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For Christians. Was the flood real or just a myth?

QuestioningMind

Well-Known Member
I find Genesis 3:6 informs us that Eve ' saw ' the fruit from the forbidden tree could be eaten.
Eve could have seen animals eat from the fallen fruit and Not die. Possibly birds eat from it and Not die.
Who knows, that ' snake in grass ' ( aka Satan using that serpent like a ventriloquist uses his dummy ) could have make it look like the serpent could talk, and told Eve he could talk because he ate from the fruit.
So, that does Not make Eve naive or gullible, but as 1 Timothy 2:14 says she was ' deceived '.
No doubt this process did Not happen over night, but could possibly have been on-going for years.
Eve could have thus visualized herself as becoming so sort of 'goddess' choosing for herself what was good or bad.
Just as written at James 1:13-15 each person is drawn out by their 'own' desires.

You have Eve, who has never been lied to and never been deceived, and God decides to allow this deceptive snake aka SATAN into the garden where Eve is the perfectly naive and gullible dupe for an accomplished liar and con man.
 

Deeje

Avid Bible Student
Premium Member
You have Eve, who has never been lied to and never been deceived, and God decides to allow this deceptive snake aka SATAN into the garden where Eve is the perfectly naive and gullible dupe for an accomplished liar and con man.

That is not so. God had posted a Cherub in the garden as an overseer to look after the humans initially. It was a position of great responsibility which he abused to satisfy his own selfish desires. This Cherub started out as a faithful servant of his God, but he began to entertain wrong desires and planned to snatch the humans away from God by tempting the woman in order to get to his real target...Adam.

Ezekiel 28:12-17....though directed to the King of Tyre, this is clearly speaking directly to satan.

“You were the model of perfection, Full of wisdom and perfect in beauty.

13 You were in Eʹden, the garden of God. You were adorned with every precious stone. . . .
They were prepared on the day you were created.
14 I assigned you as the anointed covering cherub.
You were on the holy mountain of God, and you walked about among fiery stones.

15 You were faultless in your ways from the day you were created Until unrighteousness was found in you. . . .
You became filled with violence, and you began to sin.
So I will cast you out as profane from the mountain of God and destroy you,
O covering cherub, away from the stones of fire.

17 Your heart became haughty because of your beauty.

You corrupted your wisdom because of your own glorious splendor."


He did what James speaks of here....James 1:13-15..."When under trial, let no one say: “I am being tried by God.” For with evil things God cannot be tried, nor does he himself try anyone. 14 But each one is tried by being drawn out and enticed by his own desire. 15 Then the desire, when it has become fertile, gives birth to sin; in turn sin, when it has been carried out, brings forth death."

Who was to blame for the fall of man? The apostle Paul said...."Therefore, as through one man sin entered into the world, and death through sin; and so death passed unto all men, for that all sinned". (Romans 5:12) Sin did not enter into the world through the woman, but through the man. He was not deceived and willfully broke the only command that carried the death penalty.

If the serpent had approached Adam directly, he would in all likelihood have refused the devil's offer....but when it came by the hand of the mate for whom he had been waiting for some time, he was emotionally divided. Forced to choose between the love of his life and the love of his God, he chose with his heart and not his head.....the damage would take millenniums to fix, but in the meantime precedents could be set so that the issue of Universal Sovereignty could never be challenged again.

So many people misunderstand what happened in Eden.
 
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QuestioningMind

Well-Known Member
That is not so. God had posted a Cherub in the garden as an overseer to look after the humans initially. It was a position of great responsibility which he abused to satisfy his own selfish desires. This Cherub started out as a faithful servant of his God, but he began to entertain wrong desires and planned to snatch the humans away from God by tempting the woman in order to get to his real target...Adam.

Ezekiel 28:12-17....though directed to the King of Tyre, this is clearly speaking directly to satan.

“You were the model of perfection, Full of wisdom and perfect in beauty.

13 You were in Eʹden, the garden of God. You were adorned with every precious stone. . . .
They were prepared on the day you were created.
14 I assigned you as the anointed covering cherub.
You were on the holy mountain of God, and you walked about among fiery stones.

15 You were faultless in your ways from the day you were created Until unrighteousness was found in you. . . .
You became filled with violence, and you began to sin.
So I will cast you out as profane from the mountain of God and destroy you,
O covering cherub, away from the stones of fire.

17 Your heart became haughty because of your beauty.

You corrupted your wisdom because of your own glorious splendor."


He did what James speaks of here....James 1:13-15..."When under trial, let no one say: “I am being tried by God.” For with evil things God cannot be tried, nor does he himself try anyone. 14 But each one is tried by being drawn out and enticed by his own desire. 15 Then the desire, when it has become fertile, gives birth to sin; in turn sin, when it has been carried out, brings forth death."

Who was to blame for the fall of man? The apostle Paul said...."Therefore, as through one man sin entered into the world, and death through sin; and so death passed unto all men, for that all sinned". (Romans 5:12) Sin did not enter into the world through the woman, but through the man. He was not deceived and willfully broke the only command that carried the death penalty.

If the serpent had approached Adam directly, he would in all likelihood have refused the devil's offer....but when it came by the hand of the mate for whom he had been waiting for some time, he was emotionally divided. Forced to choose between the love of his life and the love of his God, he chose with his heart and not his head.....the damage would take millenniums to fix, but in the meantime precedents could be set so that the issue of Universal Sovereignty could never be challenged again.

So many people misunderstand what happened in Eden.

Nothing you wrote indicates that Eve wasn't naive and gullible. The simple fact that a talking snake was able to deceive her suggests that she was.
 

Deeje

Avid Bible Student
Premium Member
Nothing you wrote indicates that Eve wasn't naive and gullible. The simple fact that a talking snake was able to deceive her suggests that she was.

The point I was addressing was what you said about God....

"You have Eve, who has never been lied to and never been deceived, and God decides to allow this deceptive snake aka SATAN into the garden where Eve is the perfectly naive and gullible dupe for an accomplished liar and con man."

That wasn't how it happened. God did not decide to allow satan into the garden as a liar and a con man, because he did not become a "satan" or a "devil" until after his decision to make himself in to a "resistor" and a "slanderer".

His decision to approach the woman when she was alone, was an exploitation of her naivety as the newest member of the human family and his position as a guardian....that decision was his alone. However, his main target was Adam. He used the woman to get to the man. It worked.

Jesus said of satan....."That one was a murderer when he began, and he did not stand fast in the truth, because truth is not in him. When he speaks the lie, he speaks according to his own disposition, because he is a liar and the father of the lie." (John 8:44) He was not a murderer until he led the humans into temptation.
 

QuestioningMind

Well-Known Member
The point I was addressing was what you said about God....

"You have Eve, who has never been lied to and never been deceived, and God decides to allow this deceptive snake aka SATAN into the garden where Eve is the perfectly naive and gullible dupe for an accomplished liar and con man."

That wasn't how it happened. God did not decide to allow satan into the garden as a liar and a con man, because he did not become a "satan" or a "devil" until after his decision to make himself in to a "resistor" and a "slanderer".

His decision to approach the woman when she was alone, was an exploitation of her naivety as the newest member of the human family and his position as a guardian....that decision was his alone. However, his main target was Adam. He used the woman to get to the man. It worked.

Jesus said of satan....."That one was a murderer when he began, and he did not stand fast in the truth, because truth is not in him. When he speaks the lie, he speaks according to his own disposition, because he is a liar and the father of the lie." (John 8:44) He was not a murderer until he led the humans into temptation.

Okay... so actually it's God who was naive and gullible in creating a being that he didn't realize was a liar and the father of the lie that He then allowed to interact with and poison the mind of Eve. Not really sure how that makes it better.
 

Deeje

Avid Bible Student
Premium Member
Okay... so actually it's God who was naive and gullible in creating a being that he didn't realize was a liar and the father of the lie that He then allowed to interact with and poison the mind of Eve. Not really sure how that makes it better.

Do you have any knowledge of the Bible at all? What a ridiculously ignorant statement to make!
Can humans ever know better than the one who created them? :facepalm:

All of God's intelligent creatures have free will. They were not created to be robots with only a "yes Master" code embedded.

As free moral agents, all of us have choices that we value every day. To be made in God's image and likeness, we can reflect the moral qualities of the Creator himself....like wisdom, justice, the appropriate exercise of power....and his dominant quality....love.

Can any of us force someone to love us? Can we legally obligate someone to have affection for us? Can we use fear to intimidate someone to love us? If not...why not?

In order to have the freedom to love and obey God, we conversely also have to have the freedom to hate and disobey him. He allows us that choice...would you prefer that he didn't? Do you value that freedom?

The only reason why humans and angels are presently in this situation is because free will is a precious possession....but abusing it makes life miserable for all. Was it a mistake to allow us this freedom? Or was there a way to allow both humans and angels to see and experience for themselves the folly of abusing it?

This object lesson that began in Eden was all about consequences. Using free will in an abusive way was never going to accomplish anything good. God knew it and he even tried to protect the humans by instituting a single command that would have saved us all this angst and suffering....but a rebel spirit cooked up a scheme to derail God's original purpose. He abused his free will so as to exercise his will over the humans and at the same time influence other free willed creatures in heaven. The humans fell for the plot and then, under the influence of their newly chosen "god" they began to use their own free will to subjugate others....and the rest, as they say, is history.

By allowing free will to be expressed and the full consequences of its abuse to be felt in every corner of the world without his intervention, God has set precedents for all time to come. Irresponsible use of free will always results in corruption and unacceptable outcomes. God's wisdom in how he handled all of this will be vindicated. Action speak louder than words and experience is the best teacher.

Humans were designed to be ruled by their Creator, who would always have their best interests at heart.....but they chose to reject his rulership in favour of ruling themselves....imagining that they know better than God. Having power over others always results in corruption, as we are well aware. Enough time has elapsed to allow humans to try every form of government that they could think up....all have ended in abject failure.

For God, teaching his children powerful lessons that will carry over into eternity means that these issues can never be raised again. No one will be able to challenge God's sovereign right to set reasonable limits for his 'children' for all time to come. The future will therefore be awesome!.....free from that abuse.

The end will forever justify the means.
 

QuestioningMind

Well-Known Member
Do you have any knowledge of the Bible at all? What a ridiculously ignorant statement to make!
Can humans ever know better than the one who created them? :facepalm:

All of God's intelligent creatures have free will. They were not created to be robots with only a "yes Master" code embedded.

As free moral agents, all of us have choices that we value every day. To be made in God's image and likeness, we can reflect the moral qualities of the Creator himself....like wisdom, justice, the appropriate exercise of power....and his dominant quality....love.

Can any of us force someone to love us? Can we legally obligate someone to have affection for us? Can we use fear to intimidate someone to love us? If not...why not?

In order to have the freedom to love and obey God, we conversely also have to have the freedom to hate and disobey him. He allows us that choice...would you prefer that he didn't? Do you value that freedom?

The only reason why humans and angels are presently in this situation is because free will is a precious possession....but abusing it makes life miserable for all. Was it a mistake to allow us this freedom? Or was there a way to allow both humans and angels to see and experience for themselves the folly of abusing it?

This object lesson that began in Eden was all about consequences. Using free will in an abusive way was never going to accomplish anything good. God knew it and he even tried to protect the humans by instituting a single command that would have saved us all this angst and suffering....but a rebel spirit cooked up a scheme to derail God's original purpose. He abused his free will so as to exercise his will over the humans and at the same time influence other free willed creatures in heaven. The humans fell for the plot and then, under the influence of their newly chosen "god" they began to use their own free will to subjugate others....and the rest, as they say, is history.

By allowing free will to be expressed and the full consequences of its abuse to be felt in every corner of the world without his intervention, God has set precedents for all time to come. Irresponsible use of free will always results in corruption and unacceptable outcomes. God's wisdom in how he handled all of this will be vindicated. Action speak louder than words and experience is the best teacher.

Humans were designed to be ruled by their Creator, who would always have their best interests at heart.....but they chose to reject his rulership in favour of ruling themselves....imagining that they know better than God. Having power over others always results in corruption, as we are well aware. Enough time has elapsed to allow humans to try every form of government that they could think up....all have ended in abject failure.

For God, teaching his children powerful lessons that will carry over into eternity means that these issues can never be raised again. No one will be able to challenge God's sovereign right to set reasonable limits for his 'children' for all time to come. The future will therefore be awesome!.....free from that abuse.

The end will forever justify the means.

"Can humans ever know better than the one who created them?"

Apparently so, since in the bible God explicitly condones slavery; yet human beings today have concluded that owning others as property is horribly immoral.
 

Deeje

Avid Bible Student
Premium Member
"Can humans ever know better than the one who created them?"

Apparently so, since in the bible God explicitly condones slavery; yet human beings today have concluded that owning others as property is horribly immoral.

Oh please :facepalm:...another completely ignorant statement!

What was the Biblical slavery that was was established in Israel and had laws governing it?

Can you comprehend the times and the circumstances of these people's lives?

“Slavery” in Israel was not like the oppressive slavery known in more recent times. It was actually a way of protecting the family who, through financial reverses or calamity, were obliged to sell their land inheritance and who eventually used up the money received from the sale and were destitute. Or, they might get heavily into debt. Then, instead of being self-employed as they had been, the family, or certain members thereof, could go into “slavery.” But this slavery was very much like our modern-day principle of employment, working for another person, which for many is a form of ‘economic slavery.’

For example, the Hebrew “slave” had to be treated, not like property, but as a “hired laborer.” Furthermore, he was to be released after six years’ servitude. (Leviticus 25:39-43) At his release his master or “employer” had to give him material things, as he was able, to help the man and his family to make a fresh start. (Deuteronomy 15:12-15) By this arrangement a family could avoid being destitute and could have food and clothing until such time as they could stand on their own.

Moreover, the person, while in “slavery,” could engage in projects or other business or investments, so that in some cases a man was able to buy himself out of servitude. Or a near relative could pay off any indebtedness he might have, thereby releasing the man as a free person. (Leviticus 25:47-54) A daughter who went into “slavery” often was taken as the wife of her master. She had to be given full dues as was the case with any wife.—Exodus 21:7-11."
A Pattern of Things to Come — Watchtower ONLINE LIBRARY

"Slaves" in Israel were no more "slaves" than employees are in today's world.....all who work for a boss are slaves. Working conditions are largely a matter of geography and government policy.

The cruel slavery that Israel underwent in Egypt was not the kind they experienced later. Why would God release them from one form of harsh treatment, only to inflict the same situation on them again later?

For goodness sake, do some research!
mad0211.gif
 

Subduction Zone

Veteran Member
Oh please :facepalm:...another completely ignorant statement!

What was the Biblical slavery that was was established in Israel and had laws governing it?

Can you comprehend the times and the circumstances of these people's lives?

“Slavery” in Israel was not like the oppressive slavery known in more recent times. It was actually a way of protecting the family who, through financial reverses or calamity, were obliged to sell their land inheritance and who eventually used up the money received from the sale and were destitute. Or, they might get heavily into debt. Then, instead of being self-employed as they had been, the family, or certain members thereof, could go into “slavery.” But this slavery was very much like our modern-day principle of employment, working for another person, which for many is a form of ‘economic slavery.’

For example, the Hebrew “slave” had to be treated, not like property, but as a “hired laborer.” Furthermore, he was to be released after six years’ servitude. (Leviticus 25:39-43) At his release his master or “employer” had to give him material things, as he was able, to help the man and his family to make a fresh start. (Deuteronomy 15:12-15) By this arrangement a family could avoid being destitute and could have food and clothing until such time as they could stand on their own.

Moreover, the person, while in “slavery,” could engage in projects or other business or investments, so that in some cases a man was able to buy himself out of servitude. Or a near relative could pay off any indebtedness he might have, thereby releasing the man as a free person. (Leviticus 25:47-54) A daughter who went into “slavery” often was taken as the wife of her master. She had to be given full dues as was the case with any wife.—Exodus 21:7-11."
A Pattern of Things to Come — Watchtower ONLINE LIBRARY

"Slaves" in Israel were no more "slaves" than employees are in today's world.....all who work for a boss are slaves. Working conditions are largely a matter of geography and government policy.

The cruel slavery that Israel underwent in Egypt was not the kind they experienced later. Why would God release them from one form of harsh treatment, only to inflict the same situation on them again later?

For goodness sake, do some research!
mad0211.gif

Why do Christians almost always ignore the way that non-Hebrew slaves were treated in the Bible? Or that even Hebrews could be tricked into slavery for life?

Another inappropriate facepalm by Deeje.
 

QuestioningMind

Well-Known Member
"Can humans ever know better than the one who created them?"

Apparently so, since in the bible God explicitly condones slavery; yet human beings today have concluded that owning others as property is horribly immoral.

Oh please :facepalm:...another completely ignorant statement!

What was the Biblical slavery that was was established in Israel and had laws governing it?

Can you comprehend the times and the circumstances of these people's lives?

“Slavery” in Israel was not like the oppressive slavery known in more recent times. It was actually a way of protecting the family who, through financial reverses or calamity, were obliged to sell their land inheritance and who eventually used up the money received from the sale and were destitute. Or, they might get heavily into debt. Then, instead of being self-employed as they had been, the family, or certain members thereof, could go into “slavery.” But this slavery was very much like our modern-day principle of employment, working for another person, which for many is a form of ‘economic slavery.’

For example, the Hebrew “slave” had to be treated, not like property, but as a “hired laborer.” Furthermore, he was to be released after six years’ servitude. (Leviticus 25:39-43) At his release his master or “employer” had to give him material things, as he was able, to help the man and his family to make a fresh start. (Deuteronomy 15:12-15) By this arrangement a family could avoid being destitute and could have food and clothing until such time as they could stand on their own.

Moreover, the person, while in “slavery,” could engage in projects or other business or investments, so that in some cases a man was able to buy himself out of servitude. Or a near relative could pay off any indebtedness he might have, thereby releasing the man as a free person. (Leviticus 25:47-54) A daughter who went into “slavery” often was taken as the wife of her master. She had to be given full dues as was the case with any wife.—Exodus 21:7-11."
A Pattern of Things to Come — Watchtower ONLINE LIBRARY

"Slaves" in Israel were no more "slaves" than employees are in today's world.....all who work for a boss are slaves. Working conditions are largely a matter of geography and government policy.

The cruel slavery that Israel underwent in Egypt was not the kind they experienced later. Why would God release them from one form of harsh treatment, only to inflict the same situation on them again later?

For goodness sake, do some research!
mad0211.gif

How sad. Either it's YOU who haven't actually read your bible or - and I fear this is the most likely scenario - you are just blatantly lying about what's in the bible.

I notice that all you focused on was '...the Hebrew “slave” had to be treated, not like property, but as a “hired laborer.” Yes, it's true that FELLOW HEBREWS that you enslaved had to be treated far more like indentured servants than slaves. Funny though that you didn't mention Levitcus 25:45:

"…45 Then, too, it is out of the sons of the sojourners who live as aliens among you that you may gain acquisition, and out of their families who are with you, whom they will have produced in your land; they also may become your possession."

This is where God talks about how you can own NON-Hebrew slaves as well. Then in Leviticus 25:46, God talks about how you can treat these non-Hebrew slaves.

"46 You may even bequeath them to your sons after you, to receive as a possession; you can use them as permanent slaves. But in respect to your countrymen, the sons of Israel, you shall not rule with severity over one another."

Note how is says that the non-Hebrews can be owned indefinitely, even passed on to one's heirs like goats or sheep - none of this six years of servitude that you mentioned. Why did you try to imply that ALL slaves were released after 6 years when the bible very specifically says otherwise? Also note how God reiterates that the indentured servitude ONLY applies to 'son's of Israel, NOT the non-Hebrews that they are welcome to own as property. God even thinks it's perfectly okay for you to beat your non-Hebrew slaves, just as long as they don't end up dying as a result of the beating within a couple of days.

"Exodus 21:20-21:
20 “Anyone who beats their male or female slave with a rod must be punished if the slave dies as a direct result, 21 but they are not to be punished if the slave recovers after a day or two, since the slave is their property."

So, now you've read the words in your bible from your God's own lips that indicates that God has no problem with owning other people as property. In fact, American slave owners were fond of quoting the above passages as evidence that God condoned the owning of other people as slaves.

Yet today virtually everyone agrees that slavery is a horribly immoral practice that should never be condoned. Clearly mere fallible human beings have a far better grasp of what is genuinely moral than your God of the bible does.

The fact that you decided to pretend like the above quotes don't exist suggests that you pick and choose which parts of the bible you want to follow and just ignore the parts you don't like.
 

Deeje

Avid Bible Student
Premium Member
I asked...."Can humans ever know better than the one who created them?"

You replied...."Apparently so, since in the bible God explicitly condones slavery; yet human beings today have concluded that owning others as property is horribly immoral."

I asked "Can you comprehend the times and the circumstances of these people's lives?"

You seem to want to put today's standards on ancient times and practices. Today slavery is considered immoral,
but back then it was common practice. In Israel, a slave's rights were protected under the law.

It was normal practice even to beat an errant son.

Again, remembering the times Solomon wrote...
"Do not hold back discipline from a boy.
If you strike him with the rod, he will not die.
14 With the rod you should strike him,
In order to save him from the Grave."
(Proverbs 23:13-14)

So beating your son was considered good parenting. If you remember back in the old days it wasn't unusual for a son to get a good whooping behind the wood shed. It was called discipline and nobody turned a hair. The school system dished out discipline this way too. It seems a bit harsh these days but back then it was considered normal.

"The one holding back his rod is hating his son, but the one loving him is he
that does look for him with discipline.”
(Prov. 13:24)

"And you have entirely forgotten the exhortation that addresses you as sons: “My son, do not belittle the discipline from Jehovah, nor give up when you are corrected by him; 6 for those whom Jehovah loves he disciplines, in fact, he scourges everyone whom he receives as a son.” (Hebrews 12:5-6; Proverbs 3:11-12)

Its a shame really that people are afraid to discipline their children....it has not produced respectful youths or a peaceful environment. Kids do horrible things to each other and film it to put it on social media.

No one is advocating a beating.....but a smack on the behind never hurt anyone.

Pain is something we want to avoid, so if discipline hurts it teaches us something....like the law of gravity, if we defy it, the consequences will be painful and immediate. We will not be in a hurry to repeat the process.

We get all hung up about the violence that the old discipline did to children, only to have them feed on a steady diet of the most graphic violence on their computer screens today and then have it spill over onto the streets in drunken weekend brawls when they get old enough to drink. What is wrong with that picture?
sign0069.gif
 

QuestioningMind

Well-Known Member
I asked...."Can humans ever know better than the one who created them?"

You replied...."Apparently so, since in the bible God explicitly condones slavery; yet human beings today have concluded that owning others as property is horribly immoral."

I asked "Can you comprehend the times and the circumstances of these people's lives?"

You seem to want to put today's standards on ancient times and practices. Today slavery is considered immoral,
but back then it was common practice. In Israel, a slave's rights were protected under the law.

It was normal practice even to beat an errant son.

Again, remembering the times Solomon wrote...
"Do not hold back discipline from a boy.
If you strike him with the rod, he will not die.
14 With the rod you should strike him,
In order to save him from the Grave."
(Proverbs 23:13-14)

So beating your son was considered good parenting. If you remember back in the old days it wasn't unusual for a son to get a good whooping behind the wood shed. It was called discipline and nobody turned a hair. The school system dished out discipline this way too. It seems a bit harsh these days but back then it was considered normal.

"The one holding back his rod is hating his son, but the one loving him is he
that does look for him with discipline.”
(Prov. 13:24)

"And you have entirely forgotten the exhortation that addresses you as sons: “My son, do not belittle the discipline from Jehovah, nor give up when you are corrected by him; 6 for those whom Jehovah loves he disciplines, in fact, he scourges everyone whom he receives as a son.” (Hebrews 12:5-6; Proverbs 3:11-12)

Its a shame really that people are afraid to discipline their children....it has not produced respectful youths or a peaceful environment. Kids do horrible things to each other and film it to put it on social media.

No one is advocating a beating.....but a smack on the behind never hurt anyone.

Pain is something we want to avoid, so if discipline hurts it teaches us something....like the law of gravity, if we defy it, the consequences will be painful and immediate. We will not be in a hurry to repeat the process.

We get all hung up about the violence that the old discipline did to children, only to have them feed on a steady diet of the most graphic violence on their computer screens today and then have it spill over onto the streets in drunken weekend brawls when they get old enough to drink. What is wrong with that picture?
sign0069.gif

So, why did you blatantly lie about God saying you can only own slaves for 6 years? Why are you reluctant to admit that God had no problem with people owning other people as slaves for their entire lives? Is it because you know in your heart that doing so in COMPLETELY immoral and that there's absolutely no justification for condoning it? I suspect so.

Okay, so please DO tell me what it was about the times and the circumstances of these people's lives that justifies owning other people as if they were goats or sheep and allowing then to be beaten senseless... just as long as they don't die from the beating within a couple of days? How are you going to try and twist logic and morality so that you can pretend as if a God that would allow such abhorrent behavior is actually just and loving and a blueprint for moral behavior?

"No one is advocating a beating.....but a smack on the behind never hurt anyone."

Did you actually READ the passage? It very specifically says you CAN beat your slaves. In fact, you can beat them so severely that it's okay, just as long as they don't die from the injuries within a couple of days. So if you beat your slave into a bloody coma that they linger in for a week before they die, your horrible immoral God thinks it's perfectly OKAY... because after all, the human being was nothing more than property.

So sad and pathetic that you can try and pretend that beating someone to the verge of death is a 'smack on the behind'. But it's not surprising, since you're attempting to defend slavery as a 'moral' act. If that's Christian morality, I don't want to have anything to do with it.
 

74x12

Well-Known Member
So, why did you blatantly lie about God saying you can only own slaves for 6 years? Why are you reluctant to admit that God had no problem with people owning other people as slaves for their entire lives? Is it because you know in your heart that doing so in COMPLETELY immoral and that there's absolutely no justification for condoning it? I suspect so.

Okay, so please DO tell me what it was about the times and the circumstances of these people's lives that justifies owning other people as if they were goats or sheep and allowing then to be beaten senseless... just as long as they don't die from the beating within a couple of days? How are you going to try and twist logic and morality so that you can pretend as if a God that would allow such abhorrent behavior is actually just and loving and a blueprint for moral behavior?

"No one is advocating a beating.....but a smack on the behind never hurt anyone."

Did you actually READ the passage? It very specifically says you CAN beat your slaves. In fact, you can beat them so severely that it's okay, just as long as they don't die from the injuries within a couple of days. So if you beat your slave into a bloody coma that they linger in for a week before they die, your horrible immoral God thinks it's perfectly OKAY... because after all, the human being was nothing more than property.

So sad and pathetic that you can try and pretend that beating someone to the verge of death is a 'smack on the behind'. But it's not surprising, since you're attempting to defend slavery as a 'moral' act. If that's Christian morality, I don't want to have anything to do with it.
You know it was not just a religious law but civil law. It had to govern a new society. It's important to keep in mind it was very much a bronze age society and the people expected things to be the way they had always been. The fact is that God wasn't trying to start some kind of social justice revolution to overthrow all of bronze age society. He was establishing a way for people to come to more knowledge of the true spirituality. In Matthew 19:8 where Jesus says that because of the hardness of their hearts Moses gave them the commandment about divorces. There is reason for us to believe that laws about slavery were also given because of the hardness of their hearts at the time.
 
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Deeje

Avid Bible Student
Premium Member
So, why did you blatantly lie about God saying you can only own slaves for 6 years? Why are you reluctant to admit that God had no problem with people owning other people as slaves for their entire lives? Is it because you know in your heart that doing so in COMPLETELY immoral and that there's absolutely no justification for condoning it? I suspect so.

Okay, so please DO tell me what it was about the times and the circumstances of these people's lives that justifies owning other people as if they were goats or sheep and allowing then to be beaten senseless... just as long as they don't die from the beating within a couple of days? How are you going to try and twist logic and morality so that you can pretend as if a God that would allow such abhorrent behavior is actually just and loving and a blueprint for moral behavior?

"No one is advocating a beating.....but a smack on the behind never hurt anyone."

Did you actually READ the passage? It very specifically says you CAN beat your slaves. In fact, you can beat them so severely that it's okay, just as long as they don't die from the injuries within a couple of days. So if you beat your slave into a bloody coma that they linger in for a week before they die, your horrible immoral God thinks it's perfectly OKAY... because after all, the human being was nothing more than property.

So sad and pathetic that you can try and pretend that beating someone to the verge of death is a 'smack on the behind'. But it's not surprising, since you're attempting to defend slavery as a 'moral' act. If that's Christian morality, I don't want to have anything to do with it.

Times and attitudes change.....it was the ancient way to have servants. It gave the servants a job and put food in their bellies and gave them somewhere to live. There was no social security back then. Poverty was not preferable to slavery. If they failed to do the job that their master assigned to them, they knew what the consequences were.....
....a good incentive to be a diligent worker.
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I can't say that I have ever owned a slave or treated one badly with a beating recently.....so what on earth are you going on about? I don't think God needs your permission to do whatever he sees fit.....any more than a boss needs the permission of his employees to tell him how to run his business. Try it and see where it gets you...
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QuestioningMind

Well-Known Member
You know it was not just a religious law but civil law. It had to govern a new society. It's important to keep in mind it was very much a bronze age society and the people expected things to be the way they had always been. The fact is that God wasn't trying to start some kind of social justice revolution to overthrow all of bronze age society. He was establishing a way for people to come to more knowledge of the true spirituality. In Matthew 19:8 where Jesus says that because of the hardness of their hearts Moses gave them the commandment about divorces. There is no reason for us to believe that laws about slavery are not also because of the hardness of their hearts at the time.

Ah yes... God was had no problem telling people Thou Shalt Not Kill and Thou Shalt Not Steal and Thou Shalt Not Eat Shellfish, but for SOME reason - I guess according to you because if civil law - He couldn't be bothered to say Thou Shalt Not Own Others As Property? Not only does He fail to condemn the practice, He takes the time to tell then how much they should expect to pay for them, how severely you can beat them, and that you're more than welcome to pass them on to your son when you die.

If you were to ask fallible human beings today what the top 10 most immoral acts you could perform are, I can almost guarantee that aside from murder and stealing that both enslaving someone and raping someone would be near the very top of the list... yet neither rape or slavery are addressed in God's 10 Commandments.

Anyone who doesn't condemn a horribly immoral practice like slavery and instead condones it cannot be considered a moral authority worthy of obedience. That Christians continually try and claim otherwise is absolutely baffling to me.
 

QuestioningMind

Well-Known Member
Times and attitudes change.....it was the ancient way to have servants. It gave the servants a job and put food in their bellies and gave them somewhere to live. There was no social security back then. Poverty was not preferable to slavery. If they failed to do the job that their master assigned to them, they knew what the consequences were.....
....a good incentive to be a diligent worker.
sign0184.gif


I can't say that I have ever owned a slave or treated one badly with a beating recently.....so what on earth are you going on about? I don't think God needs your permission to do whatever he sees fit.....any more than a boss needs the permission of his employees to tell him how to run his business. Try it and see where it gets you...
indifferent0025.gif

Times and attitudes change.....it was the Southern way to have black servants. It gave the blacks a job and put food in their bellies and gave them somewhere to live. There was no social security back then. Poverty was not preferable to slavery. If they failed to do the job that their master assigned to them, they knew what the consequences were.....

Clearly you would have agreed with Southern slave owners during the Civil War. Because you make the exact same argument that they did and that some racist morons still make today. Black people were 'better off' being slaves and the slave owners were actually doing them a huge favor by depriving them of their right to basic freedom. How appalling.

I'm sure that you never have owned a slave. That's because as a society we have evolved beyond biblical morality in which people would quote the word of God to justify owning other people.


I guess you're never going to explain why you blatantly lied about God saying slaves could only be owned for 6 years. So much for that Christian 'morality' of yours.
 

74x12

Well-Known Member
Ah yes... God was had no problem telling people Thou Shalt Not Kill and Thou Shalt Not Steal and Thou Shalt Not Eat Shellfish, but for SOME reason - I guess according to you because if civil law - He couldn't be bothered to say Thou Shalt Not Own Others As Property? Not only does He fail to condemn the practice, He takes the time to tell then how much they should expect to pay for them, how severely you can beat them, and that you're more than welcome to pass them on to your son when you die.

If you were to ask fallible human beings today what the top 10 most immoral acts you could perform are, I can almost guarantee that aside from murder and stealing that both enslaving someone and raping someone would be near the very top of the list... yet neither rape or slavery are addressed in God's 10 Commandments.

Anyone who doesn't condemn a horribly immoral practice like slavery and instead condones it cannot be considered a moral authority worthy of obedience. That Christians continually try and claim otherwise is absolutely baffling to me.
You're coming across as close minded. Have you read the Iliad? You can see how people thought in the bronze age. They likely just wouldn't understand if you told them it was wrong to enslave war captives. People didn't think the same as we do now. Think of different cultures. Think of how one thing can be taboo in one culture and completely accepted in another.
 

Subduction Zone

Veteran Member
You're coming across as close minded. Have you read the Iliad? You can see how people thought in the bronze age. They likely just wouldn't understand if you told them it was wrong to enslave war captives. People didn't think the same as we do now. Think of different cultures. Think of how one thing can be taboo in one culture and completely accepted in another.

I am sure that you meant to say "You have come across the close minded. QuestioningMind is clearly not the close minded one in his this discussion.
 

Deeje

Avid Bible Student
Premium Member
Times and attitudes change.....it was the Southern way to have black servants. It gave the blacks a job and put food in their bellies and gave them somewhere to live. There was no social security back then. Poverty was not preferable to slavery. If they failed to do the job that their master assigned to them, they knew what the consequences were.....

How did the "black servants" get to be in the South in the first place? Capturing humans with the intent to treat them badly was against God's law. So the reasons why there were black slaves kidnapped and taken into forced slavery were nothing to do with God. For an Israelite, the treatment of an errant slave was the same as the treatment for an errant son. Different times and different expectations...you have been told this repeatedly, but continue to rail against God....do you think he cares about your opinion? Shaking your fist at him will accomplish what? You want him to go back and change history for you? Really?

Clearly you would have agreed with Southern slave owners during the Civil War. Because you make the exact same argument that they did and that some racist morons still make today. Black people were 'better off' being slaves and the slave owners were actually doing them a huge favor by depriving them of their right to basic freedom. How appalling.

Well I don't agree with any of it because of why the slaves were there in the first place. I condone nothing. I was merely trying to explain it....but you have your ears and your mind closed. How appalling!

I'm sure that you never have owned a slave. That's because as a society we have evolved beyond biblical morality in which people would quote the word of God to justify owning other people.

For many slaves, it was preferable to poverty. You can believe whatever you like.

I guess you're never going to explain why you blatantly lied about God saying slaves could only be owned for 6 years. So much for that Christian 'morality' of yours.

In Israel, that was the law for an Israelite slave. They had to be released after 6 years. That is what I wrote.

As far as I am aware no Christians have slaves...although some people treat their wife and mother that way....

My morality is the same as God's.....you can entertain whatever morality suits yourself. I don't think God is going to change just to make you feel better.....do you? :shrug:

You will have to continue your rant with someone else...
 

SkepticThinker

Veteran Member
I am also posting on a thread dealing with evolution, and didn't realize this was the "Flood" thread...so this discussion between you and I here is off-topic.


'What "goal" were you thinking of, and whose goal is it?'

I think that you fit it...your wish is to remove God from His rightful position as Creator. Some facets of science -- like molecule-to-man evolution, and abiogenesis (the fringe sciences that cant rely on the scientific method) -- fit the mindset, but not all.
So, wait a minute here. This sounds rather absurd. First of all, people who don't believe in God(s) couldn't possibly wish to remove him/them from their 'rightful position as Creator" because they don't believe God(s) exist in the first place and therefore wouldn't hold any position anywhere.

Secondly, what you appear to be saying here is that you accept most of science, except when it comes into conflict with your personal beliefs about God, and at that point you reject it.

And thirdly, you appear to be saying that it's only scientists in the particular fields in which you don't accept the science (even though evolutionary science is drawn from multiple different fields of science) whose ultimate goal is to kill God. Computer scientists for instance, have no particular interest in killing God(s), but you believe that scientists who study evolution have a deep interest in doing so. And conveniently enough, that is the part of science that you don't accept, because it conflicts with your personal beliefs.

And you want to claim that it is scientists who are being dishonest?

I guess I need to put it another way: anything that refuses to acknowledge Jehovah God and His qualities or Word, we refuse to acknowledge as having any veracity. That does not include all science.
By lumping us as "anti-science" when we only find fault with CD and very little else -- that's not honest at all!

That's like calling someone who is anti-Chrysler, "anti-vehicle".
Oh I get it. You're against science when you feel it conflicts with your personal beliefs about God.
 
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