I maintain it's extremely important where the idea of good comes from. If good comes from God then it is universal and doesn't change.
Unless God changes their mind, which - according to the Bible - they do.
See, it doesn't matter if there is or isn't a God if the only means by which to determine what they want us to do is to interpret ancient texts that make all sorts of contradictory and vague claims. Hence why, despite belief in God being prevalent among people, beliefs about exactly what God wants or what is truly moral is almost as varied as those people are.
If it comes from man then there are no absolutes thereby"good" is in the eye of the beholder and there's no real way to to say whether anything at all is good or bad.
That depends what the standard is that you use. For example, my basis for morality is based on the concept of well-being. I.E: if something negatively affects an individual's (or a group's) well-being, it is morally bad. Using this standard, it is actually quite easy to determine an objective moral value for our actions. After all, it is not "in the eye of the beholder" that decapitating my neighbour negatively impacts their well-being.
Id also like to clarify that I know the colonists came here to flee religious persecution and absolutely forbade a mandatory religion for this country. But they absolutely did found most of the laws on the Bible, but more specifically the Torah. Even Jefferson and Adams wanted to emulate what God did through the Jews and how He set up their country.
So do you believe Christainity endorses slavery and the subjugation of women?
I think history shows that slave in the Bible and slave in early America were in no way the same thing.
1) All forms of slavery are immoral. Are you suggesting that the slavery found in the Bible is moral?
2) You asserted that America was founded in Christian principles. Since America participated heavily in the global slave trade of African slaves, you must believe that this endeavor was in some way Christian. Correct?
I'm not saying no Christian would own a slave....I will say most often three word slave in the Bible is more akin to our word servant.
False. The Bible specifically instructs that a slave is somebody you own as property, can be beaten as punishment by you, and can even be inherited as property. It even specifies how you can keep Hebrew slaves for six years but then must let them free, but if they have a wife and children by the end of those six years you get to keep them indefinitely. It also instructs that fathers are allowed to sell their daughters into slavery, and that they have less, and more restrictive, rights to freedom than male slaves.
SOURCES:
Bible Gateway passage: Leviticus 25:44-46 - New Revised Standard Version
Bible Gateway passage: Exodus 21:20-21 - New Revised Standard Version
Bible Gateway passage: Exodus 21:1-4 - New Revised Standard Version
Bible Gateway passage: Exodus 21:7-11 - New International Version
Slavery is the owning of another human being as property, which is immoral.
Do you or do you not agree that treating or owning a human being as property is immoral?
This is a falsifiable claim. You don't have to believe it but it happens to be true.
Actually, it's not. You're wrong on this issue.
It's very easy to find historical documents demonstrating the influence of the Torah on the founding of this country.
So you believe the Torah promotes slavery, too?