Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by ActRaiserTheReturned
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Magic Magnum said
It was an example meant to be highlighting that it's discriminating against something you are and can't control.Now it seems to be getting circular there though, since you think homosexuality can be cured while I think it's something genetic and sticks around.So let me approach it from this way instead, outside of God saying that it's wrong what is actually bad about Homosexuality?@Bible Preference: Fair enough.@Homosexuality: Well if we wish to resolve this conversation and understand each other, rather than simply ending it here that seems to be the direction we need to go in.But before I do that I also feel the need to ask, define what you mean by Heterosexual and Homosexual acts before marriage.Do you mean sexual intercourse? Do you mean dating, kissing, simply being attracted?


Okay well allegedly, homosexuality is far more dangerous as far as STD's go than heterosexuality. But as for attraction, it's not a sin to just be attracted to the same sex. It is, however, a sin to have lustful attraction, filling your head with pornographic thoughts (Just like heterosexuality), etcetera. But I'll note, I'm not talking about Ex-Gay Therapy, necessarily, that is, in regards to Jesus changing a sinner. I think that the Ex-Gay type of ministry has it's place, but I"m more or less saying that God can do anything if he wanted. If he wanted to change us into a cat, he could. If he wanted to change us from a gay person to a straight person, he could. But the Bible specifically states that as far as our sin nature goes, God's will is to do anything to change us from our sinful state to a place that's closer to God. It doesn't matter how intrinsic to someone's being it is. So even when it comes to your sexuality, God, can change you.
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Magic Magnum said
(Covering this discussion elsewhere)


*Covered, going to sleep now, peace out mates*
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by Gwazi Magnum
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Just to state now, I logging off after I make this post.

Shy said
A sexual act is usually in reference to things such as lustful kissing (virtually eating each other's faces off), sexual intercourse (regular or anal), as well as oral and "heavy petting." If it is anything along those lines then it is most likely considered a sexual act that should not be engaged in outside of marriage.I'll come back to the marriage thing in a minute.


Ok, glad we had that clarified in advance though.
Means less confusion later on.

ActRaiserTheReturned said
Okay well allegedly, homosexuality is far more dangerous as far as STD's go than heterosexuality. But as for attraction, it's not a sin to just be attracted to the same sex. It is, however, a sin to have lustful attraction, filling your head with pornographic thoughts (Just like heterosexuality), etcetera. But I'll note, I'm not talking about Ex-Gay Therapy, necessarily, that is, in regards to Jesus changing a sinner. I think that the Ex-Gay type of ministry has it's place, but I"m more or less saying that God can do anything if he wanted. If he wanted to change us into a cat, he could. If he wanted to change us from a gay person to a straight person, he could. But the Bible specifically states that as far as our sin nature goes, God's will is to do anything to change us from our sinful state to a place that's closer to God. It doesn't matter how intrinsic to someone's being it is. So even when it comes to your sexuality, God, can change you.


I knew you meant in terms of God Healing, no worries there.

Also, I should probably ask now.
Do you even feel like continuing this? We seem to be circular.

mdk said whoa whoah whoah. Not rape. Let's be firm on that point. Slavery existed, yes, as it did in every society (the Hebrew people were themselves slaves, and descendants of slaves, and found themselves enslaved periodically throughout the course of the scripture). Slaves of Israel were treated pretty well, including codified release and freedom (you've probably heard of the 'year of jubilee' if you've read up on the subject), and the poor (for instance, recently-freed slaves) were provided for under Abrahamic law (research 'gleaning' if you're interested). As for the sexism, well, that's a debate. Like I said before, we've been changing and evolving and growing ever since we were made, and the circumstances have changed. Fortunately the 'New Covenant' you read about is not like the old; it's not 'follow these rules and you will be pure,' it's 'follow Jesus and you will be forgiven.'


Bible supporting Rape

Not trying to claim you're like this in the slightest just to clarify.
But when it's claim the Bible doesn't have ______ when it does, I have a tendency to point out where it actually does.

mdk said
Is that your 'scientific' opinion? Have you made no assumptions, have you adapted your theories, have you abandoned your pre-existing claims?


I've adapted and changed claims before, such as when I left Christianity.
As for assumptions, I would assume you mean "The Bible = Christianity" claim.
But I just don't see anything it could be based on if not the Bible, there's nothing else really supporting it.

mdk said I never said 'THE BIBLE ISN'T RELEVANT TO THE RELIGION.' In fact I gave you a specific verse quite to the contrary. So you can see why I'm a bit flippant on that last quote, and on this one -- if you're claiming (as you should) that science and reason are the only ways to approach the truth then why, with Christianity, do you instead rely on your prejudice (and your google, if you're holding to the stereotype)? Just as experiments need to be done under control, with honest and scrupulous observation, so must the Bible be read in good faith. Where we come from is always going to be an aspect of where we are. Hopefully I've cleared up the misunderstanding, and no harm done. I met a Christian once who argued that rock and roll was satan worship (OKAY, MORE THAN ONCE). We've got some loonies, that's for damn sure. Anyway being open is cool, I'll tell you what I can, we can talk at length and have fun. .


Sorry then. I was more just trying to cover possible claims or responses I've heard before in advance in an attempt to spare us a few posts.

With Christianity it's a matter of it's a claim of something existing (God) which needs evidence to prove itself.
Science always gives proof it's claims, but Christianity hasn't given the proof needed for God.

As for read it in Good faith, that still won't change the fact the Bible may have a confliction, or support horrible crimes being committed.

And there is no harm done, I'm just making my stance on the issue currently clear ahead of time.
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I actually want to stop talking about this and walk agree disagreeing, but agreeing to disagree.

I don't agree about the Bible supporting rape.
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Magic Magnum said
-Bible supporting rape-


With the Help of Jorick and Brand I scanned through the link you sent with bible passages ABOUT rape.

Deuteronomy 22:25-28 - Blatantly states if a man rapes a woman (who is married) he will die.

Deuteronomy 22: 28-29 - States if the woman is unbetrothed, the man has to marry her now because he slept with her. Could be seen as condoning rape or not condoning rape.

Deuteronomy 22:23-24 - The rapist gets killed.

Zechariah 14:1-2 - This one appears to support rape. My only possible defense for this one is it is talking about the coming of the Lord so its some apocalyptic stuff. We'll count this as support of rape because, it definitely appears to.

Deuteronomy 21:10-14 could be seen as sort of condoning rape, in that a captive woman can be made one's wife apparently without her consent if you give her a month to grieve her losses. (Jorick)

Leviticus 18:19-23 one doesn't support rape at all, doesn't even mention it. (Jorick)

Galatians 5:19-21 - Does not support rape at all

1 Corinthians 6:9-11 - Like Galatians condemns rape

Judges 5:30 - sort of implies that sex slaves as spoils or war are a thing that's allowed, which would be rape, but that's super tenuous. (Jorick)

Numbers 31:7-18 (particularly 18) is another thing that condones taking women as spoils of war, this far more clearly. (Jorick)

Deuteronomy 20:10-14 - same thing

Leviticus 20:10-16 - No mention of rape like at all.

Exodus 21:7 is also weird and doesn't make sense to claim it's about rape. (Jorick)

Genesis 19:1-38 - This isn't really promoting rape. Lot was outnumbered and his guests were in serious danger. As was procedure back then, protecting your guests was the most important thing for you to do, so he offered his own daughters instead. Is it a good message? No. Does it support rape? Eeeh not really but if you tried maybe.

"And then for the rest of those quotes on this page, none of them really support rape. One mention of concubines, but meh." (Jorick)
So we have 1 that explicitly condones it while 2 others are maybe's. Then 3 support taking people as spoils of war and marrying them then having sex with them which could be considered rape. In reference to the spoils of war that was common practice back then to take women from places you conquered and marry them though.

Either way majority of your quotes did NOT support rape and only ONE blatantly condoned it. Again, stop just pulling quotes out without analyzing them.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by Jorick
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This seems like a fun thread. I'm going to go through and cherry pick some things from the last page or so that I feel weren't sufficiently addressed.

Shy said
Every verse you referenced discuss an ACT of homosexuality, none speak in regards to the person themselves.


This gets into some sketchy territory. Thinking and being a certain way is okay so long as you don't act on it? Consider it as a facet of personality, which sexuality kind of is. An analogy to this would be if the Bible said acts of kindness are a sin. Being kind and thinking kind things is fine, but actually expressing that trait is sinful? That's pretty damning against the people who possess said trait that results in sin. Another example: being happy and thinking happy things is fine, but smiling and laughing are sinful. See how ridiculous it is?

The expression of one's sexuality is inextricably tied with having that sexuality (unless you're asexual or similar, but that's kind of irrelevant here). Saying expression of a sexuality is not okay it just a weak and indirect way of saying that sexuality is not okay. What if some fascist regime of homosexuals attained world dominance and made a law that said heterosexual sex acts were now illegal? That wouldn't just be a statement against those acts, it's a statement against heterosexuals as a whole, that they are bad and illegal. The reasoning for such wording of a law is that you can't police people's thoughts and know they're of a particular sexuality, so it's only the acts of expression of sexuality that can be found out and thus condemned and be grounds for punishment. That is what those Bible quotes are doing, condemning and outlining punishment for homosexual acts, so they do indeed fit the intended point of the Bible saying homosexuality is bad.

Magic Magnum said
Science is entirely based on finding the truth, with no assumptions made.


Woah woah woah, hold on there. Are you forgetting the foundational assumptions upon which science is built? Saying no assumptions are made is simply and objectively wrong. I'll list these assumptions so you can see what I mean.

1 - The universe is a real physical place. Pure objective no assumptions science only gets us as far as cogito ergo sum. Everything past that is an assumption.

2 - Human senses and tools to enhance them are reliable. We cannot know for absolute certainty that our senses are accurate, and we happen to know there are things we cannot naturally perceive (spectrum of light for instance), so we are assuming that we can actually gather objective data.

3 - Through observation and experimentation, we can understand and make predictions about the world around us. This is a combo of the above and the assumption that cause and effect is a real thing and that it's reliable and predictable with enough knowledge.

Without making those core assumptions, we cannot have science. We cannot know them to be true with objective certainty, thus they are assumptions. These assumptions being made are part of the root of why science is said to never be 100% objectively accurate: it's always possible that one of those core assumptions is false, thus invalidating everything we know as science.

It's easy to forget these are assumptions because we humans constantly make them in day to day life, but they are indeed assumptions. Just keep that in mind next time you want to say how science is better than religion due to supposed objectivity. I happen to agree that science is preferable due to its methodology, and I have many issues with religion and its methodology, but you've got to have intellectual integrity with this stuff and admit the failings of your preferred system if you wish to have a stable foundation upon which to build your arguments.

ActRaiserTheReturned said
It's just that it doesn't seem like discrimination when the Bible mentions everyone a long together, literally, with homosexuals, since we all not only sin but are headed towards the same consequences.


That doesn't make it not discrimination though. The fact that homosexuals are one of the explicitly listed categories of sinners means that discrimination is in effect, both in the meanings of "making a distinction" and "acting favorably or unfavorably toward a group based on a particular trait."

Consider this following list of sinners for example: murderers, rapists, cheaters, liars (even white lies), thieves (even so much as a penny), blasphemers, black people.

Just because all black people already happen to fit into the prior categories, due to everyone having lied or stolen at some point as a child at least, does not mean that listing them in particular is not discriminating. If the point of the list of sins was to just say "hey, everyone's a sinner, get some Jesus or burn forever" then it could have listed sinners simply as everyone instead of giving particular categories. Once you have particular categories you then have distinctions, which is the basis of the non-prejudice meaning of discrimination. Once you add in rewards and punishments based upon those categories you're into the prejudice type meaning of the word.

That's what the Bible is doing by saying homosexuality is a sin. It is in both meanings of the word discriminating against homosexuals, just in the same way it's discriminating against liars and thieves and murderers and so forth. Arguing that it doesn't discriminate against homosexuals (or other sinner groups) just because everyone is a sinner is ridiculous and totally ignores the meaning of the word 'discrimination.' If you want to argue that it's justified in the same ways as the discrimination against murderers and so forth is justified, cool, give something to back the stance up and we can have a discussion about it, but saying there is no discrimination present is just silly and wrong.

Magic Magnum said
So let me approach it from this way instead, outside of God saying that it's wrong what is actually bad about Homosexuality?


As a non-religious person, I can provide an answer to this that's rooted in science.

The basic biological imperative of all living things is to reproduce and pass on genetic material. This is the sole purpose of the existence of any living thing, the only purpose in life one can really derive from a purely scientific perspective, and this purpose is strongly enforced by things like the sex drive in humans and the migration of various animals to mating grounds during certain seasons. Homosexuality goes counter to this biological imperative because it cannot produce offspring, thus it is bad. If you want to go further with it, you can even say it's a non-beneficial mutation, just as would be a mutation that causes sterility, both being non-beneficial for the same reason.

Obviously (or I hope it's obvious, at least) this isn't a good justification for discrimination and whatnot. Our population numbers and technological advancements mean that some people not mating and producing offspring doesn't truly do any harm to the species. Someone else being homosexual doesn't do you any harm, so there's no point in giving a shit about it on a social or moral level. From the pure biological perspective it's bad, but fuck it, not really relevant to humans in this day and age.

Shy said Genesis 19:1-38 - This isn't really promoting rape. Lot was outnumbered and his guests were in serious danger. As was procedure back then, protecting your guests was the most important thing for you to do, so he offered his own daughters instead. Is it a good message? No. Does it support rape? Eeeh not really but if you tried maybe.

So we have 1 that explicitly condones it while 2 others are maybe's. Then 3 support taking people as spoils of war and marrying them then having sex with them which could be considered rape. In reference to the spoils of war that was common practice back then to take women from places you conquered and marry them though.


You forgot that later part of Genesis 19 that talks about Lot's daughters getting him drunk, raping him (rape by way of that intoxication and taking advantage of him), and having children by him. It doesn't condemn or punish them for their rape or incest, so that's another one that sort of condones rape.

Also some of those spoils of war thing didn't mention anything about having to marry those women. Zechariah 14 just says the women will be ravished, no marriage. Judges 5 just mentions that each man would get a damsel or two, not necessarily that they'd be married before the ravishing commences. The thing from Numbers 31 also says nothing about marriage. Even if it's implied, there's the part about how taking a woman by force after killing her people and then making her marry you is pretty much rape, and just because it was common practice that doesn't mean it's okay or it wasn't rape.
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Shy said Again, stop just pulling quotes out without analyzing them.


sparing me some time for grocery shopping, thanks. This is kind of what I mean. If you're going to take the 'Claims must be supported, I believe in science path' -- AWESOME, let's do that. Google is not research, any more than Genesis is scientific evidence.
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Jorick said
-Lots of stuff-


To your first quote from me I addressed a lot of it afterwards with the whole marriage thing. At least I believe I did.

Jorick said Another example: being happy and thinking happy things is fine, but smiling and laughing are sinful. See how ridiculous it is?


Can I ask you for a better example? With happiness your smile and laugh is an automatic almost instant reaction, meaning it could happen without you having the time to stop the act from happening. Sexual acts, be they heterosexual or homosexual are not automatic or instant reactions to an emotion or feeling. It is a choice to act on those feelings instead of a bodily reaction.

To your second quote, yes I'm sorry if I missed some stuff, weeding it out through skype was a difficult task considering the conversation kept moving. In regards to Zechariah I stated how that one does condone rape, no if's, and's, or's about it. Numbers 31 also has no mention of sex at all. It simply says "But all the women children, that have not known a man by lying with him, keep alive for yourselves." I feel that wording there implies a far more long term relationship than just raping and leaving them. same thing with Judges.

Obviously forcefully taking a woman as a wife is wrong. But in some Christian denominations (especially if you go back before the reformation) so was divorce. However if you go into Exodus and Leviticus you will find laws regarding how to divorce your wife. Jesus explains about divorce in Matthew 19:8 "Moses permitted you to divorce your wives because your hearts were hard." Moses permitted a lot of things that Jesus later explained were not what was originally intended. In taking more wives from these others (those who were virgins so as to avoid adultery) The tribes of Israel were able to survive and grow. Many of the laws you find in the Torah were about the Israelites establishing themselves as a nation different from others and that must be kept in mind. Moses, while a great guy and all, wasn't perfect. He had a nation to take care of and expand and he did his best with the stubborn group he had. Was it right? No. In context can you see why it was that way? I can yes.

But that is a 100% contextual analysis, meaning what I just said is irrelevant to any defense of fundamentalist ideas.
Also just for fun here is an article written by a gay Catholic on his opinion about gay marriage and such. Like I said, its the guys opinion so its pretty biased and set on Catholic beliefs.
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Shy said To your first quote from me I addressed a lot of it afterwards with the whole marriage thing. At least I believe I did.

Can I ask you for a better example? With happiness your smile and laugh is an automatic almost instant reaction, meaning it could happen without you having the time to stop the act from happening. Sexual acts, be they heterosexual or homosexual are not automatic or instant reactions to an emotion or feeling. It is a choice to act on those feelings instead of a bodily reaction.


I don't think you did address it with the marriage thing, since marriage actually wasn't even a part of what I was talking about. In your first post I quoted, you were saying that those anti-homosexual Bible verses were only pertaining to the homosexual acts and thus not the people, and my response to that was essentially "bullshit, that's just a roundabout way of saying homosexuals are bad and giving the acts as the thing which can actually be found out and be cause for punishment." Your marriage post explained a Catholic take on it, that it's the marriage thing that's the crux of it for Catholics, but that's not really relevant to what I was saying (which was about those quotes rather than the specific doctrine they spawned in a particular denomination).

Since it was brought up though, I find the marriage thing to be a shallow defense for what is really a different angle on the "gays are bad" idea. Regardless of how it's phrased or approached, the discrimination against homosexuality all says "you can't be who you are because this ancient book said so." I find that entirely unreasonable, whether it's because the book says homosexual acts are bad or because it says homosexual marriage is bad. I could go into a whole rant about the marriage thing and how religious doctrine shouldn't have any bearing on the legal institution of marriage and thus the religious people who fight against gay marriage on the grounds of their religion are doing it wrong and that they should stick with saying their particular church won't perform ceremonies they are against, but I think that little summary should suffice instead of the many paragraphs it could be instead.

I will, however, have another round of analogy/example things to show why I think it's ridiculous. Having a stance of "no, no, gay sex is fine, but it can't be done outside of marriage" and then saying "gay people can't get married" is absurd and in no meaningful way actually condones homosexuality, just gives lip service to the idea while still saying it's bad for another reason. For example, "it's okay if you drink, but you can never buy alcohol or get others to give you any" is still anti-drinking for all intents and purposes. "You can watch pay-per-view channels, but we're never going to get a TV service that actually has pay per-view-channels" does not truly allow the hypothetical person to watch said channels. "Go ahead and pick up that ball, wait oops it's in a box and you're not allowed to touch the box" means no you cannot actually pick up that ball. "Yeah you can do thing A, but actually you can't because reason B" is in practice just a roundabout way of saying "no you can't do thing A." That's what's going on with the Catholic homosexuality and marriage thing.

As for a better example, that would be the kindness example I already gave, and it being better was the reason it was given first. A person with strong self control could be a kind person but never do a kind act, since it's not an automatic response like laughter or smiles, just in the same way that someone could be a mean-spirited jerk in their own mind but never let it show. I also gave another example, one far better than the emotion-based ones, by way of proposing an outlandish scenario in which heterosexual acts were banned and giving my take on what that would mean. A key point of my argument is that making some distinction between being homosexual and doing homosexual things is bullshit, calling one bad is the same as calling other bad because they are so inextricably linked. If you were to say "it's okay to be black, just don't act black," do you see how blatantly racist that would be? That's what's going on with those Bible quotes about homosexuality and trying to make a distinction between being and doing, it's saying "it's okay to be gay, just don't act gay." Also the part about the acts being targeted because that's all that can be enforced. Trying to say these quotes don't constitute the Bible condemning homosexuals as sinners because of a technicality comes off as an empty defense, very similar to "I'm not racist, I have black friends."

To your second quote, yes I'm sorry if I missed some stuff, weeding it out through skype was a difficult task considering the conversation kept moving. In regards to Zechariah I stated how that one does condone rape, no if's, and's, or's about it. Numbers 31 also has no mention of sex at all. It simply says "But all the women children, that have not known a man by lying with him, keep alive for yourselves." I feel that wording there implies a far more long term relationship than just raping and leaving them. same thing with Judges.

Obviously forcefully taking a woman as a wife is wrong. But in some Christian denominations (especially if you go back before the reformation) so was divorce. However if you go into Exodus and Leviticus you will find laws regarding how to divorce your wife. Jesus explains about divorce in Matthew 19:8 "Moses permitted you to divorce your wives because your hearts were hard." Moses permitted a lot of things that Jesus later explained were not what was originally intended. In taking more wives from these others (those who were virgins so as to avoid adultery) The tribes of Israel were able to survive and grow. Many of the laws you find in the Torah were about the Israelites establishing themselves as a nation different from others and that must be kept in mind. Moses, while a great guy and all, wasn't perfect. He had a nation to take care of and expand and he did his best with the stubborn group he had. Was it right? No. In context can you see why it was that way? I can yes.

But that is a 100% contextual analysis, meaning what I just said is irrelevant to any defense of fundamentalist ideas.


The missed stuff is fine. For the other things, I was just making some clarifications that I felt your post lacked, no big deal.
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ActRaiserTheReturned said I don't agree about the Bible supporting rape.


It's not a matter you can choose to agree on.
It's written in the Bible, it's there.
The Bible supporting rape is fact.

You can choose not to believe in it.
But that won't change the fact it's there, no amount of disagreeing will change that.

Shy said
-Lots of Bible analysis-


Might as well respond to each of these.

Deuteronomy 22:25-28 = True, this was a search engine result of simply showing any quote involving rape.
The point of the link was to highlight those links later on that do support it though.

I'll just mark future one's that this case happens to with "Search result".

Deuteronomy 22:28-29 = I'll grant, the wording here of "Lay Hold on her" isn't clear in if it's rape, or consensual. Though the fact it also leads to forced marriage and paying the father leans it in the direction of rape. Not overly though cause both forced marriages and paying the father after marriage are common practices today even when rape is never involved.

Deuteronomy 22:23-24 = And so was the victim.

Zechariah 14:1-2 = Agreed here, it is clearly supporting rape.

Deuteronomy 21:10-14 = It's forced sex and marriage after she was imprisoned by them and had her parents killed. It's rape.

Leviticus 18:19-23 = Search Engine (Though oddly enough, it is another point to showing the Bible is Homophobic)

Galatians 5:19-21 = Search Engine

1 Corinthians 6:9-11 = Search Engine

Judges 5:30 = Gives men damsels to be taken as spoils. Most likely rape, but Jorick is right in terms of being a bit tenous.
It's defelently in support of kidnapping however and treating women as property, which rape comes hand in hand with many times.

Numbers 31:7-18 = Same case as the last one.

Deuteronomy 20:10-14 = Same thing again.

Leviticus 20:10-16 = Search Engine, though yet again one that supports the Bible in being Homophobic.

Exodus 21:7 = Search Engine, seems more of a case of sexism than anything else.

Genesis 19:1-38 = Two different parts here that rape seems to be relevant in.
In the hostage part, he was willingly giving his wife and daughters away for safety.
No mention of them consenting, just seems to be Lot making the choice himself.
That's basically the woman being forced into ownership (and most likely sex) with the invaders.
But sense having sex is not outright said, it doesn't work 100%.

It's just knowing humans, their nature and our history there's very little reason to give woman away like that if not to be raped.

The second part where rape seems relevant seems to be the daughter's raping their Dad.
They made him drunk on wine, and slept with him. Which being coerced/unconseual sex is rape.
However, this case seems more as a recanting of something that did happen, rather than something that the Bible outright supports.

*Skipped Quotes*

Judges 21:10-24 = First men pillaged a town, took 400 women as captives to claim as wives.
Forced marriage and most likely forced sex/rape.

The bigger part here is later, where they're isn't enough women for all the men. So the remaining ones are told to wait in the bushes to ambush and take women forcefully as wives of their own.
This one screams every alarm for rape without outright saying the women were raped.

Deuteronomy 23:17-18 = Search Engine

Leviticus 20:1-27 = Search Engine/Longer version of something above.

Judges 19:1-30 = Specifcally 24-25. He gave his Concubine to some men and they quote "so the man took his concubine, and brought her forth unto them; and they knew her, and abused her all the night until the morning: and when the day began to spring, they let her go".

Then disgustingly enough, at 29 she get's cut up into 12 pieces and they get sent to different parts of Egypt.
Though the later part is just revolting, the earlier part is clear rape.
So an overall count gives us:

-Search Engine Glitches: 8
-Suggested but not Confirmed Rape: 5 (Note: This one includes the confirmed rape with the Dad. Listed here though since it seems more history recall than wanted by God, plus it's the same quote involving giving the daughters away to invaders).
-Confirmed Rape: 4
-Other Barbaric Things, but not Rape: 1

So that list didn't seem the most efficient, had it's hiccups. But there were a number of quotes that supported the point.
I'll note next time to grab the individual quotes rather than post the page overall. My apology for that, I figured it'd save stress and effort of finding them on your part by simply giving the link to the one page.

Otherwise, we got 4 cases of confirmed rape. Only one was needed to prove the Bible supports Rape.
At least if you go by the "The Bible is God's word, to reject any of his word is blasphemy" approach.

And 5 other cases strongly suggesting rape on top of that, a few are only not listed as confirmed rape if for the sake being objective.
But in most society and situations it is very safe to assume there was rape there, and God would of allowed/supported it.

Even with the Spoils of War argument being common practice.
This is very true, but that doesn't defend the act of rape in the first place. Rape is rape.
At the same time, it doesn't change the fact that this being the Bible would of been act's God would of had or at least allowed his followers to do.

So to address the last comment here:

Shy said
Again, stop just pulling quotes out without analyzing them.


The first time it's a case of not being a bible you yourself follow.
There are many bibles under Christianity, just because it's not your version specifically doesn't make my past argument or references invalid at all.
If that comment was directed at you specifically, and then you responded saying "Sorry, that's not my Bible, this is my Bible" then it'd be valid to tell me to try again.

But the first time was not directed at you specifically, so it did not need to tailor to the specific Bible you choose to go by.

As for this case, like said above. I was sending one link for convenience on both ends.
I've noted to not do this next time, and simply pull the individual quotes out of it. Even if it causes a bigger time to look over and a more cluttered post.
Plus, it had 4 quotes directly confirming and another 5 that strongly suggest it.

So it was hardly far off or unanalyzed.

Jorick said
This seems like a fun thread.


It is :P

*Also to note ahead of time: I agree 100% with what you said both to me and the others here.

Jorick said Woah woah woah, hold on there. Are you forgetting the foundational assumptions upon which science is built? Saying no assumptions are made is simply and objectively wrong. I'll list these assumptions so you can see what I mean.

1 - The universe is a real physical place. Pure objective no assumptions science only gets us as far as cogito ergo sum. Everything past that is an assumption.

2 - Human senses and tools to enhance them are reliable. We cannot know for absolute certainty that our senses are accurate, and we happen to know there are things we cannot naturally perceive (spectrum of light for instance), so we are assuming that we can actually gather objective data.

3 - Through observation and experimentation, we can understand and make predictions about the world around us. This is a combo of the above and the assumption that cause and effect is a real thing and that it's reliable and predictable with enough knowledge.

Without making those core assumptions, we cannot have science. We cannot know them to be true with objective certainty, thus they are assumptions. These assumptions being made are part of the root of why science is said to never be 100% objectively accurate: it's always possible that one of those core assumptions is false, thus invalidating everything we know as science.

It's easy to forget these are assumptions because we humans constantly make them in day to day life, but they are indeed assumptions. Just keep that in mind next time you want to say how science is better than religion due to supposed objectivity. I happen to agree that science is preferable due to its methodology, and I have many issues with religion and its methodology, but you've got to have intellectual integrity with this stuff and admit the failings of your preferred system if you wish to have a stable foundation upon which to build your arguments.


This is a good point that I had missed/not considered at all.
It is easy to forget that science is based on some assumptions such as we are observing all we need to.

So I will take back the science makes no assumptions argument.
But I will still stand by that it relies on proof and evidence, and adapts when proven wrong rather than argue it or label it as heresy.

Jorick said As a non-religious person, I can provide an answer to this that's rooted in science.

The basic biological imperative of all living things is to reproduce and pass on genetic material. This is the sole purpose of the existence of any living thing, the only purpose in life one can really derive from a purely scientific perspective, and this purpose is strongly enforced by things like the sex drive in humans and the migration of various animals to mating grounds during certain seasons. Homosexuality goes counter to this biological imperative because it cannot produce offspring, thus it is bad. If you want to go further with it, you can even say it's a non-beneficial mutation, just as would be a mutation that causes sterility, both being non-beneficial for the same reason.

Obviously (or I hope it's obvious, at least) this isn't a good justification for discrimination and whatnot. Our population numbers and technological advancements mean that some people not mating and producing offspring doesn't truly do any harm to the species. Someone else being homosexual doesn't do you any harm, so there's no point in giving a shit about it on a social or moral level. From the pure biological perspective it's bad, but fuck it, not really relevant to humans in this day and age.


Good point, though when I asked that question I was already aware of this potential answer.

I just figured it'd be better to let him list it as one before I replied.
It'd be pretty one sided if I debunked all the possible defenses he could of had before he even had a chance to reply.

But since you now brought it up, I'll give the response to it.
You've already given half of it, we're at a day and age it's not going to harm us anymore.
The other half is, we're already in an age where Gay Marriages and Legal Abortions are on the rise and we still have many children in orphanages without a family to support them.
We're already facing an abundance/over-population of children.

If anything more Gay Marriages means there are more children who will have a loving family, a home and a healthy upbringing.

Also if they truly wanted a biological child of their own, there are other means.
Surrogate mother/Sperm donor, simply having sex with another person for the purpose of a child (Not too common, but it happens).
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Tossing this into the mix to see how the different parties respond:

  • I see a lot of biblical referencing in this debate with people recounting stories/events in the Bible to prove if something is right or wrong. This leads to the following questions: If something is mentioned in the BIble, does that directly mean it is acceptable or unacceptable, considering some of these stories/events never actually comment on whether the act was good/bad? In other words, is it merely a historical event and just that or is it an example of what is/isn't allowable? Also something to consider is who committed the acts in each situation: was the person who did such things, like rape, supposed to be someone good or bad? To put it in biblical terms, does that fact that either a "saved" or "unsaved" person committed the act change anything?

  • I see that the statement that If someone acts a certain way, then it must mean that they thought it first. Therefore, thinking and doing are the same thing. ~~~ That said, does thinking one thing really equate to enacting that behavior? If someone has the thought of killing someone but never acts on it, are they still a murderer? What is murder without an actual, well, murder?

  • Not to mention, some Psychologists have theorized that personality can actually be changed under the right circumstances (source: http://thedianerehmshow.org/shows/2012-10-18/henry-kellerman-personality-how-it-forms; I suggest listening to the whole podcast), so if this theory is true, then is sexual orientation, if taken as a facet of personality, a valid argument against what a person is vs what they do? Does someone's mere actions dictate who they are as a whole, is it their thoughts only, is it both thought and behavior or is there more involved, especially if personality (which is defined as the pattern of thinking, feeling and behaving by the APA) can, in fact, be changed? To put it another way, if personality can change and sexual orientation is a part of personality, can the orientation be changed or not? Is it ultimately a choice? And if it is a choice, is that enough to say

  • On the topic of biblical theology and all that: First off, I notice most scriptural references are from the Old Testament, but wasn't some of the Old Testament, in terms of some of the rules in it, made null because of Jesus Christ? If this is true, what parts of it are still applicable and which ones are void?

  • As there are many Judeo-Christian denominations, doesn't the fact that there are so many different beliefs under the same religion make the religion unreliable? What makes one different from another? Is it the same God? The same religion? And related to this topic, what is the point of using different translations? If the BIble is supposed to be eternal and "God's word", then does believing in solely one translation prove that the previous claim is false? What makes on translation correct and not another? Are they all correct?

  • Since, according to the fundamental principles of evolution, the primary goal of any living species is to pass on the best genes for survival and reproduce (survival of the fittest and all that), and since Homosexuality is, in essence, a "mutation" (if it even is a mutation) that works against survival of the fittest, is that enough ground to discriminate against them from a strictly scientific perspective? What about from a moral one? In other words, can the argument be made that if Homosexuality is not compliant to evolution, it a deterrent to the advancement of the human race?



That should be enough to keep you guys thinking. Remember, in debate, the winner (if you can even claim there is a winner) is the one who debates the best. That does not mean they were persuasive. The point of Debate is not to persuade the other or to blatantly shoot someone down, but to effectively defend your own stance (like in English class). "Winning" (and that term is used loosely) does not mean you are correct, just as "losing" (also used loosely) doesn't mean you are wrong. Merely it is a competition of who can defend better, not attack. Overall, its really just a way to see other people's points of view and letting that affect you in whatever way it does, whether it makes you stronger in your original beliefs or adopt new ones.

-- -- --

Why, yes, I am a neutral observer. Oh, and yes, I did participate in Debate Club back in High School (not yet in University). Why, I do enjoy playing Devil's advocate for all parties. Thank you for noticing.
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Eh, I take it back. I don't know a polite way to keep disagreeing so I withdraw.
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Ichthys said I see a lot of biblical referencing in this debate with people recounting stories/events in the Bible to prove if something is right or wrong. This leads to the following questions: If something is mentioned in the BIble, does that directly mean it is acceptable or unacceptable, considering some of these stories/events never actually comment on whether the act was good/bad? In other words, is it merely a historical event and just that or is it an example of what is/isn't allowable? Also something to consider is who committed the acts in each situation: was the person who did such things, like rape, supposed to be someone good or bad? To put it in biblical terms, does that fact that either a "saved" or "unsaved" person committed the act change anything?


Depend's on what you consider acceptable.
There some people who would respond "It's the word of God, of course it's acceptable!", and others who may look at it and go "I don't think this is acceptable".

Also all the cases involving acts such as rape, slavery, homophobia so far have all been stuff either God directly told his followers to do, or were something his followers did on Gods behalf (and God did nothing to stop it, or punish said followers after. Meaning he approved of it or simply didn't care) outside of the one case with the daughters and their dad, which seemed more of a historical telling.

So considering that it was Gods followers doing these things with orders, blessings or simply no consequence it's safe to say that the Bible allows you to commit these acts. So from a 100% Christian/Gods Word point of view, those are acceptable acts.

From another's perspective?
I really hope I don't need to say.

Ichthys said I see that the statement that If someone acts a certain way, then it must mean that they thought it first. Therefore, thinking and doing are the same thing. ~~~ That said, does thinking one thing really equate to enacting that behavior? If someone has the thought of killing someone but never acts on it, are they still a murderer? What is murder without an actual, well, murder?


This is a philosophical question, therefore no easy answer generally.

I would personally rule no, everyone has dark thoughts at times. That doesn't mean we actually go ahead and commit them or that we should now be treated the same. I mean we've all probably that time where someone was so much on your nerves that you think to yourself "I could kill you right now", or look at something we really wanted and thought "I wish I could take that...", but we don't actually do it.

There's actually a theory based on this called the Iceberg Theory (It does have some other names too. Iceberg is a popular one though), where it describes three parts of your mind. The ID, the Ego and the Super Ego.

Your ID is your basic wants and desires. It's the side of your mind that goes "I want to take that, I want this. We should punch this annoying jerk square in the Jaw".
Your Ego is your rational side, it evaluates your surroundings and recognizes complication's and issues such as "If I took this, the alarm would go off. If I punch this guy in the Jaw, he'll break my spine".
Your Super Ego is your balancing factor and moral factor (It's been taught to me by several different teachers in school. Each described it a bit differently). It basically tries to satisfy your ID while listening to the Ego and also uses factors like "This is wrong, I shouldn't do this".

Ichthys said Not to mention, some Psychologists have theorized that personality can actually be changed under the right circumstances (source: http://thedianerehmshow.org/shows/2012-10-18/henry-kellerman-personality-how-it-forms; I suggest listening to the whole podcast), so if this theory is true, then is sexual orientation, if taken as a facet of personality, a valid argument against what a person is vs what they do? Does someone's mere actions dictate who they are as a whole, is it their thoughts only, is it both thought and behavior or is there more involved, especially if personality (which is defined as the pattern of thinking, feeling and behaving by the APA) can, in fact, be changed? To put it another way, if personality can change and sexual orientation is a part of personality, can the orientation be changed or not? Is it ultimately a choice? And if it is a choice, is that enough to say


That link only leads to a 200 page long paper from what I could find.
If there is a podcast there I didn't see it. :(

Hypothetically, if Orientation was a personality aspect then yes it could be changed, like any other personality aspect.

However, that's not the case (Cntrl F "Gene" if you want to find the piece on it quickly).

So to answer the rest anyways, since it can still apply to other things.
I'm a big supporter of the saying "It's not who I am underneath, but what I do that defines me".
This could easily be wrong mind you, I don't claim to be an expert on the thoughts vs actions topic.

Basically, I find that deep down you may want to be someone else. Or wish you had another characteristic.
Like for example with myself, I wish I was able to be more clear, concise and affirmative in my dialog in person.
I get quiet and/or miss-word what I mean to say quite commonly.
But I'm not, so as much as I think to myself that I may be this way, or wish I could be, it's not going to make it true.

Could it change for me? Yes, but it would take a lot of practice, effort and some luck to pull off.
For another example.

Let's say you find a child outside in the snow, he's freezing and doesn't have a coat on while waiting for the bus (It's going to be a while). But you have a perfectly good coat on you, what do you do?

Almost all people here would want to say "I'd take my coat off and put in on the child", but not all the people who say that they would will actually end up doing it if in that situation. Those who actually do the action of giving the coat to the child will be people demonstrating a higher capability to be kind and selfless towards others than those who may want to help, but keep their coat on themselves cause they would get cold otherwise.

Or maybe an example that may be a bit harder to make.
You're loved one or a close friend/family member is about to die, and not a painless death either.
Their death will be decently long and painful, and let's say hypothetically the one way to stop it is for you to take their place, will you?
Whatever happens I think we can all agree, we will recognize and see those who do make the switch as kinder and braver people than those who let the loved one die so they themselves don't have to.

So basically TLDR: Being Homosexual is genetic, so it's not something they could choose on.
But for the question of is it just thought, just action or both that makes someone?
I rule it's far more based on action that it is based on thought.

Ichthys said On the topic of biblical theology and all that: First off, I notice most scriptural references are from the Old Testament, but wasn't some of the Old Testament, in terms of some of the rules in it, made null because of Jesus Christ? If this is true, what parts of it are still applicable and which ones are void?


It's iffy, in the Bible Jesus mention's new rules and laws to lead the people with.
But it's not fully clear in a 100% precise manner if that means ditching the Old Testament or not.
That it does seems to be a popular belief, and honestly I can't blame them. Who wants to relate to a Religion today that supports rape, slavery, sexism etc?

It's like one of those 5 bible passages listed above about where the Bible supports rape where I had to rule "It could be suggesting it, but with the way it's worded it's difficult to tell for sure". The stuff about forgetting the Old Testament seems the same way.

Now, as to what is still applicable and what is not?
With it being unclear, it could go either way.

And with all the different denominations of Christianity it is certainly possible for some to claim that the Old Testament still applies, and for others to claim it doesn't.
But this just get's complicated (especially when a debate pops up against a non-Christian) cause technically speaking the Bible is Christianity. It's where all the religions laws and rules come from, it is their Gods word. If they are ignoring it, what exactly is there left to be calling them a Christian?

And with the matter that the Old Testament still being in effect or not, not being 100% clear can cause both sides of it to be accused of "You're ignoring the Bible, how are you a Christian?".

So Long story short, it's hard to say.
But what I can say, you would have to accept all of the Old Testament, or none of it.

Cause either Jesus re-wrote it so it's none of it is relevant, or he didn't and it's still in effect.
To only take the Old Testament parts you want... it's cherry picking.
And the second you start to decide what parts of your religion you want to believe in or follow, is when you need to look at it again and ask yourself "Is this still Christianity? Or what I want it to be?".

Ichthys said As there are many Judeo-Christian denominations, doesn't the fact that there are so many different beliefs under the same religion make the religion unreliable? What makes one different from another? Is it the same God? The same religion? And related to this topic, what is the point of using different translations? If the BIble is supposed to be eternal and "God's word", then does believing in solely one translation prove that the previous claim is false? What makes on translation correct and not another? Are they all correct?


Thunderf00t made a very good video about this. Skip to 5:30 to get to the main point on this topic.

Essentially if they were meant to be the same thing in agreement they wouldn't be separate denominations to begin with.
Also Christianity wasn't the first or original Religion.

It came from other religions that were far older than it.
So for all intents and purposes. the whole of Christianity is one giant denomination of another Religion.
A denomination that happens to have many denominations within it as well (Denomception huh? :P).

Different Translations exist for different reasoning. But generally it amounts to, people didn't like the way Christianity was going. May it be a belief disagreement, not liking a certain rule, wanting a certain rule, adding of quotes, removing of quotes, discovery of removed quotes and putting them back in, translation error's etc. So people argue over which is correct, sometimes to the point where if you don't do it in their translation they discount your entire point.

Kind of like how Shy responded to quotes showing Christianity as Homophobic and claiming it to be false/bad evidence because it wasn't of the Translation that Shy personally chooses to follow.

Now as to which is actually correct? First we need to be under the assumption that Christianity is the right religion, and not one of the many others in the world, or that no religion is in fact correct.
Being atheist, my stance is none of them are correct. All have shown conflicts and none of shown proper evidence to give any good reason to follow it.

But for the hypothetical question, let's assume that Christianity somehow was the true Religion. There's still the matter of translation, and honestly I've never seen a single argument proving one better than another that wasn't basically them having faith, or God saying so. So sadly, they're all at one giant stalemate. They'd need historical proof or Gods divine intervention to establish one as true.

I think the safest assumption to be made in this hypothetical though would be that none of them are 100% correct. All got pieces of it right, but never the whole picture and it would have to be a matter if fitting all the right pieces back together again.

Ichthys said Since, according to the fundamental principles of evolution, the primary goal of any living species is to pass on the best genes for survival and reproduce (survival of the fittest and all that), and since Homosexuality is, in essence, a "mutation" (if it even is a mutation) that works against survival of the fittest, is that enough ground to discriminate against them from a strictly scientific perspective? What about from a moral one? In other words, can the argument be made that if Homosexuality is not compliant to evolution, it a deterrent to the advancement of the human race?


To which I have to ask in response "If we found proof that one race was better at surviving than another, would it warrant discrimination against the others?".
We know there are already some genetic differences between races of humans, differences which would play a role in surviving in the wild.

Plus let's consider the fact we are also in modern day society, would any of these even be relevant for today?
And also let's say hypothetically somehow all of humanity became homosexual. Do you think they would allow for there to simply be no kids and for the human race to go extinct?

Probably not, they would organize and breed for the sake of survival. Homosexuality doesn't make you unable to have children, it just makes it so you may be attracted to certain individuals who you may not be able to make children with.

Lastly as far as Homosexuality and Evolution is concerned.

Richard Dawkins gives some good points on how the Gay gene could of been passed during the generations.
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Ichthys said I see a lot of biblical referencing in this debate with people recounting stories/events in the Bible to prove if something is right or wrong. This leads to the following questions: If something is mentioned in the BIble, does that directly mean it is acceptable or unacceptable, considering some of these stories/events never actually comment on whether the act was good/bad? In other words, is it merely a historical event and just that or is it an example of what is/isn't allowable? Also something to consider is who committed the acts in each situation: was the person who did such things, like rape, supposed to be someone good or bad? To put it in biblical terms, does that fact that either a "saved" or "unsaved" person committed the act change anything?


This point depends on the assumption that the bible is a historically accurate piece of literature. It is not. There may be certain parts of it which are historically accurate, but the vast majority of it is most certainly and indisputable not from an archeological account. Examples are too numerous to count casually, but major points like the great flood failing to be recorded by the rest of the world, other empires continuing on unabated during said flood, the lack of evidence that Sodom and Gomorrah ever existed to begin with, the lack of mention of Jewish slaves in Egypt or their subsequent escape, plagues, deaths of first born children, etc, in Egyptian history...

Basically the bible is, at best, fantasy fiction. At worst, a perfect example of how history is written by the victors. (Note a lot of black and white conflicts, one side is deliberately evil, the other righteous and good.)

Not to mention the bible does have god supporting some pretty heinous characters. Samson is given super strength, but his only quality was to murder people for the slightest provocations. So the bible is not a good book from which to derive morality, unless you cherry pick, which is what everyone who isn't completely insane does.

I mentioned to Gwazi that pulling quotes from the bible is pointless because you can use the book to support any argument from any perspective. When I was younger and more passionate an arguer I even used it to support the idea that the bible is a book that glorifies violence and rape, and I ended up having to limit myself to just ten quotations because holy shit there is a lot of violence and rape perpetrated by the characters supported by god, sent by god, or even by god himself. It's a very violent book. If it was a movie it would be rated R for restricted and would probably be banned in most of the civilized world. :p

Ichthys said I see that the statement that If someone acts a certain way, then it must mean that they thought it first. Therefore, thinking and doing are the same thing. ~~~ That said, does thinking one thing really equate to enacting that behavior? If someone has the thought of killing someone but never acts on it, are they still a murderer? What is murder without an actual, well, murder?


No. Drawing that conclusion is insane. Why did you even ask, this is merely an inflammatory remark gazed up to ask for trouble. What kind of debate school did you attend, ACME?

Thinking is the process by which human thought is formed.

Action is a perpetrated act in the world.

There are two kinds of human actions: Voluntary and involuntary. A voluntary action is one committed by a person who has put the thought to it first. For instance: If I am hungry, I can perpetrate a series of actions to create sustenance. I can then perpetrate the series of actions necessary to consume that food. An involuntary action is subconscious and goes on independent of whether you are thinking about it or not, such as flinching away from a sudden movement, instinctively putting your arms up in front of a cougar who has you pinned to stop it from attacking more vital points on your body, breathing, your heart beat, etc.

I just thought I would explain this to you, as you obviously and plainly do not understand what an action or a thought is, and how they are separate, distinct things. A person can have a thought without acting upon it (often referred to as inner monologue, imagination, daydreaming, etc) and a person can act without having formed the thought to do so first. This is very basic human psychology that you must blatantly not understand to ask this question, even jokingly or from a point of Devil's Advocacy, and I hope you learn it soon, because it's a basic life skill.

Ichthys said Not to mention, some Psychologists have theorized that personality can actually be changed under the right circumstances (source: http://thedianerehmshow.org/shows/2012-10-18/henry-kellerman-personality-how-it-forms; I suggest listening to the whole podcast), so if this theory is true, then is sexual orientation, if taken as a facet of personality, a valid argument against what a person is vs what they do? Does someone's mere actions dictate who they are as a whole, is it their thoughts only, is it both thought and behavior or is there more involved, especially if personality (which is defined as the pattern of thinking, feeling and behaving by the APA) can, in fact, be changed? To put it another way, if personality can change and sexual orientation is a part of personality, can the orientation be changed or not? Is it ultimately a choice? And if it is a choice, is that enough to say


The point of offering a quotation or piece of evidence is to summarize the point it's making, not ask the audience to then listen to the entire thing you just linked to support the argument you're making in a more condensed form. You shouldn't have to ask them to do that, it's childish.

You're prefacing this question based on an assumption that blatantly isn't true: That sexual orientation is a personality trait is simply and irrevocable false. Sexual orientation is a biological function wired in at birth. Every piece of scientific, biological evidence we have on the subject supports this. It's the foundation for modern theory. A single podcast on the Internet (which wouldn't rate highly as a source in a university level essay by the way) wouldn't be able to even chip a tiny piece out of that mountain of data.

Simply: To tell a homosexual to stop being homosexual is in the same vein of futility and bigotry that telling a black person to stop being black or a woman to stop being a woman is. To support this kind of thinking is disgraceful.

Now please stop prefacing questions on untrue assumptions so I can actually try answering one without laughing at how preposterous it is.

Ichthys said On the topic of biblical theology and all that: First off, I notice most scriptural references are from the Old Testament, but wasn't some of the Old Testament, in terms of some of the rules in it, made null because of Jesus Christ? If this is true, what parts of it are still applicable and which ones are void?


That's the entire field of theology in a nutshell, and depending on your denomination of Christianity it can mean anything. Seriously there are hundreds of denominations that all disagree on at least one point from each other, but that doesn't stop some hatemongering bigots from using certain scripture in the bible to dehumanize various groups of people around the world. Now this doesn't mean the bible is evil: It means the people who are scapegoating it for their hatred are evil. That's all.

Ichthys said As there are many Judeo-Christian denominations, doesn't the fact that there are so many different beliefs under the same religion make the religion unreliable? What makes one different from another? Is it the same God? The same religion? And related to this topic, what is the point of using different translations? If the BIble is supposed to be eternal and "God's word", then does believing in solely one translation prove that the previous claim is false? What makes on translation correct and not another? Are they all correct?


This is actually multiple questions at once so I'll answer from the Atheistic perspective and leave any other answers to those of their own beliefs.

Q1: Yes. Duh.
Q2: Stupid disagreements on whether something is literal or metaphorical and how important or unimportant it is. Sometimes there are disagreements about things that aren't even in the fucking book. It's like an even nerdier version of the Star Trek fan base debating whether Voyager really should be considered part of the overall canon or not.
Q3: Yes. Even a cursory glance should tell you that.
Q4: Yes. They're all Christian. If they weren't, they would be self-classified as a new religion, such as Islam, which came out of Christianity. This is also common sense.
Q5: Because different translations can say different things about certain passages, and because arguments of validity between various editions and so on and so forth. Basically nerds debating which version of Microsoft Flight Simulator is the best version.
Q6: This is illogical nonsense, it proves nothing more than that person A believes MS Flight Simulator VII is superior to VIII. That doesn't then somehow mean that the entire thing is absolutely true, to them it is, but they might take certain passages metaphorically or believe that God had certain passages written to fit the needs of the time period and that they don't count anymore, and etc. I'm serious you really need to work on how you draw conclusions, they're terrible.
Q7: Personal opinion.
Q8: Depends on the definition of correct. I'm sure the ones who think their version is the best version think it's the correct one to use.

Ichthys said Since, according to the fundamental principles of evolution, the primary goal of any living species is to pass on the best genes for survival and reproduce (survival of the fittest and all that), and since Homosexuality is, in essence, a "mutation" (if it even is a mutation) that works against survival of the fittest, is that enough ground to discriminate against them from a strictly scientific perspective? What about from a moral one? In other words, can the argument be made that if Homosexuality is not compliant to evolution, it a deterrent to the advancement of the human race?


There is no goal. You don't get it, so I'll explain it to you.

The only purpose of life is to be. Evolution does not have a goal. It's a process by which natural changes occur within a species, and gradually over time these changes stack up to cause the species to become a new species. The mutations are truly and damnable random: The ones that are beneficial tend to replicate themselves better and thus stay while the ones that are detrimental tend to replicate themselves less and die off.

Homosexuality is a mutation, yes. Because reproduction itself was a mutation. Asexual reproduction of cells was how it started. We didn't do the whole male-female thing until several hundred/thousand versions later, I believe in the multicellular era is when it started being a thing... Hang on, let me do five minutes of reference material here... Lets see...

Wikipedia said In the eukaryotic fossil record, sexual reproduction first appeared by 1200 million years ago in the Proterozoic Eon.[49]


*Click, click*

Oh look, a scientific source! That wasn't hard.

Speaking from a strictly scientific perspective, sex is a horrible inefficient manner in which to propagate genes. Genetic manipulation and Eugenics would be the way to go if we were speaking from a strictly immoral standpoint, sexuality be damned, it would be entirely irrelevant to the equation of creating healthier, more efficient bodies to do tasks.

From a moral standpoint it's dependent on your set of morals. If we're speaking from the typical western standpoint on morality, which is individualist in nature and believes in the inherent value of a person, then it's incredible immoral to bar homosexuals from doing what it is they wish with each other and themselves, to direct the course of their own lives. For biblical times it made some sense. Nowadays it makes no sense. :p

No. It is not in any way, shape, or form, a deterrent to the human race for two very, brutally simple reasons.

#1: There are hundreds of species on the planet that exhibit homosexual behaviour, that range from thriving and successful populations to rare and struggling populations. In other words, homosexuality is not only common, but has little to no bearing on the successful survival of a species. Reproduction cycles, how long children are vulnerable and infantile, how much energy is expended in the process, etc, are far more prevalent factors to consider, as are natural predators and food sources, vulnerability to diseases, life span, virulence of the species' climate adaption, etc.

#2: Humanity has evolved past natural evolution. We use medicine and societal developments to do such things, we're literally right around the corner on a GATTACA-type future. For the first time in Earth's history a species has the potential capacity to chart its own biological, evolutionary course.

Period.

Seriously our technological progress is vastly superior in speed to that of evolution's progress. :p
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Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by Jorick
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Jorick Magnificent Bastard

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Ichthys said Tossing this into the mix to see how the different parties respond:


To preface this post I want to note that I agree with Brovo that a lot of these questions are based on false assumptions and are thus quite flawed, but since he's already covered that angle I'll just play along and answer the questions rather than focusing on why I dislike some of them. Actually, after finishing and posting this, I realized that's not very true and I do talk about why some of the questions are bad. Whoops.

Ichthys said I see a lot of biblical referencing in this debate with people recounting stories/events in the Bible to prove if something is right or wrong. This leads to the following questions: If something is mentioned in the BIble, does that directly mean it is acceptable or unacceptable, considering some of these stories/events never actually comment on whether the act was good/bad? In other words, is it merely a historical event and just that or is it an example of what is/isn't allowable? Also something to consider is who committed the acts in each situation: was the person who did such things, like rape, supposed to be someone good or bad? To put it in biblical terms, does that fact that either a "saved" or "unsaved" person committed the act change anything?


The only context in which the Bible quoting is valid for determination of right or wrong is when you're talking to someone who thinks it is a book of literal truth and the word of God and so forth. To any other believer, and to any non-believer, it is very simple to cast down such things by saying "but that's just allegory to illustrate a point" or something similar. So in the broadest sense, no, no story in the Bible directly shows why something is acceptable or not, regardless of whether they are blessed or a random schmuck, and regardless of whether or not they are punished for whatever they do. You can pick and choose things that exemplify a reasonable morality system from the book, but using it as an actual rulebook is extremely flawed if you think it to be absolute truth.

Now, in the context of someone who believes the Bible is divine law, the questions do need to be answered individually. When something happens in the Bible, if you assume it to be divinely inspired or maybe even the direct word of your deity, then any indication of approval or any order from God to do a thing means that it is an approved behavior. There's certainly leeway for the recording of history idea, but then again why wouldn't God smite the sinners if they were truly acting against his wishes? This is especially true in the Old Testament, where he was very active in the whole smiting and punishment thing. You can totally bypass those conundrums as a true believer though, simply decide their punishment came from eternal hellfire so God didn't have to bother doing stuff, no big deal. But when you have instances of orders direct from God or from his chosen messengers saying to go murder heathens, or adulterers, or those who break the Sabbath, or kids who make fun of bald guys, well, that's pretty clearly an approval of murder in those circumstances. So I would say that to one who believes the Bible is literal truth, yes, anything given as a direct rule or law or order to commit a horrible act can indeed be seen as good and just act regardless of the laws of man, because they would feel that the laws of God supersede them. Saying otherwise would be to contradict the supposedly infallible truth of the Bible, after all.

I could go on a bit of a diatribe about how this is ridiculous, but I see a question a little further on dealing with the supposed divinity of the Bible that would be a better place for it.

Ichthys said I see that the statement that If someone acts a certain way, then it must mean that they thought it first. Therefore, thinking and doing are the same thing. ~~~ That said, does thinking one thing really equate to enacting that behavior? If someone has the thought of killing someone but never acts on it, are they still a murderer? What is murder without an actual, well, murder?


I think you're getting this idea from a misunderstanding of previous points made in this thread. Shy said that anti-homosexual quotes (listed by Magic Magnum) in the Bible were in fact condemning homosexual acts, not homosexual people. I then responded by saying that, when it comes to sexuality, having a particular sexuality is inextricably tied to acts of expression of that sexuality, thus condemning one is as good as condemning others; an analogy to this is that if someone thinks eating meat is murder and thus evil, then those who eat meat are also evil because they do the evil thing. This was in no way and from no person a point saying thoughts are equal to actions, it was about whether or not condemning an action is equal to condemning the person who commits the act.

The short answer to your posed questions is that no, a thought is not equal to an action. Thinking of murder, no matter how detailed the thought is, does not make you a murderer.

Ichthys said Not to mention, some Psychologists have theorized that personality can actually be changed under the right circumstances (source: http://thedianerehmshow.org/shows/2012-10-18/henry-kellerman-personality-how-it-forms; I suggest listening to the whole podcast), so if this theory is true, then is sexual orientation, if taken as a facet of personality, a valid argument against what a person is vs what they do? Does someone's mere actions dictate who they are as a whole, is it their thoughts only, is it both thought and behavior or is there more involved, especially if personality (which is defined as the pattern of thinking, feeling and behaving by the APA) can, in fact, be changed? To put it another way, if personality can change and sexual orientation is a part of personality, can the orientation be changed or not? Is it ultimately a choice? And if it is a choice, is that enough to say


Brovo already covered the "yeah no, sexuality is heavily linked to genetics things" argument, which is very solid, so I'll take another angle here.

Personality is complex enough that it's impossible to peg down "who a person is" with just thoughts or just actions. Both of them together is what makes up a person's personality, so looking at one or the either is horribly limiting. Trying to determine exactly what makes up a person's personality is made even harder due to the fact that it is changeable. Psychological studies are all well and good, but you can find examples of changes in personality in everyday life, though admittedly they make up anecdotal evidence at best. Some people behave very differently after experiencing a major loss; some people think very differently after delving into the world of philosophy; some people change over the years (adult years, formative years are volatile enough with changes that they're not worth focusing on) without any major paradigm shift in their life. The very nature of personality being so complex is what makes it possible to change, because ways of thinking can be changed with new information and behaviors can be modified (extensive psychological research on this has been done, so much so that there's a special psychological term for it: conditioning), thus altering the overall picture of personality that is comprised of thoughts and behaviors.

Now, assuming that sexuality is a part of personality just like any other (which I do not agree with, but for the sake of the argument I'll work with it), this would mean that it could hypothetically be changed. I say hypothetically because this is not a sure thing; for instance, just because it is possible to condition someone into being extremely aggressive does not mean it will actually work in practice, or that the conditioned behavior will not fade away after it stops being reinforced. Even so, let's say it's really possible, that someone came up with a perfect sexuality reprogramming method. Now we get into the topic of choice, which is where things get far more hazy.

Is something truly a choice if that is just how your personality works? Let's take a look at instincts for an analogy: say your instinctual response to being threatened is to run away from the danger (the flight side of fight or flight); if someone pulls a knife on you and you run, did you truly choose to run away? If there was no conscious decision making going on, if your body went on auto-pilot and you ran, was it truly a choice? I would say no. Personality things work very much in the same way. If your response to someone being rude to you, based upon your personality, is to shrug it off and pay it no heed, it is generally done as an automatic response rather than something you consciously think about. So if someone calls you a mean name and you shrug it off as usual, did you make that choice? Again, I would say no. The word "choice" implies that something was selected from a number of alternatives, but when it comes to most facets of personality, just as with instincts, there is very rarely any kind of thought put into it that would merit calling it a choice. Sexuality works this way as well: there is no conscious thought, no choice made, in who or what you are attracted to.

With the question of change brought into it, since you can choose to undergo conditioning to change a facet of your personality, does that make all of your natural personality driven actions a choice because an alternative exists? Yet again, I would say no, because choice implies that conscious thought and decision making goes into each instance of your thoughts or actions. If you were to undergo therapy to make your neutral mood reaction to rudeness instead be to snap at the offender and be rude to them in turn, I would then say responses of such a nature done without conscious thought are still not choices. Saying that thoughts or actions driven by your personality are choices just because they can be changed would be like saying I chose to have black hair because dyes exist. I may be consciously making the choice not to change it, but that does not mean my having black hair is in fact a choice. I have a beard and choose not to use any of the various methods to remove it, but that does not mean the fact that I grow facial hair is a choice (even when taking into consideration the laser surgery that can be done to prevent hair growth). Just because alternatives exist does not mean the default thing is automatically a choice. Personality is the same, sexuality is the same; even if it's hypothetically possible to change them, that does not mean you are making a choice every time you do something based on your personality or sexuality.

That argument would have been far stronger if I also included the stuff about how sexuality is far more hardwired that personality, but I made the conscious choice not to go down that road because Brovo had already used it.

Ichthys said On the topic of biblical theology and all that: First off, I notice most scriptural references are from the Old Testament, but wasn't some of the Old Testament, in terms of some of the rules in it, made null because of Jesus Christ? If this is true, what parts of it are still applicable and which ones are void?


There are a few answers to this, an as with the first question it very much depends on who is doing the answering. Atheists like myself would say none of it is true and thus none of it should really be applied to modern life. Jews would say this Jesus fellow was mistaken the Torah is still where it's at. Muslims would say whatever agrees with the Quran is accurate and the rest is lies. Other answers are more interesting.

For a true Christian, meaning one who follows the word of Jesus Christ above all other prophets, the answer should be that almost none of the Old Testament is actually applicable nowadays. Earlier in the thread, mdk linked a passage that's rather important to this: Jesus said the two most important laws were to love God and to love your neighbor as yourself. Logically, if those are the two most important things according to Jesus, anything that goes counter to that is no longer applicable. Everything in the Old Testament about killing people for breaking the Sabbath or eating pork or wearing clothes of mixed cloth is totally out, because you wouldn't want to be killed for such silly nonsense. Honestly, so far as one truly following the teachings of Jesus should be concerned, nothing in the Old Testament actually need apply unless he specifically said that it did. Dude was pretty chill about rules though, just said that people should love God and be good to one another, and so a Christian that's all about the Christ part of their religion really needn't bother with the stuff that came before him.

For Christians as they are in reality, the sad truth is that cherry picking is the case. They don't even follow a lot of what Jesus said about not being judgmental assholes, about giving to the poor, and about that whole golden rule thing of treating others as you would want to be treated. When it comes to Old Testament, they tend to go with whatever their local clergyman or their social circle says is the stuff that matters. Slavery being totally cool in the Old Testament? Nah, archaic stuff, doesn't count now. No mixed fabrics? Pfft. No pork? Hahaha, really funny old misled guys who wrote that part, I'm keeping my bacon and ham, thanks. Condemnations of homosexuality? Sure, why not, let's keep those bits. It's a total crap shoot, no real rhyme or reason.

For Christians who say the Bible is the absolute truth, well, they should be following most of the Old Testament stuff. They can wiggle around some things by saying that it was just a historical account of how things were or that it was only ever meant to apply to a particular city or group of people, but in reality it comes down to the same cherry picking. From what I've seen, they just seem to be more favorable about pulling various things from the Old Testament than the Christians who don't believe the Bible to be infallible. It's the same nonsense methodology in both cases though.

Ichthys said As there are many Judeo-Christian denominations, doesn't the fact that there are so many different beliefs under the same religion make the religion unreliable? What makes one different from another? Is it the same God? The same religion? And related to this topic, what is the point of using different translations? If the BIble is supposed to be eternal and "God's word", then does believing in solely one translation prove that the previous claim is false? What makes on translation correct and not another? Are they all correct?


Well yeah, that's one of the things that makes it unreliable. If you had a mathematical formula to solve a simple algebra equations and it gave you tens of thousands of possible answers, you'd probably call it unreliable. Same goes with the various denominations, the very fact that there are so many variations means that the religion is essentially useless if you're trying to find the right answer. Their differences range from major issues like papal authority or which books and translation of the Bible to use to minor ones like interpretations of certain passages or matters of ceremony. Some denominations are so similar that it seems pointless for them to even be separate. It's all ostensibly the same God and religion, but then again, if you have two identical make and model cars but they each have a different stereo system, are they really the same car? If you believe in the religious stuff you'd probably say they're all worshipping the same God in different ways, but as an atheist I'd say they've modified the character to suit their own purposes so it's kind of like pondering whether a character from a certain TV show is the same exact character when they're written into a fanfic where they do things they never would on the show.

Now, for the stuff about the Bible, this is the perfect place for that diatribe I mentioned at the end of the first set of questions. That part about the Bible being God's word? Yeah, that's not a real thing. The book itself doesn't even claim to be so in most translations. Some stuff claims to be divinely inspired, but those are isolated incidents. There is nothing in there that says "God said all of this book is true." That was an addition to Christian dogma in the 1700s, after the scientific advancements of the Enlightenment, when some theologians started to question whether or not the Bible was actual literal truth. Before then, the explanation for varying interpretations and translations was that the word of God was infinite and could take as many forms as he saw fit. Strictly allegorical interpretations of the Bible in earlier times were just as accepted in theological circles as traditional interpretations that so and so laws should be followed else punishment happens. It was all about the interpretation, which remains the truth today. The whole "the Bible is God's divine word and law" shtick is very new, and very strange considering that the book itself never makes the claim.

In my personal opinion, varying translations and interpretations are all of equal value and validity, just the same as varying interpretations or translations of any other piece of classic fiction. For religious people, the folks who don't see the Bible as literal truth should probably see the variances as cool new interpretations that all may or may not have value, because aside from those core things of loving God and not being a dick, whatever they take from the Bible is done through interpretation to begin with. This, like the issue of what is right or wrong in the Bible, is only an actual issue for those who believe that it is the literal word of God and that it is a purely accurate historical account of the world. For them, the issue of translation is a major problem, because if something changes from the original then it has changed the word of God and thus made it inaccurate. Well, I should clarify that: it should be a major problem for them, but in my experience they tend to just say that whatever version they grew up with is the right one. I'm sure there are some out there who research different translations and actually make a decision about which one is right, and good for them for not being lazy about it, but they are a small minority as far as I'm aware.

Ichthys said Since, according to the fundamental principles of evolution, the primary goal of any living species is to pass on the best genes for survival and reproduce (survival of the fittest and all that), and since Homosexuality is, in essence, a "mutation" (if it even is a mutation) that works against survival of the fittest, is that enough ground to discriminate against them from a strictly scientific perspective? What about from a moral one? In other words, can the argument be made that if Homosexuality is not compliant to evolution, it a deterrent to the advancement of the human race?


Er, evolution doesn't have a goal, actually. I know Brovo already explained this, but I feel compelled to do so anyway. Evolution explains how changes in living things occur over time, that's all. It does not outline any goal; there is no perfect version of an animal that is being worked toward with successive generations. The concept of survival of the fittest is not that the species tries to pass on the best genes for survival, it's that those with the best chance to survive and reproduce are more likely to do so, and that those varying chances are derived from genetic mutations. Darwin's famous example with finches was that longer and thinner beaks were best for getting bugs from the trees in their area. This didn't mean that the birds had a little huddle and decided to go for some finch eugenics to promote long and thin beaks, it means those that happened to have mutations that caused longer and thinner beaks were less likely to starve and more likely to be able to feed their offspring, thus their genes had a greater chance to be passed on than those from birds with less beneficial mutations. Over many generations in a limited gene pool, this causes a population to slowly change toward having this trait that happens to suit their environment. The goal of the finches was not to have cool beaks, they were just doing the normal animal thing of surviving and mating, and mutations and their environment took care of the rest. Okay, lecture over, on to the questions.

From a strictly scientific perspective, particularly a biological perspective, homosexuality is grounds for discrimination in theory, yeah. In practice, the only thing that should actually take homosexuality into account in biological matters is genetically guided reproduction. If at some point in the future some population of humans were to decide to give eugenics a go with a program where they force being to get together and have kids based on their genes, then sure, I'd say it'd be reasonable for them to say homosexuals aren't desirable for their reproduction program if the goal is to better the gene pool of humanity, since homosexuality goes counter to the whole mating part of the program. Ironically enough, this could be a good thing for homosexuals because they likely wouldn't want to go through with the forced reproduction program thing anyway. However, if it were done with fully artificial insemination, and maybe even artificial wombs instead of making the women actually be pregnant because fuck it why not use cool science things, then sexuality would actually be irrelevant. Those who run the eugenics program would probably actually see homosexuality as a good thing, because then there's less risk of the people with good genes going and having unauthorized babies with someone who has bad genes. Aside from hypothetical eugenics programs though, no, there's nothing in science that would actually care about homosexuality or warrant discrimination against homosexuals.

From a moral perspective, no. First off, most morality systems tend to say that you should be nice to people regardless of who they are. Discriminating (in the negative treatment meaning of the word) against any group at all sounds pretty immoral to me. Secondly, why would this mutation be grounds for moral choices? You may as well base your morality on hair or eye color for all such a morality system would be worth. Finally, morality tends to be about your own actions and what is good or bad for you to do. If a morality system says hurting and hating people is bad, there shouldn't be any caveats just because the person is Asian or homosexual or has green eyes. A moral code based on treating others based on their physical or sexual or mental characteristics is pretty fucked up.

If homosexuality actually were a deterrent to the continuance (biologically and genetically) or advancement (a word I would only use in terms of science and technology, as applying it to genetics makes it sound like there's some end goal or that evolution always makes things bigger or stronger or smarter, which are both false) of humanity, we would have far bigger problems than homosexuality to deal with. See, as we are now with over 7 billion people living today all over the world in all manner of environments with science and technology advancing just fine, a small minority of the population being homosexual isn't a problem. If something happened tomorrow that made half of the world's population homosexual, big deal, the human race would be fine. Artificial insemination is as reliable (if not more so) as trying the natural method of baby making, and given the general worldwide hatred for homosexuality many of those people would go on through their life denying it or pretending to be straight (see the various conservative male politicians in the US and elsewhere who have a wife and kids and then are caught screwing a dude and then admit they're actually gay for a high profile example of this in action), so there probably wouldn't be much of a dip in the population of the next couple generations. Being gay doesn't prevent someone from contributing to the science and technology fields, so no problem there at all. The only way we might get to a point where homosexuality is an actual threat to the survival of humanity would be if there's some apocalyptic event that wipes out the vast majority of all humans, and at that point we'd probably be more concerned about the survival thing than we would be about forcing people to make babies. In this day and age there is absolutely zero harm done to humanity by someone being homosexual, end of story.

Ichthys said That should be enough to keep you guys thinking. Remember, in debate, the winner (if you can even claim there is a winner) is the one who debates the best. That does not mean they were persuasive. The point of Debate is not to persuade the other or to blatantly shoot someone down, but to effectively defend your own stance (like in English class). "Winning" (and that term is used loosely) does not mean you are correct, just as "losing" (also used loosely) doesn't mean you are wrong. Merely it is a competition of who can defend better, not attack. Overall, its really just a way to see other people's points of view and letting that affect you in whatever way it does, whether it makes you stronger in your original beliefs or adopt new ones.


You seem to be operating under the mistaken assumption that formal debate rules matter outside of formal debates.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by mdk
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I'm bored so I'm gonna talk about this.

Well yeah, that's one of the things that makes it unreliable. If you had a mathematical formula to solve a simple algebra equations and it gave you tens of thousands of possible answers, you'd probably call it unreliable. Same goes with the various denominations, the very fact that there are so many variations means that the religion is essentially useless if you're trying to find the right answer. Their differences range from major issues like papal authority or which books and translation of the Bible to use to minor ones like interpretations of certain passages or matters of ceremony. Some denominations are so similar that it seems pointless for them to even be separate. It's all ostensibly the same God and religion, but then again, if you have two identical make and model cars but they each have a different stereo system, are they really the same car? If you believe in the religious stuff you'd probably say they're all worshipping the same God in different ways, but as an atheist I'd say they've modified the character to suit their own purposes so it's kind of like pondering whether a character from a certain TV show is the same exact character when they're written into a fanfic where they do things they never would on the show.


The general perception of debatheists is such that 'Look at all these different denominations, all claiming to be the only way, how silly that is!' Naturally I came armed with a response, and once again it's bibbibbibblish.

First Corinthians said Now if the foot should say, “Because I am not a hand, I do not belong to the body,” it would not for that reason stop being part of the body. 16 And if the ear should say, “Because I am not an eye, I do not belong to the body,” it would not for that reason stop being part of the body. 17 If the whole body were an eye, where would the sense of hearing be? If the whole body were an ear, where would the sense of smell be? 18 But in fact God has placed the parts in the body, every one of them, just as he wanted them to be. 19 If they were all one part, where would the body be? 20 As it is, there are many parts, but one body.

21 The eye cannot say to the hand, “I don’t need you!” And the head cannot say to the feet, “I don’t need you!” 22 On the contrary, those parts of the body that seem to be weaker are indispensable, 23 and the parts that we think are less honorable we treat with special honor. And the parts that are unpresentable are treated with special modesty, 24 while our presentable parts need no special treatment. But God has put the body together, giving greater honor to the parts that lacked it, 25 so that there should be no division in the body, but that its parts should have equal concern for each other. 26 If one part suffers, every part suffers with it; if one part is honored, every part rejoices with it.


In other words (man, you people and your INSTANT demand of summary, weak! Read it! It's right there!) In other words, the different denominations make us stronger, not weaker. If the Catholic Church represents the eye and says to me (a mostly-baptist) "SEE! You have no pope! You're a fool!" then he's missing the point; the Church is men who follow the pope, and men who don't, and men who believe women can preach, and women who believe they shouldn't, and gay men, and homophobes, and more. The church is everyone who believes, no matter the nuance of that belief. It is not the rigid black-and-white mold so often imposed by those who don't really understand, but try to define. We're a body. We have hands and feet and eyes and toes and gall bladders and vomit reflexes.
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mdk said The general perception of debatheists is such that 'Look at all these different denominations, all claiming to be the only way, how silly that is!' Naturally I came armed with a response, and once again it's bibbibbibblish.

In other words (man, you people and your INSTANT demand of summary, weak! Read it! It's right there!) In other words, the different denominations make us stronger, not weaker. If the Catholic Church represents the eye and says to me (a mostly-baptist) "SEE! You have no pope! You're a fool!" then he's missing the point; the Church is men who follow the pope, and men who don't, and men who believe women can preach, and women who believe they shouldn't, and gay men, and homophobes, and more. The church is everyone who believes, no matter the nuance of that belief. It is not the rigid black-and-white mold so often imposed by those who don't really understand, but try to define. We're a body. We have hands and feet and eyes and toes and gall bladders and vomit reflexes.


I find it interesting that you cut out the preceding and following portions of that section of Corinthians that make clear what was being spoken of and chose instead to give the snarky summary for context.

Anyway, that's an interesting view, and it's actually not one that I'd heard before. It seems to be pretty closely related to the pre-Enlightenment theological idea that all sorts of differing interpretations have relatively equal value. I'd have to say that as far as religious views on other denominations and such go, this is a pretty cool one that I can't find much fault with. It's definitely better than the "my version is right and yours isn't" thing, and massive strides better than the "my version is the absolute truth and everyone else is a heathen" position some extreme folks take.

The thing about it I do have a problem with is that I'm one of those post-Enlightenment types who feels that if you're seeking or claiming to have the answer to something (such as the "how did we get here and what is the purpose of life?" question that religion tries to answer), it should be as close to absolute and objective truth as you can get it (which admittedly isn't ever going to be very close when trying to answer this particular question). Saying that every theory is valid and part of the answer, despite the extreme contradictions, just doesn't sit right with me. That's kind of like saying that evolution and young Earth creationism are both equally valid answers to why life on the planet is the way it is now and are in fact each smaller parts of the full and true answer, despite the glaring contradictions that make that illogical. Once you have a contradiction, that means one is going to be closer to the truth than the other, one is inferior and one is superior, so why bother giving equal credence to the inferior one when you could just toss it aside and stick to the superior one? My way of thinking about these kinds of things, particularly wanting concrete and evidence-based answers, is why I could never get into the religion thing in the first place, so no surprise that this point of view about denominations doesn't work for me. Seems like a neat idea for those more religiously inclined, and it's far better than those absolutist "my version is right and everyone else's versions suck" types for sure.

Oh, by the way, I don't find the huge number of varying denominations to be silly in and of itself, despite how it might've sounded in what you quoted. In the context of reliability, which was indeed the context given, it is a major factor that contributes to my conclusion that religion is unreliable if you're seeking a full and cohesive answer to why the world is the way it is. In that way the number of denominations makes religion weaker, but that's just in one particular context. The number of denominations is something I see as a proof that religious people aren't just mindless sheep, as a lot of edgy kids like to say, because each different denomination is proof that at least one person thought about things enough to come to a different conclusion than someone else reading the same thing. It would be easy to mock this in a number of different ways, but I look at it as proof that people actually are thinking about their beliefs and altering them when they find something that doesn't seem to make sense. It can be silly with some splits over tiny differences, but whatever, still shows someone applied critical thought to their religion, and that's a good thing in my book.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by ApocalypticaGM
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Scanned this page and just wanted to say something I hope others have already noted:

The faiths feeding into Judeo-Christianity are built on deep wells cultures, many divided and brought together through their mythos in the form of the Old Testament. These are stories passed down orally through each Hebraic tribe over generations until being written here. Some are written far later, however, in the name of author whose style or point they sought to build after-- like an artist working under the name of their master or a modern graduate student in pysch working under a their Ph.D boss's license. Like the names of the authors which are not always, I dare say usually, literal many of the books in both testaments are commonly regarded are deeply metaphorical by past and modern theologians. In other words, the people who study the Bible and the cultures feeding into it, as well as the people actually invested in the cultures, recognize that not all of this is attempting to state a fact. Much is merely meant to translate a message through the stories, wisdom thought worth keeping. Quoting each bit and declaring it clearly states X for all of us is lot like going to tribe we know very little about short of a deep reading of their texts and saying we totally get what they mean. We don't. We did not see the physical center of our culture and religion taken a razed, we did not serve in bondage for several generations for being of that heritage, and we did not experience the elation of escaping that bondage. There is more to understanding these texts than simply reading them and following some Americana interpretation.

There are absolutely bits, sorry, leagues of this book that turn women to objects submit them sexually to men -- oh yes. And rape is often used as a tool by people therein, and many of the heroes had killed, raped, and blasphemed horribly. There are also bits that are passages which are entirely symbolic and offer few, if even, explanations as to their meaning -- oh wait, those are the quotes from Jesus. There are many lenses we need to switch between in reading a text that is part cultural narrative, part historical record, and part mythos. Declaring the entire thing does or does not condemn something like rape is a difficult as one could view the laws as merely historical record of an old system or laws still in effect today. Some say Jesus reduced the many laws, but the detail with which he did so is somewhat vague and bound to lead to other interpretations.

So maybe instead of bastardizing the texts, we could talk about how American culture bans rape and victimizes survivors. Maybe we could talk about the reduction of women into objects thousands of years after these texts y'all are observing. We could even talk about the OP, which is about a group I think we can all detest together.
Hidden 11 yrs ago Post by mdk
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Jorick said The thing about it I have a problem with is that I'm one of those post-Enlightenment types who feels that if you're seeking or claiming to have the answer to something (such as the "how did we get here and what is the purpose of life?" question that religion tries to answer), it should be as close to absolute and objective truth as you can get it (which admittedly isn't ever going to be very close when trying to answer this particular question). Saying that every theory is valid and part of the answer, despite the extreme contradictions, just doesn't sit right with me.


Don't you suppose there's room for that as well? :)

My way of thinking about these kinds of things, particularly wanting concrete and evidence-based answers, is why I could never get into the religion thing in the first place, so no surprise that this point of view about denominations doesn't work for me.

Oh, on the contrary, evidence-based concrete is what we're all about, we're simply building a different road. Or using a different cement mix, or.... shit, I don't know, pick your metaphor. 'Apologetics' is a field of study involving research and proofs and logical reasoning and prayer too, I guess, but it's how these denominations come about in the first place. It's deep and philosophical study, by people who wanted the concrete answer, and who went out and gathered their evidence and researched it and then came to their conclusions and defended them, refined them, etc. Academic in the extremest sense. You'd like it.

That's kind of like saying that evolution and young Earth creationism are both equally valid answers to why life on the planet is the way it is now and are in fact each smaller parts of the full and true answer, despite the glaring contradictions that make that illogical.

I mean... I've always been of the opinion that the Big Bang has nothing at all to do with the important parts of 'why life on the planet is the way it is now,' so in that sense.... Does believing in the big bang make you a better father? Ken Ham said it in that debate thing, and I haven't fact-checked it -- is there a single major scientific discovery, *actually* impacting human life, that could only be derived from a belief in the big bang? I don't think there is. Because I like concrete too, I'd rather leave the whole origin argument to the philosopher types and get on with the hard science. But that's an aside. I don't know why I'm pulling this quote out. Shut up.
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