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I realize now I think what the problem is. The Bible.

The Bible teaches Christians that non-Christians are all fools and murders and liars and even pigs.

The passage in Psalms Christians always dig out says the fool in his heart says there is no God.

Jesus says don't cast your pearls before swine, meaning the believer shouldn't talk to pigs about Christianity.

In Romans Chapter 1 verse 28 St Paul says that the non believer is a murderor and a sexual deviant.

In 1 John 2:22 it is said that they who deny Christ are liars.

Those who believe the Bible to be a word for word of God would read these verses and conclude that the non-Christian is a fool, a liar, a murderor, a pig, a sexual deviant, etc.

That is the cause of the problem, the book, and people who are blinded by it to open their eyes to see non-Christians as the good decent human beings that we are.

Your thoughts please.

2007-02-06 02:42:02 · 27 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

27 answers

I think you are over-killing the subject Jim.

The purpose is that Christians shouldn't wallow in sinful places nor try to change that which satan has devised as a way to lure the weak in faith.

2007-02-06 02:49:53 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Can and do people use the Bible to condone some lame-brained ideas? Yes. There are some odd ducks out there to be sure, but I do not blame this on the Bible. After all, John Hinckley was inspired to shoot Ronald Reagan by the movie Taxi Driver. Does this make Martin Scorsese or Robert DeNiro responsible?

2007-02-06 02:58:56 · answer #2 · answered by Adoptive Father 6 · 0 0

Non-Christians are people.
Jesus died for ALL people.
I am not the judge of anyone, or better than anyone.
Yeah, everyone speculates about what it would be like if everyone believed the way they do [whatever that belief is], but that's simply not going to happen. I do my best to be accepting of everyone and respect their right to make the choices they have made. Peace.

2007-02-06 02:50:32 · answer #3 · answered by Char 7 · 0 0

Or those blinded by their own self-righteousness thinking that they are "enlightened" because they have an agnostic view upon things. Trust this coming from a Philosophy major, Kant was a **** and Richard Dawkins doesn't know what he is talking about.

2007-02-06 02:48:24 · answer #4 · answered by RMS4EVER 3 · 0 0

I think that that's an accurate description of what's going on. The first response that you received really demonstrates the type of enabling behavior that people engage in with Jehovah.

Come on, people, "God" is never going to get better if you keep on mollycoddling him.

Spare the rod, spoil the god,

Lazarus

2007-02-06 02:51:24 · answer #5 · answered by The Man Comes Around 5 · 0 0

Think of all the "good and decent human beings" that you know. Now think about their faults (they all have them). What the bible teaches is that ALL PEOPLE (Christians and non-Christians alike) fall short of the glory of god and there fore only through God's forgiveness can we be made perfect and pure.

2007-02-06 02:48:57 · answer #6 · answered by Fire_God_69 5 · 0 0

Well you fit right in with a long list of people throughout history who have tried their best to discredit and destroy the Bible, but it is still around. God says "Heaven and earth will pass away but My Word will never pass away."

2007-02-06 02:49:16 · answer #7 · answered by oldguy63 7 · 0 0

It is a silly book. From an academic standpoint, I would have trouble figuring out how to make it a worse source. I mean unidentified religious zealots are not really known for producing accurate material. And yes, it is the problem.

2007-02-06 02:48:43 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

All books are problems to be solved. That's why literacy is such a gift.

There are many, many troublesome passages in the Bible; to a contemporary reader, they may sound xenophobic, homophobic, primitive, violent, what have you.

However, I think there are some things to remember when you read these books. The Hebrew Scriptures were written in the context of a tiny nation that was constantly under siege from its more powerful neighbors. They were written by priests, reformers, and prophets who had a cultural memory of their ancestors being brought out of slavery by some miracle that they attributed to a great warrior God. Yes, at times, the scriptures reflect a very violent attitude towards the nations who oppressed them (and, during time of conquest, whom they may have oppressed), but especially in the prophetic texts, there is a notion that the ancient Israelites were called to do justice and take care of the poor. The prophets often pointed to invading foreign armies as God's punishment for the rulers of Israel ignoring the poor.

The Christian Scriptures were written under the weight of the Roman Empire; as minorities (ethnic and religious), the early christians were striving to set themselves apart from the dominant culture, and proclaiming their chosen-ness in a world that typically found them worthless, at best, or a threat that needed to be vanquished.

Often, minority cultures make the practices of the dominant culture into taboos. Same-sex relationships, for example, were part of mainstream culture in ancient Rome. By making them an impure act, Paul was making a point about setting one's self apart as a cultural group. As a social group, it was as much about surviving from day to day as it was about plotting one's eternal salvation....

Now, I say all of that to make this point: We can't just read the Bible as if it's going to interpret itself for us; documents that are translated from ancient languages and written in cultural contexts very different from ours do not have meanings that are automatically self-evident. That's why rabbis have debated for generations.

As a Christian, I tend to think of the Bible as somewhat of a Family Album. Your family album is full of all sorts of embarassing pictures, right? Things you did that you don't want to remember, as well as pictures of your skanky ex girlfriend, your sleazy uncle in jail, and all sorts of people you don't want to admit to knowing....but it's a record fo where you come from, and of the many complex things that have shaped you, either because you accept them, reject them, or are in therapy trying to figure them out.

The Bible is like that, too...

2007-02-06 03:09:09 · answer #9 · answered by carwheelsongravel1975 3 · 0 0

ok, those are invaluable Q's. a million. i ask your self what u recommend by previous. in case you inspect the ten C's heavily, they make sense. think of roughly what occurs in case you ruin any of them . . .they have been made for our own solid to maintain our society healthful. occasion: not Coveting (previous formed language). It ability do not choose some thing belonging to somebody else to the element the place somebody gets harm. only be grateful for what you have simply by fact there is often somebody who has some thing "extra sensible" (or is it?) 2. sure flow might have somewhat blazed yus out of existence by now. it is in basic terms his extreme love for us that forestalls him. He supplies us probability after probability after probability. it is called grace and it is stunning. 3. super which you examine to appreciate. it is unasked-for advice so excuse me. even nevertheless it is extra sensible to not in basic terms initiate on the commencing up and flow by. you will get slowed down for one element. I recommend that to appreciate God, examine the e book of John (as in Matthew, Mark, then Luke then Jhn). John knew Jesus in my opinion and you gets lots extra be attentive to-how of who God is. i'm hoping you come back with yet another question once you're by with John!

2016-09-28 12:07:55 · answer #10 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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