yeah, I feel like if you have a passion for learning something, you shouldn't need to run to wiki. But at least he is not being an ass. I think that I must be a literary nerd or something, because sometimes I just want to break out into tears when I read the NT, and I am not a religious person. I just think that it is literary genius.
12/29/2012 2:16:33 PM
You said it, not me.But a few conflicting stories, lectures, bashing gays and women, then an acid trip at the end don't really do it for me.And yes, that's a gross oversimplification. I forgot to mention the almost certainly fabricated Acts. [Edited on December 29, 2012 at 2:33 PM. Reason : .]
12/29/2012 2:22:24 PM
from one gentleman to another: you are not reading it critically. Maybe take a lecture course on it or something?
12/29/2012 2:51:35 PM
Says the guy emotionally attached to the text.
12/29/2012 4:24:09 PM
I am an atheist, have no emotional attachment to the bible, but your simplification is missing the gospel of Christ stuff some of which does actually have some good things that are the type of things even an atheist can agree with (the not be a douche and help others stuff)There's also some cool stories with all kinds of rape and incest that you see played out in many different stories, historically significant plays and books, tv shows, and movies, etc... Except for the language, [i]some[/] of the stories are good from an entertainment perspective
12/29/2012 4:56:17 PM
12/29/2012 5:30:49 PM
12/29/2012 5:36:48 PM
If you want some good reading, try some christian apologetics. I read a lot of the major ones and remained unconvinced. You'll certainly learn a lot more about it than you will on here.
12/29/2012 5:42:55 PM
i wanna get touched by His noodly appendage
12/29/2012 7:01:52 PM
12/29/2012 7:38:51 PM
The bible says teh gays to be stoned (which is clearly a reference of Washington legalizing gay marriage and pot in the same election) Working on Sunday is just as bad.Exodus 31:15
12/30/2012 9:04:29 AM
I thout that was part of a longer sentence, but I guess only the RSV and its descendants, the NRSV and ESV, do that (okay, also the HCSB and Darby): http://www.biblegateway.com/verse/en/Ezekiel+23:20
12/30/2012 1:56:59 PM
12/30/2012 6:22:02 PM
12/31/2012 9:19:50 AM
i grew up learning that as a song
12/31/2012 10:22:52 AM
Somehow I don't think this is what Heaven was originally meant to be like......but it's full of warm fuzzies anyway~♥: http://imgur.com/gallery/FCRP0
12/31/2012 2:46:59 PM
Judaism teaches a clear difference between knowledge, wisdom, and understanding."Lean not on your own understanding" means your own understanding as an individual is not enough, it takes open dialogue (which is what I'm trying to accomplish here) to accumulate knowledge and wisdom..Besides, psalms are writings of man, not law. You can't use it as a "Oh but G-d says you have to do this!" on either side of the conversation.
12/31/2012 2:51:58 PM
To elaborate on ^ IIRC...A couple days ago, I learned from the Wikipedia that the Ketuvim ("Writings") in the Tanakh (from the first initials of its components, and known to Christians in rearranged form, possibly with added Deuterocanonical works from the Diaspora, as the "Old Testament") are considered by Jews to be mere writings about God rather than divinely-inspired works (as in the Nevi'im or "Prophets") or the literal Word of God (Torah or "Instruction," known to Christians as the Pentateuch); TIL, as suspected, that the Psalms and Proverbs are in the Ketuvim and therefore are regarded by Jews (as opposed to, say, fundamentalist Protestants) to have come from people rather than God.That "rearranged" bit is significant: Christians probably remember Ruth coming right before Kings (or "Samuel" and "Kings"), which was followed immediately by Chronicles (or "Paralipomenon"), but in the Tanakh, Samuel and Kings are in the Nevi'im, while Ruth and Chronicles are in the Ketuvim; basically the Jews didn't canonicalize the Tanakh until well after the rise of Christianity, so there were two separate efforts involved.
12/31/2012 4:05:26 PM
It is commonly believed that King David wrote most of them...and he wasn't exactly a holy person.Sending a man to the front lines of battle so that he would die and you could bang his wife without consequence? That's low.
12/31/2012 4:12:30 PM
12/31/2012 4:29:01 PM
^^in the same sense that it is "commonly believed" that Moses wrote the Pentateuch; that is, "traditionally"IRL we don't actually know who first wrote the Psalms
12/31/2012 5:18:59 PM
Whether or not he was real is not the point.They are poetic devotions to G-d written by a person/character who was imperfect. There's a lesson trying to be learned in that alone. This isn't a great comparrison but Scrooge teaches us it is never too late to become a better person.
1/1/2013 11:05:04 AM
1/1/2013 1:07:48 PM
^You are making the common confusion that Christianity = every religion.You can believe in a divine presence without believing the scriptures as written. Many people do. There are also many religions in the world with no god figure. For example, most stories about Buddha have no godly or divine influence or statements of "this is truth." They are stories meant to reveal moral lessons about life.
1/1/2013 1:31:02 PM
^^ The point is that you get the idea of the teachings. God and Jesus do not have to be real for you to do that.
1/1/2013 1:45:17 PM
^^I for one was surprised to learn that not every religion even has some super-important set of canonical scriptures that all adherents are supposed to read, like that's mostly an Abrahamic thing too; ditto for the fact that a notable minority of religions, including a few denominations of Christianity, do not believe in a literal Hell or its analogue.[Edited on January 1, 2013 at 4:37 PM. Reason : moar
1/1/2013 4:34:46 PM
For those of you with an attention span longer than your average show on Adult Swim, I recommend the following speech by George Will:Youtube - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TbA5ab18SCoText of speech - http://rap.wustl.edu/wp-content/uploads/2012/02/George-Will-lecture-text.pdfPeggy Noonan called this "the most important speech so far in the in the 21st Century"http://blogs.wsj.com/peggynoonan/2012/12/29/the-most-important-speech-so-far-in-the-21st-century/I was awakened around 4:30 this morning and was unable to fall back asleep so I decided to test Ms. Noonan's assertion. I too agree Will's speech was well done. The Q&A session after the speech is also worth watching.[Edited on January 2, 2013 at 7:07 AM. Reason : ....][Edited on January 2, 2013 at 7:08 AM. Reason : ....]
1/2/2013 7:04:27 AM
1/2/2013 9:08:48 AM
^I would really like to hear what your definition of religion is.
1/2/2013 4:09:50 PM
I don't mind dictionary.com's defintion:
1/3/2013 8:50:28 AM
1/3/2013 2:45:38 PM
"involves" not "is the totality of". Did you just completely ignore the quoted definition which I clearly stated I agreed with because it was convenient for you to make a quip?[Edited on January 3, 2013 at 3:22 PM. Reason : .]
1/3/2013 3:21:04 PM
I don't want to know what the dictionary says. There is no one true definition of what religion is because no definition can actually encompass every religion.I want to know what YOU mean when you refer to religion. What you've put in your own words, in my opinion, is a better description of philosophy than it is religion. But if to you they are one in the same, then it's good to know when reading over your comments.[Edited on January 3, 2013 at 3:42 PM. Reason : -]
1/3/2013 3:41:47 PM
So.... yes.
1/3/2013 3:42:47 PM
It's obvious that I don't think philosophy is the same as religion and it's clear that what was my own words was in addition to the dictionary definition I provided. As you put it, "religion" has varied meanings so instead of playing this game where you try to tie me down to a particular definition and then say "A HA! see, I can name a 'religion' that doesn't exactly fit THAT definition," why don't we have an actual conversation?Were you intending to include deistic religious concepts in this conversation? What can usefully be said about a deistic god? Clearly the Abrahamic religions worship a god more involved with mortal affairs than a deistic god.Do you disagree that Buddhism makes unsubstantiated supernatural claims?Do you believe that morality can only be understood within a religious and not a secular context?
1/3/2013 4:40:39 PM
If I call something big but you call it huge, then we could be talking about the same thing with different understandings of what it is. It is important that we understand each other's vantage point before having the conversation of what it is.However, I didn't really want this to be about the nature of religion but rather specific beliefs and view points within religious sects. I started with original sin just because it was on my mind around Christmas time with all the "saving of souls" folks were trying to do out on the streets.A discussion on the nature of a god or gods can only be had in the context of each individual belief group, otherwise it becomes a two sided argument whether or not a god or gods do or can exist. I find your question about a god from a deistic ground hard to grasp because I grew up in an Abrahamic religion that teaches how to find G-d in nature, so I don't feel that the two contradict each other.As I understand it, and correct me if I'm wrong, many Deists would argue that G-d, although a creator, is not a miracle worker. However I believe that the fact the world continues to work as it does (nature, physics, etc) on a daily basis is a miracle in itself.
1/3/2013 7:38:28 PM
1/4/2013 12:56:03 AM
1/4/2013 8:58:46 AM
From the site that points out the problems with the Bible, the Book of Mormon, and even the Quran, a book appears: http://www.skepticsannotatedbible.com/thebook/index.htmlThe sample appears well-made: http://www.scribd.com/doc/110216886/Click-to-expand-The-Skeptic-s-Annotated-Bible-sample
1/9/2013 11:14:18 PM
New topic: reincarnation.The thought that our actions in one life could change how we experience the world in the next is an interesting one. What I don't like about it is the lack of consciousness of the previous life. There is no sense of guilt or even awareness of what one could possibly be punished for, and therefor there is no real chance at redemption.
2/27/2013 5:46:12 PM
Wishful thinking, that's all that is. People don't want to just stop existing so they fabricate these ideas that death isn't the end and cling to them.You don't have any consciousness of your previous life because you didn't have a previous life. You didn't have any brain or other types of cells before your parents conceived you. You simply did not exist, and at some point you will stop existing.I don't want to die tonight, but I've long since accepted that it's coming and I'm ok with that. I didn't hate not existing for billions of years before I existed so I doubt I'll care for billions of years after.
2/27/2013 7:11:32 PM
To apply it specifically to the caste system, if you messed up in one life you would be punished in the next by being put lower on the ladder. But if you have no knowledge of what you did wrong, then you can never make up for it.Punishment means nothing without the understanding of why.
2/27/2013 7:40:19 PM