RandFan
Mormon Atheist
- Joined
- Dec 18, 2001
- Messages
- 60,135
No, and this is really frustrating because I have made my point clear time and time again.Some of this feels like you are choosing the extreem to refute the majority, so it would be sort of like useing the FLDS church to refute the LDS church.
The main disagreement we seem to have is that you concider all religions to be equaly full of strange beliefs, that is not true because for example not all christians would take the opinion that god wanted him to kill his daughter. There are also ones who would take the opinion that it was just a historic record of him killing his daughter.
Christians like Doc are not eager to agree that there are many bizarre Christians beliefs. Beliving that the bible is a moral guide is bizarre.
Again, why is the story of Jephthah there at all? A historical record of a man who is fighting on behalf of god's people keeping a promise to god serves what purpose? Your dismissal makes no sense in the light of a bible literalism that holds that God meant for ALL of the bible to have a purpose (according to literalists). Tell us of this purpose? What lessons do we learn from a story of a man who promises god to sacrifice whatever greets him at his door? What are we to learn from a story where god delivers to this man the battle? What are we to learn from the fact that Jephthah kills his daughter?
I'm waiting.
You strain at a gnat and sallow a camel. Never mind virgin birth. Never mind walking on water. Never mind bushes that burn and are never consumed. Never mind the BS magical thinking throughout the bible and all of the stories that are contradicted by science and evidence.This is dirrect evidence that not all religions are equaly full of strange beliefs.
