate, it was the Red Viscacha Rat)

Some mammals have fluid numbers of chromosomes, within limits. The Okapi kan have 2n=three different values (I think 44, 45 and 46).

There is a certain problem for diversification of mammal kinds here. A spoof comment by Hovind put me on the trace, but I am not making the same argument as that one. It's not about the tobacco plant being more advanced than man, it's about how mammals get beyond 2n=48. Some certainly do. And 2n=48 seems to be so pervasive, that the original mammalian placental population would have been 2n=48 rather than higher, if evolution were true.

Note, I said viable. Robertsonian fission is not viable. A non-chromosomal tetraploid human will typically die before birth, one clinical case survived a week or two, perhaps a month, in a very bad state before dying. I suppose a tetraploid fetus triggers the immune system of the womb, is not recognised as a fetus, or sth.

Reduplication events could not very easily if at all produce two new chromosomes from one, each with two telomeres, one centromere and arms of genome between centromere and each telomere. I was refused an answer on whether the telomeres attach to the outer end of the arms due to telomeres having been there in the chromosome before and being copied or whether telomeres attach at any end to an arm, simply by "freefloating telomerase" in the specific part when the chromosome is being copied.

And I don't know if you say we have 23 chromosome pairs and 46 chromosomes or 23 chromosomes and 46 chromatids for 2n=46. I think both usages exist.

So, if I misunderstood any word, you have a golden opportunity to correct it, I have already shown sufficiently I don't claim to be an expert, I'm uncertain about some parts of the argument, and even, since that question was not answered when I put it, years ago, that I haven't used the argument for a long time, even if I didn't delete the posts from back earlier where I made it.

Meanwhile, a simpler one is, now I am asking you:

Exactly which of the mechanisms given above would enable a new cell type, like a cone or a tap, to evolve?

6:34 Wait ... would the fifth mechanism be inbreeding? Founder effect?

I just looked up the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, and the one opposite that was "Very large population size. The population should be effectively infinite in size."

7:50 "halfstrand from ma and halfstrand from dad"

Is he confusing the copying of DNA at cell divisions with the chromosome / chromatid (1/46, just so we don't quarrel about what the correct term is) being in pairs?

I think he has confused meiosis (whichever of the two processes it is) with the other one, I forget the name of.

8:58 Misrecalling a foreign name or even an uncommon word is not all that uncommon.

I don't think it affects the argument.

9:15 Here is a different explanation.

The book he is citing is vital for his argument, since it contains one paragraph (or whatever), but it was NOT one of his text books.

He never discussed the book while getting his PhD, so he never got corrected on the name.

And as said, misrecalling a foreign name is not all that uncommon.

9:47 You have so far not shown Jeanson was not understanding the actual argument.

Misciting a source is not the same as misunderstanding it.

10:51 What are the mechanisms of what's often called language evolution? Like Latin to French?

First, whether you call them mechanisms or not is a matter of philosophy, which doesn't affect which ones they are.

  • phonemes change
  • ambiguous morphemes are replaced or modified at one or other situation (solem + solum => sol, ambiguous, except solem => sol => soleyl / solecle whichever was the state of - iculum at this point; amabit + amavit => amave(t), ambiguous, except future amave(t) => amare ave(t)
  • analogy restores phonetical or morphemical similarities between different forms of a word (to newer or older standard)

    amo, amas, amat, amamus, amatis, amant
    aime, aimes, aime, amens, ametz, aiment (non-stressed a remains a, stressed becomes an open e sound, spelled ai, è, or e before a consonant
    sorry: aimons, aimetz, aiment

    amare ave + ave, avea => amare ave, amare avea (that's why Romance has a conditional, a new tense, it's a past future)

  • word forms come in from elsewhere
    for instance, for "we love" we would expect "amens" or "aimens" but we actually find "amons => aimons" and the -ons ending is not a regular French development of Latin -amus

  • like words
    septentriones => le nord

  • forms get out of use or into use
    enter for instance conditional, exit the Latin six case system

  • redundant features become essential
    ego amo librum Tolkieni / word order S V O supports the cases Nominative and Accusative
    j'aime un livre de Tolkien / word order S V O now is essentially doing what Nominative and Accusative were mainly doing back in Latin

    (ego) amo, (tu) amas => j'aime, tu aimes (the is is not pronoounced, so the pronouns need to be there now).


Second, given what they are, which of these would you consider to be relevant for developing human language for the first time from a non-human communication system like we see among undisputed primates and undisputed apes?

Before you say "I don't know, ask Tomasello!" I already did. Soon four months ago. He had no answer on how a one tier system became a three tier system (phoneme, morpheme, phrase).

Correspondence of Hans Georg Lundahl : Tomasello Not Answering
Thursday 28 September 2023
https://correspondentia-ioannis-georgii.blogspot.com/2023/09/tomasello-not-answering.html

Friday, January 26, 2024

No Deception, Your Apologies, Just a Thing You Hadn't Learned to Read : an Implication


My Apologies Leaves Out Parts of the Argument He Pretends to Refute · Dialogue under My Apologies' Video : was already 382 infallible? · "My Apologies" Claims to Defend Infallible Scripture As Somehow Accessible Without Infallible Church · No Deception, Your Apologies, Just a Thing You Hadn't Learned to Read : an Implication

Church History DECEPTION!
My Apologies | 24 Jan. 2024
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EBrBoyBCWVQ


4:07 Definitely compares Eves disobedience to Mary's obedience.

Now, obedience to God is a quality predicated of Her Son whom we already know to be sinless.

4:15 "makes no comment at all on her sin or lack thereof"

Kind of does when you remember what sin means in Christian theology.

4:33 "what the virgin Eve had bound in unbelief"

By persuading her husband Adam

"the Virgin Mary loosed by faith"

By persuading the new Adam, Whom She was educating.

This is not just a case of one act of obedience, though a great one, it's a question of Who was teaching Jesus when He was very small.

Eve could not have corrupted Adam if she had not herself sinned.

Mary could not have kept the new Adam upright, if She had not been sinless.

Note, St. Ireneaeus doesn't just call her "occasion" for salvation (the word certainly exists in Latin), he called Her "cause" of it.

Bill Pletikapich
@billpletikapich5640
Outstanding pull ! For me, this also obviates the meaning of original sin.

Hans Georg Lundahl
@hglundahl
@billpletikapich5640 What does? In what way? Sorry if I'm obtuse.

Bill Pletikapich
@hglundahl I seemed to read your typology points at the right time - They got me noodling on original sin and the role of Mary throughout Jesus life. Original Sin - On the surface it's an inherited sin, a stain, a blemish. What I had never really pondered was the privation and loss. We had original grace ordered to God inherent in our nature. Then, this gift and its privileges were forfeited by original sin. Our original integral nature is now a loss or privation where we retain our memory and the wounds of our loss. When God's angel declared Mary "full of grace", it obviates that sinful man came from original sin of Eve and sinless Jesus came from sinless Mary . Body of Christ, from Mary's body. Blood of Christ from Mary's blood. Where Abraham, the Father of Faith, required covenants with God to stop sinning and come to obedience, Mary birthed the new and everlasting covenant without consternation "Let it be to me according to your will". Without a rich biblical understanding of Mary's role in salvation history, its easy to overlook the church fathers -"obedience", "without stain or blemish", "pain free birth", "cause of salvation", etc.

@hglundahl The concept that Mary had to mother "raise" Jesus got me thinking: Mary birthed Jesus, she interceded at His first miracle, She was at His death on the cross when Jesus declared her as our Mother, She was in the upper room as Queen Mother of The Church and she now sits "clothed with the sun, and the moon under her feet, and upon her head a crown of twelve stars". This all appears to be above the pay grade of a sinful human mother.

Hans Georg Lundahl
@billpletikapich5640 Key word: sinful.

Sinless = also victorious against the old serpent.

Where does it say?

"blessed among women" ...

Like Jael was victorious against Sisera and Judith against Holophernes.


5:40 This is a bit more direct than St. Irenaeus:

Ὑπὸ τὴν σὴν εὐσπλαγχνίαν,
καταφεύγομεν, Θεοτόκε.
Τὰς ἡμῶν ἱκεσίας,
μὴ παρίδῃς ἐν περιστάσει,
ἀλλ᾽ ἐκ κινδύνων λύτρωσαι ἡμᾶς,
μόνη Ἁγνή, μόνη εὐλογημένη.


From a Coptic service from 250 AD.

How do you read "alone pure, alone blessed" (in the feminine, not obviously excluding her son was pure and blessed in the masculine)?

To me this seems a pretty blatant show of belief She was sinless. And specifically, the "mone" seems to indicate her justice and sinlessness goes beyond what other women can have by being redeemed after having already fallen. Therefore, unfallen.

6:10 Yeah, that's where I quoted Tertullian from.

But ... "quotes that don't actually support the doctrine in question" ... does that mean "that do not state it in identical words"?

"The Father is God, the Son is God, the Holy Spirit is God.
The Father is not the Son or the Holy Spirit.
The Son is not the Father or the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit is not the Father or the Son.
Yet they are one God, not three Gods."


Find a verbatim quote in the Bible?

6:27 It's more like you haven't learned to read.

You have not learned to read a statement and capture the statements that logically go with it, that is.

I suppose when it comes to reading nursery rhymes and car travel maps, you do just fine.

The fact that they need to compare Mary to Eve is in itself a good argument for Her sinlessness, especially when Eve's disobedience (the first human sin if not the decisive one) is compared to Her obedience, over and over again.