Jump to content

kblackthorne

Fremen
  • Posts

    32
  • Joined

  • Last visited

    Never

Reputation

0 Neutral
  1. Stout Theist. And, BTW, I really like your categories.
  2. I feel old when FerriS Beuler is "Classic". Here I thought we were talking things like "The Aweful Truth", "His Girl Friday", and "Some Like it Hot"! But if we're considering 70's-'80's as "classic", then... Better Off Dead Real Genius GhostBusters! Python... any Python, but we're quoting Holy Grail a lot lately... Raising Arizona
  3. Um, wrong. It says right there in Gen. II: 4-7, it states a chronology. And again in Gen. II, 18. Saying otherwise (when the chronology is right there in front of you -- go read it!) is just plain ridiculous. It is sad that some people feel the need to deny what is written in this book. In my experience, that most often happens when one is trying to defend the literal truth of something that was never meant to be taken literally.
  4. For those who asked what my point was, it is this: According to the Bible, which was created first, Man or animals? According to Gen. 1, it was clearly animals. (Man was the pinacle of creation.) According to Gen. 2, it was clearly man. (Man was among the first of creation, and all else was created for his benefit.) Now, how is that not a contradiction? (Sneezer, it probably won't show up in your book, since it is not specific to the King James Version. It is simply -- as is found throughtout Genesis -- two versions of the same story.) As for saying that evolution & God are incompatible... are you really going to place limits on the methods God is allowed to use? Science is how. Religion is why. Are you really going to tell God that He can't use a particular tool (evolution, Maxwell's equations {or whatever the correction of them is}, etc) simply because it offends you? ~laughter~ I didn't think so.
  5. This is a perfect example of why the Biblical stories must be considered in their context. It wasn't just a test: It was a lesson. In that time and place, in neighboring tribes, it was customary to offer one's first-born as a sacrifice to the gods. (There was a specific deity involved, but the details escape me at the moment. I can try looking it up later.) This was simply accepted as what was demanded by deity. So here is Abraham, whom God has furnished -- against all expectation -- with a son. And then... the time comes, as he dreaded it would, to make the sacrifice. So a dutiful Abraham prepares to do so. It's really what he expected all along, and all God's previous promises couldn't erase that certainty from his mind, because this is just what the gods demanded. He knew this. But that wasn't what God was demanding. In fact, God was showing him a completely different way to serve. But there wasn't much short of divine intervention at the moment of sacrifice that would have convinced Abraham that this wasn't his duty. And that is the true miracle of the story. It is not about some cruel being demanding ultimate sacrifice, then going, "Just kidding". It is about teaching a culturally-conditioned follower that the things he thinks are demanded of him... are not the things God demands.
  6. Here's what I read in Chapter 2: Gen II,5-7: God made man. (It specifies that God made man before there was field, shrub, grass or rain.) Gen II, 8-9: After God made man, He made the garden (Eden). Then He made trees. Gen II, 10-14: God makes some rivers that are highly important in the Ancient world, along with precious metals & stones. Gen II, 18-20: Well after Man was made, God made the animals as companions to man. Gen II, 21-25: None of the animals were a fit mate for Man, so God made woman from man's rib. Will you please confirm that your Bible matches mine in this?
  7. Yes, that was Chapter 1. Now read what order it says in Chapter 2.
  8. Both, actually. Anyone who can find this will have my profound gratitude. I also think the story itself (or as much as I've been able to paraphrase) is relevant to the discussion at hand.
  9. Sneezer, I'd like you to do an exercise for me. Get out your Bible, and turn to Gen. 1. Read it, and write down what order things were created in. Now turn to Gen 2. Read it, and write down what order things were created in.
  10. Some years ago, when we were all in college, my roomate's fianc
  11. Sneezer, A Sadist is one who enjoys causing pain to others. It is otherwise defined as "delight in cruelty" or "excessive cruelty". Muad Dib, Your logic is flawed. First, you try to say that because no human is perfect then God (who us usually defined as, among other things, a perfect being) cannot be perfect. Then, when it is pointed out to you that God is not human, you claim that still doesn't make God perfect. Nor does that argument make God imperfect, or in any way even imply God's imperfection. You must present an actual argument to be taken seriously. Why do you feel it would be hard for God to be perfect -- and (as your post indicated) harder for God than for someone else?
  12. Um, how, exactly, would you go about forbidding private prayer (in schools or anywhere else)? I can see prohibitions on public prayer, but that's an entirely different matter. Private prayer is not -- and by its nature cannot be -- prohibited or restricted anywhere. Trust me -- you can't stop me from praying where & when I choose! And I don't believe anyone has the magic camera to look into my head & see if I'm in conversation with the Divine, yet! As for Bush's good intentions, I judge the man by his actions, not a few pretty words in a speech. As Governor of Texas, he opposed Head Start. He promoted the use of the death penalty on a mentally retarded individual. He chose to "get tough" on welfare by ending the allowance for each individual child (which, in Texas, was $38.00/month). He is not concerned with the poor or downtrodden... except when it makes him look good. Talk is cheap. Whiskey costs money.
  13. Can I play? ;D 1. Are you single? (as in do you have a girlfriend/fiance/wife please don't tell me about any "boyfriends", lol! ) By that definition, yes. 2. If you had a girlfriend who felt you were spending too much time on your computer, would you still hang around here? Yes. She said spending too much time, right? She didn't say "I'll leave you if you visit there". (I hope!) So it's not a choice between forum or her. 3. Heck, would you even choose to hang around if you had a girlfriend? Probably. My online life has little to do with my social life. 4. is the reason why you post in here because you don't have a girlfriend? Um, no. 5. Lastly, if you answered YES to #1, do you think your chances of getting a girlfriend are negatively impacted by spending a lot of time here? No -- I think they're negatively impacted by my having a husband to whom I am faithful. ~general raspberries~ (And no, I haven't been offended -- just entertained!)
  14. Hm... I think there's a difference between "Revisionist History" (which implies knowingly & deliberately changing facts) and the sorts of things you are describing with King & Kennedy, which involve, rather, "compartmentalizing" them. (Public, heroic stuff in this slot. Private, dishonorable stuff in this slot.) The flaws of these men are known. But they also accomplished impressive things, and in those things serve as role-models. Then again, I am capable of admiring, respecting, & looking up to someone who isn't perfect. Good thing, too, since none of us are perfect. Hmmm... The more I think about it, the more I think your implied complaints of "revisionist history" tearing down heros is the back-end of the same process. Reminding people of the flaws of these role-models that have been -- in many ways -- turned into Saints in the popular imagination. When historical figures begin acquiring folklore ("Who cut down the cherry tree?"), certainly the record should be set straight. As for judging the past by our current standards... which ones? Yours? Mine? Jewish? Christian? Those of some native on a Pacific Island who beleives head-hunting is good for his tribe? The only standards that can realistically be used to pass judgement on an action are those of the individual performing that action. And while we can never know the mind or conscience of another individual, we CAN do everything we can to understand the cultural context they came out of... which can shed a great deal of light on their actions. For example, if a person comes from a culture where there is a single dominant religion, and that religion teaches, "Thou shalt not kill", we can be fairly safe in assuming that it was an ideal for them. Then again, a study of the time/place they were from may show us many times when killing (since this is my example) were permitted or even required. (The stoning of the adulterous wife in ancient Judea, the execution of the traitor, etc.) But, again, we must use the standards of the time & place. Otherwise I might be condemned for wearing my hair uncovered as a married woman. And you might be condemned for failing to offer a proper sacrifice to the health of some tribal god-king or god-emporer. (Such acts were considered the duty of all loyal -- refusal was an act of disloyalty against the state as well as a religious offense. See: Rome) Yes, we can look back on History, and say, "These were the delimas they faced", "This act was terrible", or "This act would be considered wrong today for these reasons". But to try to apply a morality that would be foreign to those it is being applied to is... pointless.
  15. Edric, It isn't. I've posted in at least one other thread, and wanted to post in another, but didn't have time to finish reading that thread. (And jumping into something that long when you haven't bothered to read it is both stupid & rude.) Ever join a forum & suddenly discover you have NO time to hang out online? I've hardly even been keeping up with my email. But I felt it would be rude/unfair of me to abandon this particular discussion, since I've been rather vocal. So I've checked back frequently, so that if someone (such as yourself) had something to say to me, I could actually respond. Fortunatly, things at work are improving & the servers, so we can actually get work done during work hours... and the chaos that has been my after-work life for the past few weeks should settle down in a couple more weeks. (Work stabalizing will help that. I spent all day Saturday on call, and put of plans until Sunday, only to be called on Sunday! ::) )
×
×
  • Create New...