P
PRmerger
Guest
Only when you use a fundamentalist reading of Scripture do you get the conclusions you’ve drawn.Debates here in CAF have really pushed me in this direction more than anything that has happened to me in some time. What am I supposed to believe about a religion which tries to justify slavery. St. Augustine wrote in his Enarrationes in Psalmos:
“if you see your slave living badly, what other punishment will you curb him with, if not the lash? Use it: do. God allows it. In fact he is angered if you don’t. But do it in a loving rather than a vindictive spirit.”
“Servumque ipsum tuum, si male viventem videris, non poena aliqua, non verberibus refrenabis? fiat hoc, fiat : admittit deus, imo reprehendit, si no fiat ; sed animo dilectionis fac : non animo ultionis.”
The Old Testament plainly allows slavery:
Leviticus 25:44-46
This kind of thing raises doubts in my mind about all religion, not just Christianity or Judaism.
I find it curious that fundamentalists and atheists always seem to have the same interpretations of particular Bible verses.
Rather, when one reads Scripture through the lens of the faith which gave us these Scriptures, can one come to a reading which isn’t tortured.