Hello,
I am a new listener and have enjoyed four episodes so far. I really like the format -- friendly, informative and civil. I think it's helpful to hear the best arguments from each side.
I've noticed, however, that many of Norton's arguments / explanations rely in part or in essence on "what the Bible says" on a topic. However, as an atheistic listener I find this frustrating, because it takes the discussion away form what is often based on logic / empiricism / ethics into a statement which is offered as authoritative but is of value only to a Christian.
I one took the Bible literally, then I could understand offering a passage from the Bible as evidence. However, non-literalists seem willing to acknowledge the Bible has factual errors, contradictions, uses analogies and parables, suffers from prejudices of ancient and distance peoples, etc.
If one takes this latter view then, how is it helpful to offer up a passage from the Bible as evidence without justifying why this quote (a) isn't one that is a mis-translation (b) isn't one which is meant as an analogy (c) isn't a parable (d) isn't merely a cultural anachronism and therefore should be taken somewhat literally?
My impression is that the Bible was once taken much more literally by most people. Over time, as the explanatory power of science grew, an increasing number of passages in the Bible were acknowledged to be false. (The age of the earth, heliocentrism, evolution, the value of pi, etc.) Similarly, as broadly held cultural norms (often based on humanistic principles) evolved, various moral prescriptions were viewed as anachronistic and to be ignored. Thus, while in the past many people used the Bible to justify slavery, few do so today. Fewer people use the Bible to justify misogyny today than in the past. Few people suggest that a rape victim should marry her rapist even though this is suggested in the Bible. At some point, when the broad culture advances Christians will probably place comments in the Bible about homosexuality in the same camp as those about slavery. It's in the Bible but with their modern perspective they will be able to justify ignoring it for one reason or another.
Given this perspective, it seems quite arbitrary then to quote the Bible to justify an argument. One of the episodes I listened to was on homosexuality. It seems the co-hosts agreed that (a) for many homosexuality was an inborn impulse (created by God?) not a chosen one (b) for many, it imposed no social cost and was harmless to others (c) it was probably unlikely that most people could change their impulses. Unstated but probably agreed by both hosts was that punishing people for things they couldn't change was morally ambiguous. All this was good: logical, based on ethics and empirical evidence.
Yet in the face of these rational arguments, Norton brought up alleged support in the Bible for condemning gays. OK, maybe the Bible said this, but how does one justify quoting these passages while disavowing similar ones on slavery / rape / genocide?
TOPIC IDEA
All of this leads me to my topic suggestion. Rather than allowing Christians to engage in ex-post special pleading about what in the Bible should be followed and what shouldn't, discuss optimal principles which in theory any intelligent person could use to parse the Bible. In other words, define a set of rules / principles / guidelines about how one can determine which parts of the Bible one should absolutely believe, which one should ignore, and which are unclear? Reasonable principles might be (a) believe those that are not contradicted by consensus science worldview (b) believe those passages that are supported by historical evidence outside the Bible (c) ignore moral prescriptions which violate the Golden Rule (d) etc. This is entirely possible in other areas of knowledge. For example, it would be fairly simple to define rules for judging scientific principles, e.g. (a) believe theories which are confirmed by increasing volumes of evidence (b) place weight on theories which make predictions that are shown to be true (c) question theories when new evidence arises that is inconsistent with the theory (d) etc.
It would be interesting to come up with the rules in advance, then go through some parts of the Bible to see what the rules would suggest? It would be particularly interesting to contrast this exercise with how the Bible seems actually to be parsed: (a) Christians believe factual claims in the Bible until science proves them wrong (b) Christians believe moral claims in the Bible until the prevailing morality changes then they don't (e.g. slavery, misogyny, etc.) (c) Christians generally affirm passages that show God / Jesus in a good light and disavow / ignore those that show him in a bad light.
The fact that Norton quotes passages justifying prejudice against gay people but not promoting slavery is more consistent with the latter approach than the former. I would be interested to see what kind of rules, established in advance, would justify our current view of the Bible.
Of course, if the Bible isn't generally reliable, or it isn't clear whether any individual fact or moral claim is reliable, then it shouldn't be used as evidence.
Thanks! I look forward to listening to more podcasts, even if only to better understand the Christian point of view.
Michael


