Originally Posted by Huntster
Further, isn't it wise to consider the reality that you might be looking from the perspective of a common citizen rather than the leader of a nation? Moses and President Bush have the authority and responsibility to make decisions like warfare. I don't have that horrible responsibility, and I doubt you do either.
“I have as much authority as the Pope. I just don't have as many people who believe it.” – George Carlin
President Bush has no more “authority” to declare war than what we allow him. The same is true for Moses, God, or anyone/thing else.
No, it is not. It isn't even true of President Bush. After being elected, he has the authority and responsibility to deploy U.S. military forces under current legal conditions, and you do not.
Those legal or other considerations differ among leaders. The authority of Moses, Saddam Hussein, and the Prime Minister Ehud differ.
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Don't we learn morality as we live and grow? Isn't it a process in the works?
I could have sworn you said that morality was absolute earlier. How can it be absolute and a work in progress?
I believe that the laws of good/evil are absolute. Morality is how we understand and behave within those laws, and it can vary with each and every individual based on many factors.
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The kind that confirm what you have already learned.
A key point in your scenario is that by rejecting those described questionable events is also evidence of one's moral growth and decision making.
If you’re simply picking the ones that you agree with, it is not a guide at all, and it lends unwarranted credibility to it to refer to it that way.
It can be a guide, if one wishes to use it such.
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It doesn't help to have other people claiming that if you accept the wisdom from a particular source, you must also accept that which clearly doesn't work for them.
Perhaps, but when people refer to the Bible as a moral guide it certainly implies they mean the whole thing.
That depends on how liberally you percieve implications. As this thread demonstrates, speculation is easy to do, and it provides error.
You’d have to add some qualifiers to that statement. Like saying something along the lines as, “The Bible can be used by anyone as a moral guide, as it contains such a wide variety of possible moral or immoral actions, ranging from the slaughtering of children or selling your daughter as a sex slave to helping the poor or caring for the sick, so no matter what you may consider moral, you’ll be sure to find some passages to suit you.”
If you wish to review the Bible in that manner, that may be the way you should do it.
But, frankly, I tend to focus on biblical passages that praise God with joy and a fullness of heart, because that's what I'm at this point in my life. At my age, I think I've pretty much figured out sound morality that is accepted in the society that I live in. I'm a successful parent and husband, well known, respected, and liked by community leaders, well liked by my neighbors, successful with employers, and start another round of jury duty in just a few days. I'm beyond "basic training" in morality.