In line with Peter's line of reasoning at John 6:68 about where they should go if they leave Jesus, shouldn't someone that wants to discredit your beliefs want to direct to theirs?
1. If the "discredit" or criticism is not valid it should be easy to refute, so just refute it.
Every time that I have, you add a few more things in to your taunts.
2. If the "discredit" is giving you facts, like telling you of Bible passages that are fabrications, then it's good information worthy of being aware of.
Yeah, if.
3. If the "discredit" is an interpretation that is different to yours then surely there is nothing unusual about that. There are hundreds of different interpretations or sects out there. Discuss and compare in a friendly way. Inform and become informed.
Your interpretation is that this verse could mean this so the other verses that clarify said verse are not valid.
Quote: [4. Remember that a Muslim does not regard the Qur'an as the only scripture ever sent by God. Muslims believe that God sent guidance to all human beings wherever and whenever they existed, so they accept the Bible as having been a guidance from God. However, you unreservedly discredit the Muslim claim that the Qur'an is from God and accept only the Bible as the inerrant word of God.]
That's a bit of a joke coming from you with all the supposed confusion and contradictions you believe exist.
1. A taunt is "a remark made in order to anger, wound, or provoke someone." My remarks are almost never personal, they're directed at the subject under discussion. So why should my view of the subject under discussion be a taunt if it's different from yours? If you discuss Jesus with any other Christian sect their view of Jesus is bound to be different from yours because you see Jesus as an incarnation of the archangel Michael. Is it a taunt if they express their view of Jesus?
EDIT: [https://www.dictionary.com/browse/taunt
At least 4 different taunts in this thread alluding to the scriptures not being valid or my beliefs:
https://answermug.com/forums/topic/46649/can-you-trust-the-bible-below-are-some-links-that-may-at-leas/view/page/4
First taunt as if not at all discernable with different amounts of books of Bibles.
Second taunt as if two genealogies are contradicting each other.
Third taunt that the scriptures in the Bible known as letters of Paul are not inspired scriptures because they didn't exist before he wrote them.
Fourth taunt that your interpretation is facts and mine is only my understanding.
1st [I also assume by "the Bible" you mean some of the widely accepted Protestant [66 book] versions of the Bible, including the JW's NWT version. I suspect that you yourself do not trust the [73 book] Catholic Bible or the [81 book] Ethiopian Bible or the [84 book] Eastern Orthodox Bible to tell you the truth and nothing else but the truth. ]
2nd [ if they study the Bible they can't help wondering if the writers of say the Gospels were guided by the holy spirit. If they were then why did the holy spirit, for example, inspire one writer to give one genealogy of Jesus and another writer to give a different one? If the holy spirit was directing what was going into the scripture then why did, not just a few additional words or an extra verse or two but, whole fabricated passages get into the scriptures?]
3rd [When Paul wrote the phrase "All scriptures" in the letter to his student I think most will agree that neither understood "All" to include the Hindu Vedas. It is reasonable to say that "scripture" to both Paul and Timothy meant all the books that were included in the Hebrew Bible of their time. Neither Paul would have seen the letter he was writing to Timothy as scripture nor would Timothy have regarded Paul's letter to him as scripture. The Gospels did not exist at the time Paul wrote the phrase "All scriptures" so obviously he couldn't have had those in mind.]
4th ["It's up to you to work out how you want to handle any discrepancy between facts and your understanding" >>>]
Then of course you have other threads like the one where you brought up how Jesus and John the Baptist contradicted each other and then when I asked your thoughts on how to reason on the verses, you pop off that they are not important to you:
Quote from CLURT: [. There was obvious confusion and some apparent contradictions.]
Quote from me: [1) Also, were you expecting Elijah himself to come back at that time or someone in a role like that of Elijah?
2) That's a really odd way of reasoning. If baptism was commonplace before John, why would they reason that John had to be the Christ, Elijah or the prophet?
3) Were all of these people doing all of this baptizing the Christ, Elijah or the prophet? If not, why were they baptizing?
4) Also, if all of this baptizing 'was commonplace', why was John known as the baptist? (use 'must have been common' in its place to help you)
5) According to you, John was doing what everyone else was already doing, yes?]
Quote from CLURT: [my position on the five points is that I have not given them thought because they are not important to me.]
2. It's not "if", I have in our discussions pointed out Bible passages that are fabrications. I'm glad you don't regard those as "taunts" but regard them as good information worthy of being aware of.