You get what I'm saying .... somehow I think not because you don't appear to even get what you have said.
 
You said that the God of the Bible turns His back on His children because they sin against Him.
I pointed to the parable of the 'prodigal son' which refutes your assertion entirely.
You then accused me of going off topic.
I replied that you brought the matter up and reaffirmed that the parable is a scriptural depiction of God's attitude towards His children.
And you reply that the parable is a 'fantastical tale' and 'nothing new'.
Well, fact is that it must be new to you because it in no way fits your characterisation.
And fact is, being a scriptural depiction of the relationship, it is (in the context) God's depiction of His own attitude.
It doesn't in any way suit your argument so you wipe it aside, as you wipe aside anything contrary to your own preconceptions.
 
Yes, scripturally, women are more likely to be deceived by religious fakery than men.
It is Paul's view which he firmly bases on Moses.
 
'The fact that women are more religious than men is one of the most consistent findings in the sociology of religion.'
Collett and Lizardo U of Notre Dame
'A consistent finding in studies of religion is that on a wide range of measures females tend to be more religious than males'
De Vaus La Trobe U and McAllister ADF Academy
 
'Within the psychology of religion two main groups of theories have been advanced to account for gender differences in religiousity. The first group of theories concentrates on social or contextual influences ..... The second group of theories concentrates on personal or individual psychological charachteristics which differentiate between men and women.'
Francis U of Wales and Wilcox Nth England Institute for Christian Education
 
I accept a third theory, Paul's and Moses' theory, to explain the fact that they revealed long before it was confirmed by modern studies in the psychology and sociology of religion.
 
If you ask why a law is included in the scriptures then, lets face it, a scriptural answer is the only one that can be made.
If you asked why a law was in your country's legal code would you fly off the handle at receiving a legal argument based on you country's constitution?
Scripturally does not mean ficticiously. In this instance, it includes the meaning 'as confirmed by modern research'.
 
The bible does not portray women as STUPID. Only a stupid person could get that from the scriptures or a person with a religious chip on their shoulder the size of Ayer's Rock.
The Bible, more often than not, portrays women as finer, nobler creatures than men. As persons that a man should feel honoured and priviledged to be associated with.
It is a great shame on the men with whom you have been associated that they have not conveyed this to you. Perhaps if you were within a Christian community the point would not need to be made by me.
And for the record I think that men and women are equal.
But women and men are not the same, in some respects women are superior to men in others inferior; if values must be applied.
Must I say again that a bonded pair, male and female, each with particular and complimentary strengths and weakenesses, is the scriptural depiction of a human being.
 
The modern world and the scriptural world cannot be mixed on the subject of sexuality.
The fundamental assumptions of each world are far estranged one from another.
The idea of 2 virgins in one marriage bed, both of whose avowed intentions are life-long monogamous fidelity, is a quaint anachronism in the modern view.
Moderns, without a change of mind, cannot even enter into the concepts of sexuality in the scriptures in a meaningful way.
All moderns appear to see is an attack on their own multi-partnered and casual sexual values that have been shaped by a lifetime of media hype and advertising campaigns.
Sex in this world is ubiquitously represented as fun to be shared around, good for selling cars, or chocolates, or cigarettes, or whatever, the sexual concepts filling modern heads are foreign to the Bible and shouldn't be shoe-horned into it.
 
The victim's father represents her rights in the scripture and does a better job of it than any DA.
As I understand it, marriage for love, and only love, is a modern fiction of the western world that has acquired authority from romantic novels and Hollywood glitz.
Much of the world still holds to arranged marriages (India, Asia, Africa, the Middle East); those marriages are more likely to last and be truly loving relationships at year 10 than their western counterparts. Which is a sad comment on the western ideal.
I would be content to allow the victim's father to negotiate her best interests with the offender.
If he says die so be it, if he says marry so be it; I assume that he has his daughter's best interest at heart and would consult with her; and the circumstances in each case would be different.
But applying that to modern times would be a gross error of judgement.
 
Why is it that you insist on applying scriptural law to modern situations?
In most cases the different cultural, sociological and psychological circumstances make such applications ridiculous.
As ridiculous as applying Aboriginal Traditional law, or Medieval English law, or Tsarist Russian law, to the operations of the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
Can't you see that you are paddling a barbed-wire canoe when you do this?