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Author Topic:   Genesis 1 and 2: The Difference Between Created and Formed
arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 139 of 210 (332856)
07-18-2006 10:57 AM
Reply to: Message 136 by jaywill
07-18-2006 10:35 AM


Re: Sefer Hazzohar on Gen. 1:2
I'm glad you recognize then that some who fluently read ancient Hebrew do have a different understanding of Genesis chapter one than what you present.
It seemed that for a while your tone was "Of course all who know Hebrew agree with me on Genesis in every respect."
jar mentioned once an old saying, two rabbis have three opinions between them.
there are different interpretations -- but yours is ruled out by the literal text. arguments you have yet to even tackle, like where god commands the sun to exist.


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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 141 of 210 (332862)
07-18-2006 11:12 AM
Reply to: Message 140 by jaywill
07-18-2006 11:06 AM


not your fault
These symbols probably would bring out more of the pronunciation issues. Fault me for inadaquately quoting the translator then. The accent marks I omitted from my quotation.
it's not accents. it's consonant sounds. putting a "w" in for vav where it is not being used as a vowel is inappropriate not matter what accents you put on it. selecting a "v" for a bet at the beginning of the word is also the wrong consonant sound, again too soft. i don't know of an accents (in english) that make a consonant harder, just change vowel sounds. hebrew has such an accent, the dagesh.
if he flubbed a bet or a vav in the middle of a word, it wouldn't be a big deal. that's a lot more flexible. but at the beginnings of words they ALWAYS take the hard sound.
As for time. I think you're far too busy with little Internet arguments to do this kind of heavy duty scholarly work.
yes, well, if i get in enough arguments where i have to read someone the hebrew and explain what it means, eventually i'll have a translation won't i?
Edited by arachnophilia, : broken tag, subtitle


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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 148 of 210 (333583)
07-20-2006 12:17 AM
Reply to: Message 142 by jaywill
07-19-2006 8:07 AM


Re: not your fault
Suppose the writer was German and the w sounds like v to him?
almost acceptable. he still uses a v elsewhere, and that's still incorrect, too.


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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 149 of 210 (333591)
07-20-2006 12:35 AM
Reply to: Message 143 by jaywill
07-19-2006 8:32 AM


Re: land
I have a suspicion that you'll like that footnote better. Am I right?
no. except for the bit about "gratuitous introduction of difficulties."
i don't especially take a stand on whether bara neccessarily, can, or does mean creation ex. nihilo. but i'll be happy to let you know if i ever come to a solid conclusion on that.


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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 150 of 210 (333592)
07-20-2006 12:43 AM
Reply to: Message 144 by jaywill
07-19-2006 8:49 AM


Re: context
Look Arach This is MY book! I want to make that very clear to you.
it's my book too. look. *holds up a copy or three*
Now, if you would notice Genesis is not the origin of Judaism only. It tells the origin of the whole world and the whole human race. That includes a Gentile dog like me.
no, genesis kinds of gets a little fuzzy on the details and genealogies of non-jews. but besides.
god gave the torah to the jews. not the assyrians, not the american indians, not the chinese. you can claim the book is yours, but it belonged to the jews first.
Don't try to lock it up in like only the Jews are "daddy's favorite" sitting on daddy's lap to whom Genesis alone is addressed.
funny, quite ironic actually. it's YOOOOOUUUUUUURRRRRR book, but nevermind the people that wrote it? the whole "daddy's favourites" thing doesn't work -- but YOOOOOOOOOUUUUUUUURRRRRRRR'''''EEEEEE daddy's favourite?
hypocrite. and nevermind that YOOOOOOOOUUUUUUURRRR book SAYS they are daddy's favourite. what a disconnect with what the bible is and says you must have.


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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 160 of 210 (333829)
07-20-2006 8:44 PM
Reply to: Message 151 by jaywill
07-20-2006 9:54 AM


Re: context
Before God gave the law to the Jews He created the human conscience within man.
That was a God given law within man's very being. It predates Sinai and belongs to all humanity - the human conscience.
that's nice, jay. this discussion is about the law he gave to the jews.
I had to exaggerate to get the point across. Your smugness is repulsive.
your claim to exclusive owmership and understanding of a text you claim is given to the world is repulsive.
This whole "What the Bible REALLY REALLY REALLY means" forum is just an attraction for people like who like to get away from what the Bible really means.
nearest i can tell, jay, you're the one who is trying to get away from what the bible really means. you keep misrepresenting what passages are, and what they say, and taking them way out of context to prop up your own ideas.


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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 161 of 210 (333833)
07-20-2006 8:55 PM
Reply to: Message 157 by jaywill
07-20-2006 3:52 PM


how to read the bible
Worst still is the person who militantly uses "historical and cultural context" to assault that part of the Bible which is of eternal wisdom.
the problem is that your "eternal wisdom" exists outside of the bible. you purport that the bible is "really" talking about things that are not only unsupported by the cultural and historical context, but unsupported by the text itself. you treat the bible like a coded message, when the things it says are pretty plainly evident to anyone choosing to actually read it.
However, you should be aware that many times what someone purports to be the historical and cultural context is just talk laden with someone's own agenda. In that case your are not getting a lot of insight into history necessarily. You may be getting insight into the person's own contemporary biases with his or her particular axe to grind.
my axe to grind is that the bible means what it says, and says what it means. i think this is a very basic and reasonable concept -- and i am willing to make rather large allowances that some situations may even be highly symbolic (such as the book of revelation). my "agenda" is to promote a reading of the bible correct to the words of the text, their implications, the way the authors would have read it, and the cultural and historical context. my bias is the text.
if your "eternal wisdom" contradicts not only the culture and the history, but the text itself, then your "eternal wisdom" is wrong -- or at least completely unbiblical.
I think that with the word of God there is a part which is related to cultural and historical context and there is a part which trancends culture and is of eternal wisdom.
yes, i think so too. but it is based on the text's literal reading, like a building is built on a foundation. the text of the bible is the foundation, not the decoration to be sprinkled around as prooftext.
Edited by arachnophilia, : typo


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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 165 of 210 (334057)
07-21-2006 3:39 PM
Reply to: Message 162 by jaywill
07-21-2006 2:50 PM


Re: context
The discussion is about the Difference Between Created and Formed in Genesis 1 and 2.
yes. and genesis is part of the book of law given to the jews, isn't it?
And for some reason the old Off Topic Flag has been a little lenient lately.
yes, it has. your gap theory is totally off-topic.
Hold on. I did not say "exclusive ownership". I affirmed that the book is written to folks like me. Perhaps strongly I affirmed this. But I did not claim it was only for me.
you claim that god has imparted some kind of external eternal wisdom to you personally, not found in the text, and that you need some kind of decoder ring ("the holy spirit") to understand it (and implied in the process that i do not have such a decoder ring).
My ideas are correct in this instance. I think your ideas on this matter are wrong. And I am not the only one who thinks so. And I am not just including evanglical Christians who agree with me against you, on this matter of ASAH verses BARA.
you have talked very little about two words, just your gap theory. much of this argument has revolved around the fact that you think asah means prior existence to the extent that it negates a creative act -- in order to support the idea that god did not create the sun on the fourth day, but sometime earlier, in a prior existance of the earth. this has been shown to be inaccurate grammatically and contextually. and you avoided answering a simple question, twice:
if the sun pre-exists god "making" it, why does god commaned it to exist in verse 14? it would be silly for god to command something that already exists to exist.
I lean towards ASAH and BARA having different shades of meaning in Genesis and elsewhere in the Bible.
yes, they do. but that doesn't mean you can apply any meaning you choose to any word you choose, ignore the grammar and context, and read something into the text far, far different from the basic meaning of the verse.
I put forth my belief that God oversaw the exact usage of which word He wanted the prophet to use.
really? the words in qere, or the words in cotev? and did god dictate the scribal errors?


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Replies to this message:
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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 167 of 210 (334083)
07-21-2006 4:40 PM
Reply to: Message 166 by jaywill
07-21-2006 4:13 PM


Re: context
You chose the discussion heading, not me. Ask anyone. The most direct way to find out what the discussion is on is by reading the heading to the discussion.
yes, jay. you're dodging. genesis 1 and 2 are found where? in genesis. genesis is found where? in the torah -- the law. the law was given to whom? the jews.
were talking about conscience or something prior the torah as being a god-given law. i was saying we are not debating that, we are debating the law that god gave to jews.
Perhaps. But it furnishes the logical support for understanding WHY asah and bara are used rather than only one word was used.
no, it does not. i have repeatedly showed you that your view does not fit the text. you choose to ignore that.
And you already acknowledged that some rabbis shared that understanding, if not all.
irrelevant, and argument based on authority. not all rabbis are right.
"External wisdom" is your brain child.
since your "eternal wisdom" exists external to the bible, it is YOUR brainchild we are debating.
And since You acknowledged that some rabbis saw things the way I saw them in Genesis, it isn't purely a personal matter. Is it?
no. when the text demonstrates that your interpretation is wrong, your interpretation is wrong. you cannot interpret the text to contradict the text.
Oh. I couldn't fail to notice that you stole some thunder from old Ringo there. "Decoder Ring" was just too good to pass up, huh?
yes, it was. but it's a concept i've disagreed with for a long time. i find this special understanding people claim to have to be an excuse for ignoring the obvious meaning of the text.
My contribution to that was as follows: It could mean that for all intents and purposes to the seer of the vision, the lightbearers were made on the fourth day.
and do you therefore contend that the bible is wrong, and they were not made on the fourth day?
I think, if I am not mistaken, you conceded that that could be a possible interpretation.
no, you are mistaken.
If you did not agree that it is plausible if not preferable, I haven't yet read your answer to that regard.
then i suggest you go back and read it.
Thank you. I'm satisfied that you realize that. And therefore my interpretation (which is also that of some ancient rabbis) of a restored earth after divine judgment, is not all that far fetched after all.
yes. it is. "shades of meaning" has quite a different shade of meaning than "redefinition." you are re-defining the words as you see fit, and ignoring context and grammar -- and nevermind idiomatic usage.
I don't recall that you responded to my comparison with the 104th Psalm. That is the foundation of the earth being laid before the waters covering the mountains, and the limiting of the sea's influence, and the rising if the dry land. Did you comment on that corraborating evidence on a Destruction / Reconstruction view of Genesis 1:1,2?
again, go back and read it. my response is found in message 130 of this thread. i responded by walking through all the verses of psalm 104 that you provided as evidence, with direct correlations that are actually written in the book of genesis. god destroys the earth with water, and then promises to never do it again. gee, what does that sound like to you, jay?
I think the autographs were innerant. Copyist errors did get from scribes in spite of their miticulous care to preserve the original. They were human.
again, which is correct, the qere or the cotev? we're not talking typos, here. we're talking about emmendations that totally change wording -- as you are trying to do.
To what extent God controls the entrance of copyist's errors, I don't know. But the process of inspiration of the Holy Scriptures is very mysterious to me. It is a mysterious thing to most of us who believe in the divine inspiration of the Bible separates it from the myriad of other kinds of liturature, including other sacred or religious writing.
cop out, and demonstrating ignorance of other ancient and sacred literature, and ignorance of the bible's contruction.
I don't think dictation was what occured most of the time. I think men were moved by God in a divine and human coordination. Human writers and the divine Spirit flowing in a unspeakable harmony caused the inspiration of the Holy Bible.
you don't think dictation was used, but god controlled the wording?
The ancient Jews, the ones who were men of God, recognized the divinely inspired writings from the others. They established a Hebrew Canon. Not everything entered into it. And the canon itself refers to some books which were not in the canon, i.e. The Book of the Wars of the Lord.
the hebrew canon is five books, the torah ("the law"). nothing else. there are other books with are considered sacred as well, but to a lesser degree. these books are "the prophets" and include joshua, judges, sam/kings, isaiah, jeremiah, ezekiel, and the 12 minor prophets. there are books that are considered important works of literature, but not holy: "writings" and that includes psalms, proverbs, ecclesiastes, the five megillot, jonah, ruth, etc.
if you're going to argue the hebrew canon, than genesis takes priority, and psalms are not even given by god. (rather, psalms are given TO god, by man. geuss which one makes more sense?)
God can preserve the style of the author and allow the writing to carry many cultural effects yet still speak His divine oracles for all mankind. He used Hebrew and He used Greek to speak to man in this written form. He also used a bit of Chaldee.
we tend to call it "aramaic." but yes. this is not a good argument for god controlling the text down to the word.


This message is a reply to:
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Replies to this message:
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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 169 of 210 (334091)
07-21-2006 5:56 PM
Reply to: Message 168 by jaywill
07-21-2006 5:12 PM


Re: context
Alright, alright. Genesis is part of the five books of Moses. I never denied that. I wouldn't have it any other way.
Now, the whole Bible is God's word to mankind as well.
you were making two claims:
1. that you have understanding imparted by god through the holy spirit that is not found directly in the bible.
2. that there was a law of god prior to the torah, that all mankind possessed.
this thread is about the torah, the law given to the jews specifically. (and yes, even the new testament was given to jews, wasn't it?) let's try to stick to what's on the page, without giving cop-out "decoder ring" answers. i don't eat crackerjacks.
Which do you think is better - To be Jewish and not turn to be saved by God or to be Gentile from the ends of the earth and turn to be saved by God?
salvation is not under discussion in this thread.


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Replies to this message:
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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 172 of 210 (335055)
07-25-2006 12:13 AM
Reply to: Message 170 by jaywill
07-24-2006 11:50 PM


Re: context
Giving of the torah is not under discussion either. Unless what you discuss is under discussion and what anyone else discusses is not if you don't want to discuss it.
your whole tangent, in fact, everything we've been talking about is off-topic. salvation is especially far off-topic.
God stretched forth the heavens, laid the foundation of the earth, and formed the spirit of man within him according to Zechariah 12:1.
How did God stretch forth the heavens if there was nothing in the heavens?
because the heaven is a solid object. pay close attention to the purpose it serves in genesis 1: it keeps the waters above separate from the waters below.


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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 174 of 210 (335057)
07-25-2006 12:16 AM
Reply to: Message 171 by jaywill
07-25-2006 12:02 AM


Re: land
I say maybe. But maybe not. It is a Psalm on creation.
it's a psalm on the power of god.
I think if it was on the flood of Noah it might well mention the ark and the animals coming out of it.
i think the reference is pretty obvious for those of us that aren't trying to read our own agendas into everything.
If it is a praise psalm on what God did after the flood why is there no mention of the salvation of Noah and the eight people in the ark? Isn't that the most significant thing about that event?
no. it is not. it's about the might of god, not noah.


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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 175 of 210 (335058)
07-25-2006 12:22 AM
Reply to: Message 173 by jaywill
07-25-2006 12:16 AM


Re: context
False charge. Any understanding of the Bible I claim with the help of the Holy Spirit can be confirmed by the plain words of the Bible.
you're right, that is a false charge. you have not been able to support anything with the plain words of the bible. you have been trying to twist them since you first posted in this thread.
It is in the interpretation of the those plain words where YOU will argue that I have the wrong meaning. But I have not claimed any inside story into the Bible which I cannot establish with the plain words of the Bible.
yes, you have. repeatedly.
The Bible is a book for all mankind - period.
...given to the jews, in hebrew.
So the fact that Israel was a appointed national instrument of God does not mean that God did not speak such things to the Gentiles.
as your balaam example proves, god could speak through an ass if he so chooses. however, by and large, god chose to deliver his message through the jews. why do you think that understanding the people charged with keeping god's word, and the language it was written in is not helpful?
What the Bible records of God's doings does not mean that those ONLY are God's doings.
then do you accept that god might have delivered other testaments to other nations? say, one to muhammed, and one to joseph smith? how about buddha? if we're going to say the bible is not the exclusive word of god, where do we draw the line, and on what factors?


This message is a reply to:
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Replies to this message:
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arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 179 of 210 (335073)
07-25-2006 1:55 AM
Reply to: Message 177 by jaywill
07-25-2006 12:34 AM


Re: context
You have not been able to prove that rabbis of the close of the first century and early second century AD didn't know basic Hebrew because they saw previous worlds had been destroyed befire Genesus 1:2.
no, you have not supported anything with the plain words of the bible. not the rabbis of 1800 years ago, you. you twist the words, they do not. you don't know hebrew, they did.
your argument is based on either mirepresentation of the text, or authority. neither is a good standard -- authority is especially bad when it comes rabbinical opinion, interpretation, and the talmud. in this issue, you will not find consensus on your opinion -- but the vast majority of opinion will disagree with it. you simply ignore that.
the rabbis that agreed with your position worked it (rather needlessly, imho) into the text, between verses. you, on the other hand, need to change the text, making god's creation of the sun, in fact, not about god creating the sun. their position is extra-biblical. your position is un-biblical. there is a difference.
You have not been able to prove that Formed and Created have to be regarded as exact equilavent terms in the Bible.
that was not my claim.
You have established that you have an opinion about it. You have not established that only your opinion on it should be considered right.
i have established that the text does not support your claim.
It was given to the Jews in Hebrew. And it is for the whole world.
yet you show disrespect for the words in the original.
I never said that it is not helpful to know how to read and write Hebrew.
yes, actually, you did. for instance, you wrote:
quote:
King Saul's Hebrew was up to par as was Korah's and Jeroboam's and Ahab's. They came away from God's speaking totally in the dark.
knowing hebrew didn't help them any, did it? you have consistently claimed that understanding is imparted external to the bible, by the holy spirit. what use is linguistic context and grammar and precision of wording to arguments like this?
I did say that just because one does does not mean that you'll get good interpretations of the Bible from them.
hey, guess what. works for those rabbis too, doesn't it? this is really fun, we can just pick and choose whatever we want to believe, claim the holy spirit inspired it, and the text be damned.
the hebrew grammar, literary context, and social context do not support your story. you cannot just change the words of the bible willy-nilly to mean whatever you would like. that's all i'm saying.


This message is a reply to:
 Message 177 by jaywill, posted 07-25-2006 12:34 AM jaywill has replied

Replies to this message:
 Message 182 by jaywill, posted 07-25-2006 5:40 AM arachnophilia has replied

  
arachnophilia
Member (Idle past 1375 days)
Posts: 9069
From: god's waiting room
Joined: 05-21-2004


Message 180 of 210 (335074)
07-25-2006 1:55 AM
Reply to: Message 176 by jaywill
07-25-2006 12:24 AM


Re: context
It is better to turn to God, in any regard ... ANY regard.
sure. lets get on with the topic now.

This message is a reply to:
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