BitconnectCarlos
A quick rule for most: if you think you understand Paul, then you don't. As to fornication, that word does not appear in the Bible. — tim wood
BitconnectCarlos
More likely, the person who has done at least some of the work to understand Paul will be modest in his claims — tim wood
And yes, biblical, just not the modern word or sense of the modern word. — tim wood
And translations that are off, or in some cases just plain wrong, part of the problem. — tim wood
Best advice I had about the Bible was to keep in mind that it was not written to me, for me, or about me, and that anyone who claims that it is telling me what to do is taking several leaps that are not in the Bible.
BitconnectCarlos
— tim wood
You may like this series of lectures. — tim wood
Anyway. I invite you to weigh that word "purity," — tim wood
He may not be exactly right all the time — tim wood
Ciceronianus
BitconnectCarlos
Sir2u
I don't see how that is relevant, as the time frame is intermediary between the two events of interest. — Lionino
Long before we started making anthropological investigations of those people. Thus, the results of those investigations may have been caused by contact with outsiders. Not to speak of the Arab slave trade in Africa: — Lionino
One story in Ovid describes the origin of the age-old battle, speaking of a Pygmy Queen named Gerana who offended the goddess Hera with her boasts of superior beauty, and was transformed into a crane.
In art the scene was popular with little Pygmies armed with spears and slings, riding on the backs of goats, battling the flying cranes. The 2nd-century BC tomb near Panticapaeum, Crimea "shows the battle of human pygmies with a flock of herons". — Wiki
I doubt it.
Moreover, most Pygmies now speak Niger-Kordofanian (e.g., Bantu) or Nilo-Saharan languages, possibly acquired from neighboring farmers, especially since the expansion of Bantu-speaking agriculturalists beginning ∼5 kya (Blench 2006).
And ideas get spread by ways other than demic diffusion. An unmixed DNA doesn't say much about one's culture. — Lionino
BitconnectCarlos
Regardless, let's have our way with our fantasies. Romans and Greeks were gay. Yeah. They are still not part of your culture. Are you Greek or Italian, or, at the very least, Mexican? No? So they have nothing to do with you. Make some history of your own so you don't have to take it from others. — Lionino
Make some history of your own so you don't have to take it from others.
Sir2u
Let us speak of these things. Or let us speak instead of the proof (proof, not scant and conditional and specific evidence) that Greeks and Romans were generally sexual degenerates. I don't see proof of that anywhere. Even then, anyone who makes such a claim is making the historical confusion of generalising a period of over 1000 years to appease their personal bias and politics. — Lionino
BitconnectCarlos
Jews may claim Greeks were a factor in their culture, that privilege doesn't apply to folks from other nations. Yet, a factor in a culture isn't the same as part of one's culture. Greece was an inextricable part of Latin/Roman culture, from its inception to the fall of the West, yet Latins saying "Aristotle and Zeus and Perikles are my culture" would be awfully weird, Augustine, Jupiter, and Scipio are their culture instead. — Lionino
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