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#11 | |||
Emerald Dragon
![]() Join Date: September 25, 2001
Location: NY , NY
Age: 64
Posts: 960
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\"How much do I love you?? I\'ll tell you one thing, it\'d be a whole hell of a lot more if you stopped nagging me and made me a friggin sandwich.\" |
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#12 | |
Zartan
![]() Join Date: July 18, 2001
Location: America, On The Beautiful Earth
Age: 51
Posts: 5,373
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If I look at the Hebrew definition of the word murder, as presented above, it seems synomynous with the word kill and goes so far to indicate that even accidental killing would fall into this category. Of course the exact meaning of words used so long ago are always going to have a question mark hovering around them, simply because they are so old IMO.
I have managed people as a career, and in doing so I have had to set clear expectations in order to get what I wanted accomplished specifically. If I were to set expectations with the intention of allowing exceptions, It does serve purpose and logic to include these exceptions in my specific expectations. If my underlings assumed any exceptions <-[edit corrected wrong word!] to my rules then they do so at the risk of consequence. My point is, if someone is going to use thou shall not kill as a moral rule of life, considering the consequences of implying exceptions to the rule is paramount. Now to get back to the contradiction of the rule, considering exceptions are not assumed and the bible is being looked upon as a strict moral authority: Consider Exodus 32 http://webchapel-x.com/kjvb/EXO32.HTML Quote:
Now lets assume that killing is allowed, that the unspoken exception is indeed the rule and killing is allowed for reasons "good" for society, why were these people killed? Because they were dancing around a golden calf? Because they were worshiping a false Idol? And did God particularly care they were killed? It seems not, God seemed more concerned that the people had worshiped a false idol. Not once is Moses reprimanded for inciting killing. God doesnt even seemed concerned Moses drop and broke the tablets with his laws on them, one of those laws being "thou shall not kill". This hardly seems to meet any moral standard that would allow an exception to a rule against killing, therefore contradicts the rule even with exceptions. [ 08-14-2003, 03:11 AM: Message edited by: Chewbacca ]
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#13 | |
Very Mad Bird
![]() Join Date: January 7, 2001
Location: Breukelen (over the river from New Amsterdam)
Age: 53
Posts: 9,246
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As far as the adultery claim goes, for starters Mary was not married. Adultery is when a married person has sexual relations outside of marriage. So if anything it was premarital fornication. However there was no sex, she was made pregnant. Are women who are artificially inseminated considered to have had sex with the doctor that implants the sperm? Or even to have had sex with the man whose sperm it is? Having sex, and fertilising an ovary are two different things. Both can happen without the other. Therefore, God did not have sex, adultery or premarital fornication with Mary. He "divinely inseminated her" you could say, and did so with her blessing, approval and consent. |
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#14 |
40th Level Warrior
![]() Join Date: July 11, 2002
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 11,916
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My wife, who went to Catholic school grades 4-College, says there are certainly many well-known contradictions in the Bible. Her paper for her 400-level theology course focused on different places in bible, specifically 2 passages in books, where one instructs women to cover their head and one states that God instructs otherwise. Her library at a Catholic University contained many texts where theologians would argue vehemently over whether these contradictions existed or not.
Only only in the last decade years did the Pope recognize that the world was flat and was not the center of the universe (via official Papal declaration), after hundreds of years of the church's assertions otherwise -- remember Galileo's famous ex-communication? As well, she remembers there being several contradictions cited between Luke and John gospels. Sorry we don't have specifics. [ 08-14-2003, 12:57 AM: Message edited by: Timber Loftis ] |
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#15 | ||
Very Mad Bird
![]() Join Date: January 7, 2001
Location: Breukelen (over the river from New Amsterdam)
Age: 53
Posts: 9,246
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"Is not" "Is so" "Is not" Sorry mate. Please, post the proof (reference), so I can refute/elaborate, or simply remove the claim. [img]smile.gif[/img] As far as theologians arguments, they finish once it is explained. Someone brings something up, it is answered. Theologians argue over interpretations, translations, true meanings yes sure, but not inconsistencies. As I've said, the OVERWHELMING majority of bible scholars are united in their opinion of biblical consistency, the crossreferencing and historical validity. As to the "earth is flat" issue, you are bringing up an error of Catholic dogma, not a biblical inconsistency or falsehood. In Job, the oldest book in the bible, written about 4,000 years ago, the earth is described as suspended in space, not as being flat. Space is absence of any thing. Nothing. Job 26:7 He spreads out the northern skies over empty space; he suspends the earth over nothing. In Isaih, the earth is described as "a circle". The Hebrew word used for "circle" also means "sphere". (more on this in the quote and link) Isaiah 40:22 It is He who sits above the circle of the earth So the bible speaks of the earth as a circle in space. Hardly nonscientific or inconsistent with either itself, or science. In fact, here is a list of things the bible spoke of, well before scientific knowledge of the thing that science eventually found to be true. from here: http://www.clarifyingchristianity.com/science.shtml Quote:
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#16 | ||||
Hathor
![]() Join Date: February 18, 2002
Location: Vienna
Age: 43
Posts: 2,248
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So let me get this straight: You believe in god but you do not believe in angels and therefore you think god is a rapist. I am confused. Quote:
God didn't craft us to be like him but at the most to look like him. Quote:
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But most people who believe in and talk about God assume him to be omniescent. Being smart does not put you above the law. but god is not being "smart". He knows EVERYTHING. This is about that much a difference as between living long (e.g. 500 years) and being immortal (i.e. NEVER EVER DIE).
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#17 | |||
Zartan
![]() Join Date: July 18, 2001
Location: America, On The Beautiful Earth
Age: 51
Posts: 5,373
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I think I finally found "my" bible: The skeptics annotated bible
http://www.skepticsannotatedbible.com/index.html Now to continue the contradictions surrounding thou shall not kill, and the idea that nations waring is an exception to the rule. I offer this line from Isaiah 2:4 http://www.skepticsannotatedbible.com/is/2.html Quote:
http://www.skepticsannotatedbible.com/rom/15.html Quote:
Psalms 18:34 http://www.skepticsannotatedbible.com/ps/18.html#34 Quote:
http://www.skepticsannotatedbible.com/contra/peace.html A full overview of killing/shall not kill can be found here: http://www.skepticsannotatedbible.com/contra/kill.html We can all enter the Bible in a search engine and find one so we can read all of these in context and decide for ourselves. Which is ultimatly my point in exploring the contradictions of the bible and any other literature I study for a moral compass while on the earth. If taken at face value and with-out question the bible or the koran will not neccessarily lead us down a path of peacefulness and wholesomness, but both have the potential if one uses the gift of discernment to decide for themselves what really is wrong and right, good and bad and of course whether or not these contradictions actually exist. Sorry if I got up on the soapbox a bit with my last paragraph.
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#18 | ||||
Hathor
![]() Join Date: February 18, 2002
Location: Vienna
Age: 43
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As back then religion was synonymous with society who denies god denies society and these are not people you want to drag along for fourty years in the desert. I agree that from a modern point of view that there are alternatives (like make the disbelievers split and go about their own business in the desert) but back then there was only one answer to heresy. So I think if viewed inside the historical context this is not a contradiction. However I concede that due to a change of that context during time New Testament offers a different set of laws than Old Testament. Yet these are not contradictions but "upgrades". After all Jesus was frequently quoting the old scriptures to interprete them in a more modern way. Also "Thou shall not murder" (my first suggestion) does not state "Thou shall not kill unless you have a good reason" but rather "Thou shall not kill unless required by law (or god)" much alike the way it is handled in almost every book of law nowadays: Murder is unlawful but killing in war is not considered murder (if it happens according to the laws of war) and therefore not subjected to punishment. Executions which still happen in some countries are killing required by law and therefore no "murder". [ 08-14-2003, 04:02 AM: Message edited by: Faceman ]
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#19 | |
Hathor
![]() Join Date: February 18, 2002
Location: Vienna
Age: 43
Posts: 2,248
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I too use the Bible for moral advice but as an agnostic I find it easy not to get into it to literally and to put the things in context. Most religious texts may it be the Bible, the Koran, the Veda, ... contain very pure and distilled wisdom of ages in the most basic things of life. It is your own task to interpret this into your own surroundings. back to the contradictions: In many of the passages you quoted/linked I fail to see the obvious contradiction. After all peace and war have not been commonly agreed to be contradictory up to nowadays. War - in an ancient viewpoint that some carry up unto today - is a tool to achieve peace. If you wanted peace (=not be bothered by invading tribes on a raid) back then you had to go to war with them and defeat them so they won't be able to come back and raid your home. I know and love the saying: "Fighting for peace is like f***ing for virginity" but most people believed and many still do (cf. Iraq war) that peace can be achieved through war. The Romans even referred to a newly captured territory as "pacified".
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#20 |
Hathor
![]() Join Date: February 18, 2002
Location: Vienna
Age: 43
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small nitpicks on your post Yorick and Timber
Timber: the main issue was not about the earth being flat (which I am not sure if the church denied that) but about the earth as god's creation being the center of the universe. Scholars just couldn't bear the image of the earth moving around the sun making it "less" than the sun. You could argue that the earth IS in fact the center of the universe not physically speaking but spiritally as it may be the only place with intelligent life. Yorick: I take it that you meant 10^21 and 10^25? Mental soundness being connected with corporal health is correct but there have been a lot of misconceptions about the DIRECT connection between the two. The best example is the misinterpretation of Latin "mens sana in corpore sano" which was taken out of context and in the full verse actually reads "may there be a sound mind in every healthy body" rather than "in a healthy body there's always a sound mind".
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