Kevin A wrote:CD,
Something I have always found interesting about the bible is that people can and will use passages from it to support just about any point they wish to convey. Your points here are no exception. In most of these situations, if one were to actually read the full context of said passages it would become clear that these passages have been completely misinterpreted.
I agree, people do that all the time. But how did I misinterpret those Bible quotes. They say what they say, and when you read them in context, they say the same thing.
Leviticus, in particular is one whacked out, extreme doctrine. Just as psychotic as any Islamic dogma on the books, IMO.
I read the Bible, cover to cover, with multiple versions and a concordance on hand to cross reference. It took about a year to do it. I estimate that maybe 10-percent of Christians have done that. I think I got the context thing covered.
I wish more Christians would actually sit down and read the Bible. They might be surprised at what is in it.
I bet that most of the Muslims in Sudan who are calling for the death of this teacher over a Teddy Bear have not read the Quoran, either. They are being led around in ignorance.
I'm not equating Christian fundamentalists in America to the barbaric fundamentalists that have become so influential in Arab countries, just to be clear. Our extremists are angels in comparison to guys like Osama bin Laden.
I'm just saying that it's not a book that causes this kind of behavior. It's people choosing to be evil and hateful that makes this stuff possible. No matter what a book says, we still have a conscience and a freewill.
CD