Saturday, September 23, 2017

A Christian testimony

I struggled with anxiety-depression and addictions, alongside the many trials of being a "child of wrath" (Ephesians 2:3), for circa 40 years, even as I read the Bible and worshipped at churches (which did not properly honour God's Word). Then in 2013 I faced up to the truth: the Holy Bible was right, I was wrong. Thanks to the testimonies of many courageous people, I had come to believe that the entire Bible is God's Word, and that I could entrust my rescue to Christ Jesus. 

Encouraged by a preacher who with her husband had established a church in Kibera, Kenya, I prayed for baptism in the Holy Spirit, and people laid hands on me. Like the Holy Bible and Bob Dylan say: a great deed of power took place. I know that, and can witness to that truthfully, not only because of what happened in that moment, when I experienced something like the power of a very strong sun radiating into me, if only for a few seconds. It's also a sure witness because 4 years later, I see that I haven't been the same person since. I have experienced liberation from slavery to sin, just as the Holy Bible testifies:


"But gratitude be to the God,
because you were slaves of the sin,
yet you obeyed from heart unto that
to which you were delivered—
that form of teaching. Then, having
been liberated from the sin, you were
enslaved to the righteousness." 
(Romans 6:17-18)

The Holy Bible is true in saying that God does rescue people through Christ Jesus. I know this because I have the same experience as countless other Christians: when I put ALL my trust in Jesus, I was set free from many kinds of slavery (to sins, wrath, addictions, etc.). But I had to walk free, choose freedom. For example, I continued to use filthy language, because I hadn't read in the New Testament the commandment not to.

Monday, September 18, 2017

The Holy Bible is perfect, but all people stumble (even in what they say)

Update: The Holy Bible can, I believe, indeed be said to be perfectly designed with conflicts between the words of the Lord Jesus and other words in itPlease see my Translator's Preface to The Christ Family Bible.

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Several years ago, in early 2012, I began researching how Israelites, Jews and Christians preserved memories. What is the primary example of this for Christians? Christ Jesus of Nazareth instructed His disciples to celebrate their meals together in a memorial to Jesus, with the two witnesses of bread commemorating Jesus's broken body and wine commemorating Jesus's spilt blood.


The research work led to the progressive realization that these communities followed memory traditions and very strict witness rules, which together explain the form of the Holy Scriptures. 

The two main rules for testimony were (1) No false testimony, and (2) Multiple corroborating witnesses required. Even Jesus of Nazareth is described as following these testimony rules. If He followed them, it is highly likely that His disciples did too. And that gives us a key for understanding a range of difficulties with the New Testament texts. 

In one and the same book, The Acts of the Apostles, an incident is reported in two conflicting ways. What is the best explanation for this? One explanation is that the book is assembled from different original texts: it doesn't have one author. If that were so, why wouldn't the editor(s) edit away the conflict between the two reports of St. Paul's encounter with the Lord on the road to Damascus (Acts 9 & 22)? If instead a single human author wrote Acts, and he followed the two rules of testimony that Christ Jesus did, we have an excellent explanation of why he preserved the conflicting testimonies:

(1) When Luke himself needed to record the history of St. Paul's conversion, he wrote it in Acts 9, in his own voice. 

(2) When Luke recorded the history of St. Paul's later speech in Jerusalem, he wrote it in Acts 22, and followed what St. Paul said.

(3) It is entirely acceptable and predictable that even St. Paul could have stumbled in his own words about a detail of the events on the road to Damascus (e.g. mixing up whether his travelling companions did not hear the voice or did not see the light; compare 9:7 with 22:9). This is because Holy Scripture itself tells us, when reasoning about why very few should be Christian teachers, that "we all stumble" in many ways, or a lot (James 3:1-2).

Saturday, September 9, 2017

The collision of theology with God

Update: I no longer agree with the statement I made here 7 years ago, that "Gentile Christians have the NT commandments to obey. Jews and Jewish Christians have both the OT and NT commandments to obey." Instead, I believe that all people have to obey the words of the Lord Jesus, which are recorded mainly in 5 Bible books, Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, and the Revelation. Please see my Translator's Preface to The Christ Family Bible.
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Humility, and tremendous caution and honesty when making truth claims, are necessary in all sciences, and yet most of all in theology, whose subject both is entirely unique and warns credibly that He is willing and able to limit, severely, the scope of theology's knowledge. When theologians start talking as authorities, disaster is usually not far off. Evidence of this is plentiful: one can look first of all at the record of theological councils (which have tended to create schisms, rifts, between people otherwise inclined to fraternity) and university theology (whose onset coincides with the age of a continuous avalanche of schisms). If one is willing to look, more controversially, at the personal life histories of people influenced by theologians, far more heart-rending evidence appears readily. This is because theologians have as a rule 


(a) ignored the warnings of the Old Testament and the New Testament that universal human understanding of these texts is blocked; 

(b) ignored the OT and NT warnings that human understanding of these texts is granted divinely as a consequence of human obedience;

(c) therefore engaged in scientific / theological discourse without the necessary limitation (that only people who are actively working to obey God could possibly have sufficient comprehension);

(d) therefore made theological claims that are not just untrue, but easily deceive because they travel with the accoutrements of credibility. 

How can you avoid a run-around away from theological truth into the various rocky shoals? According to the OT and NT, the safe path is to fear God and obey God's commandments. Gentile Christians have the NT commandments to obey. Jews and Jewish Christians have both the OT and NT commandments to obey. 

Is it obvious what these commandments are, and how to obey them? Not for the rebellious-at-heart. Both the OT and NT clearly state that the rebellious-at-heart are not going to be able to understand God's Word. 

So, who translated your modern-language version of the Bible? People who are rebellious at heart, or people who put obedience to God first and foremost? If rebellious people have tried to translate the Bible, which has most certainly happened, they will produce abominable translations where for example the commandments will likely be impossible to follow. The common mistranslation of Matthew 5:28, where hearers are told that if anyone looks at a woman in order to lust after her has committed adultery, is perhaps the most common example of bad translation misleading readers to think they cannot actually obey the commandments of the NT. The logical and doable commandment here given in the Ancient Greek, recognized by scholars for more than 100 years, is that a person must not look at a married woman (someone else's wife) in order to lust after her (cf. the dictionary by Moulton & Milligan under the word γυνή, the Swedish 1917 translation, etc.).



Tuesday, September 5, 2017

How can a so-called church display monstrous behaviour?

If a church is teaching people that they are Christian and inheritors of eternal life, although they do not imitate Christ and obey Christ's commandments, it will display monstrous character, according to 2 Peter 2. (Is there a different prediction to be found in Christ's words?)

17 These are wells without water, clouds that are carried with a tempest; to whom the mist of darkness is reserved for ever. 18 For when they speak great swelling words of vanity, they allure through the lusts of the flesh, through much wantonness, those that were clean escaped from them who live in error. 19 While they promise them liberty, they themselves are the servants of corruption: for of whom a man is overcome, of the same is he brought in bondage. 20 For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, they are again entangled therein, and overcome, the latter end is worse with them than the beginning. 21 For it had been better for them not to have known the way of righteousness, than, after they have known it, to turn from the holy commandment delivered unto them. 22 But it is happened unto them according to the true proverb, The dog is turned to his own vomit again; and the sow that was washed to her wallowing in the mire. (2 Peter 2, AKJV)


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Notes

AKJV: KJV reproduced by permission of Cambridge University Press, the Crown’s patentee in the UK.

Monday, September 4, 2017

Life and love by Christ: Is that what 2 Timothy 1 says?

How should we understand the following Ancient Greek phrases found in 2 Timothy 1? One possibility that is rarely found in English translations is presented below:

epaggelían zo:ê:s tê:s en /X/ristô:i Ie:soû
 (verse 1)
a proclamation of life that is by Christ Jesus 

agápé:i tê:i en /X/ristô:i Ie:soû (verse 13)
love that is by Christ Jesus


In favour of this way of understanding these phrases are the following considerations:

(1) The eternal life that the gospel announces is always and forever by Christ Jesus, and not only in Christ Jesus (after the final judgement it is not life in Christ, as far as the New Testament says).

(2) Similarly, by the salvation that Christ Jesus provides, a human being can be filled with God's love (Romans 5). This love is not only in Christ Jesus, but is always and forever thanks to, that is to say by, Christ Jesus.

Sunday, September 3, 2017

The New Testament shows the divide between the Cooperative Principle and the Competitive Principle of linguistic communication

Eiséltʰate dià tè:s stenês púle:s
Go in through the narrow gate,

hóti plateîa he: púle: kaì eurú/x/o:ros he: hodòs he:
because wide is the gate and roomy the way that

apágousa
is leading away

eis tè:n apó:leian kaì polloí eisin
into the destruction, and many are

hoi eiser/x/ómenoi di' autê:s
the in-goers through it,

hóti stenè: he: púle: kaì tetʰlimméne:
because narrow is the gate and hard-pressured

he: hodòs he: apágousa
the way that is leading away

eis tè:n zo:è:n kaì olígoi eisìn
into the life, and few are

hoi heurìskontes auté:n
the finders of it.

     The Lord Jesus Christ, Matthew 7:13-14 (CFB)


Eàn agapâté me
If you would love Me,

tàs entolàs tàs emàs
the commandments of Mine

te:ré:sete
keep / you will keep,

kagò: ero:tè:so: tòn patéra
and I will ask the Father

kaì állon parákle:ton dó:sei
and another helper He will grant

humîn hína metʰ' humôn
to you, so that with you,

eis tòn aiô:na ê:i
into the aeon, It will be,

tò pneûma tê:s ale:tʰeías hò
the Spirit of the truth, whom

ho kósmos ou dúnatai labeîn
the world cannot receive,

hóti ou tʰeo:reî autò
because it does not see It

oudè ginó:skei
nor recognise It.

humeîs ginó:skete autó hóti
You know It, because

par' humîn ménei kaì
beside you It abides and

en humîn éstai
in / among you It will be.

        The Lord Jesus Christ, John 14:15-17 (CFB)

Saturday, September 2, 2017

Knowledge and science instead of a useless even injurious run-around

How can a person stick to knowledge and science, and avoid a run-around into falsehood, confusion, deception, wastefulness, injury, etc?

God says that humanity needs to study and obey His Word (cf. Proverbs 1; John 14). 

The philosopher Socrates is reported to have said that he was wisest in Athens because he was honest in admitting when he did not know a true answer to a question. 

University of Oxford professor John C. Lennox (mathematics) observed that science has been highly productive in producing knowledge (i.e. facts) by asking extremely limited questions. This is effective for two well-known reasons: 

(1) It is possible for the scientific community to test extensively (in different ways and by different people) a hypothesis-answer to an extremely limited question. That testing filters out false hypotheses and obtains knowledge (facts, true statements). 

(2) The true answers to extremely limited questions help science to ask and answer more (extremely limited) questions. Reductionism accumulates and links together facts.

So we have three highly credible (and tested) answers to our question. 

From these answers, one can evaluate claims about scientific methodology made at a Swedish university recently (U. of Gothenburg), that "research traditions" are important, and that doing research using hypotheses is dangerous and unnecessary. [1]

Are research traditions (where a disciplinary field preserves specific methods) important for producing knowledge and science? Absolutely not: the history of science proves resolutely that research traditions have usually been the greatest obstacle to knowledge and science (cf. Thomas Kuhn, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions). They should be treated like nuclear waste (figuratively speaking). 

Are hypotheses dangerous and unnecessary in research whose goal is to produce knowledge and science? No. A hypothesis is a tentative claim that is made the object of evaluation. It is impossible to do research effectively unless one evaluates one's claims. A scientific work must identify what new claims it is making (i.e. what hypotheses it is raising for evaluation), so that these can be evaluated as either true or false.

Here is a useful distinction: science, journalism, churnalism. Science produces knowledge through critically evaluating claims in a way that can be agreed upon objectively or inter-subjectively. It cannot claim to produce knowledge if "only some people can see it". When only some people believe something, and cannot prove it to all other people, they have produced belief, not knowledge. Although they may claim to have produced esoteric (hidden) knowledge, verifying that in a way that all people can agree on is a demanding task in and of itself. 

Journalism seeks to describe the world in a factual way. It claims, "This is what happened." It produces purported knowledge of the world. It is not scientific knowledge because journalism's process does not work with testing claims (hypotheses) that can then be tested by any other person (with the required research resources like microscopes or field-time). Journalism produces less reliable information about the Universe, and as such cannot participate in the highly productive process of reductionism and accumulation that science does. One cannot build on journalism's facts reliably, the way that one is supposed to be able to with science's facts.

Churnalism is a relatively new form of journalism, where the journalist simply takes the statements of others and assembles them into a new publication. There is no attempt to be factual beyond accurately repeating what others have said. Those statements may be complete falsehoods. No attempt to verify those statements is made at all. The onset of churnalism is related to the financial interests of journalistic publications, or perhaps more accurately named information media. Churnalism has few risks (of lawsuits for example) and low costs (information can be produced simply by "churning" information that others provide, through for example "press releases"). 

Astoundingly, a lot of what is published in the humanities field is closest to churnalism, in terms of informativeness, factuality, tendency to mislead, and method. Humanities academics often simply "churn" the contributors of others into a new publication, adding no knowledge (scientific or purported) at all. The typical method is to critique the work of other humanities academics using the theories of yet other humanities academics, thus merely churning. Without going into the self-defeating foundational ideas of the humanities dating from the early 19th century (ideas concerned with meetings of minds and similar romantic, poetical, unscientific concepts), one can conclude from the patent and ubiquitous churnalistic bankruptcy of the humanities that the entire project ought to be turned out of the universities, where the production of new knowledge should be the rule for all intellectual work.

This brings us back to the need for hypotheses, tentative truth claims that are subjected to rigorous testing to decide whether they are true or not. If they are true, then presto, one has produced knowledge (so long as the hypothesis is new). 

What can we say of Gothenburg University regarding hypotheses as dangerous because its students do not know how to handle them? It is a confirmation that the humanities are not really in the business of producing knowledge. Again, the growth of knowledge can only come through making and testing tentative truth claims (hypotheses). If a humanities department (e.g. for the study of religions) has not trained its students to handle hypotheses, then it is unlikely that its focus is knowledge, and much more likely that it is engaged in a highly manicured form of churnalism. That is, although it will claim society's prestige and resources to focus on knowledge, its ineptitude and fear in regard to hypotheses unmasks it as a churnalistic organization.

Once one has made the decision to stick to knowledge and science and to avoid a useless (even injurious) run-around, there still remain a huge number of pitfalls that the history of science and knowledge-production informs us of. One of the best summaries here is by the Cornell University agricultural scientist and theory of science scholar Hugh G. Gauch, Jr., Scientific Method in Brief (Cambridge University Press, 2012).

Many scientists can attest to hitting unjust obstacles set up within their community. Gauch gives various examples of the kinds of unjust obstacles appearing regularly in the scientific community. A particularly important type of obstacle also appears regularly in the humanities: "the fallacy of unobtainable perfection". Let's let the talented Dr. Gauch describe it for us:

An alluring fallacy for scientists is unobtainable perfection, or at least excessive perfection. This fallacy discredits a result by requiring greater accuracy or scope. For instance, if a paper under review compares methods A and B, a reviewer might say that it must also compare method C in ordre to be publishable. But simply to complain that more could be done is irrelevant because this is always the case. Rather, the relevant criteria are whether that paper adds to what was known before and whether it has some theoretical interest or practical value. [2] 

Again Gothenburg University furnishes a cautionary case-example. An obligatory course for a BA degree in theology sets up a range of requirements for students to meet, but some of these requirements are defined so vaguely that a student must hope that the university official's arbitrary decision will be favourable so that the student can receive a degree for several years' work. Specifically, students in this course (RKT 145) should at the course's completion be able to:
"describe central theoretical perspectives in one of the five disciplinary areas and connect these to identified problems" [3]
"communicate scientific problems and solutions" [4]
What are "the central theoretical perspectives" in any humanities field? There is a continuous upheaval and expansion in the theories of a humanities field, not least because of churnalism (where theory is substituted for knowledge). So this is an arbitrary decision to be made by a university official, a situation exacerbated by requiring a student to "connect" these theoretical perspectives to "identified problems". The spectre of unobtainable perfection appears quite clearly here. But that spectre really gets to spook when armed with the requirement to communicate "scientific solutions" to problems established in the humanities. What are these? Only the university official can say, using his or her arbitrary calculation. 

Science outside engineering and other applied areas rarely talks about "scientific solutions" to "scientific problems", not least because science doesn't progress that way. Science asks questions and then tries to answer them truthfully. Hey do you have a solution on gravity? What's your solution on the effects of sucrose on mammals? Science doesn't orient to solutions but to questions and hypotheses.  



_______________
Notes:

[1] The context was theology and the study of religions. The assertion that hypotheses are dangerous focused on the inability of university students to handle them properly. 

The associate professor who made these claims has disagreed that I have understood what he said, and requested I publish an apology. At present I do not yet see any evidence that I have misunderstood the points at issue. In lieu of an apology, I asked if I could publish the email where he argues I've misunderstood and requests an apology, to which he agreed. Here is the main body text of the email.


Jag menar inte att hypoteser per se är farliga; det är en uppenbar missuppfattning.

Den fråga som ställs i en uppsats kan antingen inbegripa en hypotes eller inte. Det är fortfarande en fråga: dvs. Är denna hypotes hållbar? Man anför då argument och bevis mot och för hypotesen som på detta sätt prövas. Detta är helt oproblematiskt.

Sedan är det ett empiriskt faktum att många studenter inte är så pass insatta i sitt fält att de har formulerat en hypotes.

Vissa studenter har dock en kvasireligiös tro på sin hypotes, med andra ord oavsett vilken kritik som framförs eller vilka motbevis som läggs fram så håller man fast vid den. Då är det inte längre en fråga om hypotesprövning utan om ett slags religiös tro.

Jag önskar dig lycka till med ditt uppsatsarbete, men i fortsättningen skulle jag stämma av med den person som du kritiserar innan du gör det offentligt på en blogg. Det skulle vara trevligt om du kunde föra in en ursäkt på din blogg att du missuppfattat det jag sa på presentationen.

To understand the associate professor's email with more context, I include here the immediately preceding email from me to him.


Jag ber om ursäkt om jag har missuppfattat din presentation. Jag har ett starkt minne av att du sade:

(a) grundutbildningsstudenter har ofta svårt att hantera hypoteser, exempelvis de fokuserar på att driva på och stödja sin egen idé. Min sammanfattning var att presentationen håller hypoteser för farliga (en universitetsstudent kan ej nödvändigtvis hantera dem).

Jag står kritiskt till dessa påståenden i din presentation, och står fast vid min sammanfattning (dock det kan förbättras genom att bakgrundsfakta läggs fram. Jag bör göra det.)

(b) grundutbildningsstudenter behöver inte ha en hypotes. Min sammanfattning var därför att din presentation höll hypoteser för icke nödvändiga.

Jag hoppas att du inte tar det personligt att jag tar upp kritiska invändningar. Jag menar inte att göra personpåhopp eller dylikt. Jag tar på största allvar universitetets uppgift att producera kunskap och vetenskap, och i linje med denna uppgift försöker jag dela mina kritiska invändningar med dig och offentligt. En definition av vetenskap som finns i literaturen är "a community of scepticism". Ingen perfekt definition kanske, men den närmar sig det som krävs för att universitetet ska vara vetenskapligt (producerar kunskap).

[2] Gauch, Scientific Method in Brief, p. 125.

[3] "redogöra för centrala teoretiska perspektiv inom något av de fem ämnesområdena samt koppla dessa till identifierade problem"

[4] "kommunicera vetenskapliga problem och lösningar"