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| Abrahamic Religions Neutral discussion area for topics that cross-over between Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. |
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#16 (permalink) |
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Soul Rebel
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: The Highlands of Scotland
Posts: 4,604
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Actually, Marsh - if you take a deep breath a moment you'll see that the issue of Pagan-prophet's post is not about God - it's about interpretations of God, specifically from the position of literalist Christianity.
Most of the comments relate directly with Old Testament statements, which are rarely given the honour of a deeper and wider reading (for example, with reference to Jewish philosophy and thinking, which has an extant ancient commentary of probably every aspect of the OT, backwards, forwards - but, heck, what could the Jews know about the Torah? ).Also note that Pagan-prophets objections are entirely sourced through literal English translations - the sort that Dennis McKinsey likes trying to rub them in the faces of Christians, despite protestations that the Bible wasn't originally written in English. |
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#17 (permalink) | |||||||||||
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Super Moderator
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: London, UK, Malkhut she'be'Assiyah
Posts: 1,464
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Quote:
"YES, BUT DON'T EXPECT IT TO MAKE SENSE OR HELP YOU UNDERSTAND" on all the stuff about G!D - it is by definition impossible to know anything *positive* about the Divine - all you can know is what the Divine Isn't. in this case, G!D Is not limited by the concept of only one future - G!D Can Conceive of *all* possible futures at the same time, before and after the event from our PoV. it is axiomatic to judaism that we have free will - without this there is no possibility of making the correct - or incorrect choice. likewise, we don't believe in "goodies go to heaven and baddies go to hell" - that's far too simplistic. "ha-satan", in judaism, has no power to do anything other than get you prosecuted (as it were) for things you have yourself done. the tree enables sin by activating free-will. free-will cannot exist without knowledge of choice and the consequences of choice - in other words, the knowledge of [the consequences of] good and evil. Quote:
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b'shalom bananabrain |
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#18 (permalink) | |
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Smile: God loves you!
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Where am I from? None of your business, eh! Hosers...
Posts: 172
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Quote:
Actually, Brian, I'm well aware of what Pagan-prophet's position is, and what the post is about. Take a look at my first paragraph following the inset quotation, which points out a non-sequitor logical fallacy in Pagan-prophet's position. The rest of my post? That was just what came into my heart as I was writing. We are allowed to speak our hearts here, aren't we? |
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#20 (permalink) | |
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Smile: God loves you!
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Where am I from? None of your business, eh! Hosers...
Posts: 172
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Attacked by God?
This is actually a response to Brian's response to my response to Brian's response to my response to Pagan-prophet's argument. Confused yet?
These are some things that Pagan-prophet said-- not as part of his argument, but as foot-notes to it: Quote:
God has been taking flak from us ever since we had knowledge enough to question his authority. I don't mind it when people question God: everything that's true holds up when tested in the fire. However, I don't agree to any test where the questions are balanced unfairly, and since Pagan-prophet was challenging God based on mankind's theology, I consider the test to be unfair. Hence, my objection to what I called 'blaming God for our mistakes.' And yes, by mistakes I do mean theology. |
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#21 (permalink) |
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New Member
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Maine, USA
Posts: 7
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another two cents
Hi, I'm new here and happy to find this site. I'm in the midst of reading Spong's "Rescuing the Bible from Fundamentalism", Funk (& the Jesus Seminar's) "The Five Gospels:What did Jesus Really Say?", and "Christianity without God" (!) by Lloyd Geering. I'm sure I'm leaving some books out. . .
Personally, I cannot fathom taking the Bible literally. One, there are too many contradictions. Two, the Bible was written by men, not God, and what is canonical has been seriously effected by politics. Thirdly, as another person in this thread has pointed out, there are so many translations and interpretations. I could go on, but other more educated on this matter have responded and will. In my humble opinion, the Bible is a stunning piece of literature, wisdom and "written" oral history. Not taking it literally does NOT mean that it cannot be taken seriously. Reading it with an eye and ear for metaphor and within its' historical context can bring one to insight and wisdom. Not taking it literally does NOT mean there is no God. I must say that I hesitantly describe myself as atheist. However, I find that in all religions there is a core of the SAME ethical truths. As someone who has been a practicing Quaker and Buddhist, I find that when reading Jesus' teachings, I "hear" them more as koans. There is a universal beauty and truth at the heart of all religious texts. |
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#22 (permalink) | |
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A friend
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Quote:
Welcome to the forum and i very like much what you wrote: "I find that in all religions there is a core of the SAME ethical truths. As someone who has been a practicing Quaker and Buddhist, I find that when reading Jesus' teachings, I "hear" them more as koans. There is a universal beauty and truth at the heart of all religious texts." That sentiment ties very much in with my own beliefs. - Art |
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#24 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: USA
Posts: 90
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Can the Bible be taken literally?
In response to your original question (name of your thread): YES!
The Bible can be taken literally. But why would anyone want to do something that irrational? The human race evolved to the point where Galileo pointed out that the church and its teachings (which are derived from the Bible by "experts" i.e. theologians) were erroneous. From that point on the race evolved rapidly in learning but since it could not shake off its irrationality (clinging to superstition and biblical "authority") it is now at a place where its technology far exceeds its rational ability to use it responsibly and safely. Take the bible literally and we mix knowledge with insanity. YOU ARE HERE!!! |
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#25 (permalink) | |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Ontario
Posts: 82
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Quote:
It makes sense to discard poor translation in favour of good translation. But why would identifying a passage of the bible as myth/tall tale/story be a reason to discard it? |
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#26 (permalink) |
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New Member
Join Date: May 2004
Posts: 2
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God of the Bible
Interesting thread. I am amazed myself at how many people who call themselves Christians have never really read the Bible in-depth. There
is massive cruelty, abomination, savagry, brutality, assault, rape, violence, bloodshed, and a mass of contradictions all over the place. It cannot be the Word of God, in that "God spoke the Bible". It simply cannot be. I believe that God is Love, pure and simple. The Old Testament God of Wrath and Violence is far from love. He is practically un-appeasable. If I faced such a god, I would ask him "how do you live with yourself? I really do feel sorry for you." Regarding the issue of hypocrisy, this is big. Why would God tell us to forgive (Jesus' request) seventy times seven times (in other words, continuously) if the Bible god continuously smittens peoples and groups with bloody death, violence, and wrath for small offenses? Isn't God supposed to lead the example, here? So, in conclusion, the Bible is a historical document, and is not the literal word of God. If it was, then we have got a big problem...we would have to deal with a Deity of Great Unhappiness, Anger, Wrath, and Jealousy...a True Wretch. I don't then know how the new testament could **ever** say that God is Love. That would be inconsistent. |
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#27 (permalink) |
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Soul Rebel
Join Date: Jul 2003
Location: The Highlands of Scotland
Posts: 4,604
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Hi kcwriter, and welcome to CR.
![]() As for the God of the OT vs the NT - I'm sure we've discussed that somewhere. It's cerainly worth noting the envoroments and cultures that the different books were written from. ![]() |
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#29 (permalink) | |
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UNeyeR1
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Maryland
Posts: 5,649
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Re: God of the Bible
Quote:
And it is also a different story if you attend a synagogue and discuss the meanings and information contained in those texts....quite different. |
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