Discussing “Do atheists separate themselves from other atheists in their forms of atheism as far as motive is concerned?”

The subject question, Do atheists separate themselves from other atheists in their forms of atheism as far as motive is concerned?, was posted to the Quora site.

A certain Roy Yeo replied:

There are no “forms of atheism”, nor are there “motives” for it. Atheism is simply the absence of belief in the existence of any god. Period.

“Do you believe in god?”

“No, I don’t.”

There, you’ve found yourself an atheist.

Atheism has no agenda, no doctrines, no tenets, no dogma, no motives. It’s merely a state of being.

I, Ken Ammi, replied:

Of course there are forms of Atheism: they range from what is academically known by various terms such as “strong” and “weak.” Of course there are motives: just ask any Atheist why they converted to Atheism. But part of the problem is that every Atheist appoints themselves the (pseudo) authoritative arbiter of how to define “Atheism.” For example, you merely provided the watered down preferred definition du jour. Also, that “Atheism has no agenda, no doctrines, no tenets, no dogma, no motives” is a dogmatic statement, it is dogmatheism.

Roy Yeo:

Motive refers to the goal of a person’s actions. Atheism is the result of a person being unconvinced by the claims that any god exists. Do not attempt to redefine words to suit your narrative.

Atheism is the absence of belief in the existence of any god.

Whether the atheist says they can’t prove a god doesn’t exist, or if they claim that no god exists, it doesn’t change that fact that they don’t believe any god exists.

If you have to twist what I said about atheism not having any dogma as dogma, then it says a lot about your wilful misunderstanding of what atheism really is. Don’t be that desperate to make everything fit your narrative. Some things just don’t.

Ken Ammi:

Motive refers to the premise of a person’s actions.

That “Atheism is the result of a person being unconvinced by the claims that any god exists” is myopic—and a highly subjective issue.

As I noted, “academically known by various terms” so that is not me, it is about academia.

You don’t seem to realize that in affirming that some Atheists “claim that no god exists” does denote a denomination, a sect, an offshoot, etc. and that is academia’s point.

Such is what is meant by denomination, a sect, an offshoot, etc.: same premise, different spin.

Now, you refer to “wilful misunderstanding” but how do you know it’s willful and since you seem to condemn misunderstanding: why so?

Roy Yeo:

Motive is the GOAL of a person’s actions. Premise refers to the underlying proposition. Get your definitions right. If you’re not a native English speaker, please refer to a dictionary.

I’ll say this one last time; atheism is simply the absence of belief in the existence of any god. Gnosticism or agnosticism pertaining to atheism simply refers to what the atheist thinks about god’s existence. They’re not sects or denominations, because there are no beliefs to categorise.

Regardless, the premise is still the same – atheists are just not convinced that any god exists.

Your referring to my stating atheism as not having any agendas, dogmas, doctrines and tenets, as “dogmatheism” (are you making words up too?) is clearly a wilful misunderstanding, because I have already defined what atheism is three times in this post.

Your clear refusal to accept that means your redefinition of it was clearly done with intentional disregard.

Ken Ammi:

Friend, please look up “motive” in dictionaries.

Atheism is a worldview premised on “the absence of belief in the existence of any god”—well, it’s actually premised on hidden assumptions that (un-viably) result in the conclusion of “absence of belief in the existence of any god.”

But since you demand that Atheism has not “sects or denominations” then since you positively affirm God’s non-existence, you must prove it.

You don’t seem to be aware of the history of “Atheism” such as what has been meant by the application of that term.

As for “intentional disregard” you imply that such (if, that is what is it) is some sort of problem but how so on your worldview?

Roy Yeo:

Let’s put this as simply as possible. Atheists are not convinced by the claims that any god exists. That’s it. I don’t understand your need to redefine it.

We’re not saying god doesn’t exist. We’re not “positively affirming god’s non-existence”. As such, we have nothing to prove.

On the other hand, theists are the ones who are making the positive claim that their god exists. Therefore, the burden of proof falls on their shoulders to provide credible evidence to support that assertion and belief.

If you don’t believe leprechauns exist, would you bother looking for evidence that they don’t? Can you even? That’s the same logic being practiced here.

Atheism is NOT a worldview because it does not establish a “truth” or a point of view about the world. We simply do NOT believe any theist’s claims that god is real due to the complete absence of objective evidence.

We’re all born without that belief. God is an idea and external influence that needs to be drilled into young minds in order to stay alive. If you really want to delve into the “history” of atheism, there you have it.

There’s no need to further intellectualise it by diving into the etymology of the word as it is inconsequential to this conversation.

Ken Ammi:

The neo-Atheist definition of “Atheism” as “lack of belief in God” says nothing about God’s existence and saying something about God’s existence is supposed to be what Atheism is all about, rather than saying something about the opinions of individual Atheists.

This is not about my need to redefine it, the “lack of belief” is the redefinition.

So, when you say “We’re” as if you speak for all Atheist, “not saying god doesn’t exist” you clearly have not looked up “Atheism” is various dictionaries, encyclopedias, websites, etc. There are many scholarly sources that affirm that Atheism includes positively affirming God’s non-existence.

But when you say “the burden of proof falls on” theists to “provide credible evidence” the first step is for you to justify your demand for evidence.

If Atheism is NOT a worldview then in what area of your thinking about anything and everything do you actually believe in God?

As for that “We’re all born without that belief” I agree that Atheism requites no more intellect that can be mustered by a baby.

But you committed a genetic logical fallacy (even if logical fallacies are irrelevant on Atheism) since any and all ideas can be said to be based on external influence. Do you reject math because we’re all born without a belief in math?

But you say “in order to stay alive” so do you oppose those Atheist missionaries who purposefully attempt to damage people’s ability to “stay alive” by attacking theism?

Roy Yeo:

Like I said, you’re attempting to pseudo-intellectualise this whole thing.

Regardless of which dictionary or website you refer to, atheism is ultimately the absence of belief in the existence of any god.

It is only with that absence of belief that one might say “god doesn’t exist”, or “I don’t believe god exists”. That’s the difference between a gnostic atheist and an agnostic atheist. But that’s just splitting unnecessary hairs as far as this conversation goes.

So yes, in that regard, I speak for all atheists.

Oh look at you, comparing atheism to the intellect of a baby. What a beacon of exemplary behaviour for all theists to follow.

“Do you reject math because we’re all born without a belief in math?”

No, silly. That was my point. All ideas are external influences. Math can be supported by proofs. Science can be supported by objective evidence. God can be supported by… Oh right. Absolutely nothing.

You want me to believe in an idea? Convince me it works. You want me to believe in a claim? Show me credible and verifiable evidence. It’s not that hard to understand, is it? I’m already using baby intellect here, so try to keep up.

“Genetic logical fallacy”… Pfft. Please.

And yes, I oppose all missionaries, regardless of their message. The sheer misguided arrogance of it all is revolting, to say the least.

Which brings me to my final point – there are no “atheist missionaries”. Anyone calling themselves that have no idea what they’re saying.

Atheism is not an organised religion. It has no message to spread. It is merely a state of being. If you can understand that at all, we wouldn’t be having this conversation.

Ken Ammi:

The neo-Atheist definition of “Atheism” as “lack of belief in God” says nothing about God’s existence and saying something about God’s existence is supposed to be what Atheism is all about, rather than saying something about the opinions of individual Atheists.

“god doesn’t exist” and “I don’t believe god exists” are categorically different and that’s been my point all long: one is a positive affirmation and the other tells us something about the Atheist, not about God.

Whence did you get the authority for “speak for all atheists”?

You seem to have misremembered, it was you who was “comparing atheism to the intellect of a baby.”

Indeed, “Math can be supported by proofs” but the positive affirmation of God’s non-existence cannot which is why that definition of Atheism has been shunned by some Atheists who prefer to make subjectively emotive statements about their opinions instead.

But see, you refer to “proofs” and that “Science can be supported by objective evidence” but only as a hidden assumption: you must first justify why, on your worldview, proofs and/or evidence is required to be presented, why we should based our beliefs on, proofs and/or evidence, etc.

In fact, so that we don’t end up writing essays back and forth: let’s forego side issues and only focus on that.

BTW: “Pfft. Please” is not a defeater for identifying your genetic logical fallacy (not that fallacies matter on Atheism).

No “atheist missionaries”? I have personally encountered THOUSANDS of Atheists who’s goal is to debunk my theology so that I will accept Atheism (whoever they pseudo-authoritatively they define it).

Indeed, “Atheism is not an organised religion” it’s a disorganized one (even if it has styled leaders, “churches,” etc.).

If Atheism “has no message to spread” then why are you spreading what you’re spreading?

As for that “It is merely a state of being” wait, I thought that “atheism is ultimately the absence of belief in the existence of any god.”

So, in what area of your thinking about anything and everything do you accept God’s existence?

Roy Yeo:

You seem really hung up on this “neo-atheist” thing, so let’s replace “god” with something else. Let’s go with leprechauns and unicorns.

Do you believe they exist? If no, would you go so far as to say definitively that they don’t? If so, then you’d be making a claim, one of which supporting evidence would be requested. If you simply said you don’t believe they exist, then that’s it. Nothing more is required on your part.

And that’s what atheism is all about, neo- or otherwise. All you’re doing is splitting hairs where there’s none to be split. The entire foundation of atheism in any form is not about “saying something about god’s existence”. It is about not being convinced by claims of the positive.

“the positive affirmation of God’s non-existence cannot which is why that definition of Atheism has been shunned by some Atheists who prefer to make subjectively emotive statements about their opinions instead.”

So let me get this right. You get to make subjective statements about the existence of your god and all other gods, but cry like an indignant baby when atheists do the same? Oh no… the unfairness of it all. What shall we ever do?

“If Atheism “has no message to spread” then why are you spreading what you’re spreading?”

I was answering a question. I’m not going out knocking on doors and spreading the word of… oh wait. There’s nothing to spread. What’s your excuse? You’re the one who’s stretching this out to be more than it is.

Your encounter with the “thousands” of atheists trying to debunk your theology are doing the same as I am. Or are you also trying to redefine missionary now too to include any atheist that disagrees with you?

“As for that “It is merely a state of being” wait, I thought that “atheism is ultimately the absence of belief in the existence of any god.”

Which part of “absence of belief” do you not grasp? It is a state of being, is it not? A state of non-belief.

“So, in what area of your thinking about anything and everything do you accept God’s existence?”

Unless credible, verifiable, observable and objective evidence can be provided to prove god’s existence, the idea of god is irrelevant to me. There you go – atheism in a nutshell.

Ken Ammi:

I’m only “hung up on this ‘neo-atheist’ thing” because I know the history of the semantics.

You don’t seem to be aware of it and so you assert, “The entire foundation of atheism in any form is not about ‘saying something about god’s existence’” when, say we go back to the 1800s AD or so, that was the whole point, to say something about God’s existence.

Replacing God with leprechauns and unicorns is a category error: you can’t replace a philosophically necessary being with arbitrary ones.

I’m unsure why you go full blown childish, “cry like an indignant baby” but the first step is for the Atheist to justify demanding evidence. Without that there’s no such issue as that I “get to make subjective statements” but you don’t since the whole framework upon which any such standards are built would collapse.

So, when you merely jump to an asserted demand for “credible, verifiable, observable and objective evidence” you must first justify your demand for such.

You may not be “going out knocking on doors” but you’re doing much more than that, your posting to the WORLD WIDE web, after all.

Indeed, since it is “a state of being” then it’s your worldview.

Ken Ammi:

So we’re living in the 1800s now, are we? If we say, “I don’t believe you,” when you tell us your god exists, that’s exactly what we mean. As such, your god doesn’t exist to us until you can prove that he does.

When did god become “a philosophically necessary being”? Why is god even necessary in this day and age? Atheists have lived their entire lives for tens of thousands of years without god. That pretty much goes to show how necessary he is.

And who are you to decide which beings are “arbitrary”? If we were to replace your god with the Jade Emperor or Zeus, would you still consider that a random or personal whim?

It’s not a category error. They’re all imaginary beings until proven otherwise.

You don’t get to see the hypocrisy in your statements, clearly. You’re making subjective assertions that your god exists, aren’t you? Well, I’m saying I don’t believe you.

So, provide me with the evidence such that I may be convinced. That is my justification – I am NOT convinced. Why does this escape you?

In a court of law, is it not the job of the prosecutor or accuser to provide the evidence to support their claims so that the judge and jury can be convinced beyond reasonable doubt? Or are you of the guilty-until-proven-innocent club?

You see, the magic of the World Wide Web is that everyone has access to it. Here on Quora, people ask questions and other people answer them. Does that look like missionary work to you?

If you’re not interested in theism/atheism spaces, just don’t join them. No one’s going to send you direct messages asking if they can talk to you about not believing in some god.

You claim to understand semantics, but if such easy definitions escape you, then I’m afraid you really don’t at all.

And also, when the hell did a state of being become a worldview? If you don’t believe Krishna is real, would you consider that a worldview? Is not believing in the Vedas considered a worldview?

If so, then all atheists share that singular “worldview” – that we don’t believe any god exists.

On the other hand, you’d have to have as many worldviews as there are other gods that aren’t yours. Do you see how ridiculous and desperate you’re getting?

Ken Ammi:

Friend, you’re just digging a deeper hole.

Firstly, something can exist even if it’s existence has not been proved: that is the case every single time something is proved to exist.

But you say “until you can prove that he does” but you must first justify your demand for proof on your worldview.

It is a non-sequitur to jump form that “Atheists have lived their entire lives for tens of thousands of years without god” to that God is not necessary for various reasons including that they do not live Atheist lives but beg, borrow, and steal from a biblical worldview. Also, they have not lived without God since God exists.

The concept of a philosophically necessary being refers to issues such as that nothing would exist without God so He is necessary, absolute ethics would [not] exist without God so He is necessary, etc.

Yes, the Jade Emperor or Zeus would be a personal whim since they are not the one true living God.

A for your category error again, you replaced a philosophically necessary being with arbitrary ones who are not characterized in nearly the same way so that is, by definition, a category error. Evidence of your category error is that no Atheists are making a living by writing book, presenting lectures, being interviewed, etc., etc., etc., against leprechauns and unicorns.

But see, you positively affirm “all imaginary” as a jumped to assertion and to back to “until proven otherwise” when step one is for you to justify your demand for proof from your worldview.

You imply that it’s wrong to be hypocritical but don’t bother saying why: you just keep jumping to asserted conclusions without arguments.

Likewise, what if I was “making subjective assertions” how is that condemnable on your worldview?

So you finally come to double down on demanding evidence (as you term it this time) with your pseudo justification being “such that I may be convinced” but that’s a pure form of incoherence. It does not escape me that you’re not convinced (and you speak as if what you are or are not subjectively convinced of is a standard).

Justification refers to how, on your worldview, it’s a universal imperative to provide evidence/proof and to base our views only on those things that have been evidenced/proven—which, ironically, you’ve not evidenced nor proven.

Interestingly, I ask for your justification and your other reply is that other people demand evidence, “In a court of law” but that just punting and moving the goalpost one step back.

Indeed, it does look like missionary work when Atheist are on the World Wide Web preaching their pseudo gospel that they are right, they found the truth, and everyone else is wrong.

Yes, “If you don’t believe Krishna is real” that would be considered that a worldview since then no matter what you’re thinking about, you would never accept that Krishna had anything to do with it, would never give credit to Krishna for anything, would not allow any evidence to count as evidence of Krishna, etc., etc., etc.

That’s why I asked in what area of your thinking about anything and everything you accept God since that in none of it implies that Atheism has infected all of your thinking about anything and everything, and so it’s a worldview.

BTW: if you deny there are Atheist worldviews then you disagree with Dawkins—which is fine, I do it all the time.

My one worldview encompasses any and all “other gods that aren’t” mine and, btw, what you subjectively consider “ridiculous and desperate” is not a standard.

Bottom line is that on Atheism truth is accidental, as is our ability to discern it, there’s no universal imperative to adhere to it, nor to demand others adhere to it.

I recommend you focus on these facts (even though on Atheism fact are accidental, as is our ability to discern them, there’s no universal imperative to adhere to them, nor to demand others adhere to them) since anything else you may say will ultimately have to does with these issues so I will only be on the look out for what you say about these issues—since I’m done written multi-issue essays.

Roy Yeo:

Just about everything you’ve written is completely subjective and totally biased in favour of your beliefs. How am I to be convinced by that?

“…they do not live Atheist lives but beg, borrow, and steal from a biblical worldview.”

Your oldest biblical texts are barely 2,700 years old. Humans have been around for over 100,000 years. You might want to do the maths, or you could very conveniently just make sweeping statements that everyone was without their “true” god before yours decided to create the world. Please. That’s such absolute nonsense.

“…nothing would exist without God so He is necessary, absolute ethics would exist without God so He is necessary, etc.”

Oh really? So my innate sense of empathy is because of your god that I don’t believe exists?

You’re talking about the same ethics that killed hundreds of millions of people in the name of your god? The same ethics that made priests molest and rape little boys? Those same ones that made pastors fleece their congregation of billions to fund their multi-million dollar mansions and private jets? Those ethics that make people completely intolerant and unaccepting of the fact that other people have other beliefs or none at all? Ahh… those ethics. Yeah, I don’t need that level of hypocrisy in my life.

You don’t seem capable of comprehending that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. When evolution was discovered, objective, repeatable, testable, verifiable and observable evidence was provided to support it. Same for a heliocentric universe. The speed of light. Etc. Where’s yours? All you have given are nonsensical, barely-there, “counterarguments” to my requests for evidence.

Now you’re asking me to justify my justification that I’m not convinced by your baseless claims? hahaha… That’s about the silliest thing I’ve heard in a while.

The way you treat Krishna and all other gods is the same in which I treat yours. You believe they are whimsical just as I believe yours is. You don’t believe in other religious texts just as I don’t believe in yours. Your so-called “justification” is that your god in the true god. Really? Prove it.

All you have done is claim repeatedly, albeit in different ways, that your god is real. When I tell you I’m not convinced, you ask me to justify it. You accuse me of shifting goalposts and making logical fallacies. You redefine words to suit your narrative, you remain stubbornly obtuse to what I’m saying and show little to no understanding between subjectivity and objectivity.

“…it does look like missionary work when Atheist are on the World Wide Web preaching their pseudo gospel that they are right, they found the truth, and everyone else is wrong.”

Oh, how the tables have turned, haven’t they? How do you like that feeling now? Isn’t that what most of you believers have been doing for millennia, and are still doing? We’re saying we disagree with you and suddenly, we’re missionaries! How bloody insecure must you be to foist that ridiculous idea on us? If you want to dish it, you’d better be able to take it, buddy.

This whole time, I’d never made any claims and I’ve consistently made only one request. All I’ve been repeating is that I’m not convinced by your claims that your god exists. And if you want to convince me, or any other non-believer, then you’d do well to provide credible, verifiable, testable, repeatable, observable and objective evidence to support your claims.

If you can’t see that your responses have a) never once answered me, and b) been nothing but hypocrisy and blind cognitive bias, then I can’t help you. And frankly, I haven’t the time nor crayons to keep explaining it to you.

Ken Ammi:

You are not engaging the issues since you are just manipulating my points—you actually seem to be projecting when you write, “Just about everything you’ve written is completely subjective and totally biased in favour of your beliefs.”

For example, in fact, “they do not live Atheist lives but beg, borrow, and steal from a biblical worldview” with “they” referring to the Atheists undergoing discussion and not all “Humans” who “have been around for over 100,000 years.”

But just deal with the fact that you are just constantly jumping to merely asserted conclusions based on hidden assumptions and so we should work on revealing those assumptions.

Here’s what I mean:

You say what I’ve written is completely subjective and totally biased but don’t bother saying what’s wrong with that (if it was true) on your worldview.

You refer to not being convinced but what you are or aren’t convinced of is not a standard.

You say I make sweeping statements but don’t bother saying what’s wrong with that (if it was true) on your worldview.

You refer to not being “absolute nonsense” but what you do or don’t consider “absolute nonsense” is not a standard.

You refer to your “innate sense of empathy” which on Atheist evolution is accidental and there’s no universal imperative to adhere to it (oddly, that was a reply to when I wrote “without God…absolute ethics would exist” but I meant “without God…absolute ethics would NOT exist” and which, ironically, is how you took it so you got my meaning anyhow).

You refer to the same ethics that “killed hundreds of millions of people in the name of your god” which besides being a convenient sweeping statements does not tell me why, on your worldview, anything is wrong with that (and you meant “murder” rather than “killing”).

Same with “molest and rape little boys…fleece their congregation…intolerant…hypocrisy” you are just making a list, you never bother saying why, on your worldview, those things are wrong.

You assert “extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence” without evidence and not noticing that there is no standard of extraordinariness plus, you demand evidence without first justifying your demand for evidence.

And that is what I note you need to justify, your demand for evidence so what you consider silly is not a standard and you misunderstood the issue.

So when you say “evolution was discovered, objective, repeatable, testable, verifiable and observable evidence was provided to support it” (which depends on what you mean by “evolution” which you don’t bother defining) you don’t say how your worldview provides you a universal imperative to adhere to what is objective, repeatable, testable, verifiable and has observable evidence was provided to support it. See, you keep merely jumping to asserted conclusions.

You refer to what you think is “nonsensical” but what you consider “nonsensical” is not a standard.

You ask me to prove that my God is the true God but you must first justify your demand for proof—on your worldview, that is.

You go on about that I “claim repeatedly, albeit in different ways, that your god is real” but don’t say why that’s unacceptable on your worldview (not your personal opinion). Likewise with that I supposedly “redefine words…remain stubbornly obtuse…show little to no understanding between subjectivity and objectivity” why are those issues on your worldview? You never say any such thing you just jump and demand.

No, it’s not that you “disagree with you and suddenly, we’re missionaries!” but that you disagree and attempt to get people to convert to Atheism since you are “completely intolerant and unaccepting of the fact that other people have other beliefs” or else you would just think something in keeping with your worldview which would be, “Oh well, accidentally existing apes are believing in untrue things in a universe wherein there is no universal imperative to adhere to truth so it’s a non-issue.”

You refer to “that ridiculous idea” but what you consider ridiculous is not a standard.

Before we can get to “provide credible, verifiable, testable, repeatable, observable and objective evidence to support” my claims you must first justify, on your worldview, your demand to provide credible, verifiable, testable, repeatable, observable and objective evidence.

You imply condemning, “hypocrisy and blind cognitive bias” but don’t bother saying why?

See, you have a LOT of basic level groundwork to do before you make this enormous list of asserted demands.

Roy Yeo:

Geezes… Why is this so terribly impossible for you to understand? Everything you said regarding why I think certain actions are wrong is because of my innate sense of EMPATHY. I’ve said this repeatedly throughout this discussion. Why are you ignoring that?

If man didn’t have that, civilisations would never have formed. All religion has done is hijack what is a natural instinct and claim it as some god’s gift to man.

The Biblical god, based on inferred data and information, is 6,000 years old. Homo sapiens have been around for 200,000 years. You want to claim credit for those 194,000 years prior?

I’m not projecting anything. I’m stating my observations and point of view. If you can’t tell the difference, then I can’t help you there.

And what is this standard you’re talking about? You want to convince me that your god exists, right? Then I don’t know how much simpler I can make it when I say, “Prove it.”

I could tell you right now that I’m god himself. Would you believe me? If yes, then you need to stop arguing and worship me right now and stop with your insolence. If no, why not? Do I need to prove my claim?

My “worldview” does not define what is “credible, verifiable, testable, repeatable, observable and objective evidence”. Science does. Language does. The fact that you keep harping about this means you have no idea what a worldview is. You can’t possibly be so dense as to not understand what objectivity is either, can you?

So in short, my “justification” for requiring objective evidence is I DON’T BELIEVE THE CLAIMS THAT ANY GOD EXISTS.

If you want to convince me, then prove to me that one does. If you want me to believe that your god is responsible for humanity’s natural empathy—from 200,000 years ago to present—then prove it to me. I’ve made this statement more than once now.

Was that easy enough for you to understand? Or are you going to keep playing this silly and desperate little game of parrying?

Ken Ammi:

I am not ignoring anything but am just seeking to get you to expose your hidden assumptions.

For example, “I think certain actions are wrong is because of my innate sense of EMPATHY” well, “I think” is subjective to you, by definition. And on your view thoughts are accidental as is your ability to discern them—plus, they are predetermined by the accidental laws of thermodynamics.

And more to the point, your “innate sense[s]” are also accidental, as is your ability to discern them and, just like your thoughts, there’s no universal imperative to adhere to them.

Thus, “EMPATHY” is just your interpretation of an accidental combination of accidental neural chemistry.

I think certain actions are wrong is because of my innate sense of EMPATHY. I’ve said this repeatedly throughout this discussion. Why are you ignoring that?

I think certain actions are wrong is because of my innate sense of EMPATHY. I’ve said this repeatedly throughout this discussion. Why are you ignoring that?

Thus, “If man didn’t have that, civilisations would never have formed” and on your view, civilizations formed as a byproduct of accidents which carry no universal imperatives to adhere to them—in other words, civilizations are not an ought, they need to have formed.

“All religion has done is hijack” but the only thing I infer that you imply is wrong with that—even based on your impotent accidental “innate sense”—is that what was hijacked is “what is a natural instinct” but, again, on your view our “natural instinct[s]” are accidental, as is our ability to discern them, there’s no universal imperative to adhere to them, nor to demand or expect others to adhere to them.

You argue against a young Earth creationism view “The Biblical god…is 6,000 years old” but are merely imposing a pseudo standard since even if “Homo sapiens have been around for 200,000 years” what does that matter? See, you are now demanding adherence to what you view as facts but on your view facts are accidental (because truth/reality is accidental), as is our ability to discern them, there’s no universal imperative to adhere to them, nor to demand or expect others to adhere to them.

So you imply adherence to logic but on your view logic is accidental, as is our ability to discern it, there’s no universal imperative to adhere to it, nor to demand or expect others to adhere to it.

Also, even on a young Earth creationism view it would not be the case that “The Biblical god…is 6,000 years old” since “The Biblical god” is eternal, by definition (I’m willing to think that, that was just a slight misstatement on your part).

Indeed, you hit the accidental nail on the head when you wrote, “when I say, ‘Prove it’” since when I ask that you, on your worldview, justify your demand/request for proof (not evidence?) you simply cannot do it. If I were you, I would ponder that my worldview is such a fundamental failure that I can’t even demand/request proof. See, your worldview fails before it even begins and you are getting a taste of that now. See what happens when someone helps you expose your hidden assumptions and you realize their just a bottomless pit of subjective assertions? That seems to be why you decided to impose your subjectivism on me and turn this into a case of, “You want to convince me…Then…” But we are not there yet, we’re still taking baby-steps in analyzing your modus operandi (which is not operandi-ing very well).

So, the issue of that “I could tell you right now that I’m god himself…Do I need to prove my claim?” is merely doubling down on your lack of ability to justify demanding/requesting proof and merely punting to see if proof is justified on my worldview—but we’re not there yet, you’re getting ahead of yourself (and may be doing so as a diversionary tactic).

I find it fascinating that you admit that your worldview is not scientific since, your “‘worldview’ does not define” those categories but “Science does” (and, of course, that’s a reification fallacy since “Science does” nothing rather, scientists do things). But whence to you get “objectivity” from a worldview according to which all of reality is accidental, as is our ability to discern it?

So, in short, that you “DON’T BELIEVE THE CLAIMS THAT ANY GOD EXISTS” is not a justification for “requiring” mind you “objective” see above, “evidence” not proof this time. This is another key issues, you are “requiring objective evidence” because you “DON’T BELIEVE THE CLAIMS THAT ANY GOD EXISTS” but you’re not exposing hidden assumptions such as that ascertaining empirical truth is not only possible but a universal imperative, that we ought to (“requiring”) base our view on what can be on what “objective evidence” can demonstrate, that if you subjectively “DON’T BELIEVE” then one must adhere to your asserted demands, etc., etc., etc. This is critical thinking and analyzing not just of those views you subjectively don’t like but of your own merely jumped to assertions.

You then play the same card as before where you impose your subjective preferences on me, “If you want” and then merely asset, “then prove to me” which is just tripling (or whatever, I lost count by now actually) making baseless demands. So yes, you “made this statement more than once now” but you must realize that I am not required to only reply with “How high?” when you assert “Jump!” Rather, I ask “Why?” and you fall apart. Yet, you only really fall apart because your worldview failed before it even began so it left you with nothing but emotively subjective assertions that you demand carry weight when in reality, they weigh as much as a dream.

So, let’s just simplify this since it’s getting verbose: given the noted facts (which on your view are accidental), what is the universal imperative to provide evidence or proof, to only hold to views that have been evidenced or proven, etc.?

Roy Yeo:

Let’s make this short.

Accidental or not, you agree that we’re born with a natural sense of empathy, right? And this empathy is the result of “neural chemistry”, correct? So that means this empathy exists. Right?

That means, we are in agreement that for as long as homo sapiens have been around, so has his innate sense of empathy. Correct? Good, so there’s nothing to prove here, yes?

Okay, now let’s move on to the claim that the Abrahamic god gave man his sense of morality. Now, the Abrahamic god can be traced to old pagan religions—Babylonian, Greek, Mesopotamian, etc.—that date as far back as the Bronze Age.

This particular god wasn’t written about, spoken about, or even discussed until just over 2,000 years ago. Suddenly, the world is expected to believe all the different claims that are made about this god. But why should we?

So, all I’m asking—all any atheist and other non-believer is asking—is to provide credible, verifiable, testable, falsifiable, observable and objective evidence that A) this god of yours exists, and B) our sense of morality was created by this same god.

It’s really that simple. Until the criteria for A and B can be met, nobody has any reason to give your assertions the time of day.

You can attempt to pseudo-intellectualise whatever I’m saying until the cows come home and it will not change the fact that I have no reason to believe your claims.

Ken Ammi:

The issue is that even if we agree on empathy, on your worldview adhering to it is merely an emotively subjective personal preference de jour based on hidden assumption and without transcendent reproductions if you disregard it.

But to make this short I will bypass your various logical and even historical fallacies (since no fallacy matters on Atheism anyhow: you seem to keep ignoring that fact (yet, facts matter not on Atheism either)) and note that you are merely doubling, tripling, etc., etc., etc., on “provide credible, verifiable, testable, falsifiable, observable and objective evidence” when I, yet again, had noted, “what is the universal imperative to provide evidence or proof, to only hold to views that have been evidenced or proven, etc.?”

You seem to realize that your worldview utterly fails so you merely keep demanding without a premise form your worldview.

So, since you believe that we’re accidentally existing apes in a universe wherein there are no universal imperatives—such as to be logical, provide evidence, etc.—then you discredit yourself while I just sit here and point out that fact.

Shouldn’t your concern be that, for example, your worldview collapses the very concept of holding to views based on evidence since it has no premise for demanding evidence nor evidence based views?

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Well, that ended it as no more replies were forthcoming.

See my various books here.

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Video: Jasun Horsley and Ken Ammi: transhumanism, postgenderism, occultism, theology, etc., etc., etc.

Alternatively, you can view it at the site here.

See my various books here.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
A plea: I have to pay for server usage and have made all content on this website free and always will. I support my family on one income and do research, writing, videos, etc. as a hobby. If you can even spare $1.00 as a donation, please do so: it may not seem like much but if each person reading this would do so, even every now and then, it would add up and really, really help out. Here is my donate/paypal page.

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Is it possible that the prophet Ezekiel was witnessing angels

The question, Is it possible that the prophet Ezekiel was witnessing angels in Ezekiel 1:4-16? was posted to the Quora site and led to this discussion when a certain Kenny Payton commented

Good question. I believe that the prophet Ezekiel was witnessing angels in the Book of Ezekiel. The scripture in my understanding gives clear descriptions of three types of angelic beings that are part of, or make up , a choir.

The first type that I took note of were Cherubim. The cherub are described as having four wings, like the living creatures described in the above noted verses.

The next angel that I recognized from the given description, “like coals of fire”. These are Seraphim. Seraph, or “the burning ones,” are always described as being made of fire. The words “seraph” and “serpent” are interchangable. There are two types of Seraphim that I am aware of; water seraph and copper seraph. The Seraphim are given the charge of guarding the throne room of the LORD. It’s been suggested that the tongues of fire above the heads of believers who were speaking in languages unknown by them, but recognized instantly by foreigners in Jerusalem to recognize Pentecost were actually Seraphim. Angels are messengers of God.

The third group of angelic beings are not described with as much detail as the other two, but are there rounding out the top angelic choir which is made up of three groups. These are, once again, Cherubim, Seraphim, and last but not least, Thrones. Thrones represent the unmovabke, steadfast nature of the Lord Almighty, of whom there is not so much as a shadow of turning in Him. Throne are described just a few verses later in scripture than the scripture in the above question. They’re mostly overlooked and I felt led to point out their presence in the opening vision found in the Book of Ezekiel.

Thank you and may God bless you greatly.

I, Ken Ammi, replied:

Biblically, Ezekiel was witnessing Cherubim, not Angels and no, there’s no such thing as “three types of angelic beings” that’s just based on a common misconception that violates the law of identify via a category error. Angels, Cherubim, and Seraphim have different job titles, different job functions and look different from one another thus, they’re different categories of being.

Seraph is not interchangeable with serpent but with fiery. There’s no indication of “water seraph and copper seraph.” Unsure who “suggested that the tongues of fire…were actually Seraphim” but there’s no reason to even think that.

See my books on Angelology and the one on paranormology which covers Cherubim and Seraphim.

Mark Hamric chimed in with

According to the BDB and Strong’s lexicons the seraphim are serpents. But I agree that though they are spiritual beings it doesn’t mean they are Angels. That is like calling a reptile a mammal.

H8314

Original: שׂרף

Transliteration: śârâph

Phonetic: saw-rawf’

BDB Definition:

serpent, fiery serpentpoisonous serpent (fiery from burning effect of poison)

seraph, seraphimmajestic beings with 6 wings, human hands or voices in attendance upon God

Origin: from H8313

TWOT entry: 2292a,2292b

Part(s) of speech: Noun Masculine

Strong’s Definition: From H8313; burning, that is, (figuratively) poisonous (serpent); specifically a saraph or symbolical creature (from their copper color): – fiery (serpent), seraph.

Kenny Payton

Hey, it’s as much knowledge that I have. If I knew more I’d type more. But what I’ve written, I accept as truth because Ive done my researche I didn’t read the whole message, when you started pushing your book I realized you had an angle. But concerning seraph, I got word from God to go and look at the difference between the two words. That’s what I came up with in my study. I appreciate your input greatly, but I disagree with what you presented. And like it or not, agree or not , I’m right. And likewise with the burnt offering, the original name given to the burnt offering.

Ken Ammi

Friend, I’m empathetic as to why you would say that but I literally wrote the book(s) on sources/resources: see “The Paranormal in Early Jewish and Christian Commentaries: Over a Millennia’s Worth of Comments on Angels, Cherubim, Seraphim, Satan, the Devil, Demons, the Serpent and the Dragon” and “Bible Encyclopedias and Dictionaries on Angels, Demons, Nephilim, and Giants: From 1851 to 2010,” etc.

Those sources may say that the root word seraph refers to serpents but not that “the seraphim” of Isa 6, “are serpents” especially when they have hands, feet, wings, etc. so we can’t fall for the word-concept fallacy. What I mean is that even if seraph does or can refer to serpents, the context still determines meaning and the one and only physical description we have a Isa 6’s Seraphim does not even hint at any serpentine features/characteristics at all—as you quoted it, “wings, human hands or voices.”

Moreover, I wouldn’t say that seraph even means serpent. For example, Moses made a serpent and put it on a pole because “seraph nachash” were biting and killing people, poisonous serpents.

The serpent part is “nachash,” the poisonous part is “seraph.”

Thus, selectively, brining what you quoted into it, they were “fiery…poisonous…fiery from burning effect of poison…burning, that is, (figuratively) poisonous…fiery” serpents.

One thing we’re told about Seraphim is that one of them interacts with an altar of burning, fiery, coals, etc.

I features a section about them in my book “What Does the Bible Say About Various Paranormal Entities?: A Styled Paranormology” wherein I call them “keepers of the eternal flame” and I think that they are called Seraphim not due to serpentine features, for which we have no evidence, but due to them having something to do with heavenly fire (or, whatever we’d call it), for which we do have evidence.

Kenny Payton

Hey, it’s as much knowledge that I have. If I knew more I’d type more. But what I’ve written, I accept as truth because Ive done my researche I didn’t read the whole message, when you started pushing your book I realized you had an angle. But concerning seraph, I got word from God to go and look at the difference between the two words. That’s what I came up with in my study. I appreciate your input greatly, but I disagree with what you presented. And like it or not, agree or not , I’m right. And likewise with the burnt offering, the original name given to the burnt offering.

Ken Ammi

So then, you admit pushing your angle and especially by ignoring conter-points—interesting.

You say “If I knew more I’d type more” and I’ve typed more, I typed it into a book so if you’re going to reject my views because I make you aware of that then that’s anti-intellectual.

I can also assure you that if you decide to ignore the Biblical evidence and appeal to some sort of gnostic private personal revelation to argue your points, “I got word from God” and so conclude, “like it or not, agree or not , I’m right” then you’re sure to go wrong: please do as the Bereans did and judge what you take you be enlightened insight revealed only to you by God’s written word.

And that ended it as no more replies were forthcoming.

See my various books here.

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On Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowship’s article “NEPHILIM (& DINOSAURS): The Prophetic Significance”

Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowship’s NEPHILIM (& DINOSAURS): The Prophetic Significance article begins with a famous (or, infamous) chart of giants that I reviewed in detail in my book Nephilim and Giants: Believe It Or Not! Ancient and Neo-Theo-Sci-Fi Tall Tales wherein it got a failing grade—it is 99% inaccurate.

Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowship begins by quoting Genesis 6:4 from the Names of God Bible (NOG), “The NEPHILIM were on the earth in those days, as well as later, when the SONS of Elohim slept with the DAUGHTERS OF OTHER HUMANS and had CHILDREN by them. These children were famous long ago” (the all caps may be Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowship’s).

I am unsure whence the NOG version got “OF OTHER HUMANS.”

He rightly notes, “The result was called NEPHILIM. NEPHILIM means FALLEN.”

Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowship asks, “Why the different names?” and answers, “The Names each describe something (a feature) about the Giants. This is something recently discovered (March 2021) from one for [t]he lost Books of the Bible. These Giants could touch the sun. They were that big.”

Now, he did not alert us to what “names” he referred nor which one/s has anything to do with his subjective usage of the English word “Giants.”

He also did not tell us to what he referred by a March 2021 discovery of a lost book of the Bible. Yet, by asserting, “These Giants could touch the sun” he seems to be appealing to Rabbinic Folklore and/or metaphoric terminology since the Talmud Bavli/Babylonian Talmud (circa 400-500 AD) refers to that, “The children of Anak — [they are so called] because they wore the sun as a necklace [ma’anikin] owing to their stature” (Sotah 34b, brackets in the Soncino Babylonian Talmud, Rabbi Dr. I. Epstein, ed.)—they must have had some extraordinary SPF sunscreen!

Yet, that is what it is: folklore from millennia after the Torah and after the Anakim were no more. All we are contextually told about Anakim in the Bible is that they were subjectively “tall” compared to the average Israelite male who was 5.0-5.3 ft. in those days.

Now, if “They,” referring to Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowship’s reference to Nephilim no, “were that big” the, pray tell, upon what did they stand?

Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowship then asks, “Who were the ‘Sons of GOD’ and ‘Daughters of GOD’?” about which I will ask: what daughters of God? We have not been introduced to them as of yet and they certainly do not appear in Gen 6: whether we read it traditionally as “daughters of men” or even as the NOG has it, “DAUGHTERS OF OTHER HUMANS.”

Before replying, he also asks, “Did the ‘Sons of GOD’ do anything else? What happened to the ‘Sons of GOD’ afterwards? Where are the ‘Sons of GOD’ now?”

He notes, “SONS OF GOD = WATCHERS = They WERE GOD’S HOLY ANGELS” with Watchers being a Second Temple Era term for Angels. He notes, “that had been assigned by YAHUVEH GOD to keep an eye on mankind and REPORT BACK everything they observed. Sadly, they fell into sin by desiring man sexually in their hearts and minds after being persuaded by Satan…They were persuaded by Satan to do what they did” I can only imagine he gets, “being persuaded by Satan” from Revelation 12:4 according to which the Dragon’s “tail swept down a third of the stars of heaven and cast them to the earth” and perhaps Daniel 8:10 wherein a little horn “grew great, even to the host of heaven. And some of the host and some of the stars it threw down to the ground and trampled on them.”

Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowship has it that the sons of God in question were persuaded by Satan to do what they did, “sometime after Satan had already fallen from the HEAVENS together with a third of the angels who all became FALLEN ANGLES also known as DEMONS / ALIENS!”

But then how and when did the third fall? He does not tell us but is actually appealing to common, yet erroneous, knowledge and argued right past his own point.

There is no indication that Satan fell with Angels but rather, his fallen action seems to be recorded in Gen 3 while theirs is in Gen 6: the “Sons of GOD” and “FALLEN ANGLES” are one-in-the-same—I will set aside the “ALIENS!” issue for this review.

Oddly, Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowship mixes the original, traditional, and majority view amongst the earliest Jews and Christians alike, the Angel view, of Gen 6 with a much latter Sethite view—see my book On the Genesis 6 Affair’s Sons of God: Angels or Not?: A Survey of Early Jewish and Christian Commentaries Including Notes on Giants and the Nephilim.

He has the “DAUGHTERS OF GOD = the women from the lineage of Cain” and notes, “Sadly, later on, some of the people from ABEL’S / SETH’S (Seth was Abel’s replacement) LINEAGE also crossed over to Cain’s Lineage Camp and sinned by having sexual relations with the SONS OF GOD MENTIONED ABOVE.”

No, he did not bother elucidating what was wrong with daughters “OF GOD,” mind you, marrying Sethites. As a side note, there is no indication that Abel had any offspring. Thus, we know not why Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowship’s scenario resulted in having “sinned” since, on his telling, this was about, “DAUGHTERS OF GOD…having sexual relations with the SONS OF GOD.”

Yet, the picture he is, clumsily, painting is the Angel view.

He notes that, “They also taught man all kinds of SECRETS (such as about ASTRONOMY; CONSTELLATIONS…These SECRETS opened up the DOOR TO PRACTISING: WITCHCRAFT /WIZARDRY / SORCERY / DIVINATION!”

Now, I do not necessarily doubt that they taught things otherwise unknown to humans but he is picking that up from 1 Enoch/Ethiopic Enoch which is from millennia after the Torah, contains folklore, and contradicts the Bible (so much that I included a chapter’s worth of examples in my book In Consideration of the Book(s) of Enoch).

Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowship notes, “According to the Book of Enoch, these Angels…(also called WATCHERS / SONS OF GOD) NO LONGER HAVE A PLACE IN HEAVEN. They were banished. They are bound somewhere and will be SENTENCED on JUDGEMENT DAY!” but then, somewhat, specified, “Angels bound somewhere in the HEAVENS.”

As per 2 Peter 2:4, they were incarcerated in Tartarus.

Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowshiptells us, “Some say that the Angels who transgressed against YAH on this occasion were FALLEN ANGELS but this was not the case as per the Book of the Secrets of Enoch and the First Book of Adam and Eve.” In other words, thus saith texts from millennia after the Torah. First Book of Adam and Eve refers to a text that actually claims that when God created Adam, God commanded the Angles to worship Adam.

Again, he distinguished incarcerated “Angels bound somewhere in the HEAVENS” from “FALLEN ANGELS known as DEMONS roaming about the earth.” Now, my Angelology proves a biblical mechanism how these are one-in-the-same. Fallen Angels bodies are incarcerated in Tartarus whilst their spirits roam the Earth as what we term demons—see my article Demons Ex Machina: What Are Demons?

Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowship then loops back to that, “When Satan started his revolt…he caused 1/3 of Angels…to revolt with him” (emphasis added for emphasis) and, “Since that day, Satan started to persuade all YAH’S Holy Angels to follow him in his evil ways” but there is no indication of any such thing.

Much less that, “Some succumbed and became fallen angels together, with him” which is doubly not the case including because he is not an Angel, he is a Cherub.

Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowship then gets into the issue of, “the GREAT FLOOD of Noah’s time!” which, or so he claims, “begins with an account of DEMONIC INVASION OF THE EARTH (demonic because Satan was involved in the matter).”

Technically, it was not demonic because demons did not exist util Angels were incarcerated. I am unsure why “demonic because Satan was involved in the matter” since Satan is not a demon and his only involvement in the matter may have been whatever is meant by “cast them to the earth.”

Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowship informs us that, “Ancient Jews taught that the ‘SONS OF YAH’ were actually DEMONIC BEINGS WHO ENTERED THE EARTH REALM TO BREED WITH HUMANS HEAVENS” (sic.)

The term “Ancient Jews” is certainly generic, generic enough to make it difficult to know to when he is referring (particularly without a citation) but yes, again, the earliest majority view was the Angel view even when Rabbinic Jews later speculated that the sons of God were nobles—even though the Bible knows nothing of problems caused by marriages of people of different socio-classes.

At this point, Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowship decides to declare, “This was not the case!” because he has, “come to an understanding  through the FIRST BOOK OF ADAM AND EVE as well as THE BOOKS OF ENOCH”—so, he is buying folklore from millennia after the Torah hook, line, and stinker—“that some HOLY ANGELS who were in the HEAVENS were persuaded by Satan to sin against YAHUVEH/YAHWEH GOD by having sexual relations with mankind and animals. The result were human beings called NEPHILIM, REPHAIM, ANAKIM, EMIM and animals called DINOSAURS, etc.”

Let us parse this because he need not appeal to “the FIRST BOOK OF ADAM AND EVE as well as THE BOOKS OF ENOCH” of that “some HOLY ANGELS who were in the HEAVENS were persuaded by Satan to sin against YAHUVEH/YAHWEH GOD by having sexual relations with mankind.”

Now, even within those folkloric text there is no indication that Angels had sexual relation with animals—that is actually a common misconception promulgated by pop-Nephilologists.

As to the result well, Nephilim were the result of Angels “having sexual relations with mankind.” Yet, there is no reliable indication whatsoever that such was the case with Rephaim, Anakim, and Emim.

Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowship does not seem to realize that Anakim were a clan of the Rephaim tribe.

Emim were just another good ol’ fashioned humans—just like all Rephaim.

As for dinosaurs (and to whatever “etc.” refers), he merely asserted that Angels were having sexual relations with animals so nothing untoward is to be thought of dinosaurs—at least until he closes the asserted loop.

Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowship noted, “The OFFSPRING between the now fallen angels…NEPHILIM…appeared in legends of many nations, such as: Greece, India, Rome, China > Mighty Warriors – EVIL!!!”

I would assume that they made it into such post-Tower of Babel when what was then commonly known and shared history eventually came to be called myth and legend. Perhaps Nephilim were “Mighty Warriors – EVIL!!!” but we have no reliable indication of that.

Yahushua the CHIEF Cornerstone Ministry Fellowship notes, “The result of in-breeding with demons means that the human race became demonized” and so, “JUDGEMENT had to come but YAH preserved a REMNANT (Noah and his family)…YAH’S JUDGEMENT in the form of THE GREAT FLOOD was decreed.”

Yet, he declares, “After all these years, the NEPHILIM are still here on this earth” which implies that God failed and also contradicts Genesis 7:7, 23; Hebrews 11:7; 1 Peter 3:20, and 2 Peter 2:5.

He ends by, finally, saying something about what any of these tall tales had to do with, “NEPHILIM (& DINOSAURS): The Prophetic Significance” in asserting that, “NEPHILIM are still here on this earth and will be more manifest during the GREAT TRIBULATION / TIME OF JACOB’S TROUBLE!”

See my various books here.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A plea: I have to pay for server usage and have made all content on this website free and always will. I support my family on one income and do research, writing, videos, etc. as a hobby. If you can even spare $1.00 as a donation, please do so: it may not seem like much but if each person reading this would do so, even every now and then, it would add up and really, really help out. Here is my donate/paypal page.

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Discussing New Atheists VS Informed Atheists

The following discussion took place due to the video “New Atheists VS Informed Atheists.”

A certain EmptyDisc commented:

I find the atheists who don’t know that Santa Claus doesn’t exist fascinating.

I, Ken Ammi, replied:

I find the Atheists who don’t know that Santa Claus is not in the same category as God fascinating.

EmptyDisc:

Quite so, and the overlap of people who believe both these things is often a single circle.

A certain Anton Ekstrand chimed in with:

It all depends what you mean by ‘know’. I believe that Santa Clause doesn’t exist, but I don’t necessarily know that. It just seems like the most reasonable conclusion.

EmptyDisc:

You are fascinating. Just to be clear, you DON’T know that Santa Claus doesn’t exist?

Anton Ekstrand:

As I said, it all depends on what you mean by ‘know’. What level of certainty would you require to accept the claim as knowledge? I have no problem saying, in everyday parlance, that I know Santa Clause doesn’t exist. But I can’t demonstrate that he doesn’t, in the same way I can’t demonstrate a god doesn’t exist. It’s all based on an assessment that there’s no apparent reason to accept either claim, and the fact that the stories surrounding both characters/entities seem fictional to me.

A certain Redbad joined in with:

@EmptyDisc  can you prove that Santa Claus doesn’t exist? And I mean prove with 100% certainty. (Be careful how you disprove his existence as I will parody that to disprove God)

Ken Ammi:

@EmptyDisc  It’s like what Dinesh D’Souza pointed out: there’s no Atheists writing books like “The Unicorn Delusion” or “Unicorns Are Not Great” or “The End of Unicorns.”

Redbad:

@Ken Ammi  wading through the field of straw men you set up in the beginning of your article on why you think people become atheists don’t be was tiresome.

Then you try to use definitions (which aren’t evidence) to disprove a negative.  And it gets worse you hand pick the easiest version of Santa Claus to try and debunk, while just asserting god as a necessary being (you nor any has proven necessary beings exist).

Try harder what if Santa has god like powers? None of his tasks seem remotely difficult then. Think of Santa as necessary for Christmas.

Ken Ammi:

What is subjectively tiresome to you is not a standard.

The statement “you can’t prove a negative” is proof of a negative.

Now, the bottom line issues is that you refer to no one has “proven necessary beings exist” so the first step is to justify demanding proof on your worldview.

Redbad:

Ken Ammi  necessary beings don’t exist on my worldview so if you can show one to exist I’ll change worldview. Go back to proving a magical Santa doesn’t exist don’t get lost in “your worldview doesn’t blah blah..” you give Santa verifiable facts that we can check to see if he exists or not. Can you give me a verifiable fact to show if god exists?(note it needs to be specific because if I can use the same fact to prove anything else than it’s not very helpful)

Ken Ammi:

By definition a necessary being exist and do so on any worldview: that’s the whole point of being a necessary being.

Now, you seem rather desperate to abscond from the implications of your worldview—and I can’t blame you since it fails before it even begins.

You now realize that your worldview is such an utter failure that you can’t even viably demand evidence yet, you keep right on doing it (not surprising, of course, since being consistent is not a universal imperative on Atheism) with “show one to exist.”

But see, when you say “you give Santa verifiable facts that we can check to see if he exists or not” that is on my worldview so you can’t apply that to yours. See, you have to keep on begging, borrowing, and stealing from my worldview in order to attempt to discredit my worldview which is a self-defeating exercise for you, of course, and inconsistent with your worldview according to which accidentally existing apes can believe and even demand that anything they want to assert is true.

So, rather than covering your eyes and claiming you didn’t notice that your worldview collapsed—even when it’s being pointed out to you—ponder how/why your worldview utterly failed you at a most fundamental level.

Redbad:

you can’t be serious. You can’t miss the point this badly. You entire counter argument was “my definitions are correct and yours aren’t”. You just said that necessary beings exist on any worldview. That’s what I’m asking for you show not just state. If this is the case then Santa is necessary for Christmas boom now he exists. I didn’t ask for you to avoid the worldview conversation because I think mine doesn’t work ( it wouldn’t be my worldview if I thought that) it’s because it a bullshit move to avoid the real conversation. My worldview answers every question yours does but without the addition of magic. Either disprove a necessary Santa that has magic capabilities or prove a necessary god must exist without just stating it. Ps if you insist that definitions are evidence than god is not possible on your own worldview. He can’t be perfectly just and perfectly merciful those definitions are antithetical.

Ken Ammi:

Please mind your manners.

Correlating Santa with a philosophically necessary being is a category error (seems like further evidence that you are not aware of the concept of a philosophically necessary being).

Now, if your worldview does work then let’s see how it does with that you asked me to “show…prove…evidence” but the first step would be for you to justify such demands on your worldview.

As for “disprove a necessary Santa that has magic capabilities,” see here: https://truefreethinker.com/can-you-disprove-santa-claus-atheism-and-santa-syndrome

Redbad:

Ken Ammi   you can’t be serious. You can’t miss the point this badly. You entire counter argument was “my definitions are correct and yours aren’t”. You just said that necessary beings exist on any worldview. That’s what I’m asking for you show not just state. If this is the case then Santa is necessary for Christmas boom now he exists. I didn’t ask for you to avoid the worldview conversation because I think mine doesn’t work ( it wouldn’t be my worldview if I thought that) it’s because it a bullshit move to avoid the real conversation. My worldview answers every question yours does but without the addition of magic. Either disprove a necessary Santa that has magic capabilities or prove a necessary god must exist without just stating it.

Ps if you insist that definitions are evidence than god is not possible on your own worldview. He can’t be perfectly just and perfectly merciful those definitions are antithetical.

Ken Ammi:

Please mind your manners.

No, rather the entire counter argument has been that you’ve no premise upon which to even demand certain definitions, on Atheism.

Likewise with you “asking for you show not just state” which is why we’re at the level of fundamental worldview issues since yours provides no premise upon which it’s incumbent for an accidentally existing ape to show anything at all.

That the underlying issue which you subjectively misinterpret as a way to “avoid the real conversation” since I’ve been begging you to begin the real conversation but you just want to jump to merely asserted conclusions such as “Show!” but rather than replying, “Sir, yes, sir!” I reply, “Why?” and all you can reply with is subjective personal preferences du jour based on hidden assumptions.

It’s not incumbent upon your worldview to answers any question and does so by an accidentally existing ape subjectively interpreting accidental neural chemistry—if, that is, you interpret it at all since it may be the case that the accidental laws of physics which accidentally cause the accidental neural chemistry to accidentally result in thoughts means that your thoughts are predetermined by them.

Redbad:

Ken Ammi  my apologies if I wasn’t behaving. I agree with that on my world view my asking for evidence is subjective but it’s the only way I can think of to find truth. What on your world view provides the imperative to do anything?

Ken Ammi:

I appreciate that deeply and pray that you’re okay in general. Keep in mind that it’s not just that on your “world view my asking for evidence is subjective” but also “to find truth” means to find the byproducts of an accident. On my world view truth is, it’s absolute, knowing it is an imperative since it was purposefully created and as were we so that we could discern it, and truth personified since Jesus said, “I am…the Truth.”

Redbad:

I still don’t understand why knowing truth is an imperative on your worldview? Even if it was created by God you don’t have to find it. If you have free will God can’t give any imperatives just suggestions. Accident or not the desire to seek truth on either of our worldviews is subjective.

Ken Ammi:

Well, on Atheism it matters not if an accidentally existing ape understands what another accidentally existing ape is saying.

On my worldview, truth was created, it’s not accidental.

We were created, we’re not accidental and so were created to discern truth.

Thus, there’s a universal imperative to adhere to truth even if we can chose to reject it.

And, we can demand/expect others to adhere to it since it’s absolute and we are told to know it and adhere to it..

So, perhaps, “the desire” to seek it is subjective but the universal imperative is objective.

Jesus said, “If you abide in my word, you are truly my disciples, and you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free” (John 8:31-32).

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Well, that ended it since no more replies were forthcoming.

See my various books here.

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Professor B. J. Oropeza’s article “Who are the Nephilim and Did They Escape the Flood?”

In consideration of Professor of Biblical and Religious Studies at Azusa Pacific University B. J. Oropeza’s article Who Are the Nephilim and Did They Escape the Flood? which was posted to the Patheos site. Find my Oropeza related articles here.

He notes, “In the Bible we read about the Nephilim who lived during the time of Noah before the Great Flood (Genesis 6:1-4)” and what may be a key qualifying term—we shall see, “They are also mentioned again many years after the Flood in Numbers 13:33” (emphasis added for emphasis). Thus, he asks, “Did they escape the Flood?” and, “Depending on your translation, they are also called ‘giants’ along with the Rephaim and the Anakim” and asks, “Who are they?” (emphasis added for emphasis) which may hint at his answer since otherwise, the question would be, “Who were they?” but I may be reading too much into common parlance at this point.

  1. J. Oropeza notes, “the King James Version, New King James Version, the Septuagint (LXX), as well as the Latin Vulgate, translate this word as ‘giants’ after the Greek word, γίγαντες (gigantes).” Technically, that’s not a translation but a rendering. Also, he provided the Greek and transliteration but not the meaning which is that gigantes means earth-born.

He notes, “The Nephilim’s status as heroes or great warriors may have something to do with their designation as giants. In Numbers 13 they are mentioned again, and here they are said to be giants.” At this point, let us ask the key questions which are:

What’s the usage of the vague, generic, subjective, multi-usage and modern English word “giants” in English Bibles?

What’s Oropeza’s usage of the vague, generic, subjective, multi-usage and modern English word “giants”?

Do those usages agree?

Well, we get an idea of his usage and he seems to be unaware that biblically contextually, “The Nephilim’s status as heroes or great warriors may have something to do with their designation as giants. In Numbers 13 they are mentioned again, and here they are said to be giants” reads thusly, “The Nephilim’s status as heroes or great warriors may have something to do with their designation as Nephilim. In Numbers 13 they are mentioned again, and here they are said to be Nephilim.” He is using the term, “giants” to refer to subjectively unusual height but that’s not the English Bible’s usage at all. Therein, it merely renders (doesn’t even translate) either Nephilim in two verses or Rephaim in 98% of all others without as much as a hint of anything to do with height whatsoever.

  1. J. Oropeza includes a section on the identify of the sons of God which I will bypass by noting that Job 38:7, as one example, shows us that “sons of God” can refer to non-human beings (which the LXX has as “Angelos”).

Jude and 2 Peter 2 combined place the one-time sin of Angels to pre-flood days and correlate it to sexual sin.

The original, traditional, and majority view among the earliest Jewish and Christians commentators, starting in BC days, was the Angel view” as I proved in my book, “On the Genesis 6 Affair’s Sons of God: Angels or Not?: A Survey of Early Jewish and Christian Commentaries Including Notes on Giants and the Nephilim.

I will only note that he wrote, “Since the Nephilim first appear in the same context of this union between the sons of God and the daughters of humans, interpreters often infer from this that the Nephilim were their offspring…A careful reading of Genesis 6:1–4, however, does not explicitly state that the Nephilim were the children of this sexual union. Nevertheless, the inference is fairly clear.”

And it’s clear since the Gen 6 affair narrative’s contextual focus is the sons of God and daughters of men: their attraction, their marriage, and their offspring. Thus, it would violate that narrative’s contextual focus to artificially insert a mere passing reference to some unrelated Nephilim guys who just happened to be around at the time, are mentioned for no apparent reason, and about whom nothing more is said in relation to the narrative’s contextual focus.

Thus, “Nephilim were on the earth in those days, and also afterward” as a result of, “when the sons of God came in to the daughters of man and they bore children to them.”

  1. J. Oropeza includes a section titled, “Nephilim and Other Giants” the problem with which is that he tells us of “Other” before telling us of any—at least as per his mis-usage.

Recall, “what may be a key qualifying term—we shall see, ‘They are also mentioned again…” well, at this point he wrote another possible qualifying term, “Genesis 6 aside, we find only one other biblical reference to the Nephilim” (emphasis added for emphasis). Let’s keep in mind that if I write about George Washington right now, as I just did, that’s a mention and reference but that doesn’t mean he’s alive, on the ground, at this time. Concluding that mention and reference equal being alive at the time of the mentioned reference would be a non sequitur category error.

But let’s see if those were just common parlance terms or if B. J. Oropeza was implying something specific by them. He notes, “When Moses sent the twelve tribal leaders to spy out the land of Canaan, they brought back a discouraging report in Numbers 13:32–33: ‘The land we explored devours those living in it. All the people we saw there are of great size. We saw the Nephilim there (the descendants of Anak come from the Nephilim)…’ (NIV).”

Well, he can quote whatever version he wants but none of them say what he just claimed.

Accurate rewrite—sine referring to “they” is too vaguely generic:

“When Moses sent the twelve tribal leaders to spy out the land of Canaan, they brought back a” original report that was accepted as is. Caleb encouraged the people who obey God (Joshua sided with him). 10 of them discouraged, we are told that they presented an evil report and it was the second—fear-mongering scare-tactic—“discouraging report in Numbers 13:32–33” wherein they asserted, “The land we explored devours those living in it. All the people we saw there are of great size. We saw the Nephilim there (the descendants of Anak come from the Nephilim)…’ (NIV)’” which led to God rebuking them.

There are so many problems with those few words that I wrote an entire chapter about it, which I released as a sample: Chapter sample: On the Post Flood Nephilim Proposal.

Suffice it to say that post-flood Nephilologists are forced to rely on, to build an entire all-encompassing theory, upon one single sentence spoken by unfaithful, disloyal, contradictory embellishers who resented an evil report and were rebuked by God—I’m unaware of anyone who has ever done that for any other “doctrine” whatsoever.

Thus, it was not, “When Moses sent the twelve tribal leaders to spy out the land of Canaan, they brought back a discouraging report”: rather, B. J. Oropeza skipped the key portions of that narrative.

He proposes that, “The NIV, in my opinion, does a poor job of translating…A more literal reading of the phrase would be, ‘And there we saw the Nephilim, (the) sons of Anak of the Nephilim.’” At this point, he refers to, “the spies who were lying or at best exaggerating” but he didn’t tell us who that was. In other words, he referred to “twelve tribal leaders” failed to distinguish the two loyally faithful ones from the 10 who weren’t and now fails to distinguish them again by giving the impression that it was the twelve who were lying or at best exaggerating.”
He notes, “This passage connects the Nephilim with the Anakim” but fails to noted that such isn’t the case in the LXX which utterly lacks reference to Anakim in that section. This also would do nothing to elucidate just how it is that Anakim, named after Anak who was Arba’s son, could possibly be related to Nephilim.

He then notes that Anakim, “latter are comparable in size with the Rephaim.” Yet, since the only physical description we have of Nephilim comes from utterly unreliable guys presenting an utterly unreliable report then we’ve no reliable physical description of them. As for Anakim and Rephaim as “Other Giants” well, Deut 2 tell us that Anakim and Rephaim (the former being a clan of the latter tribe) were subjectively “tall” and that’s it so, taller than 5.0-5.3 ft.

  1. J. Oropeza then writes, “Og, king of Bashan, was a Rephaite whose bed or sarcophagus measured 9 by 4 cubits (perhaps thirteen feet long and six feet wide: Deut 3:11). The gigantic Philistine warrior, Goliath, was said to be a descendant of the ‘Raphah,’…Goliath’s height at 4.5 cubits is not too impressive (a little over 6 1/2 feet tall based on the Septuagint and Dead Sea Scrolls : 4Q Sam [1 Sam 17:4]). The Hebrew and Vulgate texts have him at 6.5 cubits (over 9 1/2 feet tall).”

Now, he wrote, “descendant of the ‘Raphah’” which some English Bibles have as, “descendant of the ‘giant’” (recall that it would merely be due to rendering Repha as giant) but then refers to, “the size of these giants” which he should, consistently, have written as, “the size of these Rephaim.” Yet, we don’t know Og’s height and the preponderance of the earliest data is that Goliath was subjectively tall but not so impressive in, say, modern day Norway, etc.—he left out that Flavius Josephus also has the shorter height range for him. Interested readers should consult my book The King, Og of Bashan, is Dead: The Man, the Myth, the Legend—of a Nephilim Giant?

Thus, just as with Og and Goliath (who got taller and taller with time and telling) so Nephilim went from being un-physically described to being so tall that humans are like grasshoppers in comparison to, “Nephilim of Genesis 6 as described in non-canonical books” who have, “bodies like mountains” and, “1 Enoch 7” which B. J. Oropeza tells us has them at, “three hundred cubits high” but it actually has them as 3,000 ells which is MILES tall—great folklore but poor reality.

We now come to, “Did the Nephilim Survive the Flood?” about which we’re told, “In Numbers 13:33 the Nephilim appear again during Israel’s travels in the wilderness” (emphasis added for emphasis) but we have zero reliable data to conclude that and only one single unreliable sentence in it’s favor.

He then asks, “If the Israelites saw the Nephilim in the land of Canaan, are we to assume that these are the offspring of the Nephilim from Genesis 6? Put differently, did the Nephilim survive the great Flood of Genesis 6–9?” Yet, even if we believe the evil report there’s no indication that, “the Israelites” saw any such thing, they were merely told that, as an assertion, by the 10.

He notes, “If we assume this to be the case (and not an inconsistency in the text), the great Flood may be interpreted as a local one” but the scope of the flood is irrelevant to Nephilology since they either didn’t make it past the flood because it was global or because they lived in the flooded region: either way, they didn’t make it past the flood in any way, shape, or form.

Yet, he tells us, “it could be surmised that some of the Nephilim escaped the flood” but that contradicts the Bible five times: ​Genesis 7:7, 23; Hebrews 11:7; 1 Peter 3:20; and 2 Peter 2:5.

  1. J. Oropeza notes, “Some scholars interpret the phrase ‘and also afterward’ in Genesis 6:4 as referring to a time after the Flood…Others, however, believe this interpretation is hard to reconcile with the context of Genesis 6—9, which depicts the flood as wiping out all human life except Noah’s family (Gen 6:5—7:23; esp. 7:19).”

Fallacious Nephilology (such as 100% of pop-Nephilology and much scholarly Nephilology) effects theology proper since any concept of post-flood Nephilim implies that God failed: He meant to be rid of them via the flood but couldn’t get the job done, He must have missed a loophole, the flood was much of a waste, etc.

Post-flood Nephilologists have to just invent un-biblical tall-tales about how they made it past the flood.

Again, this describes 100% of pop-Nephilologists and I’ve written whole books debunking them such as, Nephilim and Giants: Believe It or Not!: Ancient and Neo-Theo-Sci-Fi Tall Tales.

Also, Nephilim and Giants as per Pop-Researchers: A Comprehensive Consideration of the claims of I.D.E. Thomas, Chuck Missler, Dante Fortson, Derek Gilbert, Brian Godawa, Patrick Heron, Thomas Horn, Ken Johnson, L.A. Marzulli, Josh Peck, CK Quarterman, Steve Quayle, Rob Skiba, Gary Wayne, Jim Wilhelmsen, et al.

Gen 6:4 doesn’t mention the flood nor does it have anything to do with it.

In fact, the flood isn’t even mentioned for the very first time until a full 13 vss. later: v. 17.

Gen 6:4 states, “Nephilim were on the earth in those days, and also afterward, when the sons of God came in to the daughters of man and they bore children to them. These were the mighty men who were of old, the men of renown.”

The question becomes: when were those days?

Well, Gen 6:1 told us, “When man began to multiply on the face of the land and daughters were born to them, the sons of God saw that the daughters of man were attractive. And they took as their wives any they chose.”

The next question becomes: when was afterward?

Since it was after those days then it was simply after, “When man began to multiply on the face of the land and daughters were born to them…”

Thus, the began doing it then and they continued to do it but that’s all pre-flood.

Yet, he notes that ways to get around afterward nor referring to the flood, “does not explain how the Nephilim reappear in Numbers 13.” Thus, his view begins by believing unreliable guys whom God rebuked and making a mess of other texts in order to make everything fit their deception—this is a continuation of a lost scrimmage or spiritual warfare.

Yet, He comes to the actual biblical view, “Perhaps a better explanation of this sort is that the spies reported false information in Numbers 13…If their report implies false information, they may have lied when they claimed that the Anakim were descendants of the Nephilim.” See how easy that was? Just taking the biblical narrative at face value does away with any and every contrived pseudo problem.

Yet, B. J. Oropeza can’t seem to get away from that, “false information…lied” since he still wrote, “Granted, they may have appeared to be similar to the Nephilim of old because of their great size” failing to note that, as pop-researchers and post-flood-“giant”-Nephilologists Gary Wayne himself was forced to admit (when I put him on the spot), “we don’t know how big Nephilim were…we don’t know how tall that they were” (sic.)—see our debate here.

Even though he includes a qualifying term, he does accurately conclude, “we can suggest that, according to Scripture, they perished in the Flood of Noah’s day” to which I will add: and they didn’t return in any way, shape, or form and never will.

See my various books here.

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Discussion on LA Marzulli’s “ASTOUNDING ARCHAEOLOGICAL FIND!”

The following discussion ensued due to LA Marzulli’s video ASTOUNDING ARCHAEOLOGICAL FIND!

David B noted

Makes logical sense to me that this would be something the giants wrote. Isn’t it recorded in Enoch where they had disturbing dreams of destruction and sought out Enoch to somehow get some mercy on their side using Enoch as a mediator of sorts? Them fleeing across the face of the earth to distant continents to somehow escape the judgment upon them most definitely appears to be a piece of the fragmented puzzle of the history of the Nephilim.

I, Ken Ammi, replied

Asserting the likes of that they went about “fleeing across the face of the earth to distant continents to somehow escape the judgment” is how LA implies that God failed: He meant to be rid of them via the flood but couldn’t get the job done.

David B

this is post flood scenario, not pre Noah’s flood. God stated He would not flood the earth in judgment again, so the elimination came at the hands of obedient men?

MR V chimed in thusly

Yahweh did not fail at all. Joshua and Caleb did rid the land of these creatures. What stayed behind were the dominions, the principalities and they can still be seen there to this day.

Ken Ammi @David B

Same difference: it implies that God failed. The issue is that the one and only reason to even invent such un-biblical tall tales is one single verse within an “evil report” by guys whom God rebuked–Num 13:33.

Ken Ammi @MR V

Indeed, “Yahweh did not fail at all” but you, et al., imply that He did: he sent the flood but it turned out to be a waste since He couldn’t get the job done and so Joshua and Caleb had to finish the job.

Yet, there’s zero reliable indication that they “rid the land of these creatures.”

As I noted to David B:  the one and only reason to even invent such un-biblical tall tales is one single verse within an “evil report” by guys whom God rebuked–Num 13:33.

David B

no it isn’t. Purely your opinion because you already don’t like the premise. That’s all. God commanded Joshua to wipe out the nephilim tribes in the land, and he did. The rest of them perished, hence finding their remains all over the planet. Just because God didn’t execute His judgment the way you think it should have been done, is solely based upon your reasoning. Absolute nonsense.

“unbiblical tales…”

What do you think the Bible is supposed to contain every single aspect of history, other wise it never happened? What a seriously flawed approach to any topic out there. Of course you don’t even hint at challenging  the evidence people like L. A. uncover, you are simply coming from a opinion that no nephilim existed anywhere else on the planet, “because the Bible doesn’t say it”. News flash, scripture doesn’t comment on every single aspect of history.

Ken Ammi

Well, of course post-flood Nephilim implies that God failed: He meant to be rid of them but couldn’t get the job done. Keep in mind that LA teaches the unbiblical theory of post-flood incursions for which there’s literally zero evidence.

Buy let’s simplify this: you assert, “God commanded Joshua to wipe out the nephilim tribes” so please quote and cite where God commanded Joshua to do that, specifically.

Something must be wrong with the YT comment section since you seem to imply that you’re quoting me saying, “unbiblical tales…” but I can’t find where I did so.

In any case, if I did so then we agree: I’m saying “unbiblical tales…” and you too are saying that since you note it’s not the case that “the Bible is supposed to contain every single aspect of history…”

Now, considering that I’ve written articles about LA’s views, and interacted with him via email, and featured him in my book “Nephilim and Giants As Per Pop Researchers,” I’m unsure why you say, “you don’t even hint at challenging  the evidence people like L. A. uncover.”

I have no idea where on the planet they lived, my only point is just that they didn’t make it past the flood in any way, shape, or form.

Robert S @MR V

Interesting.   Can you elaborate ?  What do you mean ?  Are you saying there was another post flood rebellion of angels ?

Ken Ammi @Robert S

That’s actually LA’s view but he tends to back off from it when it’s pointed out to him that there’s zero evidence for it.

MR V @Robert S

When you look at the main geographical areas where Hamas and Hezbolah operate in, they coincide perfectly where the areas that were the most troublesome for Joshua and Caleb, as they applied God’s judgement. That is not a coincidence.

Ken Ammi @MR V

God’s judgment on Rephaim, et al., but not ever on Nephilim.

David B

Let’s use your logic then. God failed to wipe out sin with the flood of Noah….because….what was the judgment of the flood of Noah about??? So God failed to stop the sins committed at Sodom & Gomorrah….because…what sins were judged at those cities?

“The Nephilim were on the earth in those days—and also afterward—when the sons of God went to the daughters of humans and had children by them….”

Genesis 6:4

Genesis was written post flood, so what does the phrase “and also afterward” mean then? Remember the context is talking about the Nephilim.

“In another battle with the Philistines at Gath, they encountered a huge man with six fingers on each hand and six toes on each foot, twenty-four in all, who was also a descendant of the giants.”

2nd Samuel 21:20

Huge man with six fingers on each hand, six toes on each foot…”he also was descended from Rapha”. That is a Nephilim giant descended from the Rephaites. Plural word for this tribe is the Rephaim, which Goliath and his brothers came from.

“In the course of time, war broke out with the Philistines, at Gezer. At that time Sibbekai the Hushathite killed Sippai, one of the descendants of the Rephaites, and the Philistines were subjugated. In another battle with the Philistines, Elhanan son of Jair killed Lahmi the brother of Goliath the Gittite, who had a spear with a shaft like a weaver’s rod. In still another battle, which took place at Gath, there was a huge man with six fingers on each hand and six toes on each foot—twenty-four in all. He also was descended from Rapha. When he taunted Israel, Jonathan son of Shimea, David’s brother, killed him. These were descendants of Rapha in Gath, and they fell at the hands of David and his men.”

1st Chronicles 20:4-8

For context about the size of a “weaver’s rod”…if one was making cloth to the standard size of about 6 ft. wide, the rod would have to be 8 ft. long & 2 1/2 to 3 inches thick. This was a Nephilim giant wielding a massive spear that a normal human could not properly handle. To us that would be a pole, not a spear.

Now for more scriptural evidence of post flood giants.

“They are now dead, they live no more; their spirits do not rise. You punished them and brought them to ruin; you wiped out all memory of them.”

Isaiah 26:14

Who are “they” in the Hebrew text? The “they” are the Rephaim, a notorious Nephilim tribe the Israelites eventually completely wiped out. Their “spirits do not rise”…is a direct reference to judgment before God. All human spirits will stand before God one day in judgment, the righteous for eternal rewards, the wicked for eternal punishment. Hell will be emptied before the great white throne to receive sentencing before thrown into the lake of fire. But these post flood Rephaim spirits will never rise even for that. Their destruction is already permanently done & don’t get the same treatment as humans.

“But as the days of Noah were, so shall also the coming of the Son of man be. For as in the days that were before the flood they were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noah entered into the ark, And knew not until the flood came, and took them all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.”

Matthew 24:37-39

Jesus plainly says the genetic tampering of the human genome will happen again just like before the flood, and is happening right now as we speak. Technology has reached the point where splicing DNA of creatures that cannot normal reproduce together is being done all over the planet. You need to reconsider whatever sources you are drawing from, because they are severely ignorant of the plain truth that presented in the Bible.

Ken Ammi

Why is it that the three key features of neo-theo-sci-fi-pop-Nephilology are literally exclusively based on one single verse? Because people who are, for some unknown reasons, infatuated with demanding post-flood Nephilim are literally forced to rely exclusively on one single verse stated by utterly unreliable guys whom God rebuked.

You say by my logic “God failed to wipe out sin” but God nowhere at any time said the flood was to wipe out sin so that’s not based on my logic whatsoever and likewise with “the sins committed at Sodom & Gomorrah.”

It can only be due to neo-theo-sci-fi-pop-Nephilology that you could even ask, “what does the phrase ‘and also afterward’ mean” since the verse tells you to what it’s referring—and you quoted it, “those days—and also afterward—WHEN the sons of God went to the daughters of humans and had children by them….” ergo: in “those days” WHEN they first did it (see v. 1) and after they first did it so that they kept doing it but that’s all pre-flood, the flood brought the whole affair to a full and final end.

Now, note how you went from “Nephilim” to “a huge man” and the English word “giants” but what you can’t quote, because it doesn’t exist, is what you were forced to write yourself, because it doesn’t exist, “That is a Nephilim giant descended from the Rephaites” which is 100% made up stuff. Also, BTW, the English word “giant” you are reading in your Bible is just rendering either “Nephilim,” in two vss., or “Rephaim” in 98% of all others.

So, when you write, “Nephilim giant descended from the Rephaites” you’re, biblically, either saying “Nephilim Nephilim descended from the Rephaites” or “Nephilim Rephaites descended from the Rephaites.”

But think of what you’re saying, “Nephilim giant descended from the Rephaites” which is like saying “Cat giant descended from the dogs.” It’s a simple category error that violates the law of identity: by definition, Nephilim were Nephilim and gave birth to Nephilim who were descended from Nephilim and by definition, Rephaim were Rephaim and gave birth to Rephaim who were descended from Rephaim.

For 1st Chronicles 20:4-8 you, again, quote a text about a Repha, but decide to assert, “This was a Nephilim giant” for which there’s zero evidence.

Also, Goliath wielded such a spear also and, most reliably, he was just shy of 7 ft. In fact, regular guy Benaiah successfully wielded such a spear in hand-to-hand combat (2 Samuel 23:21). Besides, you can search YT any time for weightlifting competitions and see guys who are right around 6 ft. lifting 1,000 lbs.

But after obfuscating Nephilim and Rephaim you then switch to the English term again, “evidence of post flood giants” but do you really know about whom you’re reading? You’re exclusively reading about Rephaim and you also seem to miss that everything said about them is vague, “tall,” “great stature,” etc., with the single exception of Goliath.

With Isaiah 26:14 you don’t seem to realize that it’s using the root word repha (which ranges form healing to dead) and doesn’t necessarily refer to the people group.

But, fine, you then merely assert, since you can’t quote it since it doesn’t exist, “Rephaim, a notorious Nephilim tribe” and while yes, “the Israelites eventually completely wiped out” the Rephaim, you’re just inventing a tall tale about what they were a Nephilim tribe: again, that’s why you can’t ever quote any such a thing.

You then go as far as taking Jesus out of context to make a pretext for a prooftext. I’ve no idea what in Matthew 24:37-39 is “Jesus plainly says the genetic tampering of the human genome will happen again” but that’s why I refer to neo-theo-sci-fi.

When you read what Jesus said, in His own context, via His own emphasis, to make His own point then you’ll realize that He said the same thing about the days of Lot (Luke 17) so you don’t get to force Him to say whatever you want to hear. His point was to offer two examples of people being unaware or unconcerned with coming judgment.

Friend, please re-read the Bible for what it actually says. Or, let’s make a deal: just provide quotations for the stuff you’re thus far merely asserting.

Well, that ended it as no one replied anymore.

See my various books here.

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Dr. Michael Brown on Nephilim as answer to “Did God Command the Israelites to Slaughter Children and Babies?”

Within his video Did God Command the Israelites to Slaughter Children and Babies?, Dr. Michael Brown proposed one theory that has been trotted out as an answer to that question so let us consider it.

He noted that the claim is that, “when the Israelites went into to the land of Canaan, that they commented on the inhabitants there were giants now no one ever denied that. Joshua and Caleb, the two spies out of the 12 who said we can take the land, they never denied that there were giants and Moses never denied it what they said.”

The key questions are:

What’s the usage of the vague, generic, subjective, multi-usage and modern English word “giants” in English Bibles?

What’s Dr. Brown’s usage of the vague, generic, subjective, multi-usage and modern English word “giants”?

Do those usages agree?

We will get a hint of that so, stand by. Note that it’s much too generic to assert, “when the Israelites went into to the land of Canaan, that they commented” since it was only 10 of them and not “the Israelites” as a whole.

Also, the 10 commented on that “the inhabitants there were” Nephilim.

As for, “no one ever denied that. Joshua and Caleb…never denied that there were giants and Moses never denied it.” Well, the narrative ends after the 10—who were unfaithful, disloyal, contradictory, embellishers whom God rebuked after the presented an “evil report,” mind you—make their fear-mongering scare-tactic tall-tale.

It was not a formal moderated debate so we can’t say no one denied it. In fact, in Deut 1 when Moses is relating this event, he affirms that Anakim were on the ground at the time but doesn’t say a single word about Nephilim. He seems to be too practical, he’s concerned about the real dangers on the ground, such as the notorious Anakim, but doesn’t have time for fantasy tall-tales—since that is the only reference to post-flood Nephilim and it’s utterly unreliable.

Another form of denial of what they said is that there’s not one single other reference to post-flood Nephilim in the entire Bible in any way, shape, form, context, genre, etc.

Any concept of post-flood Nephilim implies that God failed: He meant to be rid of them via the flood but couldn’t get the job done, He must have missed a loophole, the flood was much of a waste, etc.

Post-flood Nephilologists have to just invent un-biblical tall-tales about how they made it past the flood.

This describes 100% of pop-Nephilologists and many scholarly ones. And those who claim they survived the flood contradict the Bible five times.

I’ve written whole books debunking them such as, Nephilim and Giants: Believe It or Not!: Ancient and Neo-Theo-Sci-Fi Tall Tales.

Also, Nephilim and Giants as per Pop-Researchers: A Comprehensive Consideration of the claims of I.D.E. Thomas, Chuck Missler, Dante Fortson, Derek Gilbert, Brian Godawa, Patrick Heron, Thomas Horn, Ken Johnson, L.A. Marzulli, Josh Peck, CK Quarterman, Steve Quayle, Rob Skiba, Gary Wayne, Jim Wilhelmsen, et al.

And, The Scholarly Academic Nephilim and Giants: What do Scholarly Academics Say About Nephilim Giants?

The point Dr. Michael Brown made, based on those who hold to this view, is that Caleb and Joshua’s point was that sure, there were Nephilim/giants around but, “God’s with us and we can take the land.”

As for, “where did the giants come from?” Dr. Brown elucidates:

…you remember in Genesis the 6th chapter that before the flood…gives the account how the sons of God saw the daughters of men that they look good, they took them as their wives and then their offspring called the Nephilim. So, there’s great debate about what that means and fallen ones, those who fall on others, etc.

But it’s clear contextually, even in ancient versions, that they’re giants and it is a mixed breed…a Satanic mix-breed. These were fallen Angels who somehow were able to take on human form and if you’re going to quote the Bible, I mean, here’s what the Bible’s saying…

Let’s pause for a moment. That, “their offspring called the Nephilim” is good enough reason to not bring the problems causing term modern term “giants” into it. As for that in, “ancient versions…they’re giants” well that can mean more than one thing—part of why it’s a best practice to ignore that word—since it can refer to a description of their size or it can be a word-concept fallacy. The latter would be to merely imagine some unknown height above the subjective average and the former is based on what utterly unreliable guys whom God rebuked said plus some uncited, “ancient versions” (to whatever that refers).

Indeed, they were, “a mixed breed” and it’s too bad that Dr. Brown didn’t take the time to, “quote the Bible” since it doesn’t contain one single sentence about, “Angels who somehow were able to take on human form.” Rather, Angels are always described as looking like human males, performing physical actions, and without indication that such isn’t their ontology.

Continuing Dr. Brown’s statement:

…their offspring it was it was something abominable. God says the Earth was filled with violence in those days. It was so bad that He had to wipe the human race out, lest it destroy itself. If He didn’t rescue…Noah…and then rescues his family—so, his wife, three sons, and their wives to repopulate the Earth—we wouldn’t be here. The whole world would have been completely wiped out…He wipes out everyone on the Earth, if He doesn’t do that, no one survives, no one survives if he doesn’t do that.

But it does say that after the flood there’s still giants and Genesis 6 could say it was before the flood and even after.

So, God sought to destroy everyone besides whom Dr. Michael Brown noted but must have missed a loophole: do you see how fallacious Nephilology damages theology proper?

Now, the answer to the first key question—What’s the usage of the vague, generic, subjective, multi-usage and modern English word “giants” in English Bibles?­—all but does away with statements such as, “But it does say that after the flood there’s still giants and Genesis 6 could say it was before the flood and even after.”

That is because post-flood usages of the term “giants” refers to Nephilim only in one single sentence, the evil report of Num 13:3, 98% of all other usages are references to Rephaim and they have utterly nothing to do with Angels, mix-breeds, the flood, etc.

As for Gen 6: the evil report becomes a hermeneutic for those who for some odd reason demand post-flood Nephilim (siding with unreliable guys whom God rebuked rather than with God) since it tell us exactly to what days it’s referring but post-flood Nephilologists ignore what it states.

They merely assert that, “in those days and also afterward” refers to the flood but the flood isn’t even mentioned for the very first time until a full 13 verses later—verse 17.

Gen 6:4 states, “Nephilim were on the earth in those days, and also afterward, when the sons of God came in to the daughters of man and they bore children to them. These were the mighty men who were of old, the men of renown.”

The question becomes: when were those days?

Well, Gen 6:1 told us, “When man began to multiply on the face of the land and daughters were born to them, the sons of God saw that the daughters of man were attractive. And they took as their wives any they chose.”

The next question becomes: when was afterward?

Since it was after those days then it was simply after, “When man began to multiply on the face of the land and daughters were born to them…”

Thus, the began doing it then and they continued to do it but that’s all pre-flood.

Continuing with Dr. Michael Brow’s statement:

So, there are those who hold the view that those living in Canaan were the descendants of the Nephilim, were a wicked half-breed that had to be destroyed, that simply had to be destroyed, and wiped out.

Otherwise, as Israel came into the land, with intermarriage and other things like that, now Israel itself would be destroyed and

Israel would never be a light to the Nations Messiah would never come to the world, the whole world now ends up destroyed.

So, there are those who believe that the ones that Israel was called to wipe out were this dangerous half-breed of humans fallen Angel and human, and their descendants. And that ultimately, they were wiped out finally by Israel: that none of the descendants of the giants were left, and that that was the reason, the justification.

Indeed, some appeal to that as an excuse for God having commanded what He did. Yet, such personages only make things worse since those who double-check them will realize that it’s just a tall-tale. God told us many times why He commanded such things but never said one single word about Nephilim—see chapter, “Herem: Were Post-Flood Nephilim Dedicated to Destruction?” in my book What Does the Bible Say About Giants and Nephilim? A Styled Giantology and Nephilology.

He also notes that this scenario proposes a, “mixture in the human race which is now going to corrupt the whole human race and had to be dealt with radically” and it was: via the flood.

He again states, “here’s the deal if you’re going to quote one part of the Bible then you can’t throw out the other part of the Bible” indeed, and for post-flood Nephilim all we have is one single sentence from unreliable guys (and within a textual criticism problematic sentence) which is illogical and ill-theo-logical and ill-bio-logical—see my Chapter sample: On the Post Flood Nephilim Proposal.

Dr. Michael Brown notes, “different scholars, different interpreters are going to have different perspectives and you can read what Dr Michael Heiser said…” yet, while Dr. Heiser was credentialed and experienced but not infallible, his Nephilology wasn’t biblical, and he tended to create more problems than he solved—see these articles for examples (and I featured Dr. Heiser in my books about scholars):

Review of Amy Richter and Michael Heiser on four Enochian Watcher related women in Jesus’ genealogy

Rebuttal to Dr. Michael Heiser’s “All I Want for Christmas is Another Flawed Nephilim Rebuttal”

See my various books here.

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Carl Joseph on Nephilim Nimrod and Tower of Babel: Gateway to the gods

Carl Joseph’s bio notes, in part, “Carl is a biblical scholar, minister, husband, father and life coach. In his mid-twenties he had a powerful encounter with God and saw miraculous healings as a result.”

His article Tower of Babel: Gateway to the gods is very reminiscent of Gary Wayne’s modus operandi: quote anything written by anyone for any reason in any genre from any time and any place, employ vague terminology, and mash together a theory—claiming that the theory is fact, as a result.

He notes:

The Historian Josephus claims, that Nimrod, persuaded the people to ascribe their happiness to him rather than God, seeking worship for himself. Nimrod was indeed the founder of all false religions, still in existence, to this day…Babel derives ultimately from an Akkadian word that means “gateway to God.” In the pursuit of accessing God’s throne, Nimrod became something else entirely, changing his biology forever.

Since the Bible states no such thing about him, this appears to be a case of: thus saith Josephus (centuries, if not millennia, after the Torah).

We’re also told, “The Midrash (Rabbinical writings) also describes the tower of Babel, built on tall columns designed to protect it from another divine flood.”

Since the Bible states no such thing about him, this appears to be a case of: thus saith Midrash (Rabbinical writings) (from millennia after the Torah).

My point isn’t: not as old ergo untrue but rather, from centuries, if not millennia later, and without any indication that actual history is being relayed.

The only biblical statement about Nimrod is, “And Cush begat Nimrod: he began to be a mighty one in the earth. He was a mighty hunter before the Lord: wherefore it is said, Even as Nimrod the mighty hunter before the Lord” (Genesis 10:8–9).
Since modern Nephilologists have turned Nimrod into the ultimate do-it-all bad guy, they can’t allow, “before the Lord” to mean, “before the Lord” but claim that it actually means: against the Lord. Moreover, as Carl Joseph puts it:

In his research for the Shinar Directive, Dr. Michael Lake presents a word study of the term, “he began to be.” The Hebrew word is chalal, which means to, “profane, defile or pollute, either sexually or genetically.” He did so in order to become a ‘mighty one’ which is the Hebrew term gibborim.

This term can mean “mighty, champion, chief or even giant” in some lexicons. Could it be that Nimrod became a giant by profaning himself either sexually or genetically, in order to replicate the stature of his antediluvian forefathers?
Dr. Lake goes on to cite, Annette Yoshiko in her Cambridge University Book, Fallen Angels and History of Judaism and Christianity, stating “the Nephilim of Genesis 6:4, are always grouped together with the gibborim which are the progeny of the Watchers and human women.” The Septuagint translation (LXX) also states that Nimrod began to become a giant, “Cush begat Nimrod. He was the first to be a giant on the earth” (Gen 10:8).

He follows this with some modern painting and an old sculpture of Gilgamesh which he titles as, “Nimrod the Giant (with his 375 pound ‘kitty cat’)”—yes, Gilgamesh.

carl-joseph-on-nephilim-nimrod-and-tower-of-babel-gateway-to-the-gods

Let us review:

Now, applying a meaning of, “profane, defile or pollute, either sexually or genetically” isn’t across the board since, for example, Gen 9:20 notes, “Noah began [ḥālal] to be a man of the soil, and he planted a vineyard” but there’s nothing wrong with planting a vineyard and so this can’t read, “Noah profane, defile or pollute, either sexually or genetically to be a man of the soil, and he planted a vineyard.”

Also, “mighty one,” singular, isn’t gibborim but is gibbor—the “im” part makes it male plural and it is a mere descriptive term meaning might/mighty. We might as well get to a key issue since Carl Joseph employs the vague, generic, subjective, multi-usage and modern English word “giant” without ever defining it.

Thus, the key questions are:

What’s the usage of the vague, generic, subjective, multi-usage and modern English word “giants” in English Bibles?

What’s Carl Joseph’s usage of the vague, generic, subjective, multi-usage and modern English word “giants”?

Do those two usages agree?

These are key questions because without the answer to the second one, for example, we can’t know to what he’s referring by asking, “Could it be that Nimrod became a giant by profaning himself either sexually or genetically, in order to replicate the stature of his antediluvian forefathers?” Now, as for, “the stature of his antediluvian forefathers”: he merely artificially inserts that into the article without precedent. In other words, he’s given us no reason to think that anyone pre-flood was of any, “stature” that anyone would want to replicate for any reason nor by any means. Unless, that is, by stature he means status. Yet, we, his readers, should not be left to wonder and guess: he should be elucidating.

As for, “Nephilim of Genesis 6:4, are always grouped together with the gibborim which are the progeny of the Watchers and human women” well, this appears to treat Nephilim and gibborim as two distinct groups (the gibborim) and only has gibborim as progeny of the Watchers and human women—with Watchers being a mere a.k.a. for Malakim/Angels from centuries after the Torah.

Rather, the text is informing us that Nephilim were gibborim: mighty men and it was Nephilim who were progeny of the Watchers and human women.” We’re told, “Nephilim were on the earth in those days, and also afterward, when the sons of God came in to the daughters of man and they bore children to them. These were the mighty men who were of old, the men of renown.”

Also, it’s incoherent to assert, “Nephilim of Genesis 6:4, are always grouped together with the gibborim” since Angles and Nephilim and Nimrod and some of David’s soldiers and Boaz and God, etc., etc., etc. are all referred to as gibbor/im and without any grouping with Nephilim 99% of the time.

It’s also impossible that, “The Septuagint translation (LXX) also states that Nimrod began to become a giant, ‘…giant on the earth’ (Gen 10:8)” because that’s not Greek, that’s English. The LXX employs γίγας or γίγαντες in such cases: gigas or gigantes. The giga portion refers to the Earth via the false Earth goddess Gaia which is why gigantes means earth-born. Thus, we can only assume that giant via gigas has something to do with height (which appears to be what’s being implied—since Carl Joseph won’t tell us) is if we plug it into some usages that have something to do with Greek mythology.

Yet, again without telling us to what he’s referring, Carl Joseph declares:

Evidently, Nimrod became the first post-flood giant. His nefarious act, fulfilled Moses’ prophecy of giants, “and also after that” (i.e., the flood-Gen 6:4).

Adam Clarke the famous commentator, also cites within the Syriac Targum that, “Nimrod was called a giant.”

Dr. Lake then goes on to mention that, “Clarke claims the city of Babel and its tower, were ‘built by giants.’ This begs the question, ‘was Nimrod a mighty hunter of animals or man, seeing that he was part human and fallen angel?”

In the sculpture of Nimrod (above), he holds a 375-pound African lion as a mere “kitty cat.”

From this depiction, one could estimate Nimrod’s stature to be anywhere between 10-15 ft, not too dissimilar from other giants in the Old Testament, namely Og of Bashan (Dt 3:11), Goliath (2 Sam 21:19) and the Anakites (Dt 9:1-2).

Now, due to the appeal to Gen 6, we can only conclude that, “Nimrod became the first post-flood giant” must mean, “Nimrod became the first post-flood Nephilim” which is incoherent since there’s never been any such a thing as post-flood Nephilim.

Also, note that since there’s not a single verse that makes any such statement, Carl Joseph quoted fragments of a verse and then had do insert, “i.e., the flood…” into a verse that states nothing of it: in fact, the flood’s not mentioned for the very first time until a full 13 verses later.

The issue with, “the Syriac Targum that, ‘Nimrod was called a giant’” is the same as with the LXX reference: that’s not Syriac, it’s English, and Carl Joseph doesn’t bother elucidating the original langue issue nor from when it dates, etc., etc., etc.

Okay, “Clarke claims the city of Babel and its tower, were ‘built by giants’” the question to which is: so what, what does that mean, how does he know, etc., etc., etc.

The question that’s begged isn’t the mere asserted, “was part human and fallen angel” but what on Earth makes you merely assert that he was (since there’s literally zero indication of that)—especially after Carl Joseph quoted, “Cush begat Nimrod” to us—and Cush was no Angel.

Now, for some reason, Carl Joseph thinks that we ought to take a sculpture (from whenever and wherever) should literally be taken literally—enough so to make determinations, including the weight of the lion.

And we finally for a clear answer to the second key question: by “giant,” he means something vague about subjectively unusual height. And so, we also got the answer to the third key question which is, “No” since his usage has nothing to do with the English Bibles’ usage. That’s because the answer to the second question is that “giants” is merely rendering (not even translating) “Nephilim” in two texts and “Repha/im” in 98% of all others and so it never even hints at anything whatsoever to do with height.

As for, “10-15 ft, not too dissimilar from other giants in the Old Testament, namely Og of Bashan (Dt 3:11), Goliath (2 Sam 21:19) and the Anakites (Dt 9:1-2).” Well, we’ve no physical description of Og so he’s a non-issue, Goliath was just shy of 7ft., and as for the Anakim, Dt 9:1-2 notes, “Hear, O Israel: you are to cross over the Jordan today, to go in to dispossess nations greater and mightier than you, cities great and fortified up to heaven, a people great and tall, the sons of the Anakim, whom you know, and of whom you have heard it said, ‘Who can stand before the sons of Anak?’” and that they were “tall”—which is just as vague, generic, subjective, multi-usage as “giants”—only means they were taller than the average Israelite male who was 5.0-5.3ft in those days. So, where are any 10-15 ft “giants” anywhere at all?

But the way that Carl Joseph answers, “How did Nimrod become a Giant?—before bothering to establish that he did become subjectively unusually tall: taller than 5.0-5.3ft—is, “The Bible does not explicitly mention how Nimrod became a giant” but no worries, just appeal to anything, “there are clues in Historical Jewish writings as to how antediluvian technology might have been revived after the flood. Consider the following passage highlighting a discovery by Canaan (cursed grandson of Noah-(Gen 9:25) and great uncle to Nimrod), from the Book of Jubilees 8:1-5” which has it that there was a recipe for creating Nephilim and so more were created post-flood—nothing like fresh homemade Nephilim! Also, BTW, Nephilim aren’t created via a recipe (some sort of ritual) but via mating sons of God with daughters of men.
Carl Joseph considers it, “certainly possible” that, “this forbidden knowledge” was eventually shard, “with Nimrod, aiding him to ‘become’ a gibborim?” (again, this should have read “a gibbor”).

Next comes the name-game whereby one way to attribute all sort of fanciful things to Nimrod it to claim that historically, he, “goes by many names…Ninurta…Gilgamesh…Amenhotep III…Tukulti-Ninurta” and my favorite, “Sargon of Akkad and Naram-Sin, grandson of Sargon” so he was his own grandpappy! He slices, he dices, he chops, he blends: here’s how to order!

Carl Josph even tells us, “The Book of Jasher identifies Nimrod as the inaugural tyrannical leader” even thought The Book of Jared is a modern day hoaxed fraud—see my book The Apocryphal Nephilim and Giants: Encountering Nephilim and Giants in Extra-Biblical Texts.

He then has a section titled, “Giants, Giants, everywhere!” about, “historical reports of Giants being scattered throughout the nations” but they are irrelevant since the tallest person to whom he referred us was just shy of 7ft.

But let that not stop a good tall-tale since he went on to write, “The fact that giants are mentioned in this manuscript, only fuels the speculation that Nimrod was in fact, a giant, and perhaps the leader of giants in the post flood era” since he is unaware that biblically speaking, “giants in the post flood era” means, “Rephaim in the post flood era” and nothing more.

In short, what we get in Carl Joseph’s article is sadly typical of modern Nephilology: the concoction of an exciting tall-tale built upon anything said by anyone at any time and for any reason presented to us in terminology that is watered down enough to assume cohesion.

See my various books here.

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A plea: I have to pay for server usage and have made all content on this website free and always will. I support my family on one income and do research, writing, videos, etc. as a hobby. If you can even spare $1.00 as a donation, please do so: it may not seem like much but if each person reading this would do so, even every now and then, it would add up and really, really help out. Here is my donate/paypal page.

Due to robo-spaming, I had to close the comment sections. However, you can comment on my Twitter page, on my Facebook page, or any of my other social network sites all which are available here.

Discussing: War of the Words – Rephaim and Royal Titles | Douglas Hamp & Dr Judd Burton

The video, “War of the Words – Rephaim and Royal Titles” with Douglas Hamp & Dr Judd Burton was posted to Hamp’s YouTube channel The Awakening Report.

I, Ken Ammi, replied

Shalom, that “they created this hybrid race that we know variously as Nephilim, Rephaim, Zamzumim, etc. so these are the various names for these these hybridized creatures” is committing a category error: Nephilim were strictly pre-flood hybrids, Rephaim were strictly post-flood humans, there is no relation between them and Zamzumim is merely an aka for Rephaim.

Doug Hamp replied

Hey Ken, I would point to Numb 13:33. “There we saw the giants (the descendants of Anak came from the giants); and we were like grasshoppers in our own sight, and so we were in their sight.” (Num 13:33). We also see that God destroyed the Amorite whose height was like the cedars (Amos 2:9). I detail these things and go into the original languages in my new book, Corrupting the Image 2.

Ken Ammi

Shalom brother, I pray I find you well.

You may recall that we discussed this already–including within the emails in which you offered to have me review your new book and I agreed to do so.

In Num 13:33 who is the “we” who say they “saw”?

You will find that it was unfaithful, disloyal, contradictory, embellishing spies whom presented an evil report and whom God rebuked.

They made four claims about which the whole entire rest of the Bible knows nothing.

They contradict Moses, Caleb, Joshua, God, and the rest of the Bible.

That one single verse is the one and only one upon which the whole entire theory of post-flood Nephilim is based as well as the assertion that they were very tall and that they are related to Anakim (not even to all Rephaim).

Also, note that in Deut 1:27-28 Moses relates that event and does not even bother noting Nephilim and that the LXX of that verse (v. 34 in that version) does not mention Anakim. Thus, there are also conceptual and textual issues with it.

Now, I am unsure what Amorite have to do with it since my comment was about Nephilim. But, while we are at it, what is the one-to-one ratio based comparison of the strength of an oak to the strength of a person?

A certain, “v1e1r1g1e1” chimed in with

I expect someone else has already corrected you on your many errors, but I think it bears mentioning that you are quite wrong in your suggestiion that the Spies Who Gave An Evil Report Of The Land (as they are known) were merely embellishing in order to scare the Israelites from invading.

Were I to tell you, ”Don’t go to Tasmania!  There are HUGE people down there!   Seriously, they’re enormous!  I felt like a mouse compared to them!   They’re so huge and so many, that the land can barely support them.  We’d have no chance against them in a battle.”…   The first thing you’d do would be to say ”Bolderdash!   There’s no such thing as gigantic huge Human-like things!   They all died out.   And why would there be any in Tasmania!?”

In short, the Israelites did not doubt the report of the spies… and Caleb and Joshua did not immediately gainsay their testimony.   Rather, Caleb and Joshua affirmed the capacity of the Israelites – with God on their side – to destroy the Canaanites.    So the burden of proof is not to show that there were physical descendants of the ancient Nephilim still extant in the world… but to try to deny it using the Scripture itself.

In this, you will have a hard time, because there are many many verses in Scripture – whether Septuagint or Masoretic – which make it abundantly clear that when there is discussion of Nephilim, Rephaim, Anakim, Emim or Amorite… they are talking about physical genetic mutation / hybrids of human and angelic beings on Earth.

Ken Ammi

Oh, I don’t think they were merely embellishing: they were straight up deceiving.

Your metaphor fails because it implies a recording of an entire scenario, an entire discussion.

Indeed, “Caleb and Joshua affirmed the capacity of the Israelites – with God on their side – to destroy the Canaanites” but among them you count Nephilim so now you have a number of problems such as God failing so that the flood was a waste, having to invent a tall tale about how to get Nephilim past the flood, how to make sense of a narrative that has unfaithful, disloyal, contradictory, embellishers whom God rebuked being trustworthy, dealing with why we’re told many times about the people in the land and around the land and about battles and hand-to-hand combat without a single reference to Nephilim ever, etc., etc., etc.

The burden of proof is, in fact, to show that there were physical descendants of the ancient Nephilim still extant in the world.

To deny it is quite simple using the Scripture itself: Genesis 7:7, 23; Hebrews 11:7; 1 Peter 3:20; 2 Peter 2:5 along with zero statements about a second fall of Angels nor of any manner of any sort of return of Nephilim otherwise.

Now, I get the feeling you’re willing to water down what’s supposed to be specific terminology since you write of “Nephilim, Rephaim, Anakim, Emim or Amorite.”

Yet, there’s no correlation between Nephilim and Rephaim, Anakim, Emim or Amorite.

Rephaim were a main group (like a tribe) under which there are subgroups (like clans) such as the Anakim.

Also, Emim is just an aka for Rephaim.

Plus, there’s zero indication that Rephaim, Anakim, Emim or Amorite are “physical genetic mutation / hybrids of human and angelic beings on Earth.”

Even if, for some odd reason, you actually believe some of the least reliable guys in the Bible—guys whom we’re told presented an “evil report,” guys who contradict Moses, Caleb, Joshua, God, and the rest of the whole Bible, guys who make five assertions about which the whole entire rest of the Bible knows nothing at all—you still only get Anakim as related to Nephilim, not all Rephaim: just be sure to check the LXX for Num 13:33 first.

v1e1r1g1e1

Goodness, what long post!  You claim ”The burden of proof is, in fact, to show that there were physical descendants of the ancient Nephilim still extant in the world.”.   Easy.   Genesis 6: 4 – ”There were giants in the earth in those days; and also after that, when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bare children to them”

The Bible itself makes it clear that there were TWO (at least) incursions of Angelic interbreedings with human women:  The first, the main one, occuring in the antideluvian world, to such an extent that only 8 pure bloodline / pure DNA humans lived, necessitating the Flood.    The 2nd occurred some time after the Tower of Babel incident, which saw the dispersal of humanity from the plain of Shinar out into the globe.   The Bible provides proof that these angelic inbreedings caused giants and were therefore technically ‘Nephilim”.

The particular pedigrees of giant (Anakim, Rephaim, etc) do not eliminate the reality that these creatures did indeed infest the Holy Land at the time of Joshua, and before.   That these monster hybrids were descended of further angelic beings, alike to those angelic beings who left their first estate during the antediluvian world, establishes that they were of the Nephilim…. not the selfsame ones who defiled the Earth in Noah’s day… but Nephilim even so for their paternity.

Ken Ammi

Friend, I’m unsure how “that there were physical descendants of the ancient Nephilim still extant in the world” is evidenced by that “’There were giants in the earth in those days; and also after that, when the sons of God came in unto the daughters of men, and they bare children to them.”

I must admit it bothers me that seem to imply that God failed and the flood was much of a waste: God caused the flood to be rid of “Angelic interbreedings” and preserve “only 8 pure bloodline / pure DNA humans” but Angles thought of a loophole He missed, they just came right back and did it all again.

Now, when you say “The Bible itself makes it clear that…The 2nd occurred some time after the Tower of Babel incident” where does it make that clear?

When you say “The Bible provides proof that these angelic inbreedings caused giants” where does it do that?

Also, what do you mean by “giants”?

FYI: Anakim are a subgroup, like a clan, of Rephaim, who were like a tribe.

What indication do you have that Rephaim were “creatures…monster hybrids”?

See, you replied with a list of assertions but they all go back to one single verse: Num 13:33.

I noted this to Doug:

In Num 13:33 who is the “we” who say they “saw”?

You will find that it was unfaithful, disloyal, contradictory, embellishing spies whom presented an evil report and whom God rebuked.

They made four claims about which the whole entire rest of the Bible knows nothing.

They contradict Moses, Caleb, Joshua, God, and the rest of the Bible.

That one single verse is the one and only one upon which the whole entire theory of post-flood Nephilim is based as well as the assertion that they were very tall and that they are related to Anakim (not even to all Rephaim).

I noted this to you:

Even if, for some odd reason, you actually believe some of the least reliable guys in the Bible—guys whom we’re told presented an “evil report,” guys who contradict Moses, Caleb, Joshua, God, and the rest of the whole Bible, guys who make five assertions about which the whole entire rest of the Bible knows nothing at all—you still only get Anakim as related to Nephilim, not all Rephaim: just be sure to check the LXX for Num 13:33 first.

So, what is THE issue.

v1e1r1g1e1

Ken, I think we’re wasting our time here.   You’re starting to repeat the same argument, and you nit-pick replies; demanding that we provide some kind of coup d-gras Chapter and Verse citation which will prove once and for all that there were Human / Angelic inbreedings in the past and that the Nephilim, Rephaim, Zamzumim, Emim, Anakim, etc were ALL descended of such bloodlines.

Doug Hamp and I have responded in good grace, trying to answer your questions, but I think you’re arguing for argument’s sake now… despite your (final?) question about what is the ”issue” here.    I will answer that (last) question, but after this, we’re done here.    The issue is that Satan and his allies were – and still are – attempting to pollute the human bloodline.   God has made us to be a being that can unite its consciousness with His, through the action and indwelling of the Holy Spirit.

Only humans can have this.  We are special.   Satan and his allies attempt/ed to undermine this;  robbing humanity of its chance to know the Creator in the way he has planned for us since the Beginning.  Time after time, this angelic rebellion has been attempted and time after time, thwarted.  But Satan and his minions will indeed try one last time… indeed, Jesus says clearly that the End Times will be ”like the days of Noah”.   Not just the usual sins of Humanity, but our entire civilisation in the very near future, if not already – our very physical bloodlines! – will be polluted with non-human DNA.

The result of this will be a world culture that is not only struggling to know God because of Adam’s sin in us… but will be actively anti-God because the very DNA in it will make such entities utterly unable to find Christ.   That is why there will be a future last cleansing of the Earth;  the Tribulation.   But I trust we are safe in Jesus Christ;  for only He is the Way, the Truth and the Life.   Goodbye, Ken.   Stay with Christ and may God guide you in your path.

Ken Ammi

Well, sure, when you are asserting that some humans weren’t human (or weren’t fully human) it is incumbent upon to you evidence it—but, sure, maybe that’s because I’m a Jew and get touchy about such things.

“Human / Angelic inbreedings” resulted in Nephilim and they didn’t make it past the flood.

If you want to contradict Genesis 7:7, 23; Hebrews 11:7; 1 Peter 3:20; 2 Peter 2:5 then you can assert that they did—in some way, shape, or form.

FYI: “Zamzumim, Emim, Anakim” are all Rephaim and you can’t even get all Rephaim being “descended of such bloodlines” from anywhere in the whole Bible. The most you can do is to accept as trustworthy people whom God rebuked for what they said and demand that Anakim were “descended of such bloodlines”—but not in the LXX.

Note that your parting statement includes that “Satan and his allies were – and still are – attempting to pollute the human bloodline” and that you imply that God sent a flood to end all of that but He failed.

You also misquoted and misapplied Jesus since He said the very same things about the days of Noah and the days of Lot and it had utterly nothing to do with the Genesis 6 affair.

See, you say “That is why there will be a future last cleansing of the Earth;  the Tribulation” but you deny that the flood was such a cleaning when, in fact, the Bible is clear that the flood succeeded but nothing is said about the tribulation within the context of the Genesis 6 affair.

Shalom. Stay with Christ and may God guide you in your path.

Well, that was the end of that.

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