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NotWorthy
Guest
Are you saying that God is changing. How can God be perfect and changing? If you are perfect, then there is no need to change, or else you wouldn’t have been perfect in the first place.I’ve never followed any faith so the point is moot.
Christians like to ignore parts of the OT when it suits them. How can that be right if the bible is God’s word, you either follow all of it or none of it. There’s no cherry picking for the parts that fit the agenda.
For example, Leviticus and Deuteronomy contain sections that are absolutely barbaric. If God is unchanging how do you justify ignoring those unsavoury parts?
Leviticus was written for a people that had just abandoned God in the place of a golden calf. Notice that God made the tribes of Israel sacrifice animals that were worshipped in Egypt. You see this in Exodus when Moses asks Pharaoh to let his people go out into the desert and make sacrifices to their God. He told Pharaoh they have to go out into the wilderness because Pharaoh would find the sacrfices abominable.
I’ve heard Leviticus and all the sacrifices compared to a woman that is married to an alcoholic. She wakes him up and gives him a bottle of whiskey and a hammer. She tells the husband to break the bottle and pour the whiskey down the sink or else she will leave him. The guy does it and thinks “Hey, life is great!!!” The following morning, and every morning after that, the man is again waken up with a bottle of whiskey, the hammer, and the same threat. All these sacrfices of bulls, rams, lambs, and such were to remind the Israelites that they were the gods you used to worship in Egypt in place of Yahweh.
The Laws of Deuteronomy, on the other hand were written by Moses. Notice that when God talks to Moses before “Calf-Gate”, He calls the tribes, “My people” (“Moses, tell My people this…”). After the incident at Sinai, God never refers to them as “My people” again. He lets Moses deal with these people. You see this in the New Testament when Jesus describes the allowance of divorces as, “because Moses couldn’t deal with your hardened hearts” (paraphrasing).