On Sat, Sep 15, 2012 at 7:22 AM, Roger Clough <[email protected]> wrote:

>Intelligence ? I don't think the word was available back then (Bible days).
>

Well, they certainly behaved as the didn't know what it meant to be
intelligent, but then why is the bible worth reading today? Why not read
something with a little more intellectual meat on its bones, like a Donald
Duck comic book?

>To understand the Bible you have to read it as a little child,
>

And there can be no better place for a child to start reading the Bible
than "And I will cause them to eat the flesh of their sons and the flesh of
their daughters, and they shall eat every one the flesh of his friend";
stories about how God likes to force people to eat their children and
friends makes such charming bedtime stories.

 > God did order a few massacres.


But only a *few* massacres, and hey God is just like the rest of us, He
sometimes does things He will regret when He gets into a hissy fit. I mean
we all have bad days.

> Those slaughter statements are mostly based on the old jewish laws in
> leviticus and numbers.
>

I will say this, the God of the Old testament may be the most unpleasant
character in all of fiction and He may have enjoyed forced cannibalism and
torture but at least once you were dead you were dead and He was finished
playing with you; but not so in the New Testament of Jesus the Prince of
Peace, Jesus is going to use all His skill to torture you as horribly as He
can for all of eternity if you take just one step out of line.

 > Jesus did away with them.
>

So you look at Jesus as a mass murderer who has reformed, or says He has.

> The forgiveness of Jesus also did away with the need for them. The Old
> Testament is the problem. The New Testament is the solution.
>

Christ was a jerk. I refer to the character portrayed in the bible, whether
there really was a historic figure who impressed the rubes with card tricks
and other stunts I don't know. Personally I'd be a lot more impressed if he
had taught us about the second law of thermodynamics rather than hear a
report of questionable accuracy about some water into wine trick. It took
the human race another 1800 years to learn about entropy and although it
teaches us nothing about morality neither do Christ's stunts, and unlike
the fermented grape juice bit you can't fake thermodynamics.

Christ was a nut, nutty as a fruit cake, or to put it in more politically
correct language, he had a mental illness that produced delusions of
grandeur. I don't think it was an act, I think he really thought he was God.

Christ was a martinet. His words "You serpents, you generation of vipers,
how can you escape the damnation of hell" sounds more like a typical flame
you can find anywhere on the net then it does the wisdom of a great sage.
Buddha, Lao-tse, and Socrates all had a much more enlightened attitude
toward those who disagreed with them, and they had it 500 years before
Jesus.

Christ was a creep. He believed in hell, he talked with glee about "wailing
and gnashing of teeth" and "these shall go away into everlasting fire". He
thought that torturing somebody, not for a billion years, not for a
trillion years but for an INFINITE number of years would be an amusing
thing to do to somebody he didn't like. I think cruelty on this monstrous
scale proves that Jesus Christ of the bible is morally indistinguishable
from Satan of the bible.

Christ was a idiot. He believed that God, that is to say himself, was
furious with the human race (something to do with fruit trees) and even
though he could do anything the only way for him to forgive the humans
would be for the humans to torture him to death, even though being a god he
can not die. Does any of this seem very smart to you?

 John K ClarK

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