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- Newsgroups: alt.philosophy.objectivism
- Path: sparky!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!sdd.hp.com!ux1.cso.uiuc.edu!news.cso.uiuc.edu!ux4.cso.uiuc.edu!jlamb
- From: jlamb@ux4.cso.uiuc.edu (Jeffrey Richard Lamb)
- Subject: Re: god exists, 2nd part
- References: <00966F85.931A3460@vms.csd.mu.edu>
- Message-ID: <C19qA5.DD5@news.cso.uiuc.edu>
- Sender: usenet@news.cso.uiuc.edu (Net Noise owner)
- Organization: University of Illinois at Urbana
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 18:34:51 GMT
- Lines: 141
-
- 5g72wheelerj@vms.csd.mu.edu (John C. Wheeler) writes:
-
- >(continued from previous posting) much of the Jewish Orthadoxy, agree
- >that the book of Ecclesiastes was written at least two generations
- >after Soloman's death, although the author claims to be Soloman.
- > III - Ever take a look at the 2nd bozook of 2nd Kings (specifically
- >verses 23-25)? It's a wonderful story about god sending 2 female bears
- >to tear 42 small children (youths in the NRS trans.) to shreads for
- >making fun of Elisha's baldness; let's not forget that "Jesus loves
- >the little children."
-
- Also, according to the Bible the wages of sin is death. The incident
- with the bears deserves some explaination. First the word is "youths"
- (which if you go back to original text indicates at least 13 years of
- age (probably older) and remember also that people were geting married
- at that age). This indicates boys of (considered at that time) adult
- age who had not yet married. They were mocking God's messenger and God's
- purpose. Because of this they should have been struck down, yet God did
- nothing until Elisha cursed them. It was this act they ended in their
- injury (My translation says mauled, but they could easily have died (no
- significant difference to the point)). This is all consistent with the
- rest of the Bible. The New Testiment had not come around yet. . . (I'll
- deal with that in a minute).
-
- > III' - Along the same lines, let's not forget the 19th chapter
- >of Genesis, in which Lot offers his two virgin daughters to a mob
- >and is then sighted as the only rightous man in the cities; or the
- >passage at the chapter's conclusion in which Lot himself then impregnates
- >them himself.
-
- Ok. The story for evyone who doesn't know: Lot was hanging out in the city
- of Sodom and Gomorrah. He was there and he saw this two men (who just hap-
- pened to be angels). So he tells them to come stay in his house, so they
- don't have to stay in the square. (Cause he know S&G is a Baaad placce).
- Anyway the people of the city come to Lot and yell at him to send the men
- out to them so they can have sex with them (I told you it was a bad place).
- Anyway. Here's Lot, living in a day and age, when disgrace is a big deal. He
- decides (right or wrong, I'm not sure) to offer his two daughters to the
- crowd, in hopes of saving the men. It doesn't work. The angels (through God's
- power blind the men. They escape etc). The point is Lot had a difficult
- decision to make. As far as he knew. He was in a Catch 22. He decided that
- it would be better for him to have his family disgraced and his daughters,
- than to let the strangers be disgraced. It was a decision that was made. God
- was merciful to them. "The Lord was merciful to them" (vrs 16), not because
- they deserved it, but because of a couple reasons 1) God had promised old
- Abraham a bunch of nations, and Lot dying wouldn't help that at all. 2) Lot
- had shown some type of good heart by helping the strangers. The point is: It
- is still consistent with the Bible.
-
- Now the daughters. Lot and his daughters went into some mountains nearby.
- The daughters decided that since their boyfriend were fried (they were
- left in S&G (because they didn't listen to God's warning)) they would
- continue the family line through their father. This they did without his
- knowledge. They got him drunk with wine and slept with him. Yet "He was
- not aware of it when she lay down, nor when she got up." Still consistent.
-
- > IV - Let's also not forget some of the very last words of Moses,
- >as he surveyed Canaan across the Jordan: "A perverse and crooked
- >generation shall be burnt with hunget and devoured with burning heat
- >. . . the sword without and terror within shall destptroy the young
- >man and the virgin, the suckling and the man with grey hair . . . I
- >will make mine arrows drunk with blood and my sword shall devour flesh . . .
-
- These were the words of God against the Israelites. When Moses came down
- from Mount Sinia the Children of Israel were winning a great sin against
- God. God decided they would suffer in the wilderness for a generation
- before they got to the promised land. The old to the young part, meant
- that they would wander until everyone who was alive and participated in
- that sin would die before they saw the land. It was a just punishment,
- consistent with the rest of the Bible and handed down. (And carried out)
- by God.
- The point is these are not Moses's thoughts, but God's. Moses is realizing
- that the Word of God (spoken before at Sinia) has come true (again).
-
- ><<Can it be doubted that this man's ideas and personality have certainly
- >left their mark upon history (even as I type, I think of Even Greater
- >Serbia, the slaughter by Cortes (cross and sword in hand) of the entire
- >Aztec nation, Puritan "religious freedom" (hence we now have Rhode
- >Island, Connecticut, and witchburning stories), the Spanish Inquisition,
- >etc. . . but I am straying from the immediate issue>>.
-
- This is not God's work. It is not punishment by God's hand. (And it's
- not in the Bible). (I might even go so far as to say that these things
- are wrong, but that's another issue outside this discussion).
-
- > V - There are also great stories in Judges, like the one about
- >sinated Eglon, a Moabite tyrant so fat that Ehud couldn't pull his
- >sword back out; or Jephthah, who swore if god gave him victory, he'd
- >sacrifice the first thing he saw when he got home - which turned out
- >to be his daughter.
-
- >At any rate, there are obviously many things in the Hebrew mythology
- >known as the old testament which are entirely contradictory with the
- >doctrine and theology espoused in the new testament (one of which is
- >the fundamental shift in emphasis from material/physical/community
- >oriented rites to the personal/spiritual/"my kingdom is not of this
- >earth." My contention is the following: if one chooses to place faith
- >in one thing or another, that is his decision; but that person hits
- >murky waters when attempting to empirically legitimate such; if I were
- >to buy the new testament, I would be revolted by the old, and vice versa.
- >Summarily, faith is beyond the bounds of rationality.
-
- The New Testiment is a New Deal. Think of it like a business deal. Go says:
- "Ok, man do WHATEVER you want EXCEPT eating from this one tree. It's fruit
- is no sweeter. The other trees have plenty of fruit. Just don't do it. You
- can do anything but eat from this tree." Man say, "er. . . o-tay" and goes
- to eat some fruit.
- God says, ok you couldn't handle that so here, "These are the laws. Obey
- them. They are simple. Straightforward. Learn it. Do it."
- Man says, "er. . . o-tay" and ignores the laws and everything else etc.
- God says, "Ok they can't handle this. I'm going down as Jesus to show! them
- the way to live. Since they can't seem to understand a drescription." So
- Jesus comes down and lives perfectly. This is where we are now. (Also
- in the future God is going to say, "Ok. That's enough. The people who could
- handle it (under any set of laws (for us it happens to be the new testiment))
- are coming with me and we're going to have a kingdom like it should be."
- This is in Revelations).
- The point is the New testiment is the new deal. God promised us this if this,
- but we couldn't handle it, so he said decided to forget that deal and offer
- us a better one (the New Testiment). The old Testiment could have applied to
- today if God had decided to do it that way, but he didn't. The old testement
- is still useful for a variety of reasons (most specificly insight into this
- God person), but now the old testiment promise has been replaced by the New
- Testiment Promise. None of this is contradictory since the Bible is taken
- as a whole. The Bible is a history remember. Trying to proof the invalidity
- of the Bible through New/Old contradictions is foolish. It would be like
- sighting two passages in different parts of the bible that say:
- 1) Fred is 30 years old.
- 2) Fred is 60 years old.
- Obviously this is a contradiction, but big deal. True Fred can't be 30 and
- 60 at the same time, but why does he have to be. No-one would argue this
- side, but people still argue Old vs. New.
-
- (BTW, great attack. Ask me more if you want. (It's all in the spirit of
- intelligent discussion anyway)).
-
- --
- H. Ross Perot | "How do you always manage to | Jeff R. Lamb
- for President | decide?" | Midnight Arrow
- of the United | "How do you let others decide | Champion of Reality
- States in '96 | for you?" -Ayn Rand | (jlamb@ux4.cso.uiuc.edu)
-