Arathain Kelvar wrote:
The Bible is designed to lay out a moral code and instructions on how to bring yourself to God. It must, therefore, in so doing, identify unacceptable behavior.
And any book that calls naturally occurring, common biological sexual behavior between consenting adults "unnacceptable" has serious issues.
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Would you expect a religious text, written by men nearly 2000 years ago to declare women's equality?
I would expect a book that claims to be the inspired word of God to give God's exact opinions. Unless God, too, used to be a bigot but has since moved toward equality? Likewise, your dismissal of the "old testament" scriptures as meaningless implies that you think your God was formerly a murdering, genocidal tyrant, but changed somehow. Is your Bible inspired of God or not? Were the laws of Israel God's laws or not?
Let's see what the new testament thinks of the old testament. (There are actually dozens of these references, I just grabbed a few).
Matthew 5:17-19
Mark 7:10
Luke 16:17
2 Timothy 3:16
2 Peter 20-21
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Peter 2:18 wrote:
18 Servants, be subject to your masters with all fear; not only to the good and gentle, but also to the froward.
I see no issue with this. It is instructions to perform your required tasks, regardless of whether your master/boss/manager is easy going or a pain in the ***. This is still good advice. It's certainly not advocating mistreating your servants.
The word your bible translates "Servants" was the word used for slaves in the greek language it was written. This is yet another bible verse legitimizing slavery.
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At any rate, you need to ignore A LOT of text to come to your drawn conclusions. Want to go quote for quote? You provided 3 (IMO only 2 that count). Here's three to counter:
Romans 2:1 - Ah yes. One of many scriptures that show the hypocrisy of the bible and those who wrote it. A book of judgement tells people not to pass judgement on others. I love it.
Peter 2:17 - Interesting it singles out believers there, but regardless, more hypocrisy. You know, the Qu'ran, too, tells people to be peaceable with all men, then out of the other side of its mouth says that the infidels should be killed.
John 2:1-11 - Water to wine? I mean, yeah, I'd love to have that power, but what's a miracle fable have to do with this?
Now, let's look at some more interesting New Testament principles:
The guilty are set free by the blood of an innocent victim - Romans 5:9, 12
We are predestined by God to go to heaven or hell, and can't affect this - Ephesians 1: 4-5, 11
God had his son murdered to keep himself from hurting others for things they didn't do - Ephesians 1: 7
God will set the entire earth on fire so that he can burn non-believers to death -2 Peter 3:7
I particularly love the moral message that bible writers got out of the story of Sodom and Gomorrha.
Let's tell the story for those who hadn't read it.
God sends angels to investigate the city of Sodom (and nearby Gomorrha), to see if it really needs to be destroyed. (Because, like, God's not omniscient or anything.) The angels come to stay with the faithful nephew of Abraham, Lot. The men of the city see these cute angels enter the city, and demand that Lot turn them out of his house so that they can rape them to death. Lot, taking the idea of hospitality seriously (and also the idea of the inferiority of women), offers them his daughters to rape instead. The men refuse, saying they want to rape the angels. God strikes the city with temporary blindness so the angels don't get raped. The angels encourage lot and his family to leave the city so God can burn it. (While leaving, Lot's wife turns around to watch the destruction, and gets executed for it by turned into salt.)
Now, how are Sodom and Gomorrah referred to in the new testament?
Jude 7-8
So, here we have a city of murdering rapists. But their real crime was not being murdering rapists, but the fact that they wanted to rape
men. The rape of women would have been completely acceptable. No, the real crime of Sodom is that they were too gay.