Author Topic: Homosexuality and the Bible  (Read 8470 times)

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Offline mordok

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Re: Homosexuality and the Bible
« Reply #225 on: September 03, 2007, 11:17:07 PM »
Personally, I find comfort in studies that place us within our natural context, as I find it easier to accept human stupidity when the line separating us from the rest of the animals is not artificially enhanced.  That is, I find it easier to deal with people precisely because I do not believe in a soul or a G-d.  If humans really are the special little creatures the Bible says, I'd say the whole planet is probably fucked...  :laugh:

Still very much enjoying this whole discussion.  But :plus: for this part in particular.   :green:

Offline Kiriana

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Re: Homosexuality and the Bible
« Reply #226 on: September 03, 2007, 11:31:06 PM »
 :plus: to both Alex and Mort.  I admire your stamina in this debate.   I think this is one of my favorite threads.  Probably because it's one of my favorite topics-- the balance between facts and faith.

Offline Alex179

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Re: Homosexuality and the Bible
« Reply #227 on: September 04, 2007, 09:16:50 AM »
What an interesting turn this makes!  I can almost relate to the statements above, esp. as regards the message(s) of Jesus (who does seem to have been a great fellow) and the lack of absolute truth (or, as I might put it, knowledge).
I see no real turn.

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Of course there are.  I have two acquaintances and one friend who call themselves Messianic Jews.  And I wasn't so much making an assumption as referencing a statistic; I've seen studies of messianic movements in Judaism, and those that take on a Christian character (i.e., look to Jesus) seem to be most persuasive to Jews without a strong background in Jewish history and theology, such as those raised in a secular environment.
Ones raised in a truly secular environment probably wouldn't believe in a god at all.   Nevermind accepting the Christian version of the Jewish God.

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I'm not sure I understand what you mean here.  To clarify, my personal identification with Judaism is cultural, not religious; I have no faith in the supernatural whatsoever.
Then why even hyphenate God?  Cultural respect is very weird in my opinion.   I don't go around paying high respect to Celtic religions myself really (even though that is supposed to be my background).

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At times I think I really share your misanthropy.  This is a constant battle in my life--between looking at the extraordinary foolishness of man and dreaming of his potential.  Most of the time my cynicism wins out, but that would still not be enough for me to want supernatural help.

Personally, I find comfort in studies that place us within our natural context, as I find it easier to accept human stupidity when the line separating us from the rest of the animals is not artificially enhanced.  That is, I find it easier to deal with people precisely because I do not believe in a soul or a G-d.  If humans really are the special little creatures the Bible says, I'd say the whole planet is probably fucked...  :laugh:
The world is fucked and humans are not that special.   We do however have the benefit of being able to reason, invent and do all sorts of other things the less evolved animals of this planet are incapable of doing.   The fact that we are evolved to the point where we can argue over going by animalistic instinct versus human law made to go against those instincts, tells me that we are more special to some extent.   That has nothing to do with a soul or an afterlife.   The soul and afterlife used to be to me something that was there just because humans are so egotistical that they can't fathom ceasing to exist.   If humans want to be more animalistic, then they will start acting like furries or something even more horrible.   No thanks to that, I like there to be some sort of seperation between us and the animals (soul or not).

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Do I believe it?  Hell no!  But to answer your criticism, I don't think an exclusion based on Jewishness is any less or more ridiculous than one based on faith in a dead Jewish rabbi being the incarnation of G-d...  ;)  As a life-long Pyrrhonhist, I can't stand the idea of any sort of claim to universal truth.
At least the faith based belief does not exclude everyone but Jews, anyone can believe in Jesus.   They have a choice in the matter as well.   If you don't believe in an afterlife then there really is no point.

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I think you're wrong on that account.  Polls of Americans consistently show outrageously strong popular support for such ideas as special creation, the Noachian flood, and End Times prophecy.  The evangelical movement is the fastest-growing segment of Christianity; indeed, one can almost say the only significant growth area, as membership of 'traditional' denominations like Anglicanism is in a steep nosedive.
I can agree on the world flood story with Noah, it seems more than Christians want to believe that one.    End times is something that will unfortunately always come up as people expect that to happen in their lifetime, because they think they are special enough for that to happen while they are alive.  Yeah special creation my ass, that is just grasping for straws by most who need creationism to justify their faith.   They just aren't insane enough imo.

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I'm not sure I understand this comment either.  Both the Hebrew and Christian Bibles endorse slavery; I certainly never meant to imply otherwise.
Then what is the point?   Plenty of ridiculous shit in every religious document pretty much.   Especially in ones dating back that far.   I expect to read crap like that in something written thousands of years ago.

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That's not really the point.  I've never believed in any kind of afterlife, because the idea has never seemed appealing to me.  But as my position is fairly uncommon, it's usually much more interesting to talk about anyone else's views of the afterlife!  ;D
Unfortunately the luxury of beleiving in something that is convenient and appealing to me is no longer available.

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Now I'm really lost.

Paul's mission was to the Gentiles--the pagans of the Roman world--and he did not make any requirement that they convert to, or accept, Hallachah (the Jewish Law).  This was in contrast to James's original strategy: the belief that to be 'saved' one needed to be Jewish.  Once you remove the requirement for Jewishness, what use have you for the Law?  Why would a pagan adopt any part of it not specifically called for by Pauline Christianity?

On the other hand, Paul seems to have thought that Jews who accepted Jesus should keep to the Law, but that's a very special case, and one that quickly ceased to be relevant (as Christianity only really grew outside of Judaism).

But what do you mean about "problems that we have now", and about Israel?  Which 'problems'?
If that is the one true God, then that law should apply to everyone, not just Jews.   A pagan/Gentile would adopt it because they believe in Jesus, and want to be more like him (attempting to keep the law).  Of course when you do not believe that God is the creator, his laws mean nothing... no matter if you are Jewish or not.

The problems with Israel are related to Palestine and Islam.  Would Israel have been remade if the British, Americans and French were not Christian nations who wanted the Jews to have a place in the "Holy Land"?   I doubt WW2 would have even been the same if Chrstianity never reached the Gentiles.    Think about a world where the only believers in Jesus (and the God of Israel) are Jews.   The problems are due to nations wanting a Jewish state of Israel to exist for some reason.   Supposedly Islamic Jihadists would have less of a reason to be assholes if Palestine was still as it was before WW2.   Britain was charged with care of Palestine and Iraq in the Mandate of Mesopotamia.   They of course made Israel and put the Hussein family in charge of Iraq.    We all know how that has turned out.   

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I'm quite fond of forgiveness and universal love, too, but I'd never make a hard rule about it.  I do not think that folks like Iosef Stalin or, umm, Michael Vick(!) should be endlessly forgiven and set loose to cause more harm...
The laws of society and those personal beliefs of forgiveness are two different things.   Jesus didn't want people to stop paying tax money to Ceasar for example.   Roman law still existed in his mind.  I can forgive someone who killed a family member, but society will punish them for example.  There still needs to be consequences, just it is better for me personally to not hold onto hate.   It isn't my job to be judge, jury and executioner... no matter how much I want to be sometimes.   That is up to others thankfully.  That is how I take what Jesus said as far as forgiveness goes.   I really can't take everything literally myself.   That would make me religious and not spiritual.   I can only trust what I am led to believe by God, so basically I am a crazy person.  I do not trust fully things that are written by humans hundreds of years ago, let alone thousands of years ago.   Our own history books have lies in them.

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Oh, no!  This is a common misunderstanding, though, and I've often heard Christians argue that Jesus was killed because he called himself the Messiah--but this was no crime in Judaism!  There have been dozens of Messiahs in Jewish history, and none of them have ever been considered divine.  Except for Jesus, of course, but as I am suggesting that idea came from the pagan world.
Jesus said he was God's Son pretty much, though for the most part he hinted at it and wasn't direct.   The guy was all about parables and metaphors anways.   Jesus having divine powers is more of an explanation of the miracles and him raising from the dead and then ascending 40 days later.

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Hmmm.  Well, the description 'placebo' makes the assumption that there is a 'real' effect and one that is counterfeited by science.  I am more inclined to think that the effects were always natural, but I can see your point.
Often with a placebo the mind tricks itself into experiencing the effects and sometimes can relate upon past experiences to do so.   It is like taking a pill that you are told is a drug and fooling yourself into experiencing its effects.   The brain can duplicate those effects.   I have never had anything hooked into my mind to trick me into experiencing something though.   Never been in the Matrix sadly.

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I don't think you are any more delusional than I am, or any other human for that matter.  At least, I have no sensible grounds to make such a judgement of you!  My comment is a general one; the human brain is constantly giving us incomplete or faulty data, and as the mind is a causal machine, some of this data can be interpreted in a supernatural sense.  The 'delusions' are a part of normal brain function; it is the interpretations that I frequently take issue with.
That is what makes discussions fun, coming up with ideas on your own.   Instead of me going through other avenues and regurgitating crap I read elsewhere, I formulate my own opinions (though they might not make sense to some).   At least they are my own.
:P   Internets are super serious.

Offline morthaur

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Re: Homosexuality and the Bible
« Reply #228 on: September 04, 2007, 02:55:44 PM »
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What an interesting turn this makes!  I can almost relate to the statements above, esp. as regards the message(s) of Jesus (who does seem to have been a great fellow) and the lack of absolute truth (or, as I might put it, knowledge).
I see no real turn.
Suit yourself.  I think the Christian faith (in whatever variety) is the wee contradiction underlying your posts, but never mind that.

Ones raised in a truly secular environment probably wouldn't believe in a god at all.   Nevermind accepting the Christian version of the Jewish God.
This shows relatively little appreciation for human nature.  Many individuals raised without a religion subsequently seek one, for both cultural reasons (it is something most people have) and personal reasons (many people so raised feel that they are 'missing' something).  When a person seeks out a religion to satisfy that inner void, they can turn in any number of directions, and embracing the common faith of your nation is not unusual.

Then why even hyphenate God?  Cultural respect is very weird in my opinion.   I don't go around paying high respect to Celtic religions myself really (even though that is supposed to be my background).
As I said, out of respect for my cultural heritage.  Judaism is a pervasive civilisation, and not really analogous to Celtic origins for an American--or, in most respects, even for an Irishman.  The ancient Celtic cultures have been all-but obliterated, and do not have the force of a living tradition like Judaism.  And no, I am not dogging the Irish!  For the record, I have Irish, Scots, Polish, Sicilian, Bulgarian, and Jewish roots, which makes me a typical American mutt.  ;D

The world is fucked and humans are not that special.   We do however have the benefit of being able to reason, invent and do all sorts of other things the less evolved animals of this planet are incapable of doing.   The fact that we are evolved to the point where we can argue over going by animalistic instinct versus human law made to go against those instincts, tells me that we are more special to some extent.   That has nothing to do with a soul or an afterlife.   The soul and afterlife used to be to me something that was there just because humans are so egotistical that they can't fathom ceasing to exist.   If humans want to be more animalistic, then they will start acting like furries or something even more horrible.   No thanks to that, I like there to be some sort of seperation between us and the animals (soul or not).
A 'return' to more base instincts is the last thing any sensible party should want.  It is our higher capacity for reason that gave birth to culture, and it is the beauty of culture which allows us to transcend our nature and be more than petty little assholes to each other.

And from my perspective, the afterlife and religion do stand in the way of that, because they allow people to look to someone else to help save them.  We will never take full responsibility for our natures and our cultures so long as we can turn to religion to answer fundamental questions, and we will never fully appreciate the beauty and fragility of this life so long as we have another one to look forward to.

It is, in fact, the Christian tendency to denigrate this life in comparison with the next which gets me angry.  That simple and pervasive denial of life, and the criminalisation of its many healthy instincts such as sex, may be the single greatest crime of Western civilisation.  Moving the emphasis from the life we have to another, illusory, world has had disastrous ramifications for human belief systems and cultural constructs.

At least the faith based belief does not exclude everyone but Jews, anyone can believe in Jesus.   They have a choice in the matter as well.
One can also convert to Judaism, you know!  ;D  And there is no difference between a convert and an ethnic Jew in the eyes of the community.  But to reiterate a point, I would rather humans exclude no-one by setting up monolithic beliefs and demanding adherence.  I think that orthodox Judaism and Christianity are equally foolish in this matter.

I can agree on the world flood story with Noah, it seems more than Christians want to believe that one.    End times is something that will unfortunately always come up as people expect that to happen in their lifetime, because they think they are special enough for that to happen while they are alive.  Yeah special creation my ass, that is just grasping for straws by most who need creationism to justify their faith.   They just aren't insane enough imo.
Meaning what, exactly?  That you think the Noachine flood actually happened?  Despite mountains (literally!) of evidence to the contrary?  Or that you can agree that many Christians believe in it despite the evidence?  Because I do not think there is any real difference between the level of foolishness one expresses in any of these examples, or in thousands of others besides.  Vast numbers of Biblical tales strain credulity beyond the breaking point, yet millions of believers refuse to surrender them.  Why is that?  {rhetorical question}  This kind of sincere belief in the obviously impossible (holding the sun still in the sky, turning the Nile to blood, endlessly multiplying bread and fish) is endemic to American Christianity.

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I'm not sure I understand this comment either.  Both the Hebrew and Christian Bibles endorse slavery; I certainly never meant to imply otherwise.
Then what is the point?   Plenty of ridiculous shit in every religious document pretty much.   Especially in ones dating back that far.   I expect to read crap like that in something written thousands of years ago.
My "point" was in challenging your original statement, to the effect that the Christian Bible was "neutral" on slavery.  It clearly is not.

Unfortunately the luxury of beleiving in something that is convenient and appealing to me is no longer available.
???

If that is the one true God, then that law should apply to everyone, not just Jews.   A pagan/Gentile would adopt it because they believe in Jesus, and want to be more like him (attempting to keep the law).  Of course when you do not believe that God is the creator, his laws mean nothing... no matter if you are Jewish or not.
In this you disagree with Christianity as a whole, both in its traditions and in its contemporary theology.  But I would agree with you here: As I said some time earlier, if someone believed sincerely that Jesus was G-d, he should convert to Judaism and keep the commandments!  Jesus himself said that 'not one yod nor crown should be removed from the law until its purpose is fulfiled.'  (Christians may have decided later that it was fulfiled in Jesus' death, but this ignores the purpose Jesus himself would have grown up with--and which his audience would have understood--namely, the perfection of the earth: tikkun olam).

The problems with Israel are related to Palestine and Islam.  Would Israel have been remade if the British, Americans and French were not Christian nations who wanted the Jews to have a place in the "Holy Land"?
In fact, I do think exactly that, and I would argue it as a historian of the Middle East.  The West in general, and Britain in particular, did rather a lot to obstruct the creation of a Jewish state, and it is probable that only the revelation of Nazi atrocities made a UN vote to partition successful.  Israel's birth was inevitable given the increasing numbers of ancient alien emigrants to Palestine throughout the early 20th century.

I doubt WW2 would have even been the same if Chrstianity never reached the Gentiles.
Everything would be different, so this is kind of a non-starter as arguments go.

Think about a world where the only believers in Jesus (and the God of Israel) are Jews.
I have, and there was once such a world.  It ended with Paul's message to Gentiles reaching a receptive audience, whilst the basis for belief amongst Jews--the coming end of the world--failed to transpire, leading the movement in Judaism to die out.

The problems are due to nations wanting a Jewish state of Israel to exist for some reason.   Supposedly Islamic Jihadists would have less of a reason to be assholes if Palestine was still as it was before WW2.   Britain was charged with care of Palestine and Iraq in the Mandate of Mesopotamia.   They of course made Israel and put the Hussein family in charge of Iraq.    We all know how that has turned out.
This would make for a whole different conversation, so if someone wants to start that in another thread, I'm game.  The situations in Iraq and Palestine deserve better than to be tacked onto a discussion of Christian faith and dogma...

The laws of society and those personal beliefs of forgiveness are two different things.   Jesus didn't want people to stop paying tax money to Ceasar for example.   Roman law still existed in his mind.  I can forgive someone who killed a family member, but society will punish them for example.
But taxes are not a moral problem for Judaism, or for Jesus!  A Roman law which prevented Jewish worship, however, would be.  Note the disastrous revolt against Roman authority which resulted in the Temple's destruction; defeat was almost certain, but the Roman insult to their faith was intolerable.  Note also Jesus' response to financial dealing in the Temple.

I think it is entirely plausible that Jesus would have wished society's laws to reflect accurately the moral values of the people.  This is a point with wider implications, of course, because it is certainly true of our own time.  Executions, for example, have disappeared in the rest of the Western world because they are considered morally repugnant.  Jesus, I am quite sure, would have agreed with such a change.

... That is how I take what Jesus said as far as forgiveness goes.   I really can't take everything literally myself.   That would make me religious and not spiritual.   I can only trust what I am led to believe by God, so basically I am a crazy person.  I do not trust fully things that are written by humans hundreds of years ago, let alone thousands of years ago.   Our own history books have lies in them.
Your identification with and commitment to Christianity still amazes me, given this position.

Jesus said he was God's Son pretty much, though for the most part he hinted at it and wasn't direct.   The guy was all about parables and metaphors anways.   Jesus having divine powers is more of an explanation of the miracles and him raising from the dead and then ascending 40 days later.
He said so in John's gospel, written a century later.  In each of the synoptics his statements are not inconsistent with a more base, Jewish reading of his intent: that he was G-d's son in the way that all of G-d's people were.

As for the 40 days thing, have you ever noticed that the accounts differ?  As I recall, in Luke 24 he departs from his followers on the same day as the resurrection, and it was only in Acts that we get the 40-day figure.  Makes it more difficult to believe those books had the same author, too.  :laugh:  The line about ascending to heaven was also inserted later into the text of Luke; it originally said only that he was 'removed from them'.

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I don't think you are any more delusional than I am, or any other human for that matter.  At least, I have no sensible grounds to make such a judgement of you!  My comment is a general one; the human brain is constantly giving us incomplete or faulty data, and as the mind is a causal machine, some of this data can be interpreted in a supernatural sense.  The 'delusions' are a part of normal brain function; it is the interpretations that I frequently take issue with.
That is what makes discussions fun, coming up with ideas on your own.   Instead of me going through other avenues and regurgitating crap I read elsewhere, I formulate my own opinions (though they might not make sense to some).   At least they are my own.
An admirable position; independence of thought is always respectable.  One caveat I would add, however, is the danger of taking firm opinions on the basis of incomplete or fragmentary data.  It is not a surrender of personal judgement to look for support or criticism of your positions in scholarly works and original sources.  It is, in fact, the most intellectually honest path available...

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Re: Homosexuality and the Bible
« Reply #229 on: September 09, 2007, 01:33:57 AM »
vortex_13 would be proud.  :'(

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Re: Homosexuality and the Bible
« Reply #230 on: September 09, 2007, 02:50:37 PM »
vortex_13 would be proud.  :'(

What happend to him??

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Re: Homosexuality and the Bible
« Reply #231 on: September 09, 2007, 11:19:24 PM »
:plus: to both Alex and Mort.  I admire your stamina in this debate.   I think this is one of my favorite threads.  Probably because it's one of my favorite topics-- the balance between facts and faith.

I don't see a ballance between facts and faith. They occupy two different worlds.

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Re: Homosexuality and the Bible
« Reply #232 on: September 10, 2007, 02:00:40 PM »
:plus: to both Alex and Mort.  I admire your stamina in this debate.   I think this is one of my favorite threads.  Probably because it's one of my favorite topics-- the balance between facts and faith.

I don't see a ballance between facts and faith. They occupy two different worlds.

I agree with this actually.   

Suit yourself.  I think the Christian faith (in whatever variety) is the wee contradiction underlying your posts, but never mind that.
Of course, because even Christianity in its purest form contradicts itself in some ways.   You mistake me for a someone who takes the literal religion seriously though.   I only identify with what I see from Jesus as a Biblical figure and some of his lessons.  I do however pray to God but that is normally reserved for certain things that I think are important enough to pray about.   

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This shows relatively little appreciation for human nature.  Many individuals raised without a religion subsequently seek one, for both cultural reasons (it is something most people have) and personal reasons (many people so raised feel that they are 'missing' something).  When a person seeks out a religion to satisfy that inner void, they can turn in any number of directions, and embracing the common faith of your nation is not unusual.
If they were in a truly secular environment their nation would have no common faith to embrace.  No faith would exist in that type of environment.

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As I said, out of respect for my cultural heritage.  Judaism is a pervasive civilisation, and not really analogous to Celtic origins for an American--or, in most respects, even for an Irishman.  The ancient Celtic cultures have been all-but obliterated, and do not have the force of a living tradition like Judaism.  And no, I am not dogging the Irish!  For the record, I have Irish, Scots, Polish, Sicilian, Bulgarian, and Jewish roots, which makes me a typical American mutt.  ;D
The main reason why the Jewish God has become as pervasive is due to the existence of Christianity.   Before that there was considerably less interest in the Jewish faith, Paul and Peter had to make it palatable for the Gentile.  That is also why the pagan faith of the Irish is no longer what it used to be (well same goes for many other European belief systems to an extent).

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A 'return' to more base instincts is the last thing any sensible party should want.  It is our higher capacity for reason that gave birth to culture, and it is the beauty of culture which allows us to transcend our nature and be more than petty little angel fluffy bunnys to each other.

And from my perspective, the afterlife and religion do stand in the way of that, because they allow people to look to someone else to help save them.  We will never take full responsibility for our natures and our cultures so long as we can turn to religion to answer fundamental questions, and we will never fully appreciate the beauty and fragility of this life so long as we have another one to look forward to.

It is, in fact, the Christian tendency to denigrate this life in comparison with the next which gets me angry.  That simple and pervasive denial of life, and the criminalisation of its many healthy instincts such as sex, may be the single greatest crime of Western civilisation.  Moving the emphasis from the life we have to another, illusory, world has had disastrous ramifications for human belief systems and cultural constructs.
I disagree, the afterlife shouldn't be something that changes how you live in this life.   I appreciate this life fully as it is, afterlife or no afterlife.   I would like to believe my afterlife would be better than the current life, but that can't be an expectation imo.  Sex is criminalized (outside of marriage) due to it being just for pleasure and not procreation.   What ramifications do you speak of?   Whoever thinks about their afterlife more than their current one is a fool.   All it is good for is fantasy, because you have no way of knowing what you will go through after you die specifically.

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One can also convert to Judaism, you know!  ;D  And there is no difference between a convert and an ethnic Jew in the eyes of the community.  But to reiterate a point, I would rather humans exclude no-one by setting up monolithic beliefs and demanding adherence.  I think that orthodox Judaism and Christianity are equally foolish in this matter.
I would consider converting to Judaism as moving backwards , same goes for converting to any religion.   I don't associate myself really with Christianity either, I just say that to avoid having to explain things to people.   They don't want me to rant on why I hate religion and only value spirituality.   Normally I just avoid religion or spirituality altogether.   Most people can't understand it anyways.

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Meaning what, exactly?  That you think the Noachine flood actually happened?  Despite mountains (literally!) of evidence to the contrary?  Or that you can agree that many Christians believe in it despite the evidence?  Because I do not think there is any real difference between the level of foolishness one expresses in any of these examples, or in thousands of others besides.  Vast numbers of Biblical tales strain credulity beyond the breaking point, yet millions of believers refuse to surrender them.  Why is that?  {rhetorical question}  This kind of sincere belief in the obviously impossible (holding the sun still in the sky, turning the Nile to blood, endlessly multiplying bread and fish) is endemic to American Christianity.
I was saying that many Christians (and members other faiths) believe that the world was flooded.   Basically people will search for any evidence of a world flood not just for religious support but because they find it interesting period.  Even with the religious argument taken out of the picture the world flood is still interesting no matter how incredibly unlikely it is to have occured.   Most Christians (and Jews) take most of those miracles literally.   They are the actions of an omnipotent God, that can do as it chooses and doesn't have to explain its actions to any human.   That it would be even bother with doing so is basically a nice gesture.  They refuse to surrender because they have faith that the documents and things written are true.   Their faith is in humans to take care of such documents and keep them from being perverted and misused.   Such faith in humans to handle the words of a God correctly is very foolish.  Those are religious people, they have faith in that their religion is right in how it preserved its texts.   They have no personal connection with God usually, just a placebo effect attached to the other members of their church's experiences.

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My "point" was in challenging your original statement, to the effect that the Christian Bible was "neutral" on slavery.  It clearly is not.
Eh the slavery to sin and then to the laws of God are not literal, but I can concede that Paul wasn't against slavery at all.   I believe in relativism according to time period.   Morals are not absolute over time periods in my opinion.  He appears rather neutral in regards to the situation compared to all of the other authors during that time period.   He sees slavery as it was seen through the eyes of a man of his time.   He did not argue for enslaving other cultures like it was the right of Christians to do such a thing (hi social darwinism).

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In this you disagree with Christianity as a whole, both in its traditions and in its contemporary theology.  But I would agree with you here: As I said some time earlier, if someone believed sincerely that Jesus was G-d, he should convert to Judaism and keep the commandments!  Jesus himself said that 'not one yod nor crown should be removed from the law until its purpose is fulfiled.'  (Christians may have decided later that it was fulfiled in Jesus' death, but this ignores the purpose Jesus himself would have grown up with--and which his audience would have understood--namely, the perfection of the earth: tikkun olam).
No you are still supposed to keep the commandments and such as a Christian.   Jesus died so people can be forgiven and go and sin no more.   It doesn't give you a free pass to the afterlife if you actually read the New Testament.  There are still morals that have to be adhered to, hence the work in progress thing.   Christians are not perfect after being saved, they still sin and still need to work on what causes them to sin.   As you live out your days you work to be more perfect, it is a process and no overnight change.

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In fact, I do think exactly that, and I would argue it as a historian of the Middle East.  The West in general, and Britain in particular, did rather a lot to obstruct the creation of a Jewish state, and it is probable that only the revelation of Nazi atrocities made a UN vote to partition successful.  Israel's birth was inevitable given the increasing numbers of ancient alien emigrants to Palestine throughout the early 20th century.
The Ottoman Empire and the rest of the people living in the Mesopotamian region most likely would have stood in the way of a Jewish state there considering that the area was controlled by those people until the Brits decided to make a Jewish Israel.   I do not see the state of Israel being anywhere near inevitable, it was extremely reliant on the actions of Europe.  The rise of fascism in Europe was the main reason for the immigration to Palestine by Jews.

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Everything would be different, so this is kind of a non-starter as arguments go.
Of course it would, it isn't really an argument either.   When I start with imagining things, arguments go out the window.

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I have, and there was once such a world.  It ended with Paul's message to Gentiles reaching a receptive audience, whilst the basis for belief amongst Jews--the coming end of the world--failed to transpire, leading the movement in Judaism to die out.
I wasn't referring to back then, but now.   Everything would be different, I think that the Islamists would have killed off all the Jews living in the area of Palestine for example and prevented them successfully from ever residing there again.

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This would make for a whole different conversation, so if someone wants to start that in another thread, I'm game.  The situations in Iraq and Palestine deserve better than to be tacked onto a discussion of Christian faith and dogma...
This thread was about what the Bible said in regards to homosexuality, and it has gone a while different direction.   It wasn't about my personal opinion on homosexuality, Christianity or anything else.  Sure has turned out that way though lol.   I don't think the situations in Iraq and Palestine deserve better or worse.   I would gladly kill everyone there if it were up to me.  They don't get special treatment as the rest of the world is just as deserving of death.

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But taxes are not a moral problem for Judaism, or for Jesus!  A Roman law which prevented Jewish worship, however, would be.  Note the disastrous revolt against Roman authority which resulted in the Temple's destruction; defeat was almost certain, but the Roman insult to their faith was intolerable.  Note also Jesus' response to financial dealing in the Temple.

I think it is entirely plausible that Jesus would have wished society's laws to reflect accurately the moral values of the people.  This is a point with wider implications, of course, because it is certainly true of our own time.  Executions, for example, have disappeared in the rest of the Western world because they are considered morally repugnant.  Jesus, I am quite sure, would have agreed with such a change.
He seemed to go with the flow somewhat in regards to laws of a government.   Obviously he wouldn't be cool with laws preventing worship of God lol.

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Your identification with and commitment to Christianity still amazes me, given this position.
It sure would if I identified myself truly with a religion and not with spirituality.   I don't take the traditional institutions that seriously however.   I only identify with Christianity in that I like the teachings of Jesus (well most of them) and that I pray to God.   I sure as hell don't live my life like a Christian to be honest.   So where is the commitment?

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He said so in John's gospel, written a century later.  In each of the synoptics his statements are not inconsistent with a more base, Jewish reading of his intent: that he was G-d's son in the way that all of G-d's people were.

As for the 40 days thing, have you ever noticed that the accounts differ?  As I recall, in Luke 24 he departs from his followers on the same day as the resurrection, and it was only in Acts that we get the 40-day figure.  Makes it more difficult to believe those books had the same author, too.  :laugh:  The line about ascending to heaven was also inserted later into the text of Luke; it originally said only that he was 'removed from them'.
Of course the records made by people are going to differ.   Me and my dad differ in memories when we were both present as an example.   Yes I noticed all of those things even when I was a child (inconsistencies in the Bible).   The arguments (if you want to call them that) you have been having with me are things I discussed when I was 15 or 16 years old.   That is when I would say I started to be an atheist instead of agnostic.   At age 23 as I have said before is when I started to believe a god exists (I didn't get more specific until after that).   None of that was based on facts in the least, it was acquired faith in God not religion.   

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An admirable position; independence of thought is always respectable.  One caveat I would add, however, is the danger of taking firm opinions on the basis of incomplete or fragmentary data.  It is not a surrender of personal judgement to look for support or criticism of your positions in scholarly works and original sources.  It is, in fact, the most intellectually honest path available...
What firm opinions?   When I express Christianity's views as I see them, then I am spouting the opinions of an organized religion as I see them.   That is what I was doing earlier in this thread in regards to homosexuality.   My personal opinions are different.
:P   Internets are super serious.

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Re: Homosexuality and the Bible
« Reply #233 on: September 12, 2007, 11:57:31 PM »
Jesus created a New Covenant, the Ten Commandment where of the Old Covenant. They are good Ideals [Old Covenant] to live by but not of the New Covenant. So Christians do not live by the Old Covenant but the New Covenant which is Love.
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Re: Homosexuality and the Bible
« Reply #234 on: September 16, 2007, 03:42:32 PM »
You mistake me for a someone who takes the literal religion seriously though.   I only identify with what I see from Jesus as a Biblical figure and some of his lessons.  I do however pray to God but that is normally reserved for certain things that I think are important enough to pray about.
I am trying not to so mistake you; I think something further down in this post will give me a way to clarify my criticism re: your profession of Christianity.  (And by 'criticism' I mean that there is a distinction to be made, not that judgement has been passed!)

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This shows relatively little appreciation for human nature.  Many individuals raised without a religion subsequently seek one, for both cultural reasons (it is something most people have) and personal reasons (many people so raised feel that they are 'missing' something).  When a person seeks out a religion to satisfy that inner void, they can turn in any number of directions, and embracing the common faith of your nation is not unusual.
If they were in a truly secular environment their nation would have no common faith to embrace.  No faith would exist in that type of environment.
Huh?!  By this definition, no secular environment exists anywhere on Planet Earth!!

A 'secular environment', in the context I was using, referred to a single household.  Many Jews in the West are raised with the knowledge of their Jewishness, but with no overt religious practice or feeling (in recent history this flowed in many cases from scars of the Holocaust, but Jews have been increasingly secularised since the 19th century).  Someone raised in a secular household may feel that their life is empty without metaphysical or transcendent meaning, and seek that in a common religion in their land of birth.

In broader terms, one might even call some countries a 'secular environment', as public religiosity is increasingly uncommon in, e.g., much of western Europe, and the secular status of many governments is encoded in the law (e.g., the USA & France).  In such environments, religion is not a matter of public or pervasive pressure--such as that found in many Muslim countries where religious law rules--and it is left to personal decision.  However, the nature of the religious community is seldom in any doubt; following the examples above, one can easily conclude that Roman Catholicism dominates French religious life and Protestantism (increasingly evangelical in nature) predominates in American culture.  Someone raised in a secular household and seeking a religious experience could easily enough sample this faith, no?

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As I said, out of respect for my cultural heritage.  Judaism is a pervasive civilisation, and not really analogous to Celtic origins for an American--or, in most respects, even for an Irishman.  The ancient Celtic cultures have been all-but obliterated, and do not have the force of a living tradition like Judaism.  And no, I am not dogging the Irish!  For the record, I have Irish, Scots, Polish, Sicilian, Bulgarian, and Jewish roots, which makes me a typical American mutt.  ;D
The main reason why the Jewish God has become as pervasive is due to the existence of Christianity.   Before that there was considerably less interest in the Jewish faith, Paul and Peter had to make it palatable for the Gentile.  That is also why the pagan faith of the Irish is no longer what it used to be (well same goes for many other European belief systems to an extent).
You mistake my meaning.  I meant that Judaism penetrates and permeates the identity of those raised in full knowledge of their Jewishness, and that such an identity comes with easily-identifiable cultural markers that have wide circulation amongst co-religionists.  Judaism is not only a religion, it is a cultural and national identity.  Your reference to Celtic heritage has almost nothing akin to this; being raised with knowledge of Irish roots does not seem to predispose one to particular acts and traits in a similar way.

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It is, in fact, the Christian tendency to denigrate this life in comparison with the next which gets me angry.  That simple and pervasive denial of life, and the criminalisation of its many healthy instincts such as sex, may be the single greatest crime of Western civilisation.  Moving the emphasis from the life we have to another, illusory, world has had disastrous ramifications for human belief systems and cultural constructs.
I disagree, the afterlife shouldn't be something that changes how you live in this life.   I appreciate this life fully as it is, afterlife or no afterlife.   I would like to believe my afterlife would be better than the current life, but that can't be an expectation imo. [...] What ramifications do you speak of?   Whoever thinks about their afterlife more than their current one is a fool.   All it is good for is fantasy, because you have no way of knowing what you will go through after you die specifically.
The knowledge, instilled by a religious faith, that one should live a certain way to avoid damnation does alter the way that one lives; it would have to!  If one sincerely believes in heaven and hell, one cannot live life without bearing those beliefs in mind, even if only in the back of one's mind.  And the simple fact of doing so means that religiously-inspired 'morality' trumps natural morality, leaving us with ridiculous presumptions with regard to right and wrong.  The common canard that religion makes people more ethical is destroyed by even a cursory examination of the evidence.

Anyroad, I admire your expressed position on the afterlife and this life, but I still feel that it contradicts even a basic, spiritualised acceptance of Christianity.

Sex is criminalized (outside of marriage) due to it being just for pleasure and not procreation.
Why?  It offers both pleasure and procreation, so why should one have any stigma attached at all?  This is a perfect example of religious views intruding on natural grounds, offering bizarre rationalisations for denying life.  Sex, in its pleasurable aspects, is a part of this life; of human life.  Denying it in any way, whether through enforced social codes (strict monogamy, prohibition of extramarital sex, etc.) or internalised injunctions (as against masturbation) is, in my view, criminal in itself.  Christianity's obscene position on human sexuality (historically speaking) is reason enough to condemn it as immoral and unnatural; as anti-life.

I would consider converting to Judaism as moving backwards ...
Thanks to Christianity's violent usurpation of Jewish history, sure!  But without the inherently-antisemitic theology of supercession, how could it be a 'step backward'?  Rather than, say, a step laterally, into a merely different condition?

I don't associate myself really with Christianity either, I just say that to avoid having to explain things to people.   They don't want me to rant on why I hate religion and only value spirituality.   Normally I just avoid religion or spirituality altogether.   Most people can't understand it anyways.  [ ... ]
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Your identification with and commitment to Christianity still amazes me, given this position.
It sure would if I identified myself truly with a religion and not with spirituality.   I don't take the traditional institutions that seriously however.   I only identify with Christianity in that I like the teachings of Jesus (well most of them) and that I pray to God.   I sure as hell don't live my life like a Christian to be honest.   So where is the commitment?
This is where I need to establish a definitional difference between religion and spirituality, because in character you describe yourself in spiritualistic terms, yet the basic facts of the faith you have described are entirely religious.

Let's start with 'spirituality'; is this an acceptable definition? "The quality or condition of being spiritual; attachment to or regard for things of the spirit as opposed to material or worldly interests."  But what, then, is 'spirit'?  I can think of several approaches: That of "the animating or vital principle in man (and animals); that which gives life to the physical organism, in contrast to its purely material elements; the breath of life", as found in vitalist philosophy (cf. Bergson).  Or we could locate it in the issue of mind-body duality (cf. Descartes), as with the following: "Incorporeal or immaterial being, as opposed to body or matter; being or intelligence conceived as distinct from, or independent of, anything physical or material" and "The immaterial intelligent or sentient element or part of a person, frequently in implied or expressed contrast to the body".  Spirituality, then, is a very vague term, implying only that there is an essential distinction between this existence and a 'higher' state of being, one which may be entered through ritual, or prayer, or upon the body's death, or what-have-you.  In itself, spirituality has no dogmatic features beyond this core belief in the immaterial realm.

Religion, however, is entirely dependent upon dogmatic elements.  I will define 'religious' as being: "Imbued with religion; exhibiting the spiritual or practical effects of religion; pious, godly, god-fearing, devout".  Okay, then, what is 'religion'?  I think a definition that should agree with nearly any dictionary might contain such elements as follows: "Recognition on the part of man of some higher unseen power as having control of his destiny, and as being entitled to obedience, reverence, and worship; the general mental and moral attitude resulting from this belief, with reference to its effect upon the individual or the community; personal or general acceptance of this feeling as a standard of spiritual and practical life."  Do you see from this why I cannot understand or accept the distinction which you draw between your spiritualism and religiosity?  Simply by committing yourself to the proposition "There is a G-d", you are taking a religious position, not a spiritual one.  As for my reference to your "commitment to Christianity", this flows directly from your belief that Jesus and G-d are one.  Viewing Jesus in such a way produces a fundamentally religious principle.

Were your feelings for Jesus restricted to the appreciation for his teaching noted above, I would say that I entirely share them, and that neither of our positions were religious.  Were you to restrict yourself to such an appreciation and combine that with "prayer to G-d", I would say that you practiced a thoroughly devolved form of Judaism.  But if you combine that appreciation for Jesus' teachings with the belief that Jesus is G-d / the 'son' of G-d, you have stepped thoroughly inside the Christian camp.  More so, in fact, than even the Mormons, who call themselves Christians despite a theology that entirely diverges from the fundamental identifying marks of faith.  In sum, I will suggest that your stated positions on Jesus and G-d make you a religious Christian, whether or not you identify with a particular denomination or set of beliefs and practices.  Simply believing in G-d makes you religious, by definition, and believing specifically in the notion that Jesus is G-d makes you a Christian.

Most Christians (and Jews) take most of those miracles literally.   They are the actions of an omnipotent God, that can do as it chooses and doesn't have to explain its actions to any human.   That it would be even bother with doing so is basically a nice gesture.
Ah, but they are only such actions if they can be shown to have occurred, eh?  If all they are is stories, then they are not the "actions of an omnipotent G-d", but rather the moral, political, and military tales of an ancient Canaanite culture, with no more veracity as fact than the tales of Odin One-Eye or Gilgamesh.

They refuse to surrender because they have faith that the documents and things written are true.   Their faith is in humans to take care of such documents and keep them from being perverted and misused.   Such faith in humans to handle the words of a God correctly is very foolish.  Those are religious people, they have faith in that their religion is right in how it preserved its texts.
This cuts, again, right to heart of my claim that yours is a religious faith.  You, too, have faith in those words, because they are the only source of practical (material) validation for your belief that Jesus is G-d.  Clearly the words that appear there about Jesus have some personal significance.  If someone showed (somehow) that none of it was accurate, what form then could such a faith as yours take?  Can there be a Christ without a Jesus?

They have no personal connection with God usually, just a placebo effect attached to the other members of their church's experiences.
This is, depending on the reader's point of view, either a very rude assumption about the spiritual feelings of others, or an equally apt description of all non-insane members of a congregation!  :laugh:  Psychologically speaking, it is entirely possible for everyone to be 'faking it' (whether consciously or--in most cases--not) as a matter of course; or, they could all be feeling the same thing, irrespective of their desire to validate and believe the events in those ancient texts.

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In this you disagree with Christianity as a whole, both in its traditions and in its contemporary theology.  But I would agree with you here: As I said some time earlier, if someone believed sincerely that Jesus was G-d, he should convert to Judaism and keep the commandments!  Jesus himself said that 'not one yod nor crown should be removed from the law until its purpose is fulfiled.'  (Christians may have decided later that it was fulfiled in Jesus' death, but this ignores the purpose Jesus himself would have grown up with--and which his audience would have understood--namely, the perfection of the earth: tikkun olam).
No you are still supposed to keep the commandments and such as a Christian.   Jesus died so people can be forgiven and go and sin no more.   It doesn't give you a free pass to the afterlife if you actually read the New Testament.  There are still morals that have to be adhered to, hence the work in progress thing.   Christians are not perfect after being saved, they still sin and still need to work on what causes them to sin.   As you live out your days you work to be more perfect, it is a process and no overnight change.
I can entirely agree.

The Ottoman Empire and the rest of the people living in the Mesopotamian region most likely would have stood in the way of a Jewish state there considering that the area was controlled by those people until the Brits decided to make a Jewish Israel.   I do not see the state of Israel being anywhere near inevitable, it was extremely reliant on the actions of Europe.  The rise of fascism in Europe was the main reason for the immigration to Palestine by Jews.
Many people did stand in the way, and Israel won its war of independence without any help from Europe or the US.  That fact alone makes it, in hindsight, an inevitability, no?  ;D  Its prosperity afterward, of course, did depend upon the actions of Europe (such as the French military assistance before and following the Suez Crisis, and the German economic aid that followed Adenauer's decision).

The rise of fascism certainly inspired emigration to Palestine, but this emigration was frequently stopped and had to proceed in small trickles, mostly illegally, for the entire latter period of British control.  Even in 1948, on the eve of independence, the British still kept emigrants from landing in Palestine with specially-constructed internment camps on Cyprus.  And by making fascism the principle motivator, you ignore the compelling ancient alien case which preceded it by several decades and which provided, by numbers, much more of the emigration to Palestine than came in the later 30s and 40s.  The British were far more lax about it in the early years of the Mandate.

... I think that the Islamists would have killed off all the Jews living in the area of Palestine for example and prevented them successfully from ever residing there again.
Oh?  They seem to have done a lousy job fighting the Haganah and Irgun in the Mandate era, and certainly in the wars that followed with the IDF.  Look at the early history of conflict in Palestine and then tell me that defeat was likely for the ancient aliens.  These were motivated, disciplined, well-equipped colonists, and they did as well against the Arabs as European armies had done only a short time before.

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This would make for a whole different conversation, so if someone wants to start that in another thread, I'm game.  The situations in Iraq and Palestine deserve better than to be tacked onto a discussion of Christian faith and dogma...
This thread was about what the Bible said in regards to homosexuality, and it has gone a while different direction.   It wasn't about my personal opinion on homosexuality, Christianity or anything else.  Sure has turned out that way though lol.   I don't think the situations in Iraq and Palestine deserve better or worse.   I would gladly kill everyone there if it were up to me.  They don't get special treatment as the rest of the world is just as deserving of death.
I didn't mean that the people deserved anything, but that the topic--if it is to be started--should be in a thread with an obvious title, which would more easily invite interested parties to join in.

...  At age 23 as I have said before is when I started to believe a god exists (I didn't get more specific until after that).   None of that was based on facts in the least, it was acquired faith in God not religion.
This bring us neatly back to the main point made above.  I understand that your experience gave you a faith in G-d, but I question the form it has taken.  What makes it the Christian G-d that you revere, and not another, if not the culture in which you have been raised and the form of G-d with which you are most familiar?

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An admirable position; independence of thought is always respectable.  One caveat I would add, however, is the danger of taking firm opinions on the basis of incomplete or fragmentary data.  It is not a surrender of personal judgement to look for support or criticism of your positions in scholarly works and original sources.  It is, in fact, the most intellectually honest path available...
What firm opinions?   When I express Christianity's views as I see them, then I am spouting the opinions of an organized religion as I see them.   That is what I was doing earlier in this thread in regards to homosexuality.   My personal opinions are different.
What opinions, you ask?  What, then, of the assertion that Jesus is G-d and/or the 'son of G-d?  That he died for our sins?  These are beliefs that you hold, yes?



{General grip: Why is "med-i-ta-tion" turned into "sleeping with my head in the toilet"?!  Is there a general list of these things posted somewhere, 'cuz it's getting really frustrating to find them by accident!   :laugh:}

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Re: Homosexuality and the Bible
« Reply #235 on: September 16, 2007, 03:55:38 PM »
Jesus created a New Covenant, the Ten Commandment where of the Old Covenant. They are good Ideals [Old Covenant] to live by but not of the New Covenant. So Christians do not live by the Old Covenant but the New Covenant which is Love.

I understand this but why is it a lot of the fundamentalists always refer to the Old Testament and living by that and not just the New Testament.  They pick and choose what suits them this is where I have a problem.
"Eat it up.  Wear it out.  Make it do or do without." 

'People who say it cannot be done should not interrupt those who are doing it.'
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Re: Homosexuality and the Bible
« Reply #236 on: September 16, 2007, 04:08:47 PM »
Jesus created a New Covenant, the Ten Commandment where of the Old Covenant. They are good Ideals [Old Covenant] to live by but not of the New Covenant. So Christians do not live by the Old Covenant but the New Covenant which is Love.

I understand this but why is it a lot of the fundamentalists always refer to the Old Testament and living by that and not just the New Testament.  They pick and choose what suits them this is where I have a problem.

Given all the evil shit that's in the old testament, I PREFFER that they pick and choose, so long as they do a good job of it.  8)

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Re: Homosexuality and the Bible
« Reply #237 on: September 16, 2007, 04:26:19 PM »

{General grip: Why is "med-i-ta-tion" turned into "sleeping with my head in the toilet"?!  Is there a general list of these things posted somewhere, 'cuz it's getting really frustrating to find them by accident!   :laugh:}

Here are the words that were put into the word filter to be funny because some people were overusing them, Morthaur:

Meditation is "sleeping with my head in the toilet".

Arse is "AAARRSE!!".

Asshole is "angel fluffy bunny".

Fuckn is "fairy".

There used to be others, but this is the latest list.

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Re: Homosexuality and the Bible
« Reply #238 on: September 16, 2007, 04:27:10 PM »


Given all the evil shit that's in the old testament, I PREFFER that they pick and choose, so long as they do a good job of it.  8)

Oh, I rather wish they'd live according
to OT laws. Then we could lock up the
sick fucks.

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Re: Homosexuality and the Bible
« Reply #239 on: September 16, 2007, 04:31:01 PM »


Given all the evil shit that's in the old testament, I PREFFER that they pick and choose, so long as they do a good job of it.  8)

Oh, I rather wish they'd live according
to OT laws. Then we could lock up the
sick fucks.

You just want dirty man-sex with Ragtime.  :anal: :smarty: