@georgia@netzsphaere.xyz i think the main reason is because divine revelation is from revelation/command from god -> you, it's not you -> god. however imo so much of protestant prosperity gospel falls into this camp, but basically i think what the bible was trying to say about divination is that if you try to treat god/divine revelation like a vending machine then it's bad
@georgia@netzsphaere.xyz the problem i have with almost all protestant churches is i don't see the relevant humility of christians, and instead i see a lot of arrogance. if you truly believe that the bible is 100% accurate and God is everlasting and unchanging and the righteous, jealous God of the old testament is still God, even if you might have a covenant with Jesus, you would never dare to even attempt to say "well actually this is what god said". like how can you believe that this is god and this is your god and then do the equivalent of "shush shush shush actually this is what you said". from a fundamentalist christian viewpoint a complete and utter respect, deference and fear (respect) should completely permeate your entire relationship with god but instead fundamentalist christians are always trying to prescribe things about god their entire sermons. and i still have brainworms from a fundamentalist christian upbringing, i don't know how you can believe in God but then with some magic handwavey Jesus NT covenant, basically disregard or reinterpret the bible, at that point just drop the act and admit that you're not a christian if you're trying to take a bible with the old testament (and new testament because he is eternal and unchanging) and instead construct your own cargo cult religion from that. "I don't believe in the Bible completely literally but I'm still christian because I agree with the morals" people feel like they have not thought one iota at all about their beliefs because how much of an absolute insult would it be to take one's divine commandment, reject it, and instead create a false imitation of it, it just doesn't make sense to me at all. but i am not a christian, so I'm making these observations outside of the church and personal revelation and relationship and all that.
@georgia@netzsphaere.xyz i almost want to talk intellectually to a pastor about this because literally any pastor has probably said the phrase "actually, God/the Bible says" and I just don't see how that statement can ever be uttered in a sincere way with a proper (fundamentalist i guess) interpretation of Christianity. If God isn't absolute and almighty like that then great, you've turned God into Zeus. I guess the cop out answer is "because Jesus's sacrifice" but like, if you still believe in God then you would abstain from that anyways, just as you would not sin just because Jesus made it non-defenestrative to sin.
@georgia@netzsphaere.xyz like i would have to have this conversation before even getting into any aspect of christian belief that a person has, because otherwise you can't say "xyz is for or against God" at all without prefacing with something like "this is just my personal belief as my falliable self works to better understand his unfalliable perfection and instruction" or something and if you say that this is implicit in your entire belief you could still not say this to anyone else as a prescriptive truth. so i guess i don't understand how any christian can have prescriptive absolute truth outside of divine interpretation or revelation
@georgia@netzsphaere.xyz unfortunately that directly contradicts the new testament in several places and then you are back to not being a christian
@georgia@netzsphaere.xyz i just don't see how from supposed christian epistemology, i'm just taking the bible (which is supposedly, if the bible is correct in itself about complete divine inspiration) as exactly akin to God's direct word (as divine inspiration says) so if you're not taking into account divine inspiration and the entire bible in it's entirety then you're rejecting God's word, I don't know how you can reject God's words, even if you could say you had personal divine revelation about it, then you're using God's word to reject God's word again, and I just don't know how that can be squared with someone supposedly being Christian
@georgia@netzsphaere.xyz nvm i guess biblical infallibility allows for this
@georgia@netzsphaere.xyz i mean, if that was totally inerrant then that could be true, but infallible means god's word was falliable
@georgia@netzsphaere.xyz some would argue that taking god's word being completely infalliable and saying that it's falliable is the same as blaspheming against the holy spirit and thus being the unforgivable sin. even so the complete lack of fear for literally the worst sin that a christian could commit in any churches that don't uphold complete bibilical infallibility is mind boggling to me
@toiletpaper@shitposter.world @georgia@netzsphaere.xyz if I'm not mistaken, prayer is supposed to be a personal relationship with God through Jesus, not as a ritual to enable a transaction. i think relationships have to have some transactions by nature of being a relationship, but the important thing is that the relationship is not one sided if I had to guess
@georgia@netzsphaere.xyz you're basically just saying that the bible isn't divinely infallible, which is fine, maybe you can still claim that an earlier manuscript of the bible did exist and that one would be infallible but the current ones aren't, but if you don't believe that any bible was ever infallible then I don't know how you can call yourself a christian basically, that's basically just saying you disagree with god's word
@shibao@misskey.bubbletea.dev @georgia@netzsphaere.xyz god is infallible however the bible is written by man. (as per the discussion i had with my grandfather on this subject a long long time ago. he was an evangelist minister (not a fundie tho)).
no minister worth their salt would say "the bible said...", to reference another post in this thread. the ones that do are usually begging for donations on TV.
@purple@nya.social @georgia@netzsphaere.xyz so if you believe this, I don't get how a christian can allow or be okay with another supposed "christian" blaspheming against god. at the very least you have to say in a sermon that this is blasphemy
@georgia@netzsphaere.xyz this is what i'm saying, if you're a christian and you tell me this, you're basically saying that you're rejecting what is supposedly god's word as not god's word, so unless you have personal revelation from god directly on this matter I don't see how you can make this assertion and still consider yourself a christian
@georgia@netzsphaere.xyz my thought is that if god is perfect then all of god and his word should have perfect principles even if they are too complex for humans to comprehend
@georgia@netzsphaere.xyz okay I think I'm getting it, if you're saying that nothing is infallible outside of god himself or things he has directly created in the absence of the effects of sin, then basically nothing is blasphemy outside of personal revelation or whatever else you consider infallible to you. so i guess you could technically call this christianity, but in my mind you can either have this sort of total infallibility stemming from personal revelations, or a line of historical infallibilities (which I guess catholics extend from popes as papal infallibility) or total infallibility of the bible as god's word. but any sort of christian has to have complete respect for this chain of infallibilities in my mind, wherever it comes from god
@georgia@netzsphaere.xyz and from this logic you could say that jesus might not be infallible because you got personal revelation or whatever directly from god and not need to believe in jesus or the trinity and still be considered christian, it would definitely need a new name then though
@georgia@netzsphaere.xyz well if god says it's true then it would have to be true, so i guess blasphemy probably only means denying what god has said to be true, thus why it's the unforgivable sin. i guess that's the bottom of that
@dcc@annihilation.social @georgia@netzsphaere.xyz @tyler@nicecrew.digital another long chain of thoughts https://misskey.bubbletea.dev/notes/af5w1b6k3d
@tyler@nicecrew.digital i think that's basically the conclusion i came to as well lol
@toiletpaper@shitposter.world @georgia@netzsphaere.xyz that makes sense, if i'm understanding you correctly, you're saying you can't have objective truth in anything that isn't wholly extending from god (or more accurately the metasyntactical variable) with divine inerrancy, and any other "beliefs" you have are just faith which could be wrong. so if you only believed in divine personal revelation with divine errancy then any true belief could only come from that
@nerthos@shitposter.world @georgia@netzsphaere.xyz still though, a christian pastor claiming something from those tablets without the personal revelation or whatnot would be blasphemy would it not? I guess that's the main problem I have with most churches and christians
@nerthos@shitposter.world @georgia@netzsphaere.xyz *claiming something as objective truth without having a direct chain of infallibilities that point to it basically
@shibao@misskey.bubbletea.dev @georgia@netzsphaere.xyz oh they do. those folks are just as quick to bring out the hellfire and brimstone as they are to give you a cup of flour.
@nerthos@shitposter.world @vriska@lizards.live @georgia@netzsphaere.xyz my school made us cross out millions and write down thousands in our textbooks but they got clowned on it for it and nowadays i hear it's a shitshow of a school
@nerthos@shitposter.world @mrsaturday@shitposter.world @georgia@netzsphaere.xyz @vriska@lizards.live i feel like joel olsteen started in the us before it started in brazil honestly
@nerthos@shitposter.world @georgia@netzsphaere.xyz @vriska@lizards.live nah it'd be like hundreds of books, easier to just make all the kids do it lol
@shibao @georgia @mrsaturday @nerthos im against violence but that guy needs to get charlie kirked