At the very least the texs should be accurate of its core messages or it may as well be scrapped.
My comment was more tongue in cheek.
No it is not unreasonable as there are math and mathtext books which can be accurate with no room for confusion over say division and multiplication.
But religious texts are meant to be customizable as per the specific person's characteristics, environment and need, at least far as I understand their purpose to be. And I definitely do not mean that as a criticism of the texts, but rather of our expectations towards them.
If a text is only useful once one has attained good mental balance and religious wisdom, I don't think it can be said to hold religious significance. What good can a religion be if it does not know how to deal with actual people in a constructive way?
And if it is actually unsafe except in those privileged circunstances... well, then it is really not a good thing to have in any religion, now is it?
We also have human laws which
... are just about as good an evidence for the existence of a Devil as anyone could hope to ever meet. Or should I say that people hoping laws to further justice are that evidence instead?
supply context in when a death is murder or manslaughter. We already have texts which do not have the failures of ambiguity and contextual application.
That is either very debatable or something I emphatically deny outright, depending on what you mean exactly. I have no doubt that it is indeed impossible to have texts fulfilling a better role than that of an unavoidably limited, inherently defective crutch whenever the goal is to attain justice or religious wisdom.
To believe otherwise would be to believe that a text that is literally limited in meaning and scope and completely incapable of considering the variety and subtleties of real world situations - in fact, a text that has no cognition at all - is nonetheless still a better tool to reach or learn wisdom than the actual minds of living people.
And that, I fear, is not a belief that I can expect to ever hold or even truly respect. It is just a mythification of the most unproper and dangerous kind.
If we can do it now there is no reason why text from a God can not do the same. In fact this should be guaranteed given who God is.
That would probably be true if certain conceptions of God were accurate to reality. Such a conception would need a certain kind of power and also the desire to allow and arguably encourage static texts to be wiser than living people.
Perhaps more to the point, even then he would have to decide whether he wanted to go through the trouble of telling people outright that they should use their discernment instead of third-partying their religious responsibility to written texts.
Granted, I am not a theist. And one of the reasons why I am not is because many people seem to actually believe in such a God and even to expect to shame or scare me into believing in Him. I can't for the life of me decide whether they are being more disrespectful to me or to their own conceptions of God when they do. They expect me to feel ashamed of my disbelief and lack of desire to worship a God that is not even moderately wise by very human standards.
I expect better from both people and deities, and I see no reason why anyone would not.
People look at the OT for justification for violence. Lets not pretend there are no verses without violence. However the Bible is written as a narrative with context, the context is already present often enough. An issue is that the same figure of God command these acts of violence. The peaceful verse do not absolve the figure from promoting and command violence in the past.
Indeed. As scriptures go, the Bible is among the most troubled of all - or, perhaps, the most fortunate when we consider its acceptance as contrasted to the actual merits of the text itself. It lacks the wisdom of the Tao Te Ching or the inspirational qualities of the Gita. Worst of all, it is often understood as an authoritative guide despite failing quite utterly at that.
Abrahamic Faiths do have a problem with scriptures. A very serious problem.
I admit the position is a problem. However by accepting the fallacy maybe others will look at how ambiguous the text is and accept the fact that secondary sources are required to make sense of text which provides little to no context. Maybe there will be a shift as seen with forms of Christianity in which not everything is the literial word of God but words written by men. Demolish the religious doctrine and topple the authority figures behind this doctrine.
I will go all-out and say outright that the Abrahamic Faiths need to overcome their pride and adopt a Dharmic approach.