Yes, because I'm asking you to explain how any reasonable person would have known that you switched arguments, and you aren't answering (despite saying that you would, but I guess that was a lie). So yes, you're stalling and deflecting.
Right so to clarify you misunderstood one of my posts, making an assumption that was wrong, and are insisting that is my fault? This is interesting because several of your arguments in this topic hinge upon fault lying with the person who has misinterpreted things. This is an obvious case of hypocrisy, where you're insisting one rule for you and another for everyone else. Since I'm
sure you don't want that, you're left with two options:
A) Fault does lie with the misinterpreter for not doing their research, and this whole sideline you've got going is just an ego driven tantrum because you don't like your mistakes being noted, or
B) Fault lies with the misinterpreted for not being clear enough in which case, on top of owing f0x an apology for your accusations early in the topic, all you've said about people misreading the Bible becomes the fault of the Bible.
Pick your flavour of wrong, House!
God can control everything ≠ God does control everything.
It was never a premise that God does control everything.
If god can control everything and wants the best for us while knowing some true morality, but then doesn't act to let us know clearly, then either one of those premises is false or your god is not a moral entity. Either way, fallible, so why be used as a guideline for morality?
This isn't even changing the ruling, this is just that the ruling no longer applies because certain conditions have been met.
Given the example of soda, the full rule could be "None of my children who are unable to procure food for themselves shall drink soda, outside of special occasions"
If you are unable to procure food for yourself, as if you were a toddler, you would hear "you are not allowed to drink soda". As a teenager you would hear "yes, you can drink soda". The children only hear "yes you can" or "no you can't". They do not hear the full explanation of the rule. There is one rule, and it is consistent. A child may just fall on one side of the rule or the other depending on their circumstances.
It's like you're saying that it's inconsistent that some people have a driver's license and others don't. It's not inconsistent. Some people qualify for and apply for a driver's license, and others don't. In certain places, once you pass a certain age, the "rules change", and you need to re-test in order to keep your license. Is this the government changing it's mind? "You were qualified before, but now since you're 75 years old, I've changed my mind, you're no longer qualified"?
Ooh, you possibly shouldn't have used a metaphor about rules changing specifically over time, because that's what I'm getting at. In your metaphor, the 75 year old is the Bible. Time has moved on, things have changed. We need to rethink and readdress the issue at hand (the 75 year old/the Bible) because time had moved on and things have changed. You've used an analogy that proves my point, not yours I'm afraid
Where? In the Strong's Definitions section? That reads:
πορνεία porneía, por-ni'-ah; from G4203; harlotry (including adultery and incest); figuratively, idolatry:—fornication.
In Thayer's Greek Lexicon? That reads:
πορνεία, πορνείας, ἡ (πορνεύω), the Sept. for תַּזְנוּת, זְנוּת, זְנוּנִים, fornication (Vulg. fornicatio (and (Revelation 19:2) prostitutio)); used
a. properly, of illicit sexual intercourse in general
So no, it doesn't mean prostitution. Neither of the two definitions say it does.
Post a screenshot and then draw a big red circle around what causes you to think that the word means "prostitution", because I'm not seeing it.
Once again, I advise you to read your own source again. Carefully this time. It does say that porneia means adultery...in a section specifically marked "Biblical usage". Meaning its not actually what the word means, just what scholars have decided the Bible thinks it means. Thats like if you and me were at a fancy dinner party and I asked you to pass the salt, then got outraged when you handed me salt because in the context of the fancy dinner party the word "salt" actually means "sugar". If you're just going to go around decided any word actually means anything, how can the Bible be trusted? It ceases to be the flawless work of a supreme deity and becomes the muddled work of man
Enough so that a reasonable person (preferably your peers, if we're talking academics and scholars) wouldn't blame you for not missing something.
I mean it seems me an Neuromancer are both academics and we're pointing out things you've missed, overlooked or not thought through. Does that mean you have failed your research?
It's only easy to misinterpret the bible if you don't do your research, and if you don't do your research, that's your own fault.
It's about as easy as failing a math test when you don't attend classes or study.
Right now you are arguing with me and Neuromancer because we have different interpretations of a single word. Looks like its pretty easy to misinterpret the Bible if you ask me
I agree, nobody said that "the book must never change". It's your argument that the book changing makes the book invalid, but you've yet to explain how that makes sense. In fact, your other argument is that change is good, and even that the more change, the better!
My point isn't that the Bible is untrustworthy because it changes. It's untrustworthy because it's inconsistent. It doesn't get updated, or rethought or reassessed and so we're left with various versions, various translations, various retellings. Its not updating, its
mutating
It doesn't matter whether or not the book is "done". What matters is whether or not the book is God's Word. If it's God's Word, we should listen to it, because it contains instructions for us. Whether or not those instructions will be updated sometime in the future is irrelevant.
It's your argument that the bible is outdated. Saying "it might be updated sometime later!" doesn't make it outdated. When that update comes out, then you can rightly say that the previous book is outdated, but not before.
And you know it's not already been updated...how, exactly? Remember, your god is all powerful, all loving and wants us to know the perfect morality he can conceive of. It would be an easy matter to tell satan to eff off for the day and go write some mortal laws so he can best nudge us towards that perfect morality. To not do so is, well, immoral.
There's no contradiction between the law and the Bible. Jesus never said "go and take slaves", or "go and kidnap people from other nations, making them your slaves" or "slavery is a right!" He only said "if you're a slave, continue to obey your master".
The regulation of a thing relies on the allowance of the thing. What Jesus said was to regulate, not allow or disallow.
Choose another example.
So Jesus doesn't disallow slavery (and indeed tells them to be good slaves, not to not be slaves at all) but modern law does? Ta-daa, that's a contradiction! Choose another rebuttal
It's your argument. Does your argument rely on a bunch of maybes? Well then "maybe" you're wrong about the whole thing?
Your argument has just as many maybes, you just don't like saying them out loud
Please tell me where in the bible it says to do such a thing. Or are you working backwards through inductive reasoning again?
Please tell me which countries are currently run by the Nazi party. You're the one who wanted to bring up historical examples of immorality, you don't get to back out because I can bring up more blood soaked examples from your side of things
Vaccinations are not a moral issue. The bible is a moral guide.
If you want to talk about the morality of spreading infectious diseases, that's covered under "All things, therefore, that you want men to do to you, you also must do to them" and "love your neighbor as yourself".
Ah ah ah House, you never mentioned morality in your original statement that lead us down this path. You only asked for "what's best for us" not "whats best for us
morally" so go put those goalposts back. I used the advancement of medical science as an example because there's no examples of it in the Bible. No recommendations, no warnings, no advice. And if the bible didn't see that coming...can it truly be omnniscient?