I try not to offend with religion....but take the Stone Roses in vain and the gloves are off !
I didn't realise he was still alive.
I don't think anybody seriously thinks these days the NT wasn't written in the first century, the manuscript evidence for a substantial portion of the text goes back 150 AD or a tad later.Even the texts which exist, were written hundreds of years after the events to which they pertain. So, in addition to problems of language translation, there is added the possible variation in the story, with the passage of time
The whole volume has the same origin, though not all of it applies to today. More to the point, who gets to say what the 'good' stuff is? Only that which fits modern values? Where do they come from? It's obvious biblical sex ethics at loggerheads with current morals, but take something like Take heed, and beware of all covetousness; for a man's life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions. The modern Conservative Party has no problem with greed or covetousness, and does think your life consists in your acquired wealth. Should warnings about the dangers of greed by dropped to ease the consciences of wealthy Brits?!If you're a Christian you would surely give more weight to the words of Jesus, than to a passage on what you can and eat from Leviticus.
It would have been really helpful if the early Church had extracted the words and teaching of Jesus from the texts and just said, 'You know what, let's just stick with all the good stuff... we can junk the rest'.
Or, as Wikipedia states, There is no scholarly consensus on the date of composition of the latest New Testament texts. There are plenty of references within the article.I don't think anybody seriously thinks these days the NT wasn't written in the first century, the manuscript evidence for a substantial portion of the text goes back 150 AD or a tad later.
No, but nobody needs your book to tell them that.Should warnings about the dangers of greed by dropped to ease the consciences of wealthy Brits?!
The whole volume has the same origin, though not all of it applies to today. More to the point, who gets to say what the 'good' stuff is? Only that which fits modern values? Where do they come from?
As a woman I don't think you're qualified to do thatI just think it's perfectly possible to apply your brain and reason to any religious text and discern what a loving God would want you to do.
That's a bit thin. What about the scriptures of those religions that don't posit any sort of God, loving or otherwise? And if brain and reason are the only faculties/tools we've got then everything begins to look like sudoku.I just think it's perfectly possible to apply your brain and reason to any religious text and discern what a loving God would want you to do.
That's a bit thin. What about the scriptures of those religions that don't posit any sort of God, loving or otherwise? And if brain and reason are the only faculties/tools we've got then everything begins to look like sudoku.
Set on the soul's acropolis the reason stands
A virgin, arm'd, commercing with celestial light,
And he who sins against her has defiled his own
Virginity: no cleansing makes his garment white;
So clear is reason. But how dark, imagining,
Warm, dark, obscure and infinite, daughter of Night:
Dark is her brow, the beauty of her eyes with sleep
Is loaded and her pains are long, and her delight.
Tempt not Athene. Wound not in her fertile pains
Demeter, nor rebel against her mother-right.
Oh who will reconcile in me both maid and mother,
Who make in me a concord of the depth and height?
Who make imagination's dim exploring touch
Ever report the same as intellectual sight?
Then could I truly say, and not deceive,
Then wholly say, that I B E L I E V E.
C.S. Lewis
As an atheist I don't consider it appropriate for me to tell a religious person how to interpret their scripture any more than I consider it appropriate for them to attempt to apply that scripture to me and my behaviour. I do think it's worth asking religious people how they interpret scripture and practise their religion, and attempting to accommodate those beliefs and practices as far as possible within secular society, also acknowledging the influence that religion has had on shaping society and culture.
It's all very interesting, thinking about the origin and history of scripture, particularly the Christian bible since that's the traditional religion of this country which many of us grew up in or around and therefore have experience of. But I do think it's an altogether more subtle affair than simply picking specific verses here and there to support or refute one's argument.
Killjoy.
The text itself tells us we are not under the law of Moses. I doubt, however I will ever live long enough not to see the shellfish and mixed fibres objections being made!If that's the case, why don't we give the same status to the 'Only eat animals with a cloven hoof' from Leviticus as we do to the 'Forgive those who sin against us..' from the Gospels?
That would mean that we are God. If you have had anything to do with New Age mysticism, there are plenty of people who do think they are realising their own divinity.I just think it's perfectly possible to apply your brain and reason to any religious text and discern what a loving God would want you to do.