For all of the garbage that is social media, the last few days have been amazing. Watching Europeans, Australians, and Japanese tourists in the US for the World Cup has been so much fun. Seeing how they respond to the parts of the US that are normal is amazing. The response to places like Waffle House, Buc- Ees, Chipotle and In and Out is so much fun. As is watching the response to the natural beauty and expanse of the US. It's disappointing that very few of them will venture up far enough north to explore Lake Superior. But seeing the US through the eyes of people who appreciate what we have is so refreshing.
Monday, June 15, 2026
Falsifiable
https://substack.com/home/post/p-201307700
"A few days ago, under a piece of mine, an atheist I genuinely respect — he writes as The Honest Trap, and we have been circling each other’s arguments for a while now, with more mutual concession than either of us probably expected — drew a line I think is exactly right.
He said: “A position that cannot be falsified by any conceivable evidence is not a position. It is a fixture.”
I want to start by agreeing with him. Not strategically. Actually. A belief you hold in a way that no possible evidence could ever dislodge is not a belief you arrived at by looking. It’s a belief you arrived at by deciding, and then defended against the world. He is right that this is the difference between an honest mind and a closed one, and he is right that the test of a position worth holding is whether it has exposed itself to the possibility of being wrong.
Earlier in the same conversation he drew a second distinction, just as sharp. Trust, he said, is calibrated by evidence and revised by outcome — you trust a bridge, and if it collapses, the trust is revised. Faith, he said, is commitment regardless of outcome, and “regardless of outcome” is the grammatical signature of faith, not trust.
I think that distinction is mostly right too, and I’m not going to play word games with it. But I want to do something with both of his principles that I don’t think he’s expecting. I don’t want to argue against them. I want to apply them — to the reliability of the biblical text itself — and show that the Bible is not the fixture he assumes it must be. It is, by his own standard, one of the most thoroughly falsifiable documents the ancient world ever produced. It has been making checkable bets for three thousand years. And the record of what happened when people tried to collect on those bets is not what the skeptic expects.
This is the short version. I’m writing it as a direct reply to a thread, so I’m going to keep it to the spine and leave the full skeleton — the prophecy data, the internal cross-attestation, the granular textual-criticism comparisons — for a longer piece I’ll publish after this. There is, frankly, enough material here for a hundred essays. But the spine is enough to make the point.
· · ·
Let me start by clearing my own side of the table.
If you’ve spent any time around Christian apologetics, you’ve heard some numbers. And I have to tell you, before I tell you anything else, that several of the most popular ones are junk.
You’ve heard that we have ten manuscripts of Caesar’s Gallic Wars, and over five thousand of the New Testament, so why do you doubt the one and not the other? The five-thousand figure is real. The “ten copies of Caesar” figure is not. Once you count the later witnesses, Caesar survives in something closer to two hundred and fifty manuscripts. Homer’s Iliad, which the same apologists often put at 643, actually survives in around 1,800. Plato is not seven manuscripts; it’s a couple hundred. I’m not getting these corrections from a skeptic blog. I’m getting them from the Christian Research Institute, an apologetics organization, which has been trying for years to get its own side to stop using stale numbers.
And you’ve almost certainly heard the big one: that the early church fathers quoted the New Testament so exhaustively that if every manuscript on earth were destroyed, we could reconstruct the entire thing from their quotations — all but eleven verses.
That one is a myth. Not an exaggeration. A myth, with a paper trail. It traces back to an anecdote about an eighteenth-century amateur named Lord Dalrymple, recorded fifty years after the fact by a man who couldn’t remember whether the number was seven verses or eleven. When someone finally went and checked Dalrymple’s actual notes, he’d found matches for about 3,600 of the New Testament’s roughly 7,900 verses — forty-six percent, not “all but eleven.” Bruce Metzger, the greatest textual scholar of the twentieth century, and his student Bart Ehrman, who is now one of the faith’s most prominent critics, both say plainly that you could not reconstruct an accurate New Testament from patristic quotations, because the fathers quoted loosely, from memory, and constantly disagreed with each other.
I’m telling you the bad news about my own side first, and I’m doing it on purpose, for the reason Aquinas gave when he opened every argument by stating his opponent’s case as strongly as he could: a man who will not name the weak points in his own position has not earned your trust when he names its strengths. So here is me naming them. A good chunk of what gets repeated in church basements about Bible manuscripts is inflated, stale, or simply false.
Now. Having thrown out the junk — here is what’s left. And what’s left is stronger than the junk ever was, because it’s true.
· · ·
Start with the comparison done honestly, because even after you correct every inflated number, the New Testament still stands alone.
We trust Caesar’s account of the Gallic Wars. Historians build the chronology of Rome on it. The earliest manuscript we have was copied roughly nine hundred years after Caesar wrote. We trust Tacitus, whose Annals are a backbone of first-century Roman history; large portions survive in two manuscripts, the earliest copied some eight hundred years after he died. Homer, the best-attested pagan work of antiquity, has its earliest substantial copies about a thousand years downstream of composition.
The New Testament has fragments within a generation of the events, substantial manuscripts within about a century and a half, and complete copies within three hundred years — preserved across roughly 5,800 Greek manuscripts and tens of thousands more in other languages. No serious textual scholar disputes these orders of magnitude. The gap between writing and earliest copy, for the New Testament, is the smallest in the entire ancient world by a wide margin, and the volume of cross-checkable witnesses is the largest by an order of magnitude.
Here is the part that matters for The Honest Trap specifically, because it’s an argument about consistency, which is his own favorite tool.
If you accept the text of Caesar and Tacitus and Herodotus as substantially what they wrote — and essentially every historian does — then you are accepting them on far less documentary evidence than the New Testament offers, across far larger time gaps, with far fewer copies to cross-check. So the person who says “I accept Caesar but I reject the New Testament as a transmitted document“ is not applying a high standard. He’s applying two standards. He’s trusting the thin record and doubting the thick one, and the only thing that distinguishes them is the content — which is a reason to dislike the New Testament’s claims, but not a reason to doubt that we have, accurately, what its authors wrote.
I want to be precise, because precision is the whole game here. I am not saying the manuscript count proves Christianity is true. That would be a terrible argument, and he’d be right to demolish it. A well-attested text can be well-attested fiction. What the manuscript evidence establishes is narrower and unglamorous: we know what the authors wrote. The transmission is secure. Whatever you decide about whether it’s true, you’re deciding about the actual text, not a medieval corruption of it. That’s all this particular argument buys. But it buys that completely.
Now let me show you why the transmission is secure, because the mechanism is the most interesting part, and it’s where the contrast with every other holy book becomes visible.
The New Testament text was not preserved by an authority. It was preserved by chaos.
Within a few generations the documents had scattered across the whole Mediterranean — Greek, Latin, Syriac, Coptic — into the hands of communities that didn’t all like each other, couldn’t all reach each other, and had no central office issuing approved editions. Thousands of copies got made by thousands of hands in dozens of places with no coordination whatsoever. And that turns out to be the strongest possible guarantee of integrity, for a reason that’s almost counterintuitive: nobody could have changed it even if they’d wanted to. To alter the New Testament, you’d have had to simultaneously corrupt thousands of independent copies already dispersed across three continents, in multiple languages, held by rival factions, with no way to recall them. It’s not that no one tried to fudge a line here or there. It’s that the fudges are detectable — precisely because you can lay thousands of independent witnesses side by side and see exactly where one scribe’s hand slipped. The variants aren’t a scandal. They’re the audit trail. The very messiness that skeptics point to is the thing that makes the text checkable.
This is reliability by transparency. Reliability by redundancy. Reliability by the fact that the thing was never under anyone’s control.
Hold that next to how the Quran achieved its uniformity, because the contrast is not an insult — it’s just history, and Muslim tradition itself records it. About twenty years after Muhammad’s death, the caliph Uthman, faced with communities reciting in divergent ways, commissioned a single standardized text and ordered the variant copies burned. We’re not speculating about this; it’s in the Islamic sources, told as an act of pious good order. And the material record shows what it cost: the Sana’a palimpsest, one of the oldest Quranic manuscripts in existence, is a page where an older text was scraped off and written over — and the scraped-off lower layer preserves a version that differs from the standard one. It is the only substantial surviving witness to the textual tradition Uthman’s fire was meant to erase.
So you have two completely different roads to a stable text. The Quran reached uniformity early and cleanly — by authority, by standardization, by removing the competition. The New Testament reached uniformity slowly and messily — by never having an authority that could remove the competition, leaving us thousands of uncontrolled witnesses to cross-examine. One is uniformity you’re asked to trust because the variants were destroyed. The other is uniformity you can verify because the variants survived. For a man whose entire epistemology is “calibrated by evidence and revised by outcome,” I’d think the second kind is the only kind worth having.
* * *
But all of that is about words on a page. The Honest Trap asked for something harder, and fairer. He asked, in effect: does the book make claims about the world that the world can check? Because a text that only ever talks about the unfalsifiable — heaven, the soul, the age to come — is exactly the “fixture” he warned about. It risks nothing. It can’t be wrong.
So here is the part of the case I find most genuinely persuasive, and it’s not about manuscripts at all. It’s about dirt.
The Bible is relentlessly, almost recklessly specific. It names kings, cities, governors, building projects, water tunnels, political titles, the particular官 office a particular man held in a particular decade. And every one of those specifics is a falsifiable claim. Each one is the book sticking its neck out, betting that if you dig in the right place you’ll find the thing it described. A purely mythological text doesn’t do this. Myth is set “long ago, in a far country.” Scripture keeps saying this governor, in this city, in this year.
For a long time, the skeptics took those bets. And for a long time, it looked like they were winning.
Borrowed from: https://armstronginstitute .org/954-finding-the-hittites
The Bible mentions a people called the Hittites about fifty times. For most of the modern era, there was no independent evidence the Hittites had ever existed, and serious scholars listed them among the Bible’s legendary inventions — a tell that the text was fiction. Then in 1906, archaeologists in Turkey uncovered Hattusa, the capital of a vast, lost Hittite empire. The bet paid out. The text was right and the doubters were wrong.
King David was next. The minimalists argued for decades that David was a literary myth, a Jewish King Arthur, with no more historical reality than a legend. There was no evidence outside the Bible that he’d ever lived. Then in 1993, at Tel Dan in northern Israel, archaeologists pulled out a ninth-century-BC stone inscription — carved by an enemy of Israel — bearing the phrase “House of David.” Erected within about a century and a half of David’s life, by people who had no interest in flattering Judah. The bet paid out again.
Pontius Pilate: skeptics noted that this supposedly important Roman governor left no physical trace, and wondered aloud whether the Gospels had invented or inflated him. Then in 1961, in the theater at Caesarea, a limestone block turned up with his name and title carved into it. Paid out.
The Pool of Siloam, where John’s Gospel says Jesus healed a blind man, was dismissed as a theological symbol — a spiritual metaphor, not a real place. Then in 2004, a sewer repair in Jerusalem cut into ancient steps, and the pool was there, with coins from the time of Jesus confirming it was in use exactly when the Gospel said.
I could keep going for a long time, and in the longer piece I will. But notice the shape of it, because the shape is the whole argument. Over and over, the pattern is identical: the Bible makes a specific, checkable claim. Critics bet against it on the grounds that there’s no external evidence. The ground is dug. The claim is vindicated. Not once, in the history of biblical archaeology, has a verified excavation overturned a clearly-stated biblical claim — while again and again, the doubts themselves have been the thing that got falsified.
That is not the behavior of a fixture. A fixture risks nothing and so can never be proven wrong. This book has been putting falsifiable claims on the table for millennia, the critics have been swinging at them with everything they have, and the claims keep getting up off the mat. By The Honest Trap’s own definition — calibrated by evidence, revised by outcome — that is not faith operating “regardless of outcome.” That’s a track record. The outcome kept being tested, and the outcome kept coming back the same way.
· · ·
Now let me be honest about the limit of all this, because if I overclaim it I forfeit the thing I’m asking him to give me, which is fair-mindedness.
None of this proves the resurrection. None of it proves God. Archaeology can confirm that the Pool of Siloam was real; it cannot confirm that a man gave sight to a blind one there. The manuscripts can prove the eyewitnesses wrote what we read; they cannot prove the eyewitnesses were right. There is a real gap between “this book is a reliable historical document that keeps passing the tests we can run” and “therefore its central miracle happened,” and I’m not going to pretend the gap isn’t there. Anyone who tells you the dirt proves the divinity is selling something.
But that’s not nothing — it’s the opposite of nothing. What it does is move the conversation onto exactly the ground The Honest Trap says he wants it on. It takes the Bible out of the category of “unfalsifiable fixture you either have faith in or you don’t” and puts it into the category of “document with a checkable track record, calibrated by evidence, revised by outcome.” It makes the New Testament a thing you can trust in his precise sense of the word — provisionally, on the evidence, open to revision — rather than a thing you must take on faith in his precise sense of the word.
And it relocates the one claim that can’t be settled by a shovel onto the most exposed ground of all. Because the central claim of the whole enterprise was designed to be falsifiable in the most brutal way imaginable. Paul, writing within a few decades of the event, to people who could still go and check, staked the entire faith on a single historical fact and named the disconfirmation himself: if Christ has not been raised, he wrote, then our preaching is worthless and your faith is worthless. He didn’t hide behind the unfalsifiable. He pointed at a tomb and said: the body settles it. Produce the body, and the whole thing collapses in an afternoon. Two thousand years on, the one piece of evidence that would end Christianity instantly has never been produced — not because no one wanted to, but because the people best positioned to produce it, the authorities with every motive to end the movement in its cradle, apparently could not.
That is a faith that bet its existence on an outcome. Which is the one thing The Honest Trap said faith never does.
· · ·
So here is where I’ll leave it, for now.
My friend, you handed me a standard, and it’s a good one. A position immune to all possible evidence is a fixture, not a position. I agree. I’ll go further: a faith that risks nothing deserves nothing, and a great deal of what passes for religious confidence is exactly the closed, defended, evidence-proof fixture you describe, and you are right to have no patience for it.
But the book itself is not that. The text comes to us through the most transparent, cross-checkable, uncontrolled transmission of any document in the ancient world — uniformity you can verify rather than uniformity you’re ordered to trust. Its specific, worldly claims have been tested by hostile excavation for over a century and have a record of vindication that the doubts cannot match. And its central claim was published, on purpose, with the precise conditions of its own disproof attached.
You said trust is calibrated by evidence and revised by outcome. That’s the only kind of trust I’m asking you to consider — not a leap, not a fixture, not commitment regardless of the facts. Just this: a book that keeps making falsifiable bets, and keeps winning them, has earned the right to be examined on the one bet that’s still open.
This is the short version, written fast, for a comment thread. I owe you — and I owe the argument — the full one: the prophecy record, the internal cross-attestation, the granular comparison with the Buddhist canon and the Quranic transmission and the Greek historians, line by line. That’s coming, as its own essay. I’d rather take the time to do it right than dump it all here and do it badly.
But I wanted to answer the challenge where you made it. You said a real position has to be falsifiable. The Bible agrees with you. It’s been saying so, in stone and dust and manuscript, the whole time.
Come, let us reason together. I think that was always the invitation."
Eric Chabot
Whenever the deity of Jesus comes up in conversations with people from different faiths, it is common to hear the standard objection, “But Jesus never said, ‘I am God.’” How might we approach this objection? Thanks for reading Eric's Substack! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. In his book The Case For The Real Jesus, Lee Strobel says that if you search for Jesus at Amazon.com, you will find 175, 986 books on the most controversial figure in human history. The New Testament does not reveal Jesus as any ordinary prophet or religious teacher. Rather, it reveals Him as God incarnate (John 1:1; 8:58-59;10:29-31;14:8-9;20-28; Phil. 2:5-7; Col. 2:9; Titus 2:13; Heb. 1:8; 2 Pet. 1:1). There are some good reasons as to why Jesus would never say “I am God.” The Jewish Scriptures forbids worshiping anyone other than the God of Israel (Ex. 20:1–5; Deut. 5:6–9). And for Jesus to ever say something so explicit would insinuate that he was calling upon his audience to believe in two “Gods”- the God of Israel and Jesus. Also, for Gentiles, such a claim would allow for Jesus to fit nicely into their polytheism (the belief in many gods). In Judaism, there is a term called “avodah zarah” which is defined as the formal recognition or worship as God of an entity that is in fact not God. In other words, any acceptance of a non-divine entity as your deity is a form of avodah zarah. (2) One way to answer this objection is to discuss what is called Implicit and Explicit Christology: Second, remember the following. As Marvin Wilson says:
Also as Everett Ferguson says:
Let’s heed these comments by Wilson and Ferguson and take a look at how they apply to Jesus. First, note that Wilson says:
“The Name” What is significant is the statement in Acts 4:12: “And there is salvation in no one else; for there is no other Name under heaven that has been given among men by which we must be saved.” How could Jesus be declared as the only one whom God’s salvation is effected? In the ancient world, a name was not merely what someone was called, but rather the identification of the being and essence of its bearer. James R. Edwards summarizes the importance of this issue:
So just as in the Hebrew Bible where the name of God represents the person of God and all that he is, so in the New Testament “the Name” represents all who Jesus is as Lord and Savior. Furthermore, as Jean Danielou says:
The Shekhinah, Once again, note that Wilson says:
Regarding the Shekhinah, Wilson says:
Regarding the Shekhinah, N.T Wright also says:
I should also note that for the Jewish people, the ultimate manifestation of the Shekhinah was seen in the giving of the Torah at Mt. Sinai (Ex.19:16-20). Therefore, in relation to the incarnation, the Shekhinah takes on greater significance in John 1: 1-14. As John says, “And the Word became flesh, and dwelt among us, and we saw His glory, glory as of the only begotten from the Father, full of grace and truth.” “Dwelt” (σκήνωμα), means to “live or camp in a tent” or figuratively in the NT to”dwell, take up one’s residence, come to reside (among).” As already stated, the Greek word “Skeinei” means to tabernacle. John 1:14 literally says,” the Word became flesh and tabernacled among us.” Also, to repeat what Ferguson says:
The Word/The Memra? In the Jewish Scriptures, the “Word” is discussed in a manner that takes on an independent existence of its own. As seen in John 1:1-2, the “Word” has a unique relationship with God; all things were made through Him. In this passage, John is emphasizing that the Word is with God and yet God at the same time. Paul taught a similar theme in 1 Cor. 8:6 when he says “For even if there are so-called gods whether in heaven or on earth, as indeed there are many gods and many lords, yet for us there is but one God, the Father, from whom are all things and we exist for Him; and one Lord, Jesus Christ, by whom are all things, and we exist through Him.” There are other New Testament passages that communicate that the Word is Messiah Himself (Eph.3:17 and Col. 3:16; 1 Pet.1:3; John.8:31; 15:17). Furthermore, there are also other passages in the Hebrew Bible that speak of the significance of the Word such as Ps. 33:6,“By the word of the LORD the heavens were made,” while in Ps.107:20 the divine word is sent on a mission: “He sent out his word and healed them, and delivered them from their destruction.” But why is the Christological title “Word” so significant in relation to Jewish monotheism in the first century? In Judaism, one of the most common themes was that God was “untouchable,” or totally transcendent. Therefore, there had to be a way to describe a connection between God and his creation. Within Rabbinic thought, the way to provide the connection or link between God and his creation was what was called “The Word” or in Aramaic, the “Memra.” The Targums, which were paraphrases of the Hebrew Scriptures play a significant role in how to understand the Memra. Since some Jewish people no longer spoke and understood Hebrew but grew up speaking Aramaic, they could only follow along in a public reading if they read from a Targum. The Aramic Targums employed the term “Memra” that translates into Greek as “Logos.”While John’s concept of the Logos is of a personal being (Christ), the Greeks thought of it as an impersonal rational principle. A good way to try to understand the term “Memra,” is to see what a passage in Genesis would have sounded like to a Jewish person hearing the public reading of a Targum. In Gen.3:8, most people who would have heard the Hebrew would have understood it as “And they heard the sound of the Word of the Lord God as He was walking in the garden.” Therefore, it was not the Lord who was walking in the garden, it was the Memra’ (Word) of the Lord. The Word was not just an “it”; this Word was a him.” (Michael Brown, Theological Objections, vol 2 of Answering Jewish Objections to Jesus (Grand Rapids MI: Baker Books, 2000), 18-23. Jesus and Blasphemy Another approach to this issue is to ask the question, “Why was Jesus accused of blasphemy?” According to Jewish law, the claim to be the Messiah was not a criminal, nor capital offense. Therefore, the claim to be the Messiah was not even a blasphemous claim. Why was Jesus accused of blasphemy? According to Mark 14:62, Jesus affirmed the chief priests question that He is the Messiah, the Son of God, and the Coming Son of Man who would judge the world. This was considered a claim for deity since the eschatological authority of judgment was for God alone. Jesus provoked the indignation of his opponents because of His application of Daniel 7:13 and Psalm 110:1 to himself. Also, many parables which are universally acknowledged by critical scholars to be authentic to the historical Jesus show that Jesus believed himself to be able to forgive sins against God (Matt. 9:2; Mark 2: 1-12). Forgiving sins was something that was designated for God alone (Exod. 34: 6-7; Neh.9:17; Dan. 9:9) and it was something that was done only in the Temple along with the proper sacrifice. Therefore, Jesus acts as if He is the Temple in person. In Mark 14:58, it says, “We heard him say, ‘I will destroy this man-made temple and in three days will build another, not made by man.’ The Jewish leadership knew that God was the one who was responsible for building the temple (Ex. 15:17; 1 En. 90:28-29). Also, God is the only one that is permitted to announce and threaten the destruction of the temple (Jer. 7:12-13; 26:4-6, 9;1 En.90:28-29). It is also evident that one reasons Jesus was accused of blasphemy was because He usurped God’s authority by making himself to actually be God (Jn. 10:33, 36). Not only was this considered by the Jews to be blasphemous, it was worthy of the death penalty (Matt. 26:63-66; Mk. 14:61-65; Lk. 22:66-71; Jn. 10:31-39; 19:7). Fascinating stuff indeed! |
BVMLTT (Anthony Edition)
https://x.com/Rothmus/status/2066206069576151053/video/1?s=51
Watch the video.
https://x.com/historianusa1/status/2066257802553651339?s=51&t=cLq01Oy84YkmYPZ-URIMYw
Again, watch the video.
https://x.com/immeme0/status/2066189061467840898?s=51&t=cLq01Oy84YkmYPZ-URIMYw
" This video is lengthy, but it’s worth watching. The lead attorney had already PREDICTED the outcome of Karmelo Anthony’s trial LAST YEAR. He places much of the blame on Karmelo’s mother, arguing that she effectively sentenced her son to decades in prison by allowing Dominique Alexander, a convicted felon and activist, to serve as the official spokesperson for the teenager and his family. “Let me explain how Karmelo’s mother basically sentenced her own son, Karmelo, to an extra 10 to 30 years in prison. Karmelo’s mother apparently hired a family spokesperson, one Dominique Alexander. This Dominique calls himself a “minister of justice,” whatever that is. Dominique is a convicted felon. He’s alleged to have beaten his girlfriend. Then he got a new girlfriend, and when that girlfriend left the apartment, the good minister grabbed the woman’s two-year-old baby and shook him until the child suffered brain damage. The good minister pleaded guilty in that case to felony charges and was sent to prison. Now, this is the man Karmelo’s mom chose to speak on Karmelo’s and the family’s behalf: the good baby-shaking minister. The minister did exactly what you would expect a convicted felon to do when handling Karmelo’s case. He absolutely destroyed it.”"
Sexual Assault, NBD
https://floppingaces.net/most-wanted/the-real-scandal-isnt-that-a-boy-wrestled-girls-its-the-53-days-washington-spent-looking-the-other-way/
https://komonews.com/news/local/pierce-county-declines-charges-against-trans-teen-accused-of-wrestling-match-sex-assault-puyallup-school-district-title-ix-girls-wrestling-sports-lawsuit-federal-education-trump-transgender-competitor-investigation-pcso-pierce-county
In short, the Washington High School wresting authorities allowed a boy to wrestle a girl, and the boys sexually assaulted her during the match. Shockingly enough, Washington decided to do nothing to punish this sexual assault. We can only hope that the lawsuit succeeds in getting some form of justice for the victim and that Washington, chooses to protect girls in the future.
The Rape, Incest, Life Of The Mother lie.
https://x.com/cremieuxrecueil/status/2065128033070334279?s=51&t=cLq01Oy84YkmYPZ-URIMYw
I'm just going to note that "dramatically changing my life" doesn't always mean that the change is bad or worth killing your unborn child to avoid.
Reasoning
https://x.com/attorneyf_/status/2065751074208641113?s=51&t=cLq01Oy84YkmYPZ-URIMYw
" How a religion reasons is a huge theological confession in and of itself. Christian reasoning from its foundations is meticulous, internally consistent, and built on shared text. When the writer of Hebrews wants to argue for the divinity and priestly rank of Christ to wavering Jewish believers, he does not merely assert. He builds. He says: Remember Melchizedek? No genealogy, no traceable ancestry. Yet Abraham paid him tithes. In Hebrew culture, the lesser pays the greater. You have already agreed, without knowing you agreed, that there was a figure who outranked your patriarch. Then he drops Psalm 110: "The Lord has sworn... you are a priest forever in the order of Melchizedek." If Melchizedek is greater than Abraham, and the Messiah belongs to Melchizedek’s rank, the Messiah does not share a category with the prophets. He sits above the one your fathers bowed to. That is an argument with no exit. You have to dismantle the text or accept the conclusion. Now contrast that with this example or series of examples you Muslims always point to. Anytime you want to justify bowing five times a day facing a specific geographic location, you drag in Biblical prophets completely at random. You see Jesus, in a moment of agonizing trepidation in Matthew 26, fall on his face to pray, and you instantly leap to: “Therefore he prayed like a Muslim.” Do you think through the logic of this? In 2 Samuel, King David "danced before the Lord with all his might." By your exact methodology, should we start a new religion centered around dancing hysterically before God? God is a Father. Sometimes his children approach him with dancing; sometimes, scared and broken, we lie flat; sometimes we sit. There is no chain of textual consequence in your argument. There is only a posture and a verdict. It looks like logic until you actually look inside it. But since you opened the New Testament, for Jesus let us actually look at how Jesus handles prayer. He completely shifts the frame from the external to the internal. He tells his disciples: Go into your room, close the door, and pray to your Father who is unseen. He tells the Samaritan woman that a time is coming when worship will not be tied to a mountain or to Jerusalem, because “God is spirit, and his worshipers must worship in spirit and in truth.” He does not mention any geographic requirement or rigid ritual performance. It is an intimate, genuine encounter with a personal God. And if you want to use Jesus's prayers to define him, you cannot stop at the garden. Look at John 17:5. Jesus prays: "Father, glorify me in your presence with the glory I had with you before the world began." Find me the prophet who prayed that. Abraham never did. Moses never did. No mere prophet in history ever walked into prayer and claimed pre-creational, shared glory with the Almighty. The posture of submission in Matthew 26 doesn't undermine Christian theology; it requires it. It proves the Incarnation, the eternal Son genuinely entering human dependence and feeling the weight of human fear. You stopped reading at the physical posture, missed the entire theological foundation, and as usual you think this is a good refutation."


