A Cup Of Tea
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 3,313
- Reaction score
- 579
- Points
- 108
Tell us all!
I have no desire to answer for Thomas, but I do know that I am very much invested in countering those who misrepresent Judaism, and that is absolutely not "just another way of saying those who's opinions do not match" mine.Isn't that just another way of saying those who's opinions do not match your own?Most of the time its to counter those who like to misrepresent Christian (or Catholic) doctrine.
I have no desire to answer for Thomas, but I do know that I am very much invested in countering those who misrepresent Judaism, and that is absolutely not "just another way of saying those who's opinions do not match" mine.
Except, of course, when the views are pure nonsense. I far prefer those who post informed opinions over those who share their speculations under the misguided presumption that all opinions are created equal.Presenting a counter argument in this case is one thing, but deeming their views as pure nonsense for instance is quite another.
Perhaps I misunderstood what you meant by "beyond changing the actual wording of the scripture, one persons interpretations do not necessarily match another's".
Do you not believe that there can be informed as well as uninformed conclusions?I just meant, without changing any of the words contained in a particular Biblical passage, 2 people can read it and draw different conclusions from it.
I think I can reasonably say no. I tend to state and explain what the teaching declares in the face of an ill-informed assumption (of which we can all be inadvertently culpable, and should not be taken to testily to task for it), although I will throw down the gauntlet when faced with someone who knows what they are saying we teach is just not true.Isn't that just another way of saying those who's opinions do not match your own?
Sadly, I must disagree.Trouble is ... one persons interpretations do not necessarily match another's and while we may not agree with their interpretation, that doesn't make it wrong.
Well ... I agree in the spirit of the thing ... but when you run into views that fly in the face of reason, evidence, logic and so on ... but I agree it's not enough just to say 'you're wrong'. Better to say 'I think differently, for these reasons...'Presenting a counter argument in this case is one thing, but deeming their views as pure nonsense for instance is quite another.
Do you not believe that there can be informed as well as uninformed conclusions?