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Then there's the fact that Sunday is not the sabbath...
And the fact that non-Jews aren't obligated to keep the sabbath...
Thanks for your response.
My main concern was with the punishment administered to the man that picked up sticks. I felt that it was completely inappropriate. Under what jurisdiction was it administered?
When the children of Israel were in the desert, they found a man gathering wood on the Sabbath day.
Those who found him gathering wood presented him before Moses and Aaron and before the entire congregation.
They put him under guard, since it was not specified what was to be done to him.
The Lord said to Moses, The man shall be put to death; the entire congregation shall pelt him with stones outside the camp.
So the entire congregation took him outside the camp, and they pelted him to death with stones, as the Lord had commanded Moses.
Justified?
If you believe that Moses was just a loony talking to the voices in his head, then no.
If you believe that the Creator of the Universe issued a sentence as punishment for the violation of His law regarding the Sabbath, then yes.
I'll go with the first option, thanks.
why even go with the first if it is all to you just a fairy tale?
Because it implies that Moses, like many, hear voices and interpret the voices as commands from a 'higher being'. It is a real phenomenon, hence my choice.
But if Moses didn't exist how can he hear voices?
There may well have been someone called Moses at that time who proclaimed to hear the voice of god. There may well have been someone called Jesus who claimed to heal the sick.
Mythologies develop around real people.
Alternatively, they are all fictional characters, in which case, within the context of the story, Moses heard voices and claimed they were from god.
My choice still stands.