too old to rock and roll, and too young to die. — Noah Te Stroete
Have you read Pirsig on the influence of Native culture on the (white) American psyche? — unenlightened
Do you even know what you are talking about? I’m not talking about religious dogma taken from the Bible that was sanctioned by the corrupt Roman Catholic Church that all Christian church denominations also use as their sacred text. Dogmatic bullshit is what it is full of.
Neither am I. As I mentioned, I am discussing the biblical text. I am not a Roman Catholic.
— Noah Te Stroete
I strongly suspect you’re so defensive because you yourself love your wealth and privilege. I’m sorry Jesus has condemned you, but ease your mind in knowing that He condemns all those who do not repent, myself included. Also, I’m not religious. — Noah Te Stroete
Jesus literally said, “Render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s, and render unto God what is God’s.” He was talking about paying taxes. :razz: — Noah Te Stroete
I’m not talking about religious dogma taken from the Bible that was sanctioned by the corrupt Roman Catholic Church that all Christian church denominations also use as their sacred text. Dogmatic bullshit is what it is full of. — Noah Te Stroete
The Bible has never been used to reason from first principles, and therefore, Christianity is not dogmatic, which in my opinion, is the religion's most severe weakness. — alcontali
You are not saying there isn’t Church dogma, are you? — Noah Te Stroete
I’m not being political. — Noah Te Stroete
I was being descriptive of contemporary society, and you bring in some far right-wing Murray Rothbard nonsense about the coercive State and how taxes are theft. — Noah Te Stroete
You’re defensive about your wealth and privilege. — Noah Te Stroete
Biblical commentary? What in any way does that have to do with what Jesus said? — Noah Te Stroete
Do you even realize that the Bible’s various books from Genesis to Revelation were set by the corrupt, self-serving Roman Catholic Church? And now all denominations use it. — Noah Te Stroete
The difference is entirely and exclusively epistemic. It is really not about what the scripture says. It is about the consideration whether their advisories necessarily and provably follow from scripture. — alcontali
Jesus literally said, “Render unto Caesar what is Caesar’s, and render unto God what is God’s.” He was talking about paying taxes. — Noah Te Stroete
With money with a graven image on it, occupation money the Pharisees shouldn't have been carrying. He's making a joke, I think. What did Jesus think didn't belong to God? — iolo
I don’t even know how to respond to your raving histrionics. I could argue that personal property is theft, and keeping people from sharing the land is a form of slavery. I don’t actually believe this, but this is what you sound like. The State is formed through a social contract, I might argue, and thus protects the people rather than coercing them. Taxes are the cost of civil society. Rich people who want to horde their wealth and not pay for the commons and infrastructure that they benefit more from than anyone else is the true outrage I might argue. — Noah Te Stroete
Furthermore, you are not aware of the several councils the Church held to set dogma and the format of the modern Bible? — Noah Te Stroete
And the various churches all believe that their different and varied tenets of faith do indeed come from Scripture. — Noah Te Stroete
As I understand it, there are different sects of Jews (the Reformed and the Orthodox as examples) — Noah Te Stroete
there are the Sunni and Shia Muslims. The two Muslim factions have been at odds for centuries. — Noah Te Stroete
Plus, there is the Wahabbists, too. — Noah Te Stroete
The way I read it, he wasn’t making a joke but was genuinely trying to avoid the folly of choosing sides between the occupiers (Rome) and the priests’ set trap for him. — Noah Te Stroete
For example, there is not one Church that pretends that the Nicene creed comes from the Bible. On the contrary, they all admit that the theory of the trinity was decided at the Council of Nicaea. — alcontali
Jesus literally said that it is easier for a rich man to pass through the eye of a needle than to enter the Kingdom of Heaven. Hence, wealthy people don’t get into Heaven. — Noah Te Stroete
Logically, this actually does not follow. Jesus did not say that the wealthy certainly do not go to heaven, only that it is difficult for them to do so, which is not in dispute. — Virgo Avalytikh
Apparently you’ve never heard of the probably hundreds of Protestant denominations who believe that the entire Bible is the divine Word of God, passed down to humanity through God’s will? — Noah Te Stroete
Protestants aren’t taught about the Council of Nicaea and if they know about it, they would just say that God’s will was done. — Noah Te Stroete
In 325, the First Council of Nicaea adopted the Nicene Creed which described Christ as "God of God, Light of Light, very God of very God, begotten, not made, being of one substance with the Father", and the "Holy Ghost" as the one by which was incarnate... of the Virgin Mary".[56][57] — Wikipedia on the trinity
Protestants who adhere to the Nicene Creed believe in three persons (God the Father, God the Son, and the Holy Spirit) as one God. Movements emerging around the time of the Protestant Reformation, but not a part of Protestantism, e.g. Unitarianism also reject the Trinity. — Wikipedia on Protestantism and Trinity
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