Words have a default meaning unless they are modified by other words. So I first see what something means...then I look to see if the meaning was modified by other words (the "exploration of a passage", as you put it. Sometimes it is modified, and sometimes it isn't, depending on the context. This isn't making assumptions; it's letting the text speak for itself. This is also how normal conversation works. When you say something, I believe exactly what you say, unless the context of what you say modifies the meaning of the words you use. In other words, there is no reason to assume you mean something other than what you say unless you indicate that.
Would you agree?
No, your assessment is incorrect.
Not only can a word have multiple meanings by dictionary definition, they can also have different meanings based on context including symbolic language, etc. There is no "default" meaning for items that have multiple potential meanings. That is an assumption you have included and it is not logic based. There can be, in some cases, conventions that language works by, which is not the same thing.
It compellingly seems to be the case that your use of "face-value" meaning is the same as your use of "default" meaning. If that is the case, my criticism of your use of "face-value" remains completely unchanged.
I suggest you familiarize yourself with lexicography as a science. There are no prescriptive defaults to words, only descriptive depictions about typical uses.
What are you talking about?
I didn't "A =A" or "A =non-A" was a syllogism.
Did you even read the comment that you quoted and replied to?
"A=A" is tautology.
"A therefore B" is syllogism.
I said my
speculation of angelic repentance was a syllogism (
post #44) ("quoted below)
If you want to talk about this as a syllogism, can you please render this into a syllogistic structure?
Please tell me. Why does God make the distinction between the angels and the sons of Abraham?
The context here goes back to Heb 2:9. The subject is that the act of the flesh and blood sacrifice, and that the mechanism there, was not for the sake of angels. If you read the verse in isolation with a bad translation, you could misconstrue it.
I suggest finding a better translation to look at first. I'm not a KJV purist by any means but KJV illustrates the proper context:
"But we see Jesus, who was made a little lower than the angels for the suffering of death, crowned with glory and honour; that he by the grace of God should taste death for every man. [...] For verily he took not on him the nature of angels; but he took on him the seed of Abraham. Wherefore in all things it behoved him to be made like unto his brethren, that he might be a merciful and faithful high priest in things pertaining to God, to make reconciliation for the sins of the people." - Heb 2:9&16-17 KJV
The Greek in Heb 2:16 is basically: "For then not angels does he take hold of but the seed of Abraham"
If the passage is cherry-picked the context can be accidentally removed. The scope of Heb 2:16 is about the Christ death and resurrection as it pertains to OT Law mechanics and the promises to Abraham and seed.
If we reintroduce part of Heb 2:9 to highlight the context, we have: "That Jesus should taste death for every man, for verily he took not on him the nature of angels but the seed of Abraham"
Hypotheticals cannot be disproven.
You really don't understand formal logic if you think that is the case.
You are committing an Argumentum Ad Speculum "Hypothesis Contrary to Fact" fallacy.
You cannot introduce a hypothetical, then say I'm wrong because I cannot disprove your hypothetical.
If you want to say it is necessarily the case that something does not exist (not possibly the case), it is on
you to substantiate that claim.
You also don't even need to necessarily "disprove" a possible interpretation, you can accept it as a possibility and then make the case for why it ought be seen as uncompelling or unlikely.
You are committing an Argumentum Ad Speculum "Hypothesis Contrary to Fact" fallacy.
"Hypothesis Contrary to Fact: From a statement of fact, the argument draws a counterfactual claim (i.e. a claim about what would have been true if the stated fact were not true). The argument falsely assumes that any state of affairs can have only one possible cause."
No, that does not apply to my positions in this case. Are you throwing words against the wall to see what sticks?
If someone made an argument to the effect of "If Christ wasn't crucified" that would be an example of a hypothesis contrary to fact.
Are you saying Jesus never alluded to Greek ideas when speaking to a Jewish audience?
I believe it would have been
unlikely to be the case. Jesus was very careful to speak in terms that His intended audience would understand. The prime example of that was His explanation for the use of parables.
You could suppose that the Pharisees were not the true audience that He was speaking to and that instead He was speaking to the future readers of the Bible. I admit that we can look at this as a type of compelling interpretation. That still would not give advantage to the interpretation that Jesus was speaking in terms of Greek concepts at the point.
But...
As I stated, transmutation is not uniquely a Greek concept (e.g.
Ecc 3:20). There are clear instances where Jesus
was speaking in Hebrew concepts, including references to Law and Abraham. It is therefore necessarily the case that Jesus at least part of the time spoke in terms of Hebrew concepts. It may be the case that He always spoke in Hebrew concepts. You would need to demonstrate:
1) That there were any instances where Jesus ever undeniably spoke in terms of Greek concepts (especially in-person pre-resurrection)
2) That it would likely be the case that "raise stones into children of Abraham" was a distinctly Greek concept
Do you have an example that would compellingly be interpreted as Jesus speaking in terms of Greek concepts?
The angels have no high priest to represent them before God.
Yes or No?
Non-sequitur. Angels aren't under the OT Law. The high priest is a function under the Law. The passage you are alluding to was discussing the mechanics of OT Law. How many times do I need to cover this same point?
Let's recap.
Here are the phrases you used:
A) "
angels in heaven continually see the face of My Father" (from Mat 18:10)
B) "
all the host of heaven standing by Him on His right and on His left." (from 1 Kings 22:19)
C)
"I am Gabriel, who stands in the presence of God," (from Luke 1:19
Regarding A), "And the LORD spake unto Moses face to face..." - Ex 33:11a KJV. Moses also disobeyed God, yet ended up standing beside the transfigured Jesus later in Mark 9.
Regarding B), "host of heaven" does not necessarily mean 100% angels. But again, following from the Moses example. Moses literally stands beside God as well.
Regarding C), Adam and Eve also stood in the presence of God. 2 Timothy 4:1 states that he was also in the presence of God.
Your argument was trying to make a distinction between angels and men by virtue of whether or not they had seen the full glory of God. To try to substantiate that, you brought forward examples of angels being "in the presence of" or "standing beside" God. Your examples don't sufficiently differentiate between humans and angels as both angels and humans have been in the presence of God.
You could try other passages, but the three passages you brought up were not sufficient to demonstrate your argument. Passage C) is also categorically not the type of passage you should be looking for to demonstrate your point. If one specific angel had a specific kind of relationship with God, it does not necessarily follow that all other angels would have as well.
It's ok to debate over whether the evidence is being understood correctly, but it is not ok to ask how the evidence directly "proves" the conclusion. That ignores the connected premise and insists that I skip a logical step.
If I offer a premise, you may agree or disagree. If you disagree, then we go down a layer to investigate the evidence to see if the evidence supports that premise. If you did agree with the evidence, then that is where we hang out for a while and discuss the passage(s). But you cannot ask me how the passage directly "proves" my conclusion unless no premise is required and the evidence is so obviously connected. I know you disagree with my conclusion. But do you understand what I mean by "layers" now?
Can you provide an example?
In your example can you specifically identify what you are calling "evidence" vs. "premise" vs. "conclusion"
Can you explain how this "layers" concept explains your "circular reasoning" claim?