Gioto
(1) God is completely rational, thus(2) Any action that God performs is undertaken on the basis of some good reason.(3)There is no good reason for God to resurrect Jesus from the dead.therefore(4) God did not resurrect Jesus from the dead.[1]Thibodeau issues a challenge to produce a "good" reason why God would raise Jesus from the dead. The problem is with no criteria as to what is a "good" reason he just doesn't have to ever agree that there is a good one. It will be seen from the discussion that this is just what he's done. He doesn't actually ever deal with real reasons believers give for the resurrection.
This is a classic straw man argument. The premise: "(3) There is no good reason for God to resurrect Jesus from the dead." is simply wrong. Anyone who actually has what is called "a relationship with Jesus" knows a good reason you carefully avoid talking about those. You assert all the good reasons have been shot down but didn't actually consider any. You carefully avoided the one;s those really Blevins in the Resurrection actually believe in.
His challenge: "We can issue a challenge to any person who believes that God did resurrect Jesus. That challenge would be to provide the good reason for God to resurrect Jesus."
I will take up his challenge I will give three good reasons, but the real argument will b aboiut what is a good reason,you don't have to accept what I think is a good reason so you always hold out for the idea that my reason is no good. But it's just because you don't want to admit there is a good reason.
The shared assumption of all of these reasons is that symbolism is a value. Good strong symbolism is important in communicating. You might argue that it's not.But the communicative power of symbols is obvious.
Three Good Reasons
(1) The value in the symbolism of second chances. God is about forgiving people and starting over clean slate. Resurrection drives that home, God can give second chances even from death.,
(2) The symbolism of victory. Death is the ultimate certainty. The one thing none of us escape.Yet the power of God can overcome even death.
(3) Solidarity with God. Christ share in our fate as sinners, not in our guilt but in our fate:death. We put ourselves into his death we sahre in his life,
These are independent reasons,
For one and two you might ask why not do it for all reversible? God is not calling off death for us all. But he is putting focus on Christ because we share in Christ.s victory over death,it;s a symbol of the victory over spiritual death in eternal life.The problem here is religious belief is a community, to belong is to be socialized. So the outsider is in no poison to judge unless she is willing to enter into the inner logic of the community.
Thiobodeau's Answer to my argument
Thiobodeau's Answer to my argument
You offer three reasons that you claim are good reasons for God to resurrect Jesus. All of these reasons have to do with claiming that Jesus' resurrection is a symbol of something else. In general, for something, S, to be a symbol of another thing, T, it must be the case that S should be widely recognizable as representing or indicating T.
Of course he does nothing to prove it is not. He asserts that Christians don't see the Resurrection as synoptic of a second chance that's like saying Christians don't see God as important. If the Christian doctrine of salvation and forgiveness is about anything it's second chances. He is also changing the rules of the game. First he asks for a good reason now he asks for the reason Christians will widely accept but why didn't he start out with the widely accepted Christian reason?
Reason (1): Second chances.
Reason (1): Second chances.
I do not think that Jesus' resurrection would be widely recognized as a symbol for second chances. If a person is given a second chance (in the relevant sense), it must be that this person committed some error (moral or otherwise) and was provided with a chance to make up for the error and try again. Jesus is not widely recognized for committing some error, sin, or crime for which he was justly punished. Nor is he widely recognizes as a person who made up for some error and tried again. Rather, Jesus is widely recognized as being a good man who was unjustly punished. Thus, it cannot be that Jesus' death can be widely recognized as a symbol for second chances.
Reason (2) Victory
God has no reason to show us that his power can overcome even death. A proper understanding of God can yield the understanding that God can overcome even death. Once we properly understand God, we come to believe that God is omnipotent. Once we properly understand omnipotence, we easily reach the conclusion that God can overcome death. Thus, there is no need to God to prove that he can overcome death by resurrecting Jesus.
God has no reason to show us that his power can overcome even death. A proper understanding of God can yield the understanding that God can overcome even death. Once we properly understand God, we come to believe that God is omnipotent. Once we properly understand omnipotence, we easily reach the conclusion that God can overcome death. Thus, there is no need to God to prove that he can overcome death by resurrecting Jesus.
Reason (3) Solidarity with God
The claim that Jesus shares our fate would be undermined by the resurrection rather than indicated by it. We are not resurrected. We die and do not return bodily to the Earth; resurrection is not our fate. Thus, if God wanted to show that Jesus shared our fate, he would allow Jesus to die and not return bodily to this Earth.
The claim that Jesus shares our fate would be undermined by the resurrection rather than indicated by it. We are not resurrected. We die and do not return bodily to the Earth; resurrection is not our fate. Thus, if God wanted to show that Jesus shared our fate, he would allow Jesus to die and not return bodily to this Earth.
Your suggested reasons do not qualify as good reasons for God to resurrect Jesus.
First is that relevant? Dopes his challenge as for good reasons or reasons widely accepted by Christians? The argument above merely asserts there are no good reasons. The Challenge jsut says,above good reasons says noting about the majority of Christians accepting of it, he only only consults what Christians think when it supports his cause.
Nevertheless if we define "second chance" advisedly as a new life in the power of God then the Resurrection is a powerful symbol.
His answer on number 2:
He is asserting that everyone should be a theologian. He's asserting God should chuck his pastoral nature and make everyone be a philosopher. God doesn't run the crutch as a meritocracy it's not about proving who is the smartest or who get;s tenure. The Resurrection symbol is designed to illustrate for all people--simple dimmed wretched souls who don't understand f inductive arguments. He is trying to impose his standards as a philosophy student upon the world and subsume God's pastoral concerns which really are the concerns that motivate the symbolism of the Gospel.Reason (2) Victory
God has no reason to show us that his power can overcome even death. A proper understanding of God can yield the understanding that God can overcome even death. Once we properly understand God, we come to believe that God is omnipotent. Once we properly understand omnipotence, we easily reach the conclusion that God can overcome death. Thus, there is no need to God to prove that he can overcome death by resurrecting Jesus.
Reason (3) Solidarity with God
The claim that Jesus shares our fate would be undermined by the resurrection rather than indicated by it. We are not resurrected. We die and do not return bodily to the Earth; resurrection is not our fate. Thus, if God wanted to show that Jesus shared our fate, he would allow Jesus to die and not return bodily to this Earth.
I think he misunderstands the concept here. I said the resurrection symbolizes something so it points to a reality that it does not literally instantiate. Arguing that we are not really resurrected is totally beside the point. Resurrection symbolizes the hope we have in new life. The concept came it of the Hebrew belief that Messiah would resurrect all of fallen Israel, We will actually be resurrected,. Paul calls Christ:the first fruits from the dead because his Resurrection is emblematic of things to come for all irreversible.
Paul makes the argument or rather where I got the argent was from was what Paul says about us placing ourselves into Christ's death places us into the hope of his resurrection.
Rom 6
…4We therefore were buried with Him through baptism into death, in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may walk in newness of life. 5For ifwe have been united with Him like this in Hisdeath, we will certainly also be raised to life as He was. 6We know that our old self was crucified with Him so that the body of sin might be rendered powerless, that we should no longer be slaves to sin.
Jason says:
"Your suggested reasons do not qualify as good reasons for God to resurrect Jesus."
You saying this is problematic because you are basing your concept of God on the needs of believers or seekers after God but upon your philosophy student needs the desire to show your superior logic. You really have no right to tell members of a faith community that their notion of what is good as a reason for their doctrine is not good because it doesn't meet with your needs as a philosopher; unless you are willing to enter the inner logic of the community all you are doing is waving the yea boo theory in front of them, :you are not me your not us we are us,yeah us,"
Sources
[1] JASON THIBODEAU"A Moral Argument Against the Resurrection," Secular Outpost, blog (MAY 29, 2018) http://www.patheos.com/blogs/secularoutpost/ (accessed May 29,2018)[2] Aaron Wilson, "He is not the God of Second Chances" TGC us Edition, bog, published by Gospel Coalition. (July 7,2016)
https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/he-is-not-the-god-of-second-chances/
(accessed May 29,2018)
In our polarized culture it’s rare to find a spiritual phrase that receives broad agreement from a large cross section of the population. Nevertheless, the popular cliché “God is a God of second chances” seems to be one thing on which many agree. The second-chance message reaches deep inside and outside the church. A quick Google search of the phrase links to speeches of politicians, soundbites from talk shows, and montages from animated Christian films. Everyone, no matter his or her view of Jesus, seems to find common ground around the belief that God gives second chances.[3] Atonement as Solidarity, Metacrock;s bog (May 2010) http://metacrock.blogspot.com/2010/05/atonement-as-solidarity.html