This was quite an interesting discussion. I recommend this
for Muslims who are beginning to interact with folk of a Pantheistic worldview whilst simultaneously being familiar with Christian apologetics. That may not be too many Muslims. It will help
you to understand this philosophy and assist in arguing against it. As a Muslim,
in this discussion I found myself agreeing with the Christian on a few points
Seth Dunn represented the Christian Biblical worldview. He
has a seminary education in Christianity.
I have added some commentary and discussion points below this debate video.
Deistic Pantheist's formulate their own religion?
It is quite apparent Jordan is literally formulating his
own religion as he goes along - he takes from religious texts selectively.
Basically, whatever appeals to his reasoning/emotions he accepts it. At times he was taking from the
Hindu scriptures in this discussion.
Coming to a particular worldview for emotional reasons is not the best way to do one's theology.
Problem of Cosmology in Pantheism
This is an interesting problem for the Pantheist worldview.
We know, the Universe had a beginning (this is deduced by the observation that
the Universe is expanding) while Pantheists believe "All is God". Thus, if they
believe God is immutable how can they believe God is the everything we see as
God is eternal while the material universe we observe is not eternal?
Biblical inerrancy
I don't think Seth answers this well. He misses the real
point behind the objection. Seth draws parallels between Jordan 's
argument and KJV Onlyists to dismiss the argument. That doesn't work. There are
real issues which come to the fore when we think about the documented additions
in the Biblical text.
How can Seth be sure other parts aren't additions waiting to
be uncovered via new MSS discoveries?
What of the Biblical Christians prior to the discovery of
Codex Sinaiticus by Dr Von Tischendorf in the 1800s? Weren't those Christians
claiming to have the Holy Spirit yet believing in those two chunks Jordan brought up to be
theopneustos (God breathed?)
And what about the other variants - the footnotes in Seth's
Bible aren't considered to be Non-Biblical. Rather, conservative Christians
consider them to be possible readings when it comes to the autographs. However,
what if we have further discoveries which lead to more footnotes being added to
accommodate a new reading? Who knows, perhaps John 1:1 will be found to have
variants or even to be a complete addition in the future? There
are some sceptical scholars who do suspect John 1:1-18 is
not authentic to the autograph, they obviously base this on internal evidence
rather than manuscript evidence but what if there is a new MS find to reflect this in the
future?
These are huge problems for Seth and other Biblical
Christians
Problem of evil (theodicy) in Pantheism and Christianity
(and Islam)
Historically, this has been a talking point amongst folk of
every worldview. I think this is a bigger problem for Pantheists than Christians
(or Muslims) when we consider moral evil. There are two types of problems; moral and natural. In this case, moral is the one we is the focus. It is considered moral evil when humans commit reprehensible acts such as murder, rape, theft etc.
For the Pantheist, as Seth touched
upon, it is God committing the evil act and being the victim of the evil act
simultaneously.
Old Testament violence
The thought of children being put to death will elicit emotions
in any human with a heart. Jordan
considered this part of the OT to be a likely addition to the text as he had
moved away from Biblical inerrancy.
I thought Seth Dunn did well to raise the point to Jordan that he
cannot have a moral objection to this story if he operates from a Pantheistic
pradigm. Pantheism would have no problem with 1 Samuel 15 as Pantheism comes with
the belief that God rapes and kills every time a murder/rape is carried out (the
person carrying out the crime is said to have God inside them).
Also the idea of a Pantheist telling somebody what they did
is not moral is problematic as they believe all is God.
Concluding remarks
I thought the dialogue was conducted fairly and in the spirit of friendship. I think dialogues like these will help us all to understand different worldviews and will help people with their intellectual and spiritual growth.
For me, I am surprised Jordan left the Abrahamic tradition just because of problems with the inerrancy of the Bible.
Why did he not explore Islam? Dr Jerald Dirks had a similar experience to Jordan during his studies of the NT, he came to Islam - I'd like Jordan to take the time to listen to Dr Dirk's story. Islam teaches there were Scriptures given to Moses and Jesus but these Scriptures are now corrupted thus the Hebrew Bible and the NT are not considered reliable. Islam also teaches Jesus was not God but rather a Prophet of God. This is all very interesting to somebody who follows modern day historical Jesus studies and NT textual criticism as these disciplines point to these Islamic teachings. Textual critics don't consider the text of the NT to be reliable nor authorised. Scholars like Bart Ehrman openly state Jesus would have taught himself to be a Prophet (not divine).
Some further discussion topics for our Pantheistic friends:
- Idolatry and Pantheism. Would Pantheists not accept the
worship of anything in nature as they believe whatever they are worshipping is
God?
- The universe had a beginning. The Pantheist, if consistent
with the idea that God is the universe, would be left with the problem of
whether God (too) has a beginning. Muslims and Christians don't have this
problem as we believe God is eternal.
- How can a Pantheist not believe in a moral law from God if
there's evil? If there's an evil that means there's good. If there's good that
means we have a moral law. If we have a moral law that means it can only come
from God. Would this not be an argument for divine revelation from God?
- Truth by its nature is exclusive. For example, if I say we
live on Mars and you say we live on Earth, both of us cannot be right. The same
applies for religious belief. However, for the Pantheist there's an added
difficulty as they believe everybody is God. How can they believe God is the Christian,
Muslim and the Deistic Pantheist while all three have radically different views
- all three cannot be correct. For the Pantheist, God is part of this lack of
truth as God is believed to be the untruthful/incorrect one too. There's a
problem!
- Pantheism is not monolithic. There's a very basic belief
that is common to all Pantheists but after that there are divisions. It
really is the individual or a collective of individuals deciding what to
believe:
At its most general, pantheism may be understood positively as the view that God is identical with the cosmos, the view that there exists nothing which is outside of God, or else negatively as the rejection of any view that considers God as distinct from the universe.
However, given the complex and contested nature of the concepts involved, there is insufficient consensus among philosophers to permit the construction of any more detailed definition not open to serious objection from some quarter or other. Moreover, the label is a controversial one, where strong desires either to appropriate or to reject it often serve only to obscure the actual issues, and it would be a sad irony if pantheism revealed itself to be most like a traditional religion in its sectarian disputes over just what counts as ‘true pantheism.’ Therefore pantheism should not be thought of as a single codifiable position. [Pantheism, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy]
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