Dorkman wrote:Genuine question: how much do the identical claims of the Quran compel you? The Book of Mormon? Dianetics?
Cheeky aside: The Odyssey technically claims to be a factual record, and the word of a (lesser) god, and we have after all found the remains of Troy.
EDIT: And my question wasn't really stated as a question, so that's my bad:
What is compelling about the idea that the books were accurately copied, considering this says nothing about the factual accuracy of their contents?
Thank you for clarifying. The textual accuracy is one facet that is compelling. The claim that it is the Word of God, and is a claim maintained by the authors across the centuries is another one I find compelling.
Book of Mormon is not compelling because the history does not line up. Quran is interesting because it actually puts more stock in Jesus than it does the Mohammad, though their Jesus and biblical Jesus are different. There was a whole book written couple of years ago by Muslims who investigated the role of Jesus in Islam. That was interesting.
Dianetics was written based on a bet.
I really, really don't want to derail this thread and create the "fireproof's come to Jesus" hour here. Quickly though, BDA's thing about propaganda would be compelling, if, like the Gnostics, it was a small group of people pushing for the exact same thing. But the Bible spans centuries and multiple people, not all of whom were working for the same goal.
Textual accuracy is one aspect that interests me because it shows what was historically written, to the best of our knowledge. Textual criticism is a whole field in archeology and I am probably doing a poor job relating it here. Hopefully, this helps: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Textual_criticism
BDA, the idea that the Bible was written centuries after the fact is a common one, but isn't fully accurate of the situation. Textual criticism helps us to see what a document was when it was written. That's also part of biblical interpretation, which basically analyses the original language and what the readers would understand from the writing.
I guess that is why the Bible compels me so much. There is history, poetry, letters and songs that take a lifetime to understand but is fascinating nonetheless. There is so much there to discover, including the claims the Bible makes.
I guess I go back to the nature of man, and the fact that I think that man is basically evil. I think man needs a savior. My study of psychology (and working in retail) hasn't really convinced me otherwise.
I wish I had all the answers, guys, but I don't. Experience has taught me a lot about the importance of faith too, which is a long answer too 
God loves you!