What you are saying still doesn’t make sense to me.
The idea of not-killing comes from somewhere…but why do you think it comes from a god or a religion? People have understood that taking another human life is bad wayyyyy before talk of gods and religion.
We know it’s bad because of what you said earlier…common sense–we see the hurt it causes and we don’t want anyone to kill us, either…and we want our communities to survive and thrive. It’s logical. So as a community, people got together and decided to make it a law not to kill others and to give a punishment for it if you did.
Ancient Greeks did not necessarily believe in killing each other, but would take unwanted babies to the trash heap. That is killing, is it not?
The early Christians determined this was not in keeping with their new way of living and believing. They would rescue babies from the trash heap and raise them.
So, if I am to say today that I am pro-life, from conception to natural death, can I take credit for that belief? Obviously, somebody thought to go against the norm and make it a standard, in some cases a law, long before I did. I could claim it’s common sense and I came upon my belief system by own volition, but that cannot be so. I have to take into account my upbringing, books I have read, etc to form an opinion.
Therefore, I do not believe anyone comes to conclusions on their own, ever.
For every moral or good deed these gods seem to do in holy scriptures, they turn around and do immoral, unfair, unlawful deeds as well.
Please use examples from scripture where God commands anyone to do something immoral.
In your Lincoln quote, he mentions god…not actually giving credit, as you say…but he mentions him. It was an era when people were more religious and they talked that way.
But just because a President mentions a god, it still doesn’t mean a god is responsible for the laws and the inspiration for those laws.
The will of God prevails. In great contests each party claims to act in accordance with the will of God. Both may be, and one must be, wrong. God cannot be for and against the same thing at the same time. In the present civil war it is quite possible that God’s purpose is something different from the purpose of either party and yet the human instrumentalities, working just as they do, are of the best adaptation to effect His purpose.
(Abraham Lincoln)
Sir, my concern is not whether God is on our side; my greatest concern is to be on God’s side, for God is always right.
(Abraham Lincoln)
In great contests each party claims to act in accordance with the will of God. Both may be, and one must be wrong.
(Abraham Lincoln)
I can see how it might be possible for a man to look down upon the earth and be an atheist, but I cannot conceive how a man could look up into the heavens and say there is no God.
(Abraham Lincoln)
If Lincoln were alive today and was an Atheist, do you truly believe he wouldn’t have the same convictions he had as a Theist?
He was a smart, fair, just man…and that is how he thought and acted.
He was raised a Baptist. How could one separate that from the person he became?
I mean…the bible does not condemn slavery…it actually gives rules on how to treat your slave and how close to death you are allowed to beat your slave without getting into trouble.
If the words in the bible are inspired words of god, then…well…you can do the math.
Lincoln was against slavery and saw the immorality of it and wanted to make it illegal–that high moral principal and sense of fairness and compassion for his fellow human being in that regard surely did not come from the bible. In fact, it went against it.
I have never heard of a Christian that beat their slaves because of the Bible, have you?
I picture just the pertinent Commandments listed. For example, a new display with the numbered commandments that deal with killing, stealing…and a heading that says “From The Ten Commandments”.
But then…why even call them part of The Ten Commandments?
Those three laws are common beliefs in many, many religions and philosophies and psychologies. It would make no sense to ascribe them to just the Judeo-Christian religion as if that is where they come from or as if it is the only place they reside.
Where are they from then?
Apparently atheists find them distasteful, so they won’t claim them as theirs.
I think it would be great for other faiths to contribute their own version of these laws and ideals. They would not be numbered “Thou Shalt Not’s”… but that is great.