Re: Noah's ark?
Posted by Leperous on
Wed Apr 28th 2004 at 6:22pm
Leperous
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Bizarre?! Only because you don't want to listen to their message- are you saying I should ignore certain bits because the word of God isn't that coherent really? Please point out to me where Jesus says to ignore these parts... oh, wait, he doesn't, he says you should read them and take heed. :rolleyes:
/thread derailment
Re: Noah's ark?
Posted by Orpheus on
Wed Apr 28th 2004 at 6:31pm
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... well you see, this engineer, he was.. more thwacks
Re: Noah's ark?
Posted by Leperous on
Wed Apr 28th 2004 at 10:00pm
Posted
2004-04-28 10:00pm
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Well, then it begs the question as to why the rules needed changing? And I don't think Jesus ever once said that the laws of the OT are "old" and not worth paying attention to, quite the opposite in fact.
Re: Noah's ark?
Posted by Orpheus on
Wed Apr 28th 2004 at 10:20pm
Posted
2004-04-28 10:20pm
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and then, that stupid engineer tried to... more thwacks
Re: Noah's ark?
Posted by Cash Car Star on
Thu Apr 29th 2004 at 12:00am
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2004-04-29 12:00am
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I just feel it's incredibly intrusive and mean-spiritedly instigational for someone outside of a group to say to all those inside mostly following a coda (and are better off by ignoring parts of that coda which are antiquated) that they happen to be forgetting certain areas of it. There's a passage in Deuteronomy that explicitly calls for the genocide of one of the other peoples of the Arab region (one which had attacked the Jews following the Exodus when they were at their weakest and which currently exists in no form whatsoever). Would we be better off following it by tracking down their descendants and killing them, as we are "called" to do? No.
Frankly, in this age of detestable religious intolerance, it absolutely baffles me that you're trying to incite MORE.
Re: Noah's ark?
Posted by Orpheus on
Thu Apr 29th 2004 at 12:56am
Posted
2004-04-29 12:56am
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finally, this engineer, after losing his hat, his glasses, and his... even more thwacks _____________flatlines__________
Re: Noah's ark?
Posted by Gollum on
Thu Apr 29th 2004 at 8:39am
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In the Old Testament, God is the "god of the Israelites" - they are his chosen people. In the gospels of the New Testament, Jesus explicitly changes this - from then on, the Israelites have no special status; all people have an equal claim on God, and He will treat them purely by their character and not on the basis of their descent.
Unfortunately I don't have a Bible on me so I can't quote it. But look it up - it's there!
Of course, this account does not sit comfortably with certain claims about the nature of God, such as His immutability. In the Bible He is seen to "change His mind" in this way, which is a clever trick for a timeless being to pull off. Oh, but He's omnipotent so I suppose that takes care of the problem :wink:
1000 posts! So anyway, this engineer said to the duck.......
And Cash - a coda is not the same thing as a code. Anybody who followed a coda of ethics would behave quite peculiarly indeed!
Re: Noah's ark?
Posted by Leperous on
Thu Apr 29th 2004 at 9:58am
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Very well. But like Gollum said, it doesn't seem compatible with the claims you make about God's nature. If he has to have a chosen tribe and can't cope with all of mankind, he doesn't seem too infinite or all-loving either?! See, this is one of the main problems I have with Christianity (and all religions), the selective nature of it- what happens to the people he does not and has not ever touched. And I suppose you'd argue too that, unlike the Israelite's laws, these new ones will apply to all of time and never get old? What does the bible say about cloning, genetic engineering, alien life? And you also cherry pick- while you're quick to denounce the 'silly' things I've pointed out, you're just as fast to pull out prophecies or 'positive' teachings from the same books...