Thursday, March 26, 2026

What Happened to the Original Bible?

Introduction

The quest for the "Original Bible" is often framed as a detective story where the primary evidence has gone missing. In his provocative video, What Happened to the Original Bible?, Darante' LaMar argues that because we lack the original autographs, the Bible we hold today is merely a library of evolved texts and copies of copies. This raises a critical question for both skeptics and believers: does the lack of a single, original master copy undermine the integrity of the Christian scriptures?

In this post, we will summarize LaMar's arguments, evaluate the historical reality of biblical transmission, and see how the "embarrassment of riches" in manuscript evidence provides a robust rebuttal to the claim that the original message has been lost to time.


Summary of Arguments

The core thesis of the video is that there is no such thing as an "Original Bible." Instead, there is a complex library of texts that evolved over centuries.

LaMar explains that we possess zero original "autographs" (the actual documents written by the authors). What we have are "copies of copies," many dating centuries after the events they describe.
The word "Bible" comes from the Greek Biblia (plural: "books"). For centuries, these were individual scrolls kept in chests, only later bound into a single "Codex".

Because the texts were hand-copied, errors and intentional changes "crept in." LaMar notes there are more variations among biblical manuscripts than there are words in the New Testament.

There was never a single "table of contents" agreed upon by all Christians. Different traditions (Catholic, Protestant, Ethiopian Orthodox) include different books, and the canonization process was organic and often political, not a single decision made at the Council of Nicaea.

LaMar argues that the search for an "original" text is typically a "security blanket" used to avoid the exhausting work of moral reasoning and interpretation in the present.
Evaluation

Strengths:

Historical Accuracy: The video is well-grounded in modern academic biblical scholarship and textual criticism, accurately debunking popular myths like the Council of Nicaea "voting" on the canon.

Accessibility: It simplifies complex concepts, like the "Ship of Theseus" analogy for the Bible's evolution, making high-level scholarly debates understandable for a general audience.

Nuance: It avoids the "telephone game" cliché, acknowledging that scribes like the Masoretes were regularly meticulously careful, even if variations still occurred.

Weaknesses:

Philosophical Pivot: Toward the end, the video shifts from history to a psychological critique of faith. This portion is more subjective and may feel like a deconstruction polemic rather than a neutral historical analysis.

Focus on Fragmentation: While historically true, the emphasis on "more variants than words" can be misleading without the context that the vast majority of those variants are minor spelling differences that don't change the text's meaning.
Rebuttal: The Scholarly Counter-Argument

While LaMar’s historical facts are largely correct, many scholars and apologists argue that the conclusions drawn from these facts are overly skeptical.

Superiority of Manuscript Evidence: Scholars point out that while we don't have autographs, the New Testament has far more manuscript evidence than any other ancient work. see The Worst Argument Against the Bible. For comparison, we have only a handful of copies for works by Plato or Tacitus, often with a 1,000-year gap, yet their general reliability is rarely questioned.  How does the Quality of New Testament Manuscripts Compare to Other Ancient Manuscripts? 

Textual Stability: Scholars like Daniel Wallace note that roughly 99% of the New Testament text is established with certainty. Most of the 400,000+ variants are "insignificant," such as spelling "John" with one 'n' instead of two, and do not impact any core Christian doctrine. Bart Ehrman, atheist/agnostic, and NT scholar, says this: ...the essential Christian beliefs are not affected by textual variants in the manuscript tradition of the New Testament.

Early Patristic Evidence: Even if all biblical manuscripts were lost, the New Testament could be almost entirely reconstructed from the thousands of quotations found in the writings of early Church Fathers. Is the original Bible still in existence? | GotQuestions.org.

Reliability of Oral Tradition: Scholars argue that ancient oral cultures were "communal" and highly conservative, meaning the core "identity and meaning" of the stories were protected by the community's collective memory, making them more stable than a simple "telephone game" suggests.
The Reliability of the New Testament | The Gospel Coalition.


The textual reliability of the Bible is assessed through textual criticism, a branch of philology that seeks to reconstruct the original wording of ancient documents. Because we lack the autographs (the original physical documents penned by the authors), scholars must triangulate the original text using thousands of later copies.

The New Testament: A Case of Embarrassment of Riches

The New Testament (NT) is widely considered the best-attested work of antiquity. Its reliability is measured by the number of manuscripts, their age (proximity to the original), and their geographical diversity.

Manuscript Count: There are over 5,800 Greek manuscripts of the NT. When including other early translations like Latin, Coptic, and Syriac, the total exceeds 24,000 [see College Church]


Earliest Fragments: The gap between the original writing and our earliest copies is minuscule compared to other ancient works.

P52 - John Rylands Fragment: A small piece of the Gospel of John dated to approximately 125–130 AD, only a few decades after the original was likely written. CSNTM.

P46: An early papyrus containing most of Paul's letters, dated to roughly 200 AD. Reading the Papyri

The "Patristic" Safety Net: Even if every biblical manuscript were lost, the New Testament could be almost entirely reconstructed from hundreds of thousands of quotations found in the writings of the Early Church Fathers Tekton Apologetics.


Decoding the 400,000 Variants

A common point of skepticism is that there are more "variants" (differences) in NT manuscripts than there are words in the NT. While true, scholars categorize these variants to determine their impact
Stand to Reason:

CategoryDescriptionPercentage
Non-Meaningful & Non-ViableMinor spelling errors (orthography) or word order changes that don't change the meaning.99%
Meaningful but Non-ViableChanges the meaning (e.g., a late scribe adding "Jesus" where the text said "He"), but found only in a single, late manuscript.<1%
Meaningful and ViableChanges the meaning and has strong early manuscript support.<1%


Key Example: The Adulterous Woman" (John 7:53–8:11) and the long ending of Mark (16:9–20) are the most famous "Meaningful and Viable" variants. Most modern Bibles include them with footnotes stating they are not found in the earliest and best manuscripts. Zondervan Academic.

3. The Old Testament and the Dead Sea Scrolls

Before 1947, the oldest complete Hebrew Bible was the Leningrad Codex (1008 AD). Skeptics wondered how much the text had changed over the 1,000+ years since the time of Christ.

The 1,000-Year Bridge: The discovery of the Dead Sea Scrolls (DSS) provided manuscripts dated from 250 BC to 68 AD.


The Isaiah Scroll: When scholars compared the DSS Isaiah scroll to the Masoretic Text (from 1,000 years later), they found it was 95% identical.  Bible Archaeology

The .5% variation consisted almost entirely of minor spelling and stylistic shifts, proving the meticulousness of the Jewish scribal tradition UASV Bible.

4. Comparative Reliability Table


To understand these numbers, scholars compare the Bible to other widely accepted historical texts. If one rejects the Bible's textual reliability, they must also reject almost all of ancient history
Reasonable Theology.



AuthorDate WrittenEarliest CopyApproximate Time Span between original & copyNumber of CopiesAccuracy of copies
Lucretiusdied 55 or 53 B.CUnknown1100 yrs2Unknown
PlinyA.D. 61-113A.D. 850750 yrs7Unknown
Plato427-347 B.CA.D. 9001200 yrs7Unknown
Demosthenes4th Cent. B.CA.D. 1100800 yrs8Unknown
Herodotus480-425 B.C.A.D. 9001300 yrs8Unknown
SuetoniusA.D. 75-160A.D. 950800 yrs8Unknown
Thucydides460-400 B.C.A.D. 9001300 yrs8Unknown
Euripides480-406 B.C.A.D. 11001300 yrs9Unknown
Aristophanes450-385 B.CA.D. 9001200 yrs10Unknown
Caesar100-44 B.C.A.D. 9001000 yrs10Unknown
Livy59 BC-AD 17UnknownUnknown20Unknown
Tacituscirca A.D. 100A.D. 11001000 yrs20Unknown
Aristotle384-322 B.C.A.D. 11001400 yrs49Unknown
Sophocles496-406 B.C.A.D. 11001400 yrs193Unknown
Homer (Iliad)900 B.C.400 B.C.500 yrs64395%
New Testament50-100 A.D.A.D. 130> 100 yrs560099.50%


5. The Scholarly Consensus

Even agnostic scholars like Bart Ehrman and evangelical scholars like Daniel Wallace agree that the New Testament is the best-attested work of the ancient world. The debate is not over whether we have enough evidence, but over whether the evidence allows us to reconstruct the absolute original with 100% certainty Trinity Foundation

Most textual critics conclude that the text is 99% established, and no major Christian doctrine rests on a disputed variant. Logos.com.

Conclusion

While the physical autographs of the Bible have long since succumbed to the ravages of time, the message they contained has been preserved with a level of accuracy that is unparalleled in ancient history. The transition from the YouTube skepticism of copies of copies to the scholarly reality of 24,000+ manuscripts reveals that the Bible is not a game of telephone, but a meticulously documented tradition.

When we compare the textual stability of the New Testament, supported by fragments like the John Rylands Fragment (P52), to other ancient classics like Plato or Caesar, it becomes clear that rejecting the Bible's reliability would require rejecting almost all of ancient history. Ultimately, we do not need the original paper to have the original words; the science of textual criticism ensures that the Bible we read today is a faithful reflection of the texts that first changed the world.


Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Jesus’ 7 Most Troubling Teachings

 In the video Jesus’ 7 Most Troubling Teachings, the creator (Brandon from the channel Mindshift) examines specific red-letter quotes from the Gospels that challenge the common portrayal of Jesus as the perfect moral teacher.

This post provides a comprehensive dialogue between modern skeptical critiques and traditional biblical scholarship regarding the most difficult teachings of Jesus. By contrasting the literal, often provocative interpretations found in secular humanist circles with the linguistic and cultural frameworks used by scholars/theologians, the article serves as a bridge for readers trying to navigate the verses that seem at odds with contemporary morality.

. The tension throughout the post is defined by two competing interpretive lenses:

  • The Skeptical Lens: Focuses on the literal "moral tone" and immediate psychological impact of the words, highlighting themes of shame, fear, and social disruption.

  • The Scholarly Lens: Prioritizes hermeneutics, the study of original Greek terminology (such as epithymÄ“sai for lust), ancient cultural idioms (turning the cheek), and the distinction between descriptive parables and prescriptive social policies.

Evaluation of the Original Video
  • Perspective: The video is firmly rooted in an ex-Christian/atheist critique. It intentionally avoids traditional apologetic defenses (which the narrator acknowledges but rejects as "half-truths") to focus on the literal "moral tone" of the text.

  • Argumentative Quality: The narrator is effective at isolating red letter verses to bypass common Old Testament context defenses. His strongest points lie in the psychological impact of these teachings (shame, fear, and social isolation) rather than purely theological debate.

  • Tone: The delivery is provocative but measured. While clearly biased toward a secular humanist worldview, the narrator invites sober, thoughtful consideration rather than just mockery, positioning himself as a philosopher evaluating another philosopher's work.

  • Target Audience: It is highly effective for skeptics looking for specific biblical citations to counter a "perfect Jesus" narrative.  But it likely won't serve as a stumbling block for believers who have even a modicum of knowledge in proper Biblical interpretative procedures and principles.

While the critiques presented in the video highlight common modern discomforts with these passages, biblical scholars and theologians often offer interpretations that provide cultural, linguistic, and contextual nuance.


Summary: The 7 Troubling Teachings
  1. Thought Crime Matthew 5:27-28: Jesus equates looking with lust to committing adultery in the heart. The video argues this collapses the vital distinction between human impulse and actual behavior, typically leading to deep-seated shame and religious OCD.

  2. Anti-Planning & Irresponsibility Matthew 6:25-34: The instruction to "not worry about tomorrow" like the birds of the air is criticized as dangerous economic advice. The narrator notes that relying on divine providence in place of stewardship is utterly insane in a world where people actually starve.

  3. The Intentional Hiding of Truth Mark 4:11-12: Jesus states he uses parables specifically so that those outside may see but not perceive, lest they be forgiven. The video labels this evil, as it suggests God intentionally blocks the comprehension required for repentance.

  4. Eternal Conscious Torment Matthew 25:41, 46: The establishment of infinite punishment for finite, human sins is presented as inherently unjust. The narrator argues that even if interpreted metaphorically, the existential emergency and fear it creates are psychologically damaging.

  5. Passive Submission to Evil Matthew 5:38-39: By commanding followers to "not resist an evil person" and "turn the other cheek," the video argues Jesus promotes a victimhood mentality that would cause society to break down if applied universally.

  6. Endorsement of Slavery by Analogy Luke 12:47-48: In parables involving masters beating slaves, Jesus uses the hierarchy and corporal punishment as a moral framework without ever condemning the practice of slavery itself.

  7. Extreme Measures for Sin Mark 9:43-47: The command to "cut off your hand" or "tear out your eye" to avoid hell is viewed as a hyperbolic but harmful framing of moral failure. The video notes this often manifests as "social amputation," where believers disown family or friends to avoid stumbling. 

Monday, March 23, 2026

Does the TAG argument for God have Multiple Holes in it?

This is an evaluation of a Reddit post on 3/20/21: The TAG argument for God has multiple concerning holes that most atheists do not take advantage of.  I responded, but the OP,  Technical-disOrder, never responded. 

Text of post in full: 

The typical Van Till TAG argument goes something like this:

X (God) is the necessary precondition for the possibility of Y(reason/logic) , Y exists therefore X exists.

Somebody who isn't well-adept to TAG but philosophically minded will say this is circular. You're using God to prove the existence of logic....by using logic. Kant struggled with this, but Van Till created an out for the TAG believer by making a discrepancy between viscious circularity and virtuous circularity. He stated that any meta-logic premise regardless will be circular. Naturalism would be viscious circularity because it's assuming "accident" (that is, unguided) reason for reason is incoherent because "accident" assumes meaning and purpose/tautology in the first place; it's saying purpose exists in a purposeless universe which is not a paradox but a contradiction. However, with God you have an all-powerful all-knowing being in whose nature and being is reason/logic.

I was a TAG "debatebro" for a while until I came across a wonderful paper by Amy Karofsky titled "God, Modalities, and Conceptualism".
[note: see this evaluation of this paper hereThe paper gave very good arguments against modal arguments for God, from there I found my own critique that is sort of like the Euthrypo problem but tied to modality. Since then I have tried to contact both Dyer and Jimbob in order for them to respond to the video I made but neither has contacted me. I once tried to bring this up in their discord but they treated me so poorly (so much for Christian kindness) that I had to leave. I asked them to watch my video and they said "we don't do self-promotion, just give me your argument" as if I could lay out an entire philosophical counter-argument in a discord comment. Anyway, I will get on with the structure of my argument:If God is responsible for the POSSIBILITY of knoweldge then there are two roads we can take here, either:

A: logic was arbitrarily created, this means that logic could have been anything. According to TAG logic is invariable and eternal. TAG doesn't work here obviously because logic could have been literally anything and have any form. Therefore we can't use what we see as logic now as "proof".

B: Logic was not a possibility at all but within the nature or "Logos" of God. If this is true then logic as it exists was not made by God's will as TAG claims but a necessary feature of his existence.Divine conceptualism and the "logos" does not solve this dilemma

Most TAG opponents will backtrack this fork and state something like: "logic exists within God's divine mind. A is not the case because logic/meaning is eternal and unchanging BECAUSE it comes from God's mind which we have access too. B also is incoherent because God is acting within his nature, God is free to act within his nature therefore he is not 'bound' by anything."

There are two responses to this, I will demonstrate why this isn't a good argument:

Most TAG propenents will hand-wave the "free-will" argument and use God's immutable nature, however, this is a severe problem with TAG. If both God and Logic are necessary then one cannot ground the other, you can't use God to ground logic anymore than you can use any other metaphysical theory. "Necessary" in philosophy means that it MUST exist (as in it cannot fail to exist). If you say that logic is necessary then that means there is no universe in which it cannot exist, it has standalone existince in that nothing decided the way it is or how it works. It exists because it MUST exist. Do you see how you cannot ground God anymore? Logic becomes another brute fact of reality like anything else. TAG then becomes something like this: "The fact that Bachelors are unmarried proves Bachelors exist."

If logic is a necessary feature of God's nature then logic doesn't function as an external precondition proving God, it simply follows from what God is. Describing God's nature is not the same thing as grounding logic. put in propositional form it goes something like this:

1: If something is necessary God could not have made it otherwise

2: If God couldn't have made it otherwise then logic isn't a product of divine choice

therefore: You cannot ground God in logic

Sunday, March 22, 2026

God, Modalities, and Conceptualism by Amy Karofsky

This paper can be found online here. Note: You may need a subscription to view it. I decided to look at this since it was referenced in a Reddit post/argument that I was examining. 


"God, Modalities, and Conceptualism" by Amy Karofsky.

Summary

The article addresses the classic theistic dilemma regarding God's relationship to modalities (necessity, possibility, and impossibility). The dilemma states: If God determines modalities, He can do anything, rendering "necessity" meaningless; if He does not, His power and freedom are restricted by prior necessary laws (p. 257).

Karofsky examines conceptualism as a proposed solution to this problem. Conceptualism (specifically as articulated by Jonathan Bennett) posits that modalities are determined by what the intellects of a created universe can conceive. Therefore, prior to God creating intellects, there are no modalities, leaving God completely free, yet without the problematic implication that anything is possible for Him, since possibility itself doesn't yet exist (p. 258).

Karofsky argues that conceptualism ultimately fails due to three main objections:

  • The Concepts of Possibility and Impossibility: To argue that modal concepts change depending on the shape of created intellects, the conceptualist must assume these concepts retain some core features across different worlds. These core features must therefore be necessary and independent of any intellect (p. 264).

  • Hidden Prior Modalities: The conceptualist relies on terms like "applicability" and "conceivability" to explain the theory. Karofsky points out that these are themselves modal concepts. Thus, the theory circularily grounds modalities in other, prior modalities that exist independent of created minds (p. 265).

  • Restrictions on God: Conceptualism actually binds God to certain necessary meta-rules prior to creation, such as the rule that "if there are modalities, there must be minds" or that "if something is impossible, the intellects cannot conceive of it" (p. 267).

Karofsky concludes by rejecting modal relativism, the idea that modal concepts can be contingent. She argues that the very definition of necessity requires that it cannot be otherwise; grounding necessity in God's arbitrary choice to create specific intellects destroys the concept of absolute necessity entirely (p. 268).


Evaluation

Strengths
  • Logical Rigor: Karofsky provides a very sharp, step-by-step deconstruction of Bennett's "applicability argument." Her insight that comparing concepts across different possible worlds requires those concepts to have fixed, necessary features is highly effective (p. 264).

  • Strong Core Thesis: Her general analysis correctly identifies the fatal flaw in any theory of "modal relativism." By pointing out that a contingent foundation for necessity reduces necessity to mere arbitrariness, she powerfully defends the need for absolute, mind-independent necessities (p. 268-269).

Weaknesses
  • Narrow Target: The paper focuses almost entirely on Jonathan Bennett's specific 1994 defense of conceptualism. While Karofsky briefly claims her arguments apply to all forms of modal relativism, her most detailed logical takedowns are highly tailored to Bennett's specific phrasing, which might leave alternative formulations of conceptualism unaddressed.

Amy Karofsky’s conclusion that God’s actions are restricted by prior, absolute, independent necessities presents a profound problem. Orthodox Christian theology traditionally rejects the idea that God is bound by anything outside of Himself, as this compromises His absolute sovereignty and status as the uncreated Creator of all things.

Here is how a conservative Christian thinker would systematically refute Karofsky’s argument and her critique of God’s relationship to modalities:

The False Dilemma: Arbitrariness vs. External Restriction

Karofsky argues that if God determines modalities (necessity and possibility), His choices are merely arbitrary. If they are not arbitrary, she argues, He must be bound by absolute necessities that exist independently of Him.

A conservative Christian would argue this is a false dilemma. Historically, Christian philosophers (like Augustine and Thomas Aquinas) resolve this by arguing that logic, math, and moral laws are neither arbitrary inventions of God’s will, nor independent rules that sit "above" God. Rather, necessities are grounded in God's unchanging, perfectly rational nature.  When God acts, He does not act arbitrarily; He acts in perfect accordance with His own character.

The fact that 2+2=4, or that contradictory statements [A = B, and A ≠ B] cannot both be true, is not a standard God "invented," but a reflection of His own internally consistent, orderly mind.
The Divine Intellect vs. Created Intellects

Karofsky spends much of her paper dismantling Jonathan Bennett's specific version of conceptualism, which grounds modalities in the shape of created (human) intellects. A conservative Christian might actually agree with Karofsky here: human minds do not dictate what is absolutely true or necessary.

However, the Christian worldview posits the Divine Intellect.
  • Modalities are not dependent on what we can conceive, but on what God knows eternally.
  • Karofsky suggests that prior to creation, "if there are modalities, there must be minds." A Christian agrees, but points to the eternal Mind of God. Logic and necessity have always existed because God has always existed. They are not independent cosmic laws; they are the thoughts of God.
Redefining Omnipotence

Karofsky asserts that if God's actions are restricted by necessities, "he is not genuinely omnipotent and free."

The conservative Christian worldview refutes this specific definition of omnipotence. Omnipotence does not mean the ability to do the logically impossible (like creating a married bachelor or making a square circle). As C.S. Lewis famously noted, nonsense does not cease to be nonsense just because we put the words "God can" in front of it.

  • God’s inability to do the impossible (or to sin, or to lie) is not a lack of power, but a manifestation of His supreme perfection.
  • As 2 Timothy 2:13 states, "he cannot deny himself." God is genuinely free, but He is perfectly free to be precisely who He is: a maximally great, rational being.

The Problem of "Prior" Modalities (Divine Aseity)

Divine Aseity is God exists in and of Himself, deriving His being, life, and perfection from no external source. It implies absolute self-existence, independence, and self-sufficiency, meaning God has no needs, limitations, or dependencies, contrasting with all created things

Karofsky concludes that there are absolute necessities "prior to God's creative action." If she simply means logically prior to the act of creating the universe, Christians agree. But if she means ontologically prior to God Himself, meaning God looked up at an eternal law of mathematics to figure out how to build the universe, the Christian strictly rejects this.

The doctrine of Divine Aseity states that God is the source of all reality. Colossians 1:16 states that "by him all things were created." If abstract objects or absolute necessities exist independently of God, then God is not the creator of all things, and He is a subordinate being to those necessities.


Summary of the Refutation:

Karofsky successfully defeats the idea that God arbitrarily invents logic and the idea that human minds determine reality (Bennett's Conceptualism). However, she fails to account for the classical Christian synthesis: that absolute necessity exists eternally within the mind and nature of God Himself, leaving Him entirely sovereign, rational, and unconstrained by any external force.


Saturday, March 21, 2026

When Christianity Rises, Societies Collapse - EVERYTIME

The video "When Christianity Rises, Societies Collapse - EVERYTIME" by
Darante' LaMar presents a historical and polemical argument regarding the relationship between institutional Christianity and societal stability.
Summary of the Video’s Claims

The central thesis is that when Christianity merges with state power, it creates a "theocratic monopoly" that inevitably leads to intellectual regression and societal collapse. The video highlights the
Edict of Thessalonica under Emperor Theodosius I as the moment Christianity transitioned from a tolerated faith to a state regime. This act criminalized dissent and ended Roman pluralism.

The creator argues that Christianity replaced rational inquiry with dogma. He cites the murder of the philosopher Hypatia and the destruction of libraries as evidence that "thinking itself became a threat."

The "Dark Ages" Narrative: The video asserts that this intellectual "sabotage" was the primary driver of the Western Roman Empire's collapse in 476 CE, plunging Europe into a millennium of darkness, i.e. the Dark Ages

The video concludes by warning that contemporary movements (citing "Project 2025" and "MAGA") represent a repeat of this pattern, threatening modern pluralism, science, and human rights.
Evaluation

The video is an effective piece of deconstructionist polemic. It correctly identifies the Edict of Thessalonica as a massive shift in Western history and accurately describes the intolerance that often followed state-sanctioned orthodoxy.

However, from a historical standpoint, the video relies heavily on the Conflict Thesisthe 18th and 19th-century idea that religion and science are in perpetual warfare. This perspective is considered outdated by most modern historians, who view the "Dark Ages" as a misnomer and the relationship between the Church and knowledge as far more symbiotic.


Refutation of the "Collapse" Thesis

While the video's concerns about theocracy are historically grounded, the claim that Christianity caused the collapse of Rome and a subsequent "Dark Age" is contested by several key historical facts:

The Byzantine Exception: If Christianity were a "virus" that collapses societies, the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire should have fallen immediately. Instead, it remained a devoutly Christian, highly sophisticated, and stable state for over 1,000 years after the West fell.

The Preservation of Knowledge
: Far from destroying all classical learning, it was primarily Christian monasteries that preserved, copied, and translated the Greek and Roman texts we have today. Early medieval scholars like Boethius and Bede were the links that kept classical logic and science alive.

Primary Causes of Rome's Fall: Most modern historians (e.g., Peter Heather or Will Durant) argue that Rome fell due to economic decay, military overstretch, plagues, and barbarian invasions. As Durant noted, "Rome was not destroyed by Christianity... it was an empty shell when Christianity rose to influence."

The Myth of the "Dark Ages": The term "Dark Ages" is largely rejected by historians today. The period saw significant advancements in agriculture (the heavy plow), architecture (Gothic), and the
birth of the university system in the 11th and 12th centuries, all under the auspices of the Church.

The Carolingian Renaissance and the rise of medieval universities represent two major "awakenings" in Western history that directly contradict the idea of a stagnant "Dark Age." These movements show how the Church and state worked together to preserve classical knowledge and eventually create the modern academic system.

While the Western Roman Empire had fragmented, Charlemagne (the first Holy Roman Emperor) sought to revive its cultural and intellectual glory. Charlemagne realized his empire lacked the literate officials needed for administration and a clergy educated enough to correctly interpret the Bible. He invited the English scholar Alcuin of York to his court to organize a standardized educational program.
[Source]

Monasteries became massive production centers for books. Most of the classical Roman literature we have today (works by Cicero, Horace, Virgil) survived only because Carolingian monks diligently copied them. [Source]  To make reading easier and more uniform, scholars developed a new script - 
the Carolingian minuscule. Before this, writing was often a mess of regional "shorthand." This script introduced lowercase letters and spaces between words—the direct ancestor of the font you are reading right now.

The Rise of Medieval Universities (11th–13th Centuries)

The educational seeds planted by Charlemagne eventually grew into the first universities, which were a uniquely medieval invention.

From Cathedrals to Colleges: As cities grew, the old "cathedral schools" (run by bishops) expanded into Studia Generalia—places where students from across Europe could study. [Source].  The Church was the primary patron and regulator of these institutions. Pope Gregory VII issued a decree in 1079 mandating the creation of cathedral schools to train clergy, which directly evolved into the first universities like Bologna (1088) and Paris (c. 1150). [Source]

The Curriculum: Students followed the Seven Liberal Arts, divided into the Trivium: Grammar, Logic, and Rhetoric (the "tools" of thought) and the Quadrivium: Arithmetic, Geometry, Music, and Astronomy (the "subjects" of thought). Source

Scholasticism was a dominant medieval European philosophical and theological movement (c. 1100–1700) that used rigorous Aristotelian logic to reconcile Christian faith with classical reason. This was the intellectual engine of the university. Thinkers like Thomas Aquinas argued that reason and faith were compatible. They used the logic of the newly rediscovered Aristotle to explain Christian doctrine, laying the groundwork for the modern scientific method. Source

FeatureCarolingian RenaissanceMedieval Universities
Primary DriverImperial decree & Clerical reformUrban growth & Intellectual guilds
Main AchievementPreservation of Latin/Classical textsCreation of a self-governing academic class
Long-term ImpactStandardized European writing/literacyFoundation of Western science and law


Why this matters: These eras prove that the medieval Church was not a "destroyer" of knowledge. Instead, it acted as a repository and laboratory. Without the Carolingian monks copying Roman texts or the medieval popes granting charters to universities, the Renaissance and the Scientific Revolution would have lacked their foundation. Darante' LaMar 's argument is refuted by history. 

Saturday, March 7, 2026

The Anthropic Principle

The anthropic principle is a cosmological and philosophical concept stating that the universe's fundamental physical constants and laws must be compatible with the existence of the observers who perceive it. In other words, if the universe were not "fine-tuned" for life, we would not be here to observe it.

The principle is generally divided into two main versions:

  • Weak Anthropic Principle (WAP): This version suggests that our location in the universe (in both space and time) is necessarily privileged to the extent of being compatible with our existence as observers. It is often considered a "selection effect", we only see a universe capable of supporting life because we could not exist in any other kind.

  • Strong Anthropic Principle (SAP): A more controversial version which proposes that the universe must have those properties that allow life to develop within it at some stage in its history. This implies that the emergence of life is a fundamental necessity of the universe's design or existence.

Key Aspects

  • Fine-Tuning: The principle addresses why fundamental forces (like gravity and electromagnetism) have the precise values they do. Even slight variations in these constants would have prevented the formation of stars, planets, or carbon-based life.

  • Multiverse Theory: The anthropic principle is frequently used to support the idea of a multiverse. If there are infinite universes with different physical laws, it is no longer a coincidence that we find ourselves in one of the few that can support life.

  • Scientific Status: Critics often argue the principle is a truism or tautology (we are here because we are here) and that it may discourage scientists from seeking more in-depth physical explanations for why the constants of nature are the way they are.


Saturday, February 28, 2026

Secular Moral Realism - A Critique

What is Secular Moral Realism?


Secular moral realism is a meta-ethical position asserting that objective moral facts exist independently of human opinions, cultural norms, or divine commands.

Unlike religious moral realism (which grounds morality in God, such as in Divine Command Theory), the secular version argues that moral truths can be discovered through naturalistic inquiry, reason, and empathy. Just as there are objective facts in physics or mathematics, secular moral realists argue there are objective facts about what is morally good or bad (e.g., "torture is objectively wrong").

Core Components:

Mind-Independence: Moral properties exist out in the world, not just in the minds or attitudes of human beings.

Naturalistic Foundation: Morality is grounded in observable realities like human experience, evolutionary biology, conscious well-being, and logic, rather than supernatural forces.

Rationality and Empathy: Moral principles are derived from logical consistency and our capacity to understand the suffering and flourishing of conscious creatures.

Analysis: How It Works and Where It Fits

Secular moral realism sits at the intersection of atheist/secular philosophy and objective ethics. It attempts to answer the common critique that "without God, anything is permissible."

  • Contrasts with Anti-Realism: It opposes moral relativism (morality depends on culture), moral subjectivism (morality is personal preference), and moral error theory/nihilism (all moral statements are false because moral properties don't exist).

  • Common Frameworks: Secular moral realists often align with specific ethical systems to explain how we discover these facts:

    • Consequentialism / Utilitarianism:Thinkers like Sam Harris argue that moral facts are simply facts about the well-being of conscious creatures. Actions that maximize flourishing are objectively "good."

    • Kantian Rationalism: Immanuel Kant (and modern neo-Kantians) argued that morality is derived from pure reason and logical consistency (the categorical imperative), independent of religion.

Evaluation: Strengths and Weaknesses

Strengths (Arguments in Favor)

  • Aligns with Human Intuition: It deeply aligns with our strong intuition that certain acts (like cruelty for fun) are not just "unpopular," but inherently and universally wrong, regardless of what anyone thinks.

  • Universalism and Progress: It allows for the concept of moral progress. If objective moral facts exist, we can say that ending slavery was a genuine moral improvement, rather than just a shift in cultural tastes.

  • Solves the Euthyphro Dilemma: It avoids the classic theological problem of whether something is good because God commands it (making morality arbitrary) or if God commands it because it is already good (meaning morality exists independently of God anyway).

Weaknesses (Arguments Against / Challenges)


  • The "Is-Ought" Problem (Hume's Guillotine): This is the most famous challenge. Critics argue you cannot logically jump from a descriptive statement about nature (an "is," such as "this action causes pain") to a prescriptive moral statement (an "ought," such as "you ought not do this action").

  • The Argument from Queerness (J.L. Mackie): If objective moral properties exist in the natural world without a God, they would be profoundly strange entities unlike anything else in the universe. How do these "moral particles" exist, and how do we interact with them?

  • Evolutionary Debunking Arguments: Critics argue that our moral intuitions are simply the result of blind evolutionary processes designed to help our ancestors survive and cooperate. Because evolution optimizes for survival rather than "objective truth," our moral beliefs are likely just biological programming, not reflections of mind-independent moral facts.

Rebuttal - Expanding on the Weaknesses

While secular moral realism is a popular attempt to save objective morality without religion, it faces devastating critiques from within secular philosophy itself. To robustly debunk and rebut secular moral realism, one must dismantle its core premise: the idea that objective moral facts (e.g., "murder is inherently wrong") exist out in the natural universe independently of human minds, cultures, or divine commands. Here are the strongest philosophical arguments used to rebut and debunk it:

The "Is-Ought" Problem (Hume’s Guillotine)

The most famous argument against naturalistic moral realism was articulated by David Hume. Hume pointed out that you cannot logically deduce an "ought" (a prescriptive moral command) from an "is" (a descriptive fact about nature).
  • The Problem: Secular moral realists (like Sam Harris) often argue that because certain actions cause physical pain or reduce human flourishing (an "is"), we therefore ought not do them.

  • The Rebuttal: This is a logical fallacy. Science can tell us that touching a hot stove causes tissue damage (a biological fact). But science cannot tell you that you ought to care about tissue damage. To cross from biology to morality, the secular realist has to smuggle in an unproven, subjective premise (e.g., "we should value human flourishing"). Thus, the foundation is not an objective fact, but a subjective preference.

The Evolutionary Debunking Argument

If moral facts are real, objective features of the universe, how did humans come to know them? Secular realists usually point to human intuition and empathy, which evolved over millions of years.

  • The Problem: Evolution by natural selection does not select for "objective truth"; it selects for survival and reproduction.

  • The Rebuttal: Philosophers like Sharon Street argue that our moral intuitions (e.g., "care for your children," "do not kill your neighbors") were programmed into us by evolution simply because these behaviors fostered social cohesion and kept our ancestors alive. If our moral beliefs are just the result of blind biological programming geared toward survival, it is an incredible, unbelievable coincidence that this programming happens to align with "objective cosmic moral truths." Therefore, moral realism is an illusion foisted upon us by our genes to get us to cooperate.

The Argument from Queerness (J.L. Mackie)

Philosopher J.L. Mackie famously argued against moral realism by pointing out how utterly bizarre objective moral facts would have to be if they existed in a purely material, secular universe.

  • Ontological Queerness: If the universe consists only of atoms, energy, and physical laws, what exactly is a "moral fact"? It isn't a particle, a wave, or a force. If moral properties exist out in the wild, they would be profoundly weird entities unlike anything else in physics or biology.

  • Epistemological Queerness: Furthermore, they possess a magical "to-be-done-ness" or "not-to-be-done-ness." How could a completely blind, physical universe contain invisible laws that inherently demand humans behave in a certain way? Mackie argued that it is far simpler and more rational to conclude that these "queer" entities just don't exist.

The "So What?" (Motivation) Problem

Even if we grant the secular realist their premise—let's say we mathematically prove that "Action X maximizes human well-being"—the anti-realist can still say, "So what?"
  • The Rebuttal: Objective facts in the natural world do not carry intrinsic motivation. If a sociopath recognizes that torturing someone decreases human flourishing, but they enjoy doing it anyway, on what objective grounds are they wrong? The secular moral realist can only say, "You are acting against human flourishing." The sociopath can reply, "I know, and I don't care about human flourishing." Without a transcendent authority (like a God) to enforce or ground the "ought," secular moral facts lose their binding authority. They become mere observations that one is free to ignore.

Conclusion

In conclusion, secular moral realism provides a robust framework for those who wish to maintain that morality is universal and binding without relying on the supernatural. However, it requires a heavy philosophical lift to explain exactly what these moral facts are made of and how we reliably access them using only the natural sciences and reason.



Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Honor, Patronage, Kinship & Purity

 

To interpret the text rightly, we must listen within its original context: what the original author meant to convey to the original audience. David A. deSilva's Honor, Patronage, Kinship & Purity  is a foundational text for understanding the New Testament in its original context. DeSilva argues that 1st-century Mediterranean society was driven by values vastly different from modern Western individualism: honor and shame, patronage and reciprocity, kinship and family, purity and pollution.

  1. Honor and Shame: How the pursuit of status (honor) and the avoidance of disgrace (shame) drove social behavior, and how the New Testament redefines what is honorable (e.g., the shame of the Cross becoming glory).

  2. Patronage and Reciprocity: Understanding Grace (charis) not just as a theological abstract, but as a social contract between a Patron (God) and a Client (the believer), involving the obligation of gratitude.   

  3. Kinship: The concept of the Household of God and how the early church used family language (brother/sister) to create a new fictive kinship that was often stronger than blood ties.   

  4. Purity and Pollution: The Jewish and Greco-Roman maps of clean and unclean, and how Jesus and Paul redrew those boundaries to focus on moral rather than ritual purity.

Here is a summary of the book’s four main sections (pillars), along with the key terminology for each.

Part 1: Honor and Shame

The Pivotal Value of the Ancient World

Summary: DeSilva establishes that Honor was the primary currency of the ancient world, more valuable than money. Every social interaction was a judgment of a person's worth. The goal of life was to gain honor (public acknowledgement of worth) and avoid shame (public disgrace).

  • The Problem: Early Christians faced immense pressure because their faith brought them shame in the eyes of their neighbors and families (e.g., worshipping a crucified criminal).

  • The Solution: The New Testament authors re-engineered the court of reputation. Instead of seeking the approval of the city or empire, believers were taught to seek the approval of God alone.

Key Terms:

  • Ascribed Honor: Honor you are born with (e.g., being male, Jewish, Roman, or from a noble family). It is unearned.

  • Acquired Honor: Honor gained through achievements, typically by excelling in the "games" of society (warfare, rhetoric, public benefaction).

  • The Court of Reputation: The specific group of people whose opinion matters to you. (Paul shifts this court from "the world" to "God and the Church").

  • Challenge-Riposte: A social "game" where one person challenges another (via an insult, a question, or a physical blow) to test their honor. The victim must respond (riposte) to defend their honor, or they lose status.

  • Positive Shame (Aidos): A healthy sensitivity to the opinion of others; the "blush" that keeps you from doing something disgraceful.


Part 2: Patronage and Reciprocity

Grace as a Social Contract

Summary: Ancient society was not a democracy; it was a vertical hierarchy. "Patronage" was the glue that held it together. A wealthy, powerful individual (Patron) would provide resources to a lower-status individual (Client). In return, the Client was obligated to offer loyalty, public praise, and gratitude.

  • The Theological Shift: DeSilva argues that "Grace" (Charis) in the New Testament is best understood through this lens. God is the ultimate Patron. He gives a gift we cannot repay (salvation). Therefore, our proper response is not just "acceptance," but intense loyalty, gratitude, and obedience.

Key Terms:

  • Patron: One who has access to goods, protection, or status that others need but cannot get themselves.

  • Broker: A mediator who gives a client access to a patron (e.g., Jesus is the broker between humanity and the Father).

  • Charis (Grace): In the 1st century, this wasn't just a theological feeling; it meant a concrete gift or favor that created a debt of gratitude.

  • Reciprocity: The unbreakable social rule that "grace must be met with grace." A gift must be requited with gratitude/loyalty. To fail to return thanks was to be "wicked."

  • Pistis (Faith): In a patronage context, this often means "loyalty" or "faithfulness" to the patron, rather than just intellectual belief.


Part 3: Kinship

The Household of God

Summary: The family (Oikos) was the basic economic and survival unit of the ancient world. You did not survive without a family. Loyalty to blood relations was the highest earthly obligation.

  • The Conflict: Jesus and Paul used kinship language ("brother," "sister," "household of God") to describe the Church. This was radical. It created a "fictive kinship" that demanded higher loyalty than one’s biological family. This is why Christianity caused such social disruption—it redirected the primary survival allegiance from the blood family to the faith family.

Key Terms:

  • Fictive Kinship: The social mechanism of treating non-relatives as if they were blood relatives, granting them the same rights and demanding the same loyalties.

  • In-Group vs. Out-Group: The ancient mindset was highly tribal. You were expected to love your group (family/clan) and be hostile or indifferent to outsiders. The NT challenges this by expanding the "In-Group" to include Gentiles and enemies.

  • Brotherly Love (Philadelphia): Originally referring only to blood siblings, Christians repurposed this term to define the bond between believers.


Part 4: Purity and Pollution

Maps of the Holy

Summary: Purity laws were not just about hygiene; they were about order. Ancients viewed the world as a map: things had a "proper place."

  • Clean (Pure): Anything that is in its proper place.

  • Unclean (Polluted): Matter out of place (e.g., dirt is fine in the garden, but "unclean" on the dinner table).

  • The Jewish Map: Focused on bodily boundaries (food, leprosy, fluids) to maintain separation from Gentiles.

  • The Christian Revision: Jesus and Paul did not abolish purity; they redrew the map. They moved the boundary markers from ritual markers (food/circumcision) to moral markers (sexual immorality, idolatry).

Key Terms:

  • Pollution: The state of being "out of place" or defiled. It is contagious—if you touch a corpse, you contract pollution.

  • Purity Map: The cultural "lines" that define what is safe/holy and what is dangerous/defiled.

  • Sanctification: The process of moving closer to the "center" of the purity map (God's presence) and staying away from the "margins" (sin/defilement).

  • Contagious Holiness: A unique NT concept where Jesus touches the unclean (lepers, corpses) and instead of Him getting dirty, they get clean.

What Happened to the Original Bible?

Introduction The quest for the "Original Bible" is often framed as a detective story where the primary evidence has gone missing. ...