Well, please write something good. Just expect me to pick up on any assumptions or breaches of logic. Heck, I can find my own, but I leave them there to see if anyone else sees them. It makes the game much funner.
Note that I usually try to keep "facts" to a minimum. My major concern is coherence and congruency, which doesn't depend on the fallibility of an observer to record an observation, to use a redundant term. Mmm. Redundance. How redundant.
Also, circular arguments about the validity of historical sources are boring. Although, sometimes it's worth mentioning some details, especially where ignorance of those details would, in and of itself, put you in a position where it would be foolish to continue with your beliefs.
For example, if you don't know how the bible came to be as it is today and through whose hands it passed, whereupon do you base the assumption that it could remain accurate, had it even been accurate in the first place? We can't look at how accurate the texts were before, because we don't have the original manuscripts. We can only look at what we have and what we have has been through many hands. Whose? Can they be trusted? Can YOU trust them not to corrupt the information upon which you rely for your salvation? If so, then you are trusting humans.
You see, many Christians rely on circular reasoning and it is often the only thing upon which they rely. As a kid, I thought that if I sat on a chair and pulled up, the force of my pulling might counter the effect of gravity and the chair and I could essentially hover if I kept pulling. That's a good analogy for the following reasoning:
"
The God in the Bible is God because the Bible says so." (
more fallacies)
Notice that I said nothing about whether or not there IS a God, or whether or not the being called God in the Bible might exist, but actually not be divine. These are all theoretical possibilities, but essentially, there is no evidence of the above, quoted, specific claim whatsoever. I can argue for ages that there is a president of the United States, but that doesn't prove that I'M the president of the United States. I could imitate him, dress like him, talk like him and even do more impressive things, such as invading a middle eastern country, but none of those things would inherently make me president of the United States.
Why is the Bible more credible than a criminal who insists that he is innocent? Could someone gain from others believing something without logical grounds for believing it? The criminal gains freedom if his lie is believed. Likewise, many have controlled others through the concept of faith. Cults are microcosms to the level of control that the Catholic Church had in the middle ages. Now it's a bit more subtle and isn't limited to the Catholic Church*, but it goes without saying that if people are going to place their lives in the hands of a book and its wording, there will inevitably be someone who will find advantages in changing those words to control those very people. This is irrelevant of whether or not those words were true to begin with.
*I'm saying that for the record and it does not imply that it ever was limited to the Catholic Church before, either.