frank No, it has been fulfilled, but the law is still important. As previously demonstrated in the case of adultery, the Law brings death, and it is impossible to fulfill on our own. (Romans 1:19-20). It emphasizes the need for the mercy of God, brought to us by Christ. — Waya
All people have a right to state their mind here, after all, this is a philosophy forum.
Those who refuse Christ are under the law, and the law brings death. — Waya
Yeah, but it's not a Christian fundamentalist preaching forum.
You've been called out.
Echo'ing Banno's comments above:
Deferral to someone else (that cannot be asked in particular) is to forfeit being considered a moral agent.
Refusal to take responsibility for one's actions is moral cowardice.
Anyone doing this stuff ↑ are likely inconsistent or pathological.
Does that describe you? — jorndoe
I define theocracy as rule by a god. Humans are far too corrupted to act in place of God, so they are not really accurate in demonstrating what God wants.
True capitalism has never existed except in theory, being that it is the complete absence of governmental restrictions on trade. — Waya
Which was supposed to be fixed by the propitiatory sacrifice: one of the more obscene aspects of that religion. — frank
Well... That is a peculiar way to define it in my opinion. Theocracy is meant to refer to the forms of government that existed like the definition I gave because those have actually existed. A god run government never has and likely never will so I don't know why you would be referencing that. More importantly, the types of governments that I described have existed and still do, whether or not you call them theocracies or not. — yatagarasu
When only justice exists, and no mercy, why do we perceive as unfair? — Waya
Is it draconian when a person is struck by lightning? Rather, we see that as the result of nature. Justice is natural, but the problem is in defining justice. — Waya
Mercy is an element of justice as is proportionality. That's why stoning a mother at the town's gate is draconian. In fact, I find your argument disingenuous to the extent you are suggesting you would advocate throwing rocks at a child's mother until she died because she cheated on his dad. Say it all you want, but your conscience wouldn't allow it, so why pretend to believe it? — Hanover
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