Again: If you want to argue which parts of the Bible that are acceptable and which that are not, you are facing an uphill battle.The part where it says it applies to modern Christians. I can't find that part.
Again: If you want to argue which parts of the Bible that are acceptable and which that are not, you are facing an uphill battle.The part where it says it applies to modern Christians. I can't find that part.
Like I said to Rob Lister: If you want to argue which parts of the Bible that are acceptable and which that are not, you are facing an uphill battle.
Are you dismissing the Old Testament?
Then, you treat Jews and Muslims differently than Christians.
Why?
It should be of no concern to you what faith people are. Yet, you discriminate against Jews and Muslims.
Again: If you want to argue which parts of the Bible that are acceptable and which that are not, you are facing an uphill battle.
It should be of no concern to you what faith people are. Yet, you discriminate against Jews and Muslims.
So its a matter of opinion ...
Interpretation by humans. Only problem is: How can anyone claim to be the final arbiter of the word of God?
It's about the distinction between nomadic and settled lifestyles. Pigs are not well-suited to nomadism, but they're a boon to peasants since they'll turn the waste-product of crops to meat and manure, and will even (literally) eat sch!t. Judaism and Islam are products of nomad thinking, and on the principle of "what they do and we don't is bad" pork is out. Even after the nomads become peasants.Why pork? I don't know anything about religions but why this particular animal? Does anybody know?
Nobody really knows the real reason for the ban since its origins are in prehistory.
There are several different hypotheses, like the one that you give. This particular hypothesis has the weak point that it doesn't explain why a similar prohibition didn't happen in other areas of hot climate -- pigs have been happily eaten all over SE Asia for millennia and I'd guess that pig meat spoils even quicker there.
I'm not so certain that there was a practical reason for banning pig meat. Pig is not the only mammal that is specifically mentioned as prohibited in Leviticus 11: camel, coney, and rabbit share this fate.
Great line.If they're worth killing, they're worth offending.
Why is it that you can understand prohibiting dog meat, but not pork?Rob Lister said:I could understand if the food in question was otherwise legally restricted (dog, monkey, cat, etc)
I guess it's similar to the logic under which offering marriage to opposite sex couples is "discrimination" against those inclined to form same-sex couples.SteveGrenard said:Apparently it is if I am serving them food in a soup kitchen. How does this translate into "discrimination." ?
I don't know about coneys, but perhaps this is an instance of over-regularization. They noticed the feet and decided to make it about the feet.
Here is what I found on this page:
http://www.rabbit.org/journal/3-3/digestibility.html
7. Undigested fiber and waste (hard fecal pellets) pass through the largeintestine along with vitamin-rich cecotropes(soft cecal pellets), which are formed from fermented cecal material. Cecotropes are higher in protein and water and lower in fiber than fecal pellets. (Cheeke 1987)
8. Cecotropes are consumed directly from the anus and returned to the digestive system (cecotrophy).
9. Protected in mucous membrane packages, cecotropes continue to ferment in the stomach for several hours, until they pass to the small intestine where the nutrients are absorbed. (Cheeke 1987)
http://www.gw.org/Rabbit.htm
What's difference between banning pork and banning horse meat?
Horses are basically large, funny-looking rabbits....
Where is horse meat banned?
Why is it that you can understand prohibiting dog meat, but not pork?
Why pork? I don't know anything about religions but why this particular animal? Does anybody know?
If pork was the only food available I would agree it would be highly biased against jews and muslims. However, should soup kitchens for the poor then also ban other non-kosher or non-halal foods? And what about mixing dairy and meat? Should they be prohibited from serving milk or other dairy products when they are also serving meat? And maybe they should also have separate plates? Don't these religions require the use of separate plates for dairy meals and meat meals? And separate refrigerators for meat and dairy as well. We'll need those also. And for meat shouldn't it be specified how the meat would be slaughtered.