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08-02-2001, 11:29 PM | #11 |
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I agree with Hezekiah and QoS; it's interesting both for its reflection of the ancient world and useful for understanding our own.
If I had to pick one book that you'd likely find interesting (other than the gospels), I'd recommend Ecclesiastes; even as a nonbeliever I still find that work fascinating. |
08-03-2001, 03:27 AM | #12 | |
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Read from that standpoint, it serves to help us better understand the human mind and the effect of mythology and superstition on ancient cultures. As a non-theist, I am convinced that the only way to rid mankind of the belief in the supernatural, is to educate. Education would be (as the nuns used to do) a slap on the head with the contridictions and the absurdities that abound in this book. Is it a roadmap to happiness, a design for a better life, a source of inspiration as theists say? Heck no! But if you enjoy a good novel, it's a dandy. All the right elements. Love, death, murder, ethnic cleansing,sex (and perversions of sex) violence of every imaginable description. Lies, deception, power hungry madmen. Is it a valid "history book"? Not really.It cannot be trusted for accurate recorded history. If you intend to fight in any way the superstition and dark age mentalities, you need to know the enemy. wolf |
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08-03-2001, 05:36 AM | #13 |
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Thank you for the responses, especially the recommended reading. My next question was going to be whether there are any good Cliff's Notes on the bible out there.
I will, however, take John MacArthur's transcripts with a grain of salt. here's a bit from the first one I looked at: "Back to the Future" Part 1 Revelation 1:1a Let's turn in our Bibles to the book of Revelation. We are beginning with our study tonight an examination of the great truths of this marvelous book. Yikes! On the other hand, Kirsch's books look interesting (cuts straight to the good parts, the sex and violence), and "The Bible Unearthed" looks to be right up my alley. This from a review of that book: The organization of the book clearly has the lay reader in mind. The authors do not even assume readers will be acquainted with the Bible and its stories, but instead follow a pattern whereby within each chapter they summarize what the Bible says (those of us who already know this like the back of our hands can simply skip these sections), then present the evidence for the earlier view, held even through much of the 20th century, that archaeology had confirmed the Bible in most respects. Then they present the findings of archaeology since the 1970's, and especially ground-breaking work in the 1990's, that has totally overturned most of these earlier beliefs. [ August 03, 2001: Message edited by: Xtopher ] |
08-03-2001, 08:09 AM | #14 | |
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the messiah. HE IS! HE IS THE MESSIAH!" - Monty Python really should be required in the modern education system.... |
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08-03-2001, 12:40 PM | #15 | |
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[ August 03, 2001: Message edited by: MOJO-JOJO ] |
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08-03-2001, 03:55 PM | #16 |
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I have not read it cover to cover/front to back, but more in a roundabout way. I agree with hezekiahjones that it's a valuable cultural artifact and the mythology is truly fascinating, especially when compared to other myths.
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08-03-2001, 04:10 PM | #17 |
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I'm surprised no one has said it yet, so I shall: The most beneficial thing to come from studying the Bible is the inescapable conclusion that the book is NOT the word of God. Sure, it's a trick answer to what I understand the topic to be -- but from what I understand, it's true for many deconverted atheists. (Not myself, however, which is why I hoped someone with personal experience would make the comment.)
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08-03-2001, 07:04 PM | #18 | |
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Personally, I've found Isaac Asimov's Guide to the Bible to be quite interesting. |
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08-04-2001, 07:08 AM | #19 |
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" Cliff's Notes on the Old Testament and New Testament"
"God creates man, then gets upset at everything man does" |
09-26-2001, 06:00 AM | #20 | |
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