That does make some sense. Still, I balk at a story of a supposedly loving God destroying the life of one of their followers for a bet? But I think it's unlikely that we could possibly agree on an intepretation of this, or any other story, in the Bible. I'm reading a collection of ancient texts written over a period of 1,000 years in various circumstances and for various purposes. You are reading the Word of God. But I have to say, some of the stories in the Old Testament remind me of some of the Greek stories, in which the gods do not behave in a particularly moral way and from which the lesson seems to be that the gods frequently mess about with us, either because they don't care or because they are actively hostile. — Ludwig V
What God does to Job is ethically wrong. — Banno
This is simply to renege on your responsibility to decide if an act is right or wrong, to hand that most central of judgements over to someone else. To look the other way. — Banno
Were something along these lines to have in fact occurred, the event would then make far more sense to me.
Again, I get it, it’s a very heretical interpretation of events. — javra
I can find no way out of believing that the story of Job is outrageous. God inflicts all that suffering on him because of a bet with Satan, to show off how faithful his believers are. Truly, not acceptable. — Ludwig V
Are you saying Isaac deserved the death penalty for a crime/sin? — Gregory
The Binding of Isaac and the Trials of Job speak of acts of cruelty, where unjustified suffering is inflicted in the name of faith.
So... you think you do not have very strong intuitions about how things should be?
Then why did you respond to my post? — Banno
There are those amongst us who see faith, understood as submission, as a virtue. I am questioning that. I suspect you might agree, broadly speaking. — Banno
It's devotional use is an entirely different matter. — Hanover
It's devotional use is an entirely different matter. — Hanover
And no, there was no flood, and God did not speak. I'm just trying to stop the responders who will insist upon pointing out the obvious literal absurdities before they begin. — Hanover
And once Isreal was formed, these ex-Palestinians became Israelis. So easy. — ssu
Was a Palestinian. But then, you know, some people there formed Israel and those people are called Israelis. — ssu
There are scores of movies, books and other texts/images that depict the dominant man getting a woman, from the James Bond franchise to the recent Dutch success 'Baby Girl' and from Pride and Prejudice to 50 shades of Grey. Apparently it is not that simple. Men could embrace feminine values and become nice guys, but that does not necessarily make them more attractive. Here we have a different kind of problem from the first, namely that what desired masculinity is, is itself still in doubt. Masculinity has become a problem for itself, it is unclear what it is precisely, how it should be constructed. It is clear that it is a problem, but unclear what the solution is because it is caught in a contradiction. It has to reform and not reform at the same time. — Tobias
This collapses the two concepts of faith and trust (emunah and bitachon), which are obviously related, but I see them as differing, although faith is required for trust. — Hanover
Palestinians — BitconnectCarlos
1) is faith an emotion or a thought? What if it is neither — Gregory
If we had been there and saw a man, we knew to be Caesar crossing the Rubicon then we could be certain in the sense iof having no cogent reason to doubt that Caesar crossed the Rubicon. How certain of that can we be now? I don't know how well-documented it is...I am not an historian. — Janus
The more we can cross-reference documents that record the same events when or close to when they happened, the more reliable we would think the records are—the more likely we would be to believe the events happened. There is no way to go back and observe though.
When the recording documents are understood to be more distant in time from the described events then their reliability would reasonably be thought to be inversely proportional to the temporal distance. When the described events are extraordinary, things of which we have no well-documented examples, like walking on water, raising people from the dead or turning water into wine. then we would be justified in skepticism.
In general, we cannot be sure of any historical events because as I said above, we cannot go back in time to observe for ourselves. — Janus
