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Quote from: notalent on Aug 23, 2009, 03:54 PMThese [Bereans] were more noble ... in that they received the word with all readiness of mind, and searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so. --Acts 17:11It's interesting to note that your procedure is the exact opposite. I disagree. I think the procedure cannot be judged here, or misjudged. The scripture quoted is presumed as follows: They were told many things that they did not know are true or untrue. So they went to the scriptures that are always true to see if the words spoken to them by men of spirit are speaking the truth that is always there in the Bible. It is like saying nothing that anyone says is ever true unless we find it in the Bible. But it is not saying here that the Bible is infallible. The word of God is always infallible, but the Bible is not infallible, even though all of it is the word of God. No contradiction, it is perspective.
These [Bereans] were more noble ... in that they received the word with all readiness of mind, and searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so. --Acts 17:11It's interesting to note that your procedure is the exact opposite.
THE ELIJAH, the one Jehovah has chosen.
BTW your current public comments to me here remind of my coworker at Chrysler who needed to show me how much he knew more than me on the Bible and had to tell me that Moses was humble, God chose a murderer; he said he bet I didn't know that.
NoTalent: You have begun copying and pasting an assortment of New Testament passages to reinforce the party line, which is a hackneyed and deeply old-fashioned way of engaging in dialogue...so this is where I get off. Happy trails.
I like the Khurds here, they have a good view of Allah saying if it is of Allah it will happen, and if it doesnt happen then it wasnt. To me it says the same as nothing ventured nothing gained;
I thought you said you loved the Bible? If I'd known that was an "exaggeration", I wouldn't have bothered using it to make my case.
NoTalent:Quote from: notalent on Aug 24, 2009, 02:08 PMI thought you said you loved the Bible? If I'd known that was an "exaggeration", I wouldn't have bothered using it to make my case.I do love the Bible, but I also said in the same statement that I was a follower of the Bible in a different way than you are. Those references you provide hold no water for me theologically. While I certainly find some parts of the Bible to be deeply inspiring and moving, I am also aware that because the Bible is written by many authors and the corpus is so vast and diverse, that there are many characterizations of God in the Bible. We could take anything - literally anything - and I could pour through the Bible and find verses that I could present to support it. I took a class in college about Post Holocaust Jewish & Christian Theology. The class was taught by a rabbi who was a very intense and provocative person. He was a tall, hulking, middle age man who looked just like Steven Spielberg. Anyway, during one of his lectures, he picked up a book: it was Hitler's Mein Kampf. He read off a long rambling passage which, paraphrased, said "Every last one must be expunged from our midst for they are evil and we must never allow them to live among us, because they are parasites who will corrupt us." The rabbi tossed the book onto his desk and picked up another book. It was the Bible, and he read from the books of Deuteronomy and Joshua: "The Canaanite is evil in the sight of the Lord, you shall utterly destroy his seed and his children's seed...You will not live among them for they will corrupt you. They shall be utterly destroyed from the face of the land, and you will take their food and their animals....etc."He tossed the Bible on his desk, smirked ironically, and said "Do we really need this sh*t?"No one moved for about 5 seconds as the rabbi stood their staring at each of the students. One girl started to gather her things and left. She couldn't take the implicit indictment that hung in the air:That the God of the Bible in this passage was evil personified, on the same level as Hitler.
My point, and I think the Rabbi's point, is that the Bible contains many voices, some are incredibly compassionate and some are horrifyingly intolerant. You can wish it away or attempt to justify the bad parts by saying "Well Jesus did away with that kind of vengeful God." But if you say that then you have to admit that there is more than one Biblical God.
Canaan was the offspring of incest between Mrs Noah (Noah's "nakedness") and Ham. Look how many heathen religions have the mother-son copulation/offspring motif. That reality is what those myths are built upon. Know your ancient polytheistic mythology.
Notalent: I agree with Elijah that that was a great post. You have many excellent points (but also a couple fanciful ones: Melchizedeq = Noah's son Shem??? hmmm...), and I found your argument deeply thought provoking. While there is no denying that the Levantine cultures of this time-period engaged in child sacrifice, and that their cultic worship was in many ways bound up with sexuality and "sacred" prostitution, I'm just not sure that I could ever consider genocide an appropriate response.
Why is the call to genocide acceptable when it comes to ridding the land of the abominable Canaanites, but when the brutal Romans were occupying the land 1500 years later, God's response is inconsistent:
he sends a seemingly pacifist teacher who teaches turning the other cheek and whose followers peacefully infiltrate Roman society over the course of 400 years, which culminates in the new movement becoming dominant.
I much prefer the latter scenario. The Canaanite culture, above all, was ignorant. Rather than commanding that the Canaanites all be slaughtered, why not send out emissaries of the one true God to go out into the towns and countryside and teach people about the the God of Israel, that he is the one and only [relevant] God, and that the worship he requires is different from what has been done before?
Remember that the Israelites happened to meet up with Rahab the Canaanite prostitute in Jericho, and she was considered righteous for the help she offered the Israelites. As tempting as it is to view the Canaanites as a seething mass of evil, these were individual men, women and children, and it is very ignorant to suggest that every single one of them was rotten to the core. In slaughtering the inhabitants of the land, you slaughter every Rahab (the proverbial whore with a heart of gold) and Lot (the sojourner who happens to be at the wrong place at the wrong time).
Haven't Bosnia, Kosovo, Somalia, the Holocaust taught us that violence simply creates more hostility and thus ultimately begets more violence? You cannot hope to end violent behavior by acting violently. By acting violently, you merely set an example of violence and further perpetuate the chain of vengeance.
Violence is not an ideal response in my opinion, because as a student of history it's clear that violence fuels violence - does not eradicate it. And remember: Abraham saw fit to argue with God (Genesis 18), to demand, in a sense, that God not lose site of the small pockets of righteous people found within a larger sinful population. One can only wonder why if Abraham thought it o.k. to argue with God for the lives of the righteous within Sodom - particularly his nephew Lot - why he did not argue with God for the life of his son, Isaac.
Quote from: notalent on Aug 25, 2009, 08:15 AMCanaan was the offspring of incest between Mrs Noah (Noah's "nakedness") and Ham. Look how many heathen religions have the mother-son copulation/offspring motif. That reality is what those myths are built upon. Know your ancient polytheistic mythology. I'm sorry, Ham was intimate with his mother?!I don't derive that from the text.
There are many apocryphal traditions that say all sort of things and make all sorts of connections (especially Jewish Midrash), but which cannot be taken as fact, and in the case of Midrash, are not intended to be fact. Give me a break...This and the Shem/Melchizedeq comment are really straining credulity. Let's stick to what the Bible actually says, please.
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