So, is the Old Testament, including the Book of Proverbs, Christian scripture or not?
I hardly think that the question is silly, since you required an answer from the New Testament, excluding the Old Testament.
rossum
Well, the main reason I find your objections silly is that I mentioned that you were making a comparison between Islam and Christianity, and just for the sake of arguing you had to say “Nope! Judaism too (insert baseball metaphore).” That’s silly to me, but may not have been to you.
Your main objection however (which I also find silly but is a common one among non-Christians) is that you have quoted the OT in order to compare it to Islam. Look at Youtube comments, read Islamic apologists, read any anti-Christian blog and you’ll quickly find them quoting the OT; and quoting it out of context. The issue with this however, is that Christians don’t look at those Scriptures as obviously condoning the words within. Your example given was a
proverb.
“Blessings are for the head of the just, but a rod for the back of the fool.”
Now, your objection (again silly to me) is that it can easily be interpreted just like the Surah in question: “If they continue in arrogance then strike them.” To me, the idea is so ridiculous that you can even draw a comparison, that I didn’t feel the need to get into a deep discussion about why we are no longer bound by the OT. But what the hey, you quoted it and I’m sure you’ll have 100 more for us.
Knowing that Psalms and Proverbs are often a collection of wise sayings I immediately know it’s out of context. If Jesus had said, “verily I say unto you, strike your wives on the back with a rod whilst acting in foolishness.” I may say you have a case, but instead you quoted Proverb 10:6
Blessings are for the head of the just, but a rod for the back of the fool.
Now I was looking for that translation and here they are on biblehub:
New International Version
Blessings crown the head of the righteous, but violence overwhelms the mouth of the wicked.
English Standard Version
Blessings are on the head of the righteous, but the mouth of the wicked conceals violence.
New American Standard Bible
Blessings are on the head of the righteous, But the mouth of the wicked conceals violence.
King James Bible
Blessings are upon the head of the just: but violence covereth the mouth of the wicked.
Douay-Rheims Bible
The blessing of the Lord is upon the head of the just: but iniquity covereth the mouth of the wicked.
I control + f’d “Rod” but couldn’t find yours. Here:
biblehub.com/proverbs/10-6.htm
Regardless, you want to take an OT passage and say, “That’s what Christians believe!” It’s not. We don’t repay violence with violence, or evil talk with violence, Jesus taught explicitly against it. So while the OT is Scripture in our Canon, we do not take all the sayings in a literal way that would cause us to be violent.