Michael S. Pearl
Member
- Joined
- Jun 20, 2004
- Messages
- 297
Yes. You have a choice. What is your inclination? That is the point of Luke 17: 20-21 when the Pharisees allegedly ask Jesus "when the kingdom of God was coming, and Jesus answered them, 'The kingdom of God is not coming with signs to be observed; nor will they say, ‘Lo, here it is!’ or ‘There!’ for behold, the kingdom of God is within you.'”Except that I had a choice of many, many, many orders from God to exterminate all the people and livestock of various cities (kill 'em, unless you fancy their nubile young women.) Plus God doing the slaughtering himself (again, a choice of many episodes.) BTW, how many verses would a believer trim away from the Bible, as being contrary to love and mercy, before the book as a whole is plainly seen as unsuitable for modern minds?
As regards the - let's just call them what they are - repugnant verses, they are absolutely suitable for modern minds. Those verses depict characteristics common to humans individually and collectively throughout the ages (including such ideas that an individual acts as required by God, or the law, or by the culture, or by the clan rather than in accord with the individual's own sense of responsibility/response-ability, such as in terms of for the sake of the being of an other). Many of those verses are examples of what we would now dub realpolitik. Realpolitik is more often than not repugnant; it veritably never concerns itself with attaining solutions that have the sake of the opponent, the other, as a consideration. Of course, there is no getting away from it, and it is beyond our control; it frankly is the very sort of thing that is meant by the notion of the sins of the fathers being visited upon the children.
The reason why taking God's name in vain is prohibited - the reason why taking God's name in vain is a sin - is because when someone claims, for example, that God commands that some people be exterminated, the purpose of that claim is to effectively cut off any discussion, especially in terms concerned with the sake of the other: “Did not [God] who made me in the womb make them? Did not [God] form us both within our mothers?” (Job 31:15) God does not make people be concerned for others. Being concerned for others - and how to effect being for others - is entirely a product of, and a project of, human individuals. At least in the case of those who are so inclined.