pamela Posted October 21, 2009 Report Posted October 21, 2009 well Q, with all things of this nature, it is left to subjective conjecture. It is easy to dig up anything that would be negative concerning religious beliefs, but why ignore the positive? The two dudes shared an intimacy of sorts, key point being here- love. I reckon it's not so much about the action but about the thought and intent of the heart. Too often people would rather bash someone based upon action and their own personal views and fears, than to look at the picture in it's entirety. People do love people and sometimes that falls into same sex relationships. The point is love. I never found in the Bible where God was nasty to these people nor if they had been stoned. But what i did find, were a few examples of what it is like to be human and to love. I would rather look for those things that would suggest love for one another than to dredge up the hate and fuel the fire that keeps mankind in a downward spiral of pain , fear and hatred Quote
Qfwfq Posted October 21, 2009 Report Posted October 21, 2009 Certainly! :beer: I mean Christ was always preaching to love everybody, even thine own enemy etc. so he wasn't stoning folks for it. But he was typically not talking about those little thingies, in the original text of the Gospels the word was usually ἀγαπάω which means to be fond of, or to be full of and exhibit good will. Sex was usually referred to in other ways in those books. Basically we'd need to find examples that would constitute homosexuality, like the one already quoted: lie with a man as with a woman. Are there other ones, that weren't condemned? Quote
modest Posted October 21, 2009 Report Posted October 21, 2009 two chicksRuth 1:14, referring to the relationship between Ruth and Naomi, mentions that "Ruth clave onto her." (KJV) The Hebrew word translated here as "clave" is identical to that used in the description of a heterosexual marriage in Genesis 2:24: " Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife: and they shall be one flesh." (KJV) There's nothing sexual in either Ruth 1:14 or Genesis 2:24. The Hebrew dabaq or 'cleave' is most often used throughout the Hebrew bible in reference to the relationship between man and God such as Jos 23:8 "But cleave unto the LORD your God...", but also frequently with rather mundane things like a person's tongue sticking to the roof of their mouth (Psa 137:6) or when two groups of people become allies (Isa 14:1). two dudes Samuel 18:1"...Jonathan became one in spirit with David and he loved him as himself." (NIV) "...the soul of Jonathan was knit with the soul of David, and Jonathan loved him as his own soul" (KJV)daniel 1:9Now God had brought Daniel into favor and tender love with the prince of the eunuchs" (KJV) Again, the first implies nothing sexual any more than Jesus loving his disciples implies something untoward. The case of Daniel 1:9 is kind of interesting. The english phrase is "tender love". In Hebrew this is a single word rather than 2: racham or רחם. It was translated by King James' scholars (who, by the way, did a damn fine job considering all the crap they take today about the bible being mistranslated) as these many different things: mercy, compassion, womb, bowels, pity, damsel, tender love. It might seem odd that the same word can mean womb and compassion and we might wonder what is really going on with with the Eunuch's "womb" and bowels. But, there is a very good reason for this. Like in Japan today, in ancient Judea the seat of human emotion was not the heart or the chest, but the belly and the bowels. It you loved someone or showed them compassion the feeling came from the lower stomach. This is why, by the way, seppuku is a lower stomach thing. But, yeah, it seems everywhere throughout the Hebrew bible the word is used entirely non-sexually but rather just to convey mercy or compassion or the body part in a non-sexual way. For example: Psa. 25:6 "Remember, O LORD, thy tender mercies and thy loving kindness; for they have been ever of old" or Gen 43:30 "And Joseph made haste; for his bowels did yearn upon his brother: and he sought to weep; and he entered into chamber, and wept there." [here, it should be clear, "yearning bowels" are equivalent to the modern phrase "aching heart"] So, I don't think it would be proper to make Dan. 1:9 the one instance where something sexual is implied. It seems simply to be a deep emotional connection was forged between the two. People do love people and sometimes that falls into same sex relationships. Right, and there's nothing wrong with the love in the bible or in the Church today. The problem (resulting in death) outlined in the bible is the act—the sexual act. I never found in the Bible where God was nasty to these people nor if they had been stoned. Where God was nasty to homosexuals? Look no further than Sodom. But what i did find, were a few examples of what it is like to be human and to love Jesus was clearly a loving fella (or, at least, portrayed that way). But, if you've ever honestly read the old testament of the bible you will find that Jehovah, Elohim, the God of Abraham, is the the most cruel, vindictive, jealous, and ruthless of creatures. He regularly killed children—regularly wiped out whole nations out of anger. Jesus detracts none of it and neither does the Christian church today. ~modest Quote
alexander Posted October 21, 2009 Author Report Posted October 21, 2009 we are sort of off the original discussion on this stoning/homosexuality issue. IMHO those parts should be edited, not a huge issue, happens at least once, annually, but the bigger issue is why to this date the actions of the church contradict the clearly written beliefs they are to have (clearly written that they are the beliefs that are to be had)... also, screw all this, i am taking old an new testament, gospels and all those books and rewriting it into one concise, and interesting book that will be easy to follow and clearly state what one is to do, calling it "harry potter and the order of god" and in the beginning harry potter will receive this book on gelatin tablets on top of mount Olympus, where he is forced to memorize the word of god, and as he carries this book down, he gets caught in the rain and the book melts away, but god gave him photographic memory and already broken glasses, he recites everything in the book, by the end of the book, while battling ignorance and bureaucracy of the modern church with his magical words of truth... Moontanman 1 Quote
Moontanman Posted October 21, 2009 Report Posted October 21, 2009 The thing about the *** was to show how taking something out of context (like many who preach today do) can be used to say almost anything. If you are going to follow a religion, any religion, you should do the reading and interpreting your self. At least if you get it wrong you did it and not because you were too lazy to look something up and preferred to allow others to think for you. Cherry picking is pretty much what Christianity is all about, enforce this scripture and ignore this one. Claim this means this and not what it appears to say. Sad really, so many people follow the person who tells them what to believe "religiously" never knowing they are being scammed until the kool-aid begins to twist in their guts. Quote
Qfwfq Posted October 22, 2009 Report Posted October 22, 2009 So Moon it turns out I had actually got your drift! Except I wouldn't say that cherry picking is what Christianity is all about... I thought the OP was about stoning homosexuals and a few other things. AFAIK Christ disapproved of homosexuality as much as he disapproved of adultery, but he told those guys to examine their own past misdeeds before casting the first stone...:shrug: My take on the matter is that the Catholic church, like many Christian ones, has a similar stance. The overall matter is however complex and rooted in history and somewhat delicate too. I think the stance of the Catholic church has always been that gays should not perform the acts but the way they are ain't their fault, it's only a matter of not giving in to this temptation. It is also its long standing tradition that clerics should be celibate and take vows of chastity and I don't know of there having been any rule till quite recently, against gay men becoming priests as long as they stick to the vows; much the same for other deviations, it doesn't essentially differ from resisting the ordinary heterosexual temptation. A priest naturally has temptations, whichever ones, but has vowed to resist them. Now in past times, it was not very socially acceptable for a person to remain ever celibate, except when a justified by some important and acceptable choice. Many a Good Family in Catholic societies would "strongly encourage" sons and daughters that weren't on the straight path, and refused cover-up marriage, to a monastic or clerical life. By the late middle ages this, along with illegitimate children, became a great source of "vocations" to keep the ecclesiastical institutions staffed. Of course many clerics and monastics were not resisting their temptations, straight or not, including the more troublesome ones like paedophilia. People were in the habit of knowing but not saying too loud (outside of the rowdier circumstances). In recent times more scandals have been raised, especially concerning cases of child abuse, and this led to the Vatican recently issuing a decree that candidate priests must be carefully scrutinized to filter out those whose orientation isn't quite straight. Like in Japan today, in ancient Judea the seat of human emotion was not the heart or the chest, but the belly and the bowels. It you loved someone or showed them compassion the feeling came from the lower stomach.Gut feeling? :D Seems you carried your probing a bit further than mine. :shrug: Quote
pamela Posted October 22, 2009 Report Posted October 22, 2009 who doesn't cherry pick, Moon? Christianity doesn't have the exclusive rights on that.Modest, again, its subjective.Any one can pick and choose how they want to apply the meaning of the word cleave for example.If indeed there was more going on in the cases of those people that i mentioned, the point remains that they were lovingly intimate even if not in a physical way. food for thought 2 Samuel 1:26"I grieve for you, Jonathan my brother; you were very dear to me. Your love for me was wonderful, more wonderful than that of women." They were not stoned and God didn't wipe them out as in the case of Sodom and Gomorrah. Speaking of, there was a whole lot more of "sins" going on there besides sodomy, so it's not really fair to say that God only chucked out the brimstone in response to that only:)Having been raised a Catholic, I have found that there is more tolerance to the typical hate issues that arise.On the one hand incorporating the less tolerant Anglican into the church may diffuse some of the hate, however it can also spread the hate like cancer. It also can in a sense water down those tenets that are being upheld by catholicism Quote
modest Posted October 22, 2009 Report Posted October 22, 2009 If indeed there was [no] more going on in the cases of those people that i mentioned, the point remains that they were lovingly intimate even if not in a physical way. Yes, I agree. I actually agreed in my last post:Right, and there's nothing wrong with the love in the bible or in the Church today. The problem (resulting in death) outlined in the bible is the act—the sexual act.I honestly know of nothing in either church doctrine or their canon that would prohibit, or even make improper, an emotionally intimate relationship between members of the same sex. If anything, that kind of kinship is strongly advocated in many of the old and new books of the bible—John and Jesus being a great example. food for thought2 Samuel 1:26"I grieve for you, Jonathan my brother; you were very dear to me. Your love for me was wonderful, more wonderful than that of women."Yes... again you reference David and Jonathan. I think there's a kind of cultural gap going on here. In a large part of the western world men do not openly express love for their best friends and when they do our minds immediately attach a kind of erotic insinuation to it. This is one aspect of a larger cultural reserve that western society and the U.S. in particular shows. Think, for example, men don't commonly kiss other men in this country. If someone from the U.S. who wasn't aware of even the most basic cultural differences read this about David and Jonathan:After the boy had gone, David got up from the south side [of the stone] and bowed down before Jonathan three times, with his face to the ground. Then they kissed each other and wept together--but David wept the most.1 Samuel 20:41 it might seem to insinuate something physically erotic. But, we have to remember that it is common for men to kiss in a platonic way in other cultures. Likewise, if you go to any funeral in the united states you see people standing around with their heads bowed showing really no emotion at all. If you go to the middle east or southeast Asia you see a whole different affair with people throwing themselves on the ground and wailing and all that. There's nothing in the story of David and Johnathan that implies a sexual relationship. What it shows is something you find all throughout the bible—a culture where "tender love" can be openly expressed between two men when it is entirely platonic. To support this I'll quote a rather large section of wikipedia speaking to it:A platonic interpretation for the relationship between David and Jonathan has been the mainstream view found in biblical exegesis, as led by Jewish and Christian writers. This argues that the relationship between the two, although strong and close, is ultimately a platonic friendship. The covenant that is made is political, and not erotic; while any intimacy is a case of male bonding and homosociality. David and Jonathan's love is understood as the intimate camaraderie between two young soldiers with no sexual involvement. The books of Samuel do not actually document physical intimacy between the two characters. Nothing indicates that David and Jonathan slept together. Neither of the men are described as having problems in their heterosexual married life. David had an abundance of wives and concubines as well as an adulterous affair with Bathsheba, and suffered impotence only as an old man, while Jonathan had a five year-old son at his death. The story was being told after the Holiness Code had been put into practice, with its commands and prohibitions of sexual contact between males which regulated the Israelites' sexual morality. Some traditionalists who subscribe to the Documentary Hypothesis, note the significance of the lack of censoring of the descriptions at issue, in spite of the Levitical injunctions against homoerotic contact. Gagnon notes, "The narrator’s willingness to speak of David’s vigorous heterosexual life (compare the relationship with Bathsheba) puts in stark relief his (their) complete silence about any sexual activity between David and Jonathan." Presuming such editing would have taken place, Martti Nissinen comments, "Their mutual love was certainly regarded by the editors as faithful and passionate, but without unseemly allusions to forbidden practices ... Emotional and even physical closeness of two males did not seem to concern the editors of the story, nor was such a relationship prohibited by Leviticus." Homosociality is not seen as being part of the sexual taboo in the biblical world.David and Jonathan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaYou seem to be implying that their relationship was sexual and therefore would have been punished by God if such a thing were a sin. The bible, however, does not describe their relationship as sexual. Nowhere in the bible will you find reference to homosexuality except for its condemnation or to illustrate God's anger toward such a sin (and the same, by the way, cannot be said of incest). The bible, by any reasonable interpretation, is more tolerant of incest than homosexuality. The conservative protestant outrage at the Episcopal church and some of the other progressive movements such as with women priests in the church of England—that outrage makes sense to me given the fundamental theology on which these churches are supposedly found. And, sure, that theology includes not trowing the first stone and Paul made his case for eating meat sacrificed to idols, but even in the new testament books:In a similar way, Sodom and Gomorrah and the surrounding towns gave themselves up to sexual immorality and perversion. They serve as an example of those who suffer the punishment of eternal fire.Jude 1:7 It is inherently hypocritical to ordain women and gay priests while claiming the bible as an absolute source of divinity or even inspired by divinity. And, speaking as an atheist, it does no good. When a conscious effort is made to hide the truth and the intent of the text in favor of social reform while claiming the book is flawless it gives legitimacy to fanatics who take their own license to interpret the book the way it's actually written. God does hate fags... at least, in that book he does. It does no good to obfuscate that fact. Women speaking in church is forbidden—explicitly. No point in hiding it. ...it's not really fair to say that God only chucked out the brimstone in response to that only:)No, that wouldn't be fair to say nor did I say it. But, look at what Jude said in epistle I quoted above. You are dealing with a God who wants to torture people eternally for having homosexual relations. If you believe in that God then how could you reconcile belonging to a church with a gay priest or a church that preached equality for couples of a gay lifestyle. It's hypocritical and makes no sense. It bothers me immensely that every Christian I know makes God into their own social sensibilities then have the gall to say that fundamentalists are misinterpreting the bible. It's like worshiping the Nazi party and claiming that the persecution of the Jews is a misinterpretation of the Nazi platform. It makes far more sense to me to just reject the platform entirely and neither Jesus did that nor does any Christian denomination I know of today. These are my thoughts on the issue in any case. Not being religious I can't say it affects me much, but I must admit that when I hear the Wilmington diocese is filing bankruptcy and the Catholic church is forced to drastic measures to shore up its numbers... I get a little grin. ~modest Quote
pamela Posted October 22, 2009 Report Posted October 22, 2009 hmmmnnn okay Modest, you state your case well:)I had my reservations about the action actually taking place, as there are some contradictions in the Old Testament. You have only pointed out the vengeful mean god though, and there are many places, especially in the psalms, where god is portrayed as a loving god.So there are both sides to the deity described in the Bible just as their are both sides to the man.No, that wouldn't be fair to say nor did I say it. true, i merely thought you inferred that by your choice of wordsBut, look at what Jude said in epistle I quoted above. You are dealing with a God who wants to torture people eternally for having homosexual relations. If you believe in that God then how could you reconcile belonging to a church with a gay priest or a church that preached equality for couples of a gay lifestyle. It's hypocritical and makes no sense. It bothers me immensely that every Christian I know makes God into their own social sensibilities then have the gall to say that fundamentalists are misinterpreting the bible. It's like worshiping the Nazi party and claiming that the persecution of the Jews is a misinterpretation of the Nazi platform. It makes far more sense to me to just reject the platform entirely and neither Jesus did that nor does any Christian denomination I know of today Seems like ego and religion go hand in hand from my perspective. People will pick and choose and mislead to further their cause or belief.These are my thoughts on the issue in any case. Not being religious I can't say it affects me much, but I must admit that when I hear the Wilmington diocese is filing bankruptcy and the Catholic church is forced to drastic measures to shore up its numbers... I get a little grin.now you are echoing my sentiment in my first post;) Quote
Boerseun Posted October 26, 2009 Report Posted October 26, 2009 This whole cherrypicking business invalidates the entire concept of "Christianity", in my mind. You get different takes on the belief in God, with a heady mix of what you attach any value to in both the old and new testaments. Catholics have a completely different approach to the whole matter than Methodists, for instance. Catholics make a big thing about the transmutation of a piece of crackerbread into the actual flesh of Christ, whilst the Protestants believe that the bread eaten at communion is merely symbolic of the flesh of Christ. A big, big difference, right there (and a bit cannibalistic on the catholic side - think about it). There are so many different takes on the entire thing, and each one of them claim to be authorative. They are also incompatible. Two churches, both supposedly Christian: The first find homosexuality an abomination, and cherrypicks the OT bit about stoning them. The second church attach more value (cherrypicks) to Jesus's words of forgiveness and love, and will welcome homosexuals into their fold. They are totally and completely incompatible. Various issues from birth control to abortion come to mind, and totally diverse opinions and beliefs are all justified using the same source - the Bible. Yet, we all talk about "Christians" as if there's one big huge homogeneous group qualifying as such. I will ask you to show me a real, true and proper Christian. The best you will be able to do, is to point me towards a member of a sect which will be mostly incompatible with the bulk of other sects claiming to be "Christian". I think this points to a big truth regarding the issue: There is no such thing as a "Christian", and claiming so is disingenuous. A "Christian", according to you, will be someone who share your particular flavour of Christianity. A Catholic will never say that Protestants are true Christians and Catholics not. The classic definition that will now be thrown my way, is that a Christian is somebody who believes in the Holy Trinity and accepts the Lord Jesus Christ as his/her saviour. And I agree with that - that makes for a very, very basic definition of what a Christian is, but that is the totality of what all these different sects seem to have in common. A certain sizable lot of so-called Christians will find birth control an abomination, and another sizable lot will find it okay - and both will use the same God and the same Bible as authoritative of their stance, and perfectly justify it through scripture. Both groups perfectly qualify as "Christians". This means to me that seeing as there is no universally agreed-upon set of thoughts, guidelines, rules, opinions etc. that might be ascribed to God, which a "Christian" can live by (shall I kill this prostitute or not? - half the Christians say I should, the other half says I shouldn't), it makes for a very poor religion, at best. Those who might come to the defense of the morality as set out by the Bible, saying that we shouldn't kill homosexuals and rather live according to Jesus's words of love and reconciliation, tend to forget that the Ten Commandments is slap-bang in the Old Testament. Once you stop killing homos because it's in the OT and you're now living exclusively by the NT, you should, by the same logic, scrap the Ten Commandments as well. The reason you don't do this, is because morality is actually imposed upon the Bible and imposed upon "Christianity" from outside. Five hundred years ago, it was perfectly morally justifiable to burn witches and heretics at the stake - because the societal norms of the day allowed it. As society goes through changes that might be imposed upon it by technological advances or anything else, the changed morality gets imposed on the church and the church better adapt itself in order to survive. The entire Protestant rising is symptomatic of this. But where the dispensing of morality is concerned, the church is sucking at the hind teat. You will cherry-pick lines in the Bible to justify your lifestyle, in other words, the Bible is not the source of your morality, rather, the morality imposed on you by society (in which you grew up) is used as a filtering mechanism by which you pick and choose those verses in the Bible which might resonate with your individual lifestyle - and then you take those lines you've picked (using your societal moral filter) as the source of your morality. This is ***-backwards and dishonest. So - as to the thread title, stating "another reason Christianity makes no sense", what "Christianity" are you talking about? 'Cause none of the sects claiming to be Christians make any sense to begin with. Reading the Bible is the best cure for Christianity. It's just a pity so few "Christians" actually bother to do so. In the immortal words of Winston Churchill's son (who, as an atheist, read the bible on a bet that he couldn't do it in two weeks during 1944): "Bloody hell! This God guy is a right ****!" Quote
pamela Posted October 26, 2009 Report Posted October 26, 2009 This whole cherrypicking business invalidates the entire concept of "Christianity", in my mind. You get different takes on the belief in God, with a heady mix of what you attach any value to in both the old and new testaments. Catholics have a completely different approach to the whole matter than Methodists, for instance. Catholics make a big thing about the transmutation of a piece of crackerbread into the actual flesh of Christ, whilst the Protestants believe that the bread eaten at communion is merely symbolic of the flesh of Christ. A big, big difference, right there (and a bit cannibalistic on the catholic side - think about it). I believe this all boils down to interpretation.Some take the Bible as literal and others metaphorically. In Catholicism, being a very ritualistic religion in nature, receiving the "host" is of extreme importance. This can be compared to being "born again" , a term commonly used in the more charismatic sects of Christianity. Try being 16, raised by devote Roman Catholics, and stating that it is a snack and not the actual body and blood of Christ. Now I didn't see the wrath of God that day, but I sure as hell saw the wrath of mom. Thirty years later, i can still see the look on her face, when she called me a heretic.There are so many different takes on the entire thing, and each one of them claim to be authorative. They are also incompatible. Two churches, both supposedly Christian: The first find homosexuality an abomination, and cherrypicks the OT bit about stoning them. The second church attach more value (cherrypicks) to Jesus's words of forgiveness and love, and will welcome homosexuals into their fold. They are totally and completely incompatible. Various issues from birth control to abortion come to mind, and totally diverse opinions and beliefs are all justified using the same source - the Bible.Seems to me that a Christian of any denomination or sect, should strive to be Christ-like, afterall, it's what the title implies. To date, I think I have met 3 people, out of the thousands that I have met, that actually tried and emulated Christ's attributes in their lives. I imagine that alot of Christians actually attempt to do this, but anger, hatred and unforgiveness, muddies the waterYet, we all talk about "Christians" as if there's one big huge homogeneous group qualifying as such. I will ask you to show me a real, true and proper Christian. The best you will be able to do, is to point me towards a member of a sect which will be mostly incompatible with the bulk of other sects claiming to be "Christian". I think this points to a big truth regarding the issue: There is no such thing as a "Christian", and claiming so is disingenuous. A "Christian", according to you, will be someone who share your particular flavour of Christianity. A Catholic will never say that Protestants are true Christians and Catholics not.Childish really, it's like your church is better than my church, to the tune of a prepubescent rantThe classic definition that will now be thrown my way, is that a Christian is somebody who believes in the Holy Trinity and accepts the Lord Jesus Christ as his/her saviour. And I agree with that - that makes for a very, very basic definition of what a Christian is, but that is the totality of what all these different sects seem to have in common. A certain sizable lot of so-called Christians will find birth control an abomination, and another sizable lot will find it okay - and both will use the same God and the same Bible as authoritative of their stance, and perfectly justify it through scripture. Both groups perfectly qualify as "Christians". This means to me that seeing as there is no universally agreed-upon set of thoughts, guidelines, rules, opinions etc. that might be ascribed to God, which a "Christian" can live by (shall I kill this prostitute or not? - half the Christians say I should, the other half says I shouldn't), it makes for a very poor religion, at best. funny, the New Testament actually states that perfect religion is looking after the widows and the poor. People use religion and a belief set to satisfy themselves.Those who might come to the defense of the morality as set out by the Bible, saying that we shouldn't kill homosexuals and rather live according to Jesus's words of love and reconciliation, tend to forget that the Ten Commandments is slap-bang in the Old Testament. Once you stop killing homos because it's in the OT and you're now living exclusively by the NT, you should, by the same logic, scrap the Ten Commandments as well. The reason you don't do this, is because morality is actually imposed upon the Bible and imposed upon "Christianity" from outside. Five hundred years ago, it was perfectly morally justifiable to burn witches and heretics at the stake - because the societal norms of the day allowed it. As society goes through changes that might be imposed upon it by technological advances or anything else, the changed morality gets imposed on the church and the church better adapt itself in order to survive. The entire Protestant rising is symptomatic of this. But where the dispensing of morality is concerned, the church is sucking at the hind teat. You will cherry-pick lines in the Bible to justify your lifestyle, in other words, the Bible is not the source of your morality, rather, the morality imposed on you by society (in which you grew up) is used as a filtering mechanism by which you pick and choose those verses in the Bible which might resonate with your individual lifestyle - and then you take those lines you've picked (using your societal moral filter) as the source of your morality. This is ***-backwards and dishonest.I do not know of too many people religious or non, that live honestly.I think that we have a tendency to place a higher expectation on the religious to behave in a more moral and upright manner, however, we all behave at times in a both good and bad fashion. We are emotional beings and religion does not magically remove that.So - as to the thread title, stating "another reason Christianity makes no sense", what "Christianity" are you talking about? 'Cause none of the sects claiming to be Christians make any sense to begin with. Reading the Bible is the best cure for Christianity. It's just a pity so few "Christians" actually bother to do so. In the immortal words of Winston Churchill's son (who, as an atheist, read the bible on a bet that he couldn't do it in two weeks during 1944): "Bloody hell! This God guy is a right ****!"even if you were to read the Bible in it's entirety, each individual would still have their own take on it's meaning. Religion and belief are subjective Quote
Qfwfq Posted October 30, 2009 Report Posted October 30, 2009 One could neither fully call it one single religion, neither a collection of distinct ones. The core is what that character in the Gospels said and his take on the tenets of the OT. Distinct religions? OR, rather, distinct churches? Some of these add tenets and rites that the man did not teach, and some also scorn those who don't add the same ones; this is very much a matter of history though and politics. He did not introduce an aut-aut between stoning homosexuals and allowing them to be priests. AFAIK he disapproved of commiting the act, but no "Christian" that would stone them is a true one. The exact stance of a given Christian church toward them is mere detail, if you ask me. Quote
Boerseun Posted October 31, 2009 Report Posted October 31, 2009 He did not introduce an aut-aut between stoning homosexuals and allowing them to be priests. AFAIK he disapproved of commiting the act, but no "Christian" that would stone them is a true one. The exact stance of a given Christian church toward them is mere detail, if you ask me.Jesus Christ said that the Word is the Truth, and the Entire Truth. He was, of course, referring to the Old Testament, there was no other Word - the New was still in the making. The Old Testament says that you should stone homos and hookers. Jesus Christ once condemned an olive tree to eternal barrenness for not bearing olives when he strolled by, knowing full well that it was not olive season yet. Was he so inflated with self-importance? Was he a nice guy? Is this the act of a kind, gentle and forgiving New Testament deity? Clearly not. But according to Jesus, the Old Testament is valid. Assuming that the New replaces the Old in full is subjective, and not according to the will of God (assuming the Godliness of Jesus in the Trinity). Who's to say what a "true" Christian is? Somebody of your same sect, I suspect. The thing is, the Bible is so full of self-contradictions, that using it as the main tool to shape your worldview and morals with is foolish at best. Based on what would you do this, in any case? Based on what would you attach any value to the bible and/or Christianity? Carefully studying the Bible reveals it for what it is: A largely incoherent set of mostly non-related books that covers everything from history to soft porn. Like the Q'uran, it is not a well-written book, either - regardless of what the followers might claim. Read the Bible carefully, and consider the arguments raised by the religious in favour of Christianity, and you will see how little sense any of it makes, as per the OP title. Quote
pamela Posted October 31, 2009 Report Posted October 31, 2009 Jesus Christ said that the Word is the Truth, and the Entire Truth. He was, of course, referring to the Old Testament, there was no other Word - the New was still in the making. The Old Testament says that you should stone homos and hookers.not quite true. He was referring to himself being the word. He did not come to do away with the law but to fulfill it. Basically meaning that to cover all things with love. It was stated in the OT that love covers over a multitude of sin. The purpose of Jesus was to balance the harshness of God. Man, having the desire to do both good as well as bad was at emnity with God because of sin. Therefore God made a way to connect through love, and hence Jesus.Jesus Christ once condemned an olive tree to eternal barrenness for not bearing olives when he strolled by, knowing full well that it was not olive season yet. Was he so inflated with self-importance? Was he a nice guy? Is this the act of a kind, gentle and forgiving New Testament deity? Clearly not.He cursed the tree to show those followers the importance of bearing good fruit in or out of season. The fruit would be such things as kindness, temperance, love and such. But according to Jesus, the Old Testament is valid. Assuming that the New replaces the Old in full is subjective, and not according to the will of God (assuming the Godliness of Jesus in the Trinity). Who's to say what a "true" Christian is? Somebody of your same sect, I suspect.not replaces but fulfills as stated earlier in this post. I imagine, that for a Christian, they had better wonder if God thinks them true by the thought and intent of their heart. Afterall, its not their fellow man who sits in judgement of how they showed love in their lives, but God.The thing is, the Bible is so full of self-contradictions, that using it as the main tool to shape your worldview and morals with is foolish at best. Based on what would you do this, in any case? Based on what would you attach any value to the bible and/or Christianity?I guess, to each their own. There are many positives things in the bible to ascribe to as well as some scary ones. Depending on the person and how they interpret love, that will reflect in their actions. With any religion, you can take take want you want and leave the rest. Its whatever works for the individual. Clearly many find the need for religion as they are looking for some kind of hope or an answer. Carefully studying the Bible reveals it for what it is: A largely incoherent set of mostly non-related books that covers everything from history to soft porn. Like the Q'uran, it is not a well-written book, either - regardless of what the followers might claim. reads like life, eh?Read the Bible carefully, and consider the arguments raised by the religious in favour of Christianity, and you will see how little sense any of it makes, as per the OP title.I dunno Boerseun, its all subjective. I have heard so many different takes from so many diverse sects, that it becomes a mismash. The discord that man sows over such tenets is contrary to the basic meaning of love. I guess people just like to argue-makes them feel good. It would be nice, if those who choose to follow Christianity would choose to walk in love Quote
Qfwfq Posted November 2, 2009 Report Posted November 2, 2009 Six blind men were brought to an elephant and each of them groped ahead until the could feel the animal with their hands. One fondled the ears, another grabbed a tusk....... As the well known story goes, each had a totally different notion of what an elephant is, none of them really knew what one is like. Was any of them able to judge the animal? The Old Testament says that you should stone homos and hookers.And Christ said the first stone should be cast by he who is without sin. As Pam so graciously says, he meant it ain't up to people. Who's to say what a "true" Christian is? Somebody of your same sect, I suspect.Nope. Somebody who has read what Christ said about stoning the adultress, not just only what the Torah says about stoning. The thing is, the Bible is so full of self-contradictions,Of course! It was written by so many different dimwits, and meant to be read by the simpletons of those days. :eek: Mentality is a crucial thing to consider when reading something that wasn't written yesterday by your fellow citizen of your own ilk. As for the narrative anecdotes such as the fruitless olive tree, Pam gives an example of how essential the hermeneutic tradition is, for understanding these matters. It isn't just later folks that started to twist meanings and cherry-pick, allegory was very much rooted in those folks' way of communicating. Some of the examples of narrative within the narrative clearly demonstrate this, like the parables told by Jesus, which he himself obviously meant allegorically. The same applies to much of the direct narrative. Quote
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