FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 12-30-2008, 03:09 PM   #611
Banned
 
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Florida
Posts: 19,796
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Johnny Skeptic
Since there is not any credible evidence that a God inspired any writings on slavery, discussions about slavery are merely academic, and do not really have anything to do with divine inspiration. Who knows what kind of people Old Testmament Jews were compared with all other groups of people in the world. There is no way that we can know that. The bottom line is that they chose themselves to be God's chosen people. If they had better character than some groups of people did, so what?

No matter what the texts say, there is no way for us to know how much they might have been altered in order to make Old Testament Jews look good.

No matter what the outcome of this thread is, the outcome would not be able to reasonably prove that a God ever inspired anyone to write anything about slavery.
Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter
Why can't we compare this culture with other cultures on the subject of slavery?
Of course, and I never that said we couldn't. Many people are interested in Old Testament slavery from solely an academic, secular historical perspective. If that is your only interest in Old Testament slavery, that is fine with me, but a major problem that you have is that you cannot be reasonably certain how Old Testament Hebrews acted based upon copies of copies of ancient writings that were originally written thousands of years ago. My primary interest is whether or not a God inspired the Bible. A good deal of credible evidence suggests that such was not the case. As an academic, secular historical matter, I do not find the history of Old Testament Jews to be any more interesting than any other kind of history. Why should I? The only reason that I have debated slavery is that I want to discredit fundamentalist Christianity, not merely Old Testament Jews. There are thousands of other ways to adequately discredit the Bible without discussing slavery. The global flood is a good example. It is very probable that a global flood did not occur. It is easy to discredit the Bible regarding that issue.

I do not doubt that Old Testament Jews were not much better or worse than many other groups of people. If that was the case, so what?
Johnny Skeptic is offline  
Old 12-30-2008, 03:13 PM   #612
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Metro Detroit, MI
Posts: 3,201
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Exciter View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by arnoldo View Post
Funny that, anything that can be considered negatively towards the bible is accepted as fact, i.e., "immoral double standard of slavery" in the OT however if "child sacrifice" is also documented in the bible it's dismissed a priori. If you want evidence of child sacrifice in the Near Middle East go to the library and do some research on your own. . .
Another whiny pants who can't prove his assertions that expects me to find the evidence, lol.

I figure since you and SSchlichter are such experts on what went on back then you must have something other then the Bible says so.

For what it's worth, I believe that Israeli's were told that their enemies practiced child sacrifice, propaganda is a very effective tool against your enemies. Just look at all the stuff the Third Reich said about Jews.

I think Diodorus was a 1st century historian describing the child sacrifice of the Hittites (someone can correct me if I am wrong).
They were filled with superstitious dread, for they believed they had neglected the honors of the gods that had been established by their fathers. In their zeal to make amends for their omission, they selected 200 of the noblest children and sacrificed them publicly; and others who were under suspicion sacrificed themselves voluntarily, in a number not less than 300. (Diodorus 20.14.1-7 and following).
sschlichter is offline  
Old 12-30-2008, 03:26 PM   #613
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Metro Detroit, MI
Posts: 3,201
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Johnny Skeptic View Post
The only reason that I have debated slavery is that I want to discredit fundamentalist Christianity, not merely Old Testament Jews.
This is a good way to avoid ever being surprised by what turns out to be true.
sschlichter is offline  
Old 12-30-2008, 03:30 PM   #614
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: The temple of Isis at Memphis
Posts: 1,484
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter View Post
The fact is that slavery existed throughout history until Christian Europe.
1. The fact is you got yourself in way too deep on this topic. That's why you want to ignore my point-by-point rebuttal above and simply return to asserting your desired conclusion. Waving your hands and saying "Ignoring all the facts you just presented, I still believe XYZ" is bad logic and childish.

2. Coincidence is not causality. The fact that the an anti-slavery movement arose in Christian Europe doesn't demonstrate that it was Christianity that somehow started that movement. After all, christian Europe was around for a thousand years before anti-slavery even started to be taken seriously. And during that timeChristian Europe not only tolerated, but practiced, slavery. So there's obviously nothing about Christianity or Christian Europe that opposed slavery.

3. To find out what caused the end of slavery, you have to:

(a) identify some philosophical force proximate in time to the start of the anti-slavery movement, which
(b) actively opposed slavery

Given the above, it's rather obvious that it was the philosophy of the Enlightenment that put an end to slavery. The anti-slavery movement arose in Europe in spite of Christianity, not because of it.

Quote:
To ignore the relationship between the reformation and the enlightenment is naive (at best).
Naive? You're the man who thought a few internet quotes about Voltaire constituted a rebuttal argument, and you want to tell other people what "naive" is?

There is little if any relationship between the Reformation and the Enlightenment. The only real effect the Reformation had was to weaken the hold that the Roman Catholic Church had on Europe. Once weakened, the Enlightenment was in a position to take advantage of that weakness. But the Reformation, once free of the Roman Catholic Church, became just as dogmatic and anti-Enlightenment as the RCC did. The Enlightment was a direct threat to both the RCC and the new Protestantism.

Read this again from Britannica:

Quote:
The successful application of reason to any question depended on its correct application—on the development of a methodology of reasoning that would serve as its own guarantee of validity. Such a methodology was most spectacularly achieved in the sciences and mathematics, wherethe logics of induction and deduction made possible the creation of a sweeping new cosmology. The success of Newton, in particular, in capturing in a few mathematical equations the laws that govern the motions of the planets gave great impetus to a growing faith in man's capacity to attain knowledge. At the same time, the idea of the universe as a mechanism governed by a few simple (and discoverable) laws had a subversive effect on the concepts of a personal God and individual salvation that were central to Christianity.

Inevitably, the method of reason was applied to religion itself. The product of a search for a natural—rational—religion was deism, which, although never an organized cult or movement, conflicted with Christianity for two centuries, especially in England and France. For the deist a very few religious truths sufficed, and they were truths felt to be manifest to all rational beings: the existence of one God, often conceived of as architect or mechanician, the existence of a system of rewards and punishments administered by that God, and the obligation of men to virtue and piety. Beyond the natural religion of the deists lay the more radical products of the application of reason to religion: skepticism, atheism, and materialism.
The bolded sections above point out why there is no connection between the Reformation and the Enlightenment - the Enlightenment philosophy was at war with the Reformation.

Quote:
Most enlightenment philosophers were Christians who harbored dis-taste for the abuses of the church and for slavery.
We've been through this before - in that big response above that you tried to ignore.

1. Almost all EUROPEANS were christians at that time - it proves nothing to say that most Enlightment philosophers were christian;

2. Trying to credit these philosophers' belief in christianity does not work. In point of fact, most Enlightenment philosophers were not christians in the sense that you would describe being a christian, but were instead natural religionists or Deists (see Voltaire and other quotes above);

3. If Christianity had any real opposition to slavery, then why did it take 1000 years of before Christian Europe decided that slavery was a bad thing? Answer: because it wasn't christianity that started the abolition movement after all. It was the philosophy of the Enlightenment, which didn't come along until centuries after Christianity arrived to Europe.

4. Educate yourself:
http://www.positiveliberty.com/2004/...ghtenment.html


Quote:
Why do you think enlightenment philosophy sprang from Europe and not Saudi Arabia?
It certainly wasn't due to Christianity or the Reformation, because neither one of those created the Enlightment. Europe had an Enlightenment because it had previously experienced a Renaissance rooted in humanism.
Sheshonq is offline  
Old 12-30-2008, 03:31 PM   #615
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: The temple of Isis at Memphis
Posts: 1,484
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Johnny Skeptic View Post

How would granting non-Hebrew slaves the right to gain their freedom have interfered with preserving Israel?
because in 7 years, you would have a growing population of idol worshippers living in your midst.
Nonsense. They would pick up the culture and customs of their captors (Hebrews). Unless you think that idol worship is somehow genetically programmed?
Sheshonq is offline  
Old 12-30-2008, 03:33 PM   #616
Banned
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: America?
Posts: 1,168
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter View Post
Yes, you are making me look foolish
It really isn't hard. Actually you do fine by yourself by just posting.
Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter View Post
and you are exposing ivy league universities as secret hives of Christian apologetics.
Well see, I have not done this. I merely pointed out that the website appears to be an outline on a course. What you referenced said the urn with child remains is a sign of child sacrafice because the Bible says so. If that means they are Christian apologetics then...

Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter View Post
All you are actually doing is avoiding a discussion on the relationship between slavery, poverty, and crime in the ANE.
No I haven't. You just dislike like that I pointed out that you have been wrong in a lot of what you said and/or you can't get a pulse on what I'm posting. It's not hard to realize slavery, poverty, and crime is immoral, but for you it's hard to say that it is immoral.
Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter View Post
Without slavery, can you please let me know how those destitute were to survive?
I told you already, don't let them become destitute in the first place!
Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter View Post
how those that committed crimes were to be rehabililated?
How was making them a slave rehabilitation again?
Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter View Post
simple question. I am not asking you to get baptized, just to consider the possibility that slavery in the ANE provided social functions that jails and welfare do today.
As much so that it did in the US, and it was still immoral no matter how much white wash you use.
Exciter is offline  
Old 12-30-2008, 03:42 PM   #617
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: The temple of Isis at Memphis
Posts: 1,484
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter View Post
this is about one runaway slave, not a perpetual flow of freed men and women who were are still addicted to their foreign Gods.
1. Making stuff up does not work here. How do you know it was only one slave? How do you know this wasn't a commonly occurring problem with dozens or hundreds of runaways?

2. You have no idea *why* this slave ran away. Suppose he ran away because he wanted to worship his idols?

3. The OT is pretty explicit - there was zero tolerance for idol worshipping. So even if you were correct - a huge stretch - then a runaway slave would still not be tolerated, because (according to your logic) he would be a free idol worshipper loose inside Israel.

Quote:
, that was only one of the reasons. consider if you keep a slave for 7 years in a foreign land and then let them go in a place where they have no family and no means of making a living.
This silly response from you was answered already. I'll just re-post it here since you chickened out and didn't address it earlier:

1. You just got through claiming that these slaves were apprentices; clearly you beileve they were learning some kind of useful trade. Apparently you don't realize the ramifications of your own arguments.

It doesn't really matter; experience in other cultures and other times says you're wrong. Liberated slaves do find a way to stay alive, even if it takes a decade or a generation. And ultimately, a parent would rather raise their child as a free person on meager bread, than consign that child to a lifetime of servitude at someone else's hands.


Quote:
They could not hop in a train back to their homeland. They would just have to sell themselves into slavery again.
1. Slavery meant forced servitude, less than adequate conditions, and no way out. If you think it was such a good deal, then why did they have to shackle the slaves?

2. People were quite able to find their own food and make their own way in life. And if not, then they were free to voluntarily sell themselves for a fixed period of time into indentured servitude.

Slavery is not a kindness - and all your attempts to rationalize this and avoid admitting an unpleasant truth about the bible are not going to work.

Quote:
Moses instructed his soldiers to capture women from a neighboring tribe who had not slept with men and keep them for themselves. Does that indicate to you that he was worried about having more idol worshippers around?

yes, because you are not understanding the context and are ignoring the details.
It's more about you twisting and turning to avoid admitting a moral failure in the bible.

Quote:
They are instructed to shave their heads, which represents a break from their old life and starting a new life.
No, it represents a period of mourning for their dead husbands and children.

Quote:
Then they were instructed to take them as a wife, specifically not as a slave.
Which didn't answer the question posed to you:

1. They would still be foreign women.
2. They would still be worshippers of idols.

So if Moses was worried about having idol worshippers loose in Israel, then why did Moses order the Hebrew men to take these women as wives?

Try to grow a spine and actually answer the question this time, hmm?
Sheshonq is offline  
Old 12-30-2008, 03:44 PM   #618
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: The temple of Isis at Memphis
Posts: 1,484
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by arnoldo View Post
Funny that, anything that can be considered negatively towards the bible
Over the top whining. Go somewhere else; no one here is listening.

Quote:
If you want evidence of child sacrifice in the Near Middle East go to the library and do some research on your own. . .
Why?

It was your claim - you back it up. How many times do we have to drill that into your head, arnoldo?
Sheshonq is offline  
Old 12-30-2008, 03:47 PM   #619
Banned
 
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: America?
Posts: 1,168
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ben C Smith View Post

Do you accept Jeremiah 19.3-6 as evidence that the Judeans themselves sometimes practiced child sacrifice to Ba'al?

Ben.
Actually I think that website sschlichter linked used Jeremiah 7:30–32 which says the same thing so that'd be no.

Passages from the Bible are not evidence that remains in an urn are indeed from child sacrifice, sorry.
Exciter is offline  
Old 12-30-2008, 03:48 PM   #620
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: The temple of Isis at Memphis
Posts: 1,484
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by sschlichter View Post
So you would legislate the forgiveness of all debt.
Don't play stupid. The question wasn't about all debt; it was *specifically* about the debt of those destitute who cannot pay it back. It's the same principle, in fact, as a bankruptcy court.

Of course, you're too busy spinning and kneejerking to realize that.

Quote:
Does your father know that you are playing on his computer?
Does your body know that its brain isn't at home?
Does your village know that its idiot is missing?

Are we done now? Maybe you can address the questions and stop creating strawmen.
Sheshonq is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 09:20 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.