Not so much. I believe the Bible is fiction.
And I wasn't making an argument per se. I'm actually on your side of this issue, up to the point where I think you believe Christians are somehow obligated to take preemptive action or pepper their sermons with disclaimers. I was drawing a comparison. McVeigh took to
The Turner Diaries the way that anti-abortion extremists take to the Bible. By that I mean reading allegory as instruction, misreading analogies as absolute literal truth. Perhaps this doesn't hold so true in McVeigh's case, since it's pretty obvious what
The Turner Diaries is espousing - nay - practically begging for and preaching as an inevitability.
Nowhere in the Bible is there a commandment for Christians to "kill those who abort babies no matter the reason." This is a completely "human" construct, to put it into a Christian context.
If a person with mental illness, through his delusions, comes to believe that a billboard next to the interstate is admonishing him to go on a shooting spree - then I'm afraid no amount of intervention short of professional mental health care is going to stop that spiral.
There was a case down in Texas of a
woman who murdered her own baby in the crib by severing its arms. She believed that God, through a television news report and her pastor, had admonished her to do so. The pastor's name was Doyle Davidson - and while certainly no saint and a bit of a creepy cult-leader figure - did not at any point explicitly tell this woman or even imply that she should murder her newborn. Not surprisingly, mental illness and several other factors played a major role.
Similar case with
Andrea Yates. Although she was under the influence of a charismatic and unscrupulous pastor, he never admonished her to kill her children. She inferred that herself.