steen wrote:I could say the same about your posts. Are you done with the ad hominems now?
Ad hominem attacks attack the presenter of the argument, not the argument itself. I referenced only your arguments.
steen wrote:Funny. My Bible reads different as you can see above, with the focus about "harm" clearly being about the woman regardless of whether she miscarries or not. The reference clearly is to the woman.
What translation are you using? I was using the World English Bible. Looking at the Strong's information from the KJV, it looks like either interpretation could be true.
steen wrote:Just like the Bible speaks against heterosexual behavior. Paul, in particular, was big on that. So that proves nothing.
NO! Paul does NOT speak against all heterosexual behavior. Paul simply said that celibacy would be preferable, but that heterosexual marriage would NOT be sinful. He also says that ALL homosexual behavior is wrong.
steen wrote:INFERENCE??? Yes, there we go again, trying to make claims about what God WOULD have said.
Inference is NOT the same thing as speculation. Inference is simple logic.
steen wrote:And you feel that personal, political INTERPRETATIONS of the Bible are appropriate for public policy (Which, by the way, are not allowed to endorse a specific religious view)?
I would say that the correct interpretation is not "political" but that it IS true for all people in all places, even though the U.S. government isn't allowed to enforce it.
Most if not all of the "interpretations" I have been showing you are clearly correct from actual study. Not just personal and arbitrary.
'
steen wrote:I already showed where that claim is tenuous, and clearly needing an anti-choice Bible rather than a neutral, Christian Bible.
Anti-choice? Please don't use labels like that. I don't say "anti-life".
And the Bible is "neutral"? NOT REALLY. It speaks against many moral wrongs.
steen wrote:Abortion is not murder, so you are not making sense here.
I would define "murder" as "intentionally killing a member of species
homo sapien." Abortion is murder.
But the definition that really matters is the one used in the Bible. From Exodus 20:13:
Strong's wrote:7523 ratsach raw-tsakh'
a primitive root; properly, to dash in pieces, i.e. kill (a
human being), especially to murder:--put to death, kill,
(man-)slay(-er), murder(-er).
Abortion does look like murder, even under this definition.
steen wrote:If you have to stretch interpretations that far,
Not far at all!
steen wrote:how should we then interpret the Exodus rules about how to treat slaves, and how much you can beat them, f.ex.?
Irrelevant, since I don't have any slaves. Please find me a passage that mentions "beating", as I don't recall any.
steen wrote:Or are you saying that only PART of the Bible is valid, and you get to decide which part?
Well, part of it (like OT ceremonial laws) no longer apply to us. Sound study and exegesis must decide, not my personal opinion.
steen wrote:According to the Bible, possibly.
Ever heard of "loving your neighbor"?
steen wrote:How do you know? How do you know that God doesn't consider computers the worst tool of the Devil yet?
Sound study and exegesis.
steen wrote:Because you CHOOSE to interpret the Bible that way even if the Bible doesn't talk about using computers, right?
I choose based on evidence. Not based on what I want.
steen wrote:Ah. like your appeal to your unique subjective interpretation of your wishful thinking as "facts"?
Prove at least one part of this. You have failed thus far.
steen wrote:When your "simple reasoning" involves incredible inference and assumptions based on your political/moral filter of schemas, then it is not so "simple" anymore regardless of your claim.
If it ever does. Can you give me at least one example that you can prove?
steen wrote:And there is no evidence that God sees abortion or homosexual marriage as particularly a sin.
There is plenty of evidence. See any thread on those topics.
steen wrote:But we DO know that God sees humans trying to "enforce" what they see as God's moral code as being sinful.
No, we don't. Addressed in a bit.
steen wrote:"don't judge least..." "See first the splinter..." Let the one without sin throw the first rock" Etc. That one is pervasive throughout the Bible.
This is a reference to asserting one's superiority due to an alleged lack of sin. Not to Bible-based reference to sin as sin.
steen wrote:So when you seek to restrict others civil rights through your politicized INTERPRETATION of the Bible, then you are most certainly committing a sin.
How do I want to restrict civil rights?
And my interpretation is from study, not politics.
And there is no support for the "most certainly commiting a sin", if I am simply opposing sinful acts rather than individuals.
steen wrote:Are you interested in getting help overcoming that sin?
If I ever become judgmental and hypocritical, yes.
steen wrote:Ah, because you say so, right?
No. Again, sound study and exegesis. I can prove it in another thread if you start one.
steen wrote:MHT 19:
24 - Again I tell you, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God."
It is very specific. If you are rich, you will NOT enter heaven.
Matthew 19:25-26 wrote:When the disciples heard it, they were exceedingly astonished, saying, “Who then can be saved?”
Looking at them, Jesus said, “With men this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.”
Only when taken out of context does it say that. BTW, "needle" was a reference to a specific gate that posed a challenge but not an impossibility for camels to get through. This conclusion comes from scholarship, not me.
steen wrote:Socialism at its best. Income redistribution is a MUST according to the literal Bible.
No, not really.
steen wrote:You may have CHOSEN TO INTERPRET this differently as your personal politics don't agree with the bible at this point, but that's your problem.
I choose my interpretations based on evidence. Not politics.
steen wrote:And it certainly shows al-ayeti's claim of God being a repugnican/conservative to be outright false.
It shows no such thing, even if AlAyeti's claim is false.
steen wrote:Glad you agree. Perhaps you can then persuade the person whose "side" you are taking in these arguments.
I am trying to take the side of truth and sound reason. There are points where I agree and points where I disagree with both of you.
steen wrote:He seems convinced that God specifically is a republican politician and that democrats are ungodly atheists.
This generalization would certainly be false.
steen wrote:I did. God wants the best for children.
Certainly.
steen wrote:The best is for as much education and support in reaching your goals as is at all possible.
Some goals are good, others are not. We should not help people reach sinful goals.
steen wrote:It is not to lie to kids or withhold information from them. Case closed.
It is simply that childhood is too early to study these things. Just like we shouldn't teach them calculus, since it would just confuse them. And teaching them this kind of information too early could send them into sinful lifestyles, in addition.
steen wrote:And BTW, feel free to drop those silly ad hominems. Or we could descend into "but you are ugly and your mom is dressing you funny" kind of accusations. I look forward to posts from you that do not contain such ad hominems.
I admit, I have used some ad hominem arguments (especially about your math skills). I apologize. Nonetheless, I don't see them here, besides implying that you haven't used your brain.
"Appeal to ignorance" is the name of a widely recognized logical fallacy - making a claim based on an alleged lack of evidence. Saying that you are making an "appeal to ignorance" is simply NOT making an ad hominem argument.
steen wrote:Yes, he really was. Because al-ayeti decided to claim that only republicans are Christians. That is very much a politicalization of God, making claims without evidence that God is a conservative anti-tax loon.
If he actually made this claim, it could have been politically motivated. However, it could also be a straw man.
steen wrote:I am glad you disagree with al-ayeti, then. But then I am puzzled why you up above defend that very sentiment you now disagree with?
What did I defend? Probably only parts that I agreed with.
steen wrote:Yes, I know that. But the political implications are much closer to socialism than to the anti-social fascism that al ayeti is claiming.
I don't know if AlAyeti is actually claiming this or not.
Nonetheless, socialism has historically led to evil dictators and related problems. Democratic capitalism seems less prone to these problems. This is why I think democratic capitalism is better. The Bible doesn't really specify one or the other; it only mentions personal decisions about how to handle money.
steen wrote:However, if you are as literal in single bible verses as al-ayeti is, then Pi indeed is 3.0
Not necessarily. You can be quite literal without getting pi=3.
steen wrote:The two of us have already agreed that the text of the Bible is to be looked at somewhat in context. The person you are defending has not. To him, every single Bible verse is a literal truism in itself. I would suggest that you check out some of his writings before choosing to go down that road any further.
I'll have to look more and see if he's actually like that.