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InJesusItrust
Guest
Do you agree if the God of the Bible as I presented is true He is infintively good, infinitively just and infinitively wise, to make is so in a sense that the proud condemn themselves but the humble find Him?Like all literary works, what the stories in the Bible express are human desires, human beliefs, and what we humans believe to be right at any given time. Sometimes certain human societies found it favourable to slaughter their neighbours down to the last infant, and also found it favourable to claim sanction from their god to justify their actions; at other times, when they felt powerless to overthrow the ruling authorities, it was much more believable to pin their hopes upon a more subtle subversion of power, upon the idea that a ‘meek and mild’ individual could stand in the face of oppression and overcome it, at least by dying and thus escaping. Cue the expansion of this ideal into the notion that we are all destined for an afterlife of peace and justice…so that we don’t need to worry too much about what happens here and now.
Yes, of course there is value in the ideas expressed through these stories - but that value is not in any literal truth, but rather in challenging our ways of thinking. The idea of a martyr messiah challenged the notion of a warrior messiah, but that doesn’t change the fact that determination and - at times - aggression is just as necessary as passivity if one seeks to effect change in the world.
There was a time when Christianity provided a challenge to the ruling set of beliefs, but there’s little doubt that force and coercion played a role in the conversion of many peoples, just as much - if not more - than any intellectual persuasion or emotional appeal. Nowadays, nonbelief is finally providing a vocal challenge to the norm of religious faith (Christian and otherwise).
The response of the various faiths has been to clamp down and to protest, on the one hand, against ‘unjust persecution’ (as if they did not mete out enough of that in the heyday of religious power) at the hands of ‘rampant secularism’; and on the other, to assume the intellectual and moral high ground - neither of which they have any right to claim, if the facts of history and science, and the core ideas of religions, are brought to light in plain speech.