Darth Rotor
Salted Sith Cynic
- Joined
- Aug 4, 2006
- Messages
- 38,527
Riight, cherry picking for fun and profit. Perhaps both parables are to be balanced, and considered, so that the eye of the needle be read as "don't expect your riches, if you obsess over them, and if you worship them to get you into Heaven, as material won't get you there." There are reams and reams of commentary on discussion of the parables, much of it useful, some of it not.Christianity itself foists this myth. They have God do "rational" things, like saving believers, answering prayers and the like. Indeed, they even say "God is love", yet if God's love is totally irrational compared to human love, how can you even call it "love"? God, the way Christians describe Him, behaves rationally some times and irrationally at other times. His rational moments, they call "God's love". His irrational moments they write off as our own failure to understand His logic. They like to have it both ways.
One example I can give is that wealthy Christians often cite "the parable of the talents" as justification for their accumulation of wealth. They conveniently ignore all the other admonitions Jesus gave against accumulating wealth.
Talk to me about Tithing, and how that relates to the Matthew you cite. Is it wrong that a man accumulate wealth, Tricky, if he tithe his portion, and thus benefit the entire congregation/Church/community? Is this somehow a contradiction of the admonition not to worship Mammon?
How does one resolve that conflict, if one is to cherry pick parables in order to suggest Acetism?
DR