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you make a good point here, and i suggest that even in Christ's day there were people who it might be said heard Christ logically, and took Him literally when He stated that He had to leave so that He could return, and we have their testimonies in Acts...and we also have Paul taking up collections for them after some years had passed.Wormwood said:You are dodging the point and I am not going to let you get away with it. Your point was that our reasoning methods in the modern day cause us to misunderstand how the ancients would have understood the Bible. Yet YOUR reasoning methods are leading you to conclusions that were rejected from the very people you claim your are thinking like and that modern thinkers are not! Don't you see the irony here? You are basically saying, "The ancient communities would not have drawn the conclusions we are drawing." I say, "Um, well history disagrees with your interpretations on how ancients would have understood these texts." And you say, "Oh, well thats just because the blind lead the blind."
So basically, your point is that you know better than everyone else of what early readers understood. And when history disagrees with you, well, its just because we are looking at oppressive history. How convenient. But then again, maybe I am just trying to oppress you with logic. lol
So i am not meaning to claim that conditions were any different then than they are now, so much as point out that logic was just then in the ascendancy, because certainly many contemporaries of the time would have interpreted the Writ that they had logically then, the same as they do now. But this does not adequately refute that dialectical thinking is different from logical thinking; "as far as East is from West," ok.
i encourage you to reject a dialectical approach if it does not fit with your understanding, by all means, but it follows that you must first have some understanding of a dialectical approach. Note the contrast, wherein you essentially demand that a logical approach be used, and cannot even concede that a dialectical approach be contemplated. "This verse must mean that, and that passage has to mean this."
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