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David Koresh of the Branch Davidians had schizophrenia, and I'm sure most if not all cult leaders do.
Since they existed thousand of years ago, I doubt they'd be considered widely insane.I personally don't think neither Jesus nor Muhammad ever existed, but if they did wouldn't they be considered lunatics or having a delusional disorder, or grandiose delusions that occur in people suffering from a wide range of psychiatric diseases, including schizophrenia. These patients are characterized by bizarre beliefs that one is omnipotent or powerful. These delusions typically are religious and supernatural.
So considering the preposterous things they said, wouldn't they be considered insane?
Yes please....... the verses relating to Jesus, I don't know about Muhammad.If anyone wants me to quote versus from either the Bible or Quran about these two absurd crazed characters, i would be more than willing to. It would only prove my point that they were insane, and would be diagnosed that way, if they lived today.
Again, you allow for only one possibility, choosing to ignore any other. You have a totally rigid preconceived opinion that determines the parameters of the possible, then you crow over your conclusion from within those parameters. What is the point ?If anyone wants me to quote versus from either the Bible or Quran about these two absurd crazed characters, i would be more than willing to. It would only prove my point that they were insane, and would be diagnosed that way, if they lived today.
We found that religious delusions were more likely to be accompanied by grandiose delusions, and high levels of positive symptomatology, including hallucinations, passivity phenomena, and unusual behaviour.
This study adopted a cross sectional design and thus no causal relationships can be established.
And he had good leadership ability?????
It can't be insanity if half the world believes it, or can it? Maybe a form of cognitive dissonance can be a thing but not insanity. Besides, if the Jesus character was actually performing miracles, couldn't rightly call that person insane.I personally don't think neither Jesus nor Muhammad ever existed, but if they did wouldn't they be considered lunatics or having a delusional disorder, or grandiose delusions that occur in people suffering from a wide range of psychiatric diseases, including schizophrenia. These patients are characterized by bizarre beliefs that one is omnipotent or powerful. These delusions typically are religious and supernatural.
So considering the preposterous things they said, wouldn't they be considered insane?
Yes please....... the verses relating to Jesus, I don't know about Muhammad.
You quoted the study, which was what my definite original position was.
While cross-sectional studies cannot be used to determine causal relationships that can provide a useful springboard to further research. When looking at a public health issue, such as whether a particular behavior might be linked to a particular illness, researchers might utilize a cross-sectional study to look for clues that will serve as a useful tool to guide further experimental studies.
Thank you for the debate
Biblical exegesis is not your strong point. Context, direct meaning, indirect meaning, relationship to theme or point being made. Using reasonable exegesis most of your quotations are addressing something other than you imply. AS to your last, you are simply dead wrong. The first lie told in the Bible is" you won't die" you have bought it and perpetuate it. People who are dead cannot be tortured, people dead forever cannot be tortured, forever.He told his followers to hate their families. Luke 14:26
He came to break apart families. Mathew 10:35-36
He insisted that his followers love him more than anyone else (including their families). Mathew 10:37
He encouraged people to abandon their home and family for his name's sake. Mathew 19:29, Mark 10:29-30 Luke 18:29-30
He was rude to his own family. Mathew 12:47-49, Mark 3:31-34, Luke 8:20-21
He was dismissive of other people's feelings toward their families. Mathew 8:21-22, Luke 9:59-62
He discouraged marriage. Luke 20:35
He was a hypocrite. Mathew 5:22, Luke 11:40, Luke 24:25
He encouraged his followers to mutilate themselves to avoid hell. Mathew 5:28-30, Mathew 18:8-9, Mark 9:43-48
He encouraged men to castrate themselves. Mathew 19:12
He approved of God's killings in the Bible. Mathew 10:14-15, Mathew 24:37, Luke 17:26, John 3:14
He believed in the Old Testament's stories. Mathew 24:37, Luke 17:27, Luke 17:29-32, Mathew 12:40
He accepted Old Testament laws. Mathew 5:17
He criticized the Pharisees for not killing parent-cursing children. Mathew 15:4, Mark 7:10
He and his dad plan to torture billions of people forever after they die. Mathew 7:19, Mathew 10:29, Mathew 13:41-32, Mathew 13:49-50, Mathew 25:41, Mathew 25:46, Mark 16:16, Luke 12:5
This is just fifteen, and there are many many more. I didn't want to give details of the verse, for it would take up the whole thread.
If you would like more verses, just let me know.
He told his followers to hate their families. Luke 14:26
He came to break apart families. Mathew 10:35-36
He insisted that his followers love him more than anyone else (including their families). Mathew 10:37
He encouraged people to abandon their home and family for his name's sake. Mathew 19:29, Mark 10:29-30 Luke 18:29-30
He was rude to his own family. Mathew 12:47-49, Mark 3:31-34, Luke 8:20-21
He was dismissive of other people's feelings toward their families. Mathew 8:21-22, Luke 9:59-62
He discouraged marriage. Luke 20:35
He was a hypocrite. Mathew 5:22, Luke 11:40, Luke 24:25
He encouraged his followers to mutilate themselves to avoid hell. Mathew 5:28-30, Mathew 18:8-9, Mark 9:43-48
He encouraged men to castrate themselves. Mathew 19:12
He approved of God's killings in the Bible. Mathew 10:14-15, Mathew 24:37, Luke 17:26, John 3:14
He believed in the Old Testament's stories. Mathew 24:37, Luke 17:27, Luke 17:29-32, Mathew 12:40
He accepted Old Testament laws. Mathew 5:17
He criticized the Pharisees for not killing parent-cursing children. Mathew 15:4, Mark 7:10
He and his dad plan to torture billions of people forever after they die. Mathew 7:19, Mathew 10:29, Mathew 13:41-32, Mathew 13:49-50, Mathew 25:41, Mathew 25:46, Mark 16:16, Luke 12:5
This is just fifteen, and there are many many more. I didn't want to give details of the verse, for it would take up the whole thread.
If you would like more verses, just let me know.
Biblical exegesis is not your strong point.
I read all those examples with care, and am very interested in your debate.
I'm being straight.... ok?
I would be very very grateful if you would kindly give me any ten additional examples?
I have altready saved the first 15 and have no intention of challenging even one of them.
There are no catches....
OB
A fallacious tone was not intended. What was intended was idea that you cannot take a verse, by itself, and necessarily draw the intended meaning without other considerations. As an example, you draw the conclusion that Jesus supported children being killed because they were disobedient. You missed the entire point. The pharisee's were an arrogant religious sect who were great at condemning others for sin. Jesus pointed out their hypocrisy over and over again. He was pointing out that they bragged about keeping the law perfectly, but they hypocritically disobey it when their interests are involved. He wasn't making an issue one way or another about the law, he was making an issue about them. They accused him numerous times of breaking the law. The Samaritan women was going to be stoned for adultery, she admitted it, but he stopped her execution, Adultery was certainly more serious than a kid;s disobedience, but he saw that she wasn't harmed. Once again He addressed the failings of the law, which once fulfilled by him would cease to have any authority.I'm not surprised by your repudiation of the interpretation of the versus, for i expected a fallacious tone.
Thank you for your honest and frank approach to the debate.
Here is fifteen, and if you inquire for more, i will provide them.
He implied that all Jews are going to hell. Mathew 8:12
He was a false prophet. Mathew 10:23, Mathew 16:28, Mark 9:1, Luke 9:27, Mathew 24:34, Mark 13:30, Luke 21:32 Revelation 3:11, 22:7, 22:11, 22:20
He was a warmonger. Mathew 10:34, Luke 12:51-53, Revelation 19:11
He was a megalomaniac. Mark 8:38, John3:18, 36, John 15:16
He condemned cities to dreadful deaths and to the eternal torment of hell because they didn't care for his preaching. Mathew 11:21-24, Mark 6:11, Luke 10:10-15
He called an entire generation perverse, evil, adulterous vipers. Mathew 12:34-39, 16:4, Jesus answered and said, O faithless and perverse generation.... 17:17
He invented George W. Bush's false dichotomy. Mathew 12:30, Luke 11:230
He approved of torture. Mathew 18:34-35
He believed in an unforgivable sin. Mathew 12:31-32, Mark 3:29, Luke 12:10
He spoke in parables to confuse people so he could send them to hell. Mark 4:11, Mathew 13:10-15
He believed in a God (himself?) who had his enemies slaughtered in front of him. Luke 19:27
He believed in devils, evil eyes, and unclean spirits. Mathew 10:5-8, Mathew 12:22, Mathew 17:18, Mark 1:34, Luke 9:1, Mark 3:11-12, Mark 7:22-23, Mathew 6:23, Luke 11:34, Mark 1:23-25, Mathew 10:1, Mathew 12:43-45, Luke 11:24-26
He was a bit of a racist. Mark 7:26-27, Mathew 15:22-26
He condemned people to hell for things that their ancestors supposedly did. Mathew 23:31-35
He got kind of gross sometimes. Mark 7:23, Mark 8:23, John 9:6, John 6:53-57
A fallacious tone was not intended. What was intended was idea that you cannot take a verse, by itself, and necessarily draw the intended meaning without other considerations. As an example, you draw the conclusion that Jesus supported children being killed because they were disobedient. You missed the entire point. The pharisee's were an arrogant religious sect who were great at condemning others for sin. Jesus pointed out their hypocrisy over and over again. He was pointing out that they bragged about keeping the law perfectly, but they hypocritically disobey it when their interests are involved. He wasn't making an issue one way or another about the law, he was making an issue about them. They accused him numerous times of breaking the law. The Samaritan women was going to be stoned for adultery, she admitted it, but he stopped her execution, Adultery was certainly more serious than a kid;s disobedience, but he saw that she wasn't harmed. Once again He addressed the failings of the law, which once fulfilled by him would cease to have any authority.
Thankyou very much.
I guess that must surely have exhausted the list, there are so many. ?
I need to read all of them and file them for easy access.
Yes please....There are many more, if you would like them.