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Old 02-09-2008, 07:24 PM   #21
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Message, medium, difficult to separate. Medium contains torture. Torture is integral to story. Torture is the "just dessert" of the bad guy. Justifies torture. End of discussion. Repeating message gets us nowhere. It was known before the thread started.
ETA: This is really what the thread is about: understanding the verses dealing with the king who has someone he'd forgiven tortured. You haven't said anything about it in this response of yours. You've simply gone off on a tangent because I objected to your lame attempt to try to take moral high ground, something you're incapable of doing. Can we get back onto the topic or would you like to start a new thread somewhere else?

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Please do not try to lecture people about morals. You do what you are told apparently by someone whose morals you are in no position to fathom.

Any morals you have have been taught to you despite your religious beliefs and you don't look closely at the morals that lie beneath the surface of the ancient religion you are here to disseminate. I doubt whether you'd be in favor of slavery though it is ingrained in the Hebrew bible and accepted as the way of the world in the christian literature. I doubt whether you'd advocate the stoning of children for whatever silly reason given in the Hebrew bible. Do you advocate the sexist values of the societies that produced the bible? I doubt it at least a little.

The morals you have aren't christian per se and have been instilled by your society and your parents' involvement in the society. Perhaps 150 years ago you would have supported slavery and used the bible to support your case. Perhaps 100 years ago you would have argued against women going to universities or getting the vote. Would you with your precursors have actively fought against any scientific development that questioned your dogma? Those developments eventually gave you refrigerators and cars, electricity and computers, space travel, America's political dominance in today's world.

Morality is not a realm of religion.

The bible advocate the stoning of children? When? Are you refering to the cursing of parents? This is not directed towards children but adults. This law was established by God because Israel was a rebellious nation. This was done to try and prevent rebellion against authority.
Start with Deut 21:18-21, or 13:6-10. But then there's other reasons for stoning that you probably wouldn't really condone these days. If someone worships some other god, or gathers sticks on the sabbath...

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Spin you should know better than that...
Yeah, sorry for expecting you to read the bible. I shoulda known better.

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The bible supports slavery? No it does not. Moses was allowing voluntary slavery and outlawed involuntary slavery....big difference.
Oh, I see slavery is bad, unless it's voluntary, ie someone is forced into slavery because of financial difficulties is ok. Hypocrisy.

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And what do cars and refrigerators have to do with opposing science or are you really talking about Evolution.
It's the same fruit. If you renounce one, if you had any moral fibre you should renounce all.

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America's political dominence in the world? Oh you mean like encouraging debt in third world countries and outright warefare against weaker nations?
The context has escaped you. I was looking at the benefits of modern science, a science that you would like to pick and choose with. It's all the same methodology, whether it is investigating the structure of the universe or the development of species. Would you have lit the fires for Giordano Bruno's pyre?

I have no interest in your jingoistic ravings. I'd just like to get you to focus a little, sugarhitman. Try and get continuity of thought for more than half a second in order to understand what is said to you.

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So then this dominence is of the morality of a non-christian origen nice spinny....nice.
Could you parse this sentence for me?


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Old 02-09-2008, 09:25 PM   #22
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What other ancient philosophers and teachers taught forgiveness was a virtue? Or at least where else in ancient lit can we see this precept taken as granted as "a good thing"(*TM)?

How many used the "or else" threat to undergird their or this precept's authority?
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Old 02-10-2008, 12:22 AM   #23
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I don't see a problem with this parable. The king was owed a large sum of money and he forgave his servant, and the servant was owed a small sum of money by another servant and he dealt harshly with the servant who owed him the small sum. Is it not the king's right by his authority to have the man who owed him the large amount of money punished for his transgression toward his fellow servant?
No. Nobody has the right to have people tortured.

And , according to the parable, the servant no longer owed the king anything.

If we forgave the large debts of African countries, would we have the right to bomb them, if they asked us to pay for the coffee they exported to us?
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Old 02-10-2008, 02:44 AM   #24
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It may be my bias; but I find it a bit regrettable that a story with the point that we should try to be forgiving of each other, because of our own need for forgiveness, is being read as advocating torture.
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It assumes the world of Late Antiquity in which the use of torture was an everyday fact of life. I don't think it is explicitly approving or disapproving of this fact of life.

One could maybe argue that to refer to such an ugly practice without explicit disapproval is itself problematical, but if so it is a general problem about the parables. which frequently refer to the harsh side of life in the world at that time (exploitative absentee landlords, harsh employers etc), to make their (IMO generally edifying) points.
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I think so too. Sad to see something turned inside out like that.
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Originally Posted by silentkiller
I don't see a problem with this parable. The king was owed a large sum of money and he forgave his servant, and the servant was owed a small sum of money by another servant and he dealt harshly with the servant who owed him the small sum. Is it not the king's right by his authority to have the man who owed him the large amount of money punished for his transgression toward his fellow servant?
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I agree they are twisting parables and how can they throw stones on torture consider the following from current news....
Does anyone doubt that if this parable were in the Koran it would be added to the list of other "offensive passages" posted on some websites?

What ought be said of any society that underpins, without the slightest sense of irony as indicated in the responses quoted above, the noblest of its ethics with the threat of eternal torment?

That may have been moral progress 2000 years ago. I'm reminded of a famous bridge in Prague, built a few centuries ago, that displays statues of the highest representatives of its culture standing on the roofs of dungeons with windows opening on the tormented and screaming incarcerated.

So long as a society's highest ethics are embedded within threats of torture -- how many in the ancient biblical texts that are not? -- a society is given permission to practice all forms of brutality to enforce its "higher calling".

A big reason I am a humanitarian philosophically and a utilitarian ethically is because I find no need for threats to make me want to do my bit for fellow-humanity, and because I sense the same biological nature and impulses with most others I encounter.

The need for threats to teach ethics is SO pre-18th century.
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Old 02-10-2008, 02:58 AM   #25
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The fact is this parable is making a point on different issues! that the king uses torture is a side issue and not advocating torture at all but that we still have USA among most countries using torture as a normal practise means rulers haven't changed in 2000 years so the parable is just being accurate in it's content on ruler practices but the message of the parable is very different.
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Old 02-10-2008, 03:07 AM   #26
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The fact is this parable is making a point on different issues! that the king uses torture is a side issue and not advocating torture at all but that we still have USA among most countries using torture as a normal practise means rulers haven't changed in 2000 years so the parable is just being accurate in it's content but the message is very different.
The Bible's conclusion to the parable -- presumably the conclusion contains the moral it wants readers to take away -- is as follows:

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And the master was angry and delivered him to the torturers . . . So my heavenly Father also will do to you if each of you, from his heart, does not forgive his brother his trespasses"
It is the warning of what will happen to you if you do not obey. How on earth can anyone call that a side-issue?

But I am enheartened that you and others I have quoted in this thread are apparently embarrassed by the thought of torture. That's good. We are of one mind in that respect. So why bother with any text that uses torture as its motivation to "higher ethics"?
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Old 02-10-2008, 03:10 AM   #27
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The fact is this parable is making a point on different issues! that the king uses torture is a side issue and not advocating torture at all but that we still have USA among most countries using torture as a normal practise means rulers haven't changed in 2000 years so the parable is just being accurate in it's content but the message is very different.
The Bible's conclusion to the parable -- presumably the conclusion contains the moral it wants readers to take away -- is as follows:

Quote:
And the master was angry and delivered him to the torturers . . . So my heavenly Father also will do to you if each of you, from his heart, does not forgive his brother his trespasses"
It is the warning of what will happen to you if you do not obey. How on earth can anyone call that a side-issue?
The main issue is about forgiveness and the king is an example showing that God's expect us to forgive others, if I use an example does it mean i'm going to be the example or am I just using it to strengthen my point?
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Old 02-10-2008, 03:27 AM   #28
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The Bible's conclusion to the parable -- presumably the conclusion contains the moral it wants readers to take away -- is as follows:



It is the warning of what will happen to you if you do not obey. How on earth can anyone call that a side-issue?
The main issue is about forgiveness and the king is an example showing that God's expect us to forgive others, if I use an example does it mean i'm going to be the example or am I just using it to strengthen my point?
I added the following to my original post while you were typing your reply:

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But I am enheartened that you and others I have quoted in this thread are apparently embarrassed by the thought of torture. That's good. We are of one mind in that respect. So why bother with any text that uses torture as its motivation to "higher ethics"?
Look again without blinkers. You wrote, and no doubt believe, "The main issue is about forgiveness and the king is an example showing that God's expect us to forgive others . . ."

If you read any other text where a king mercilessly tosses a servant aside to the torturers, as here,
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Shouldn't you have had mercy on your fellow servant just as I had on you?' In anger his master turned him over to the jailers to be tortured, until he should pay back all he owed. This is how my heavenly Father will treat each of you unless you forgive your brother from your heart."
. . . let's assume a western reader sees this in an Islamic text, would you, or wouldn't you, expect them to be revulsed?
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Old 02-10-2008, 03:28 AM   #29
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In Matthew 18, Jesus compares God to a wicked king who acts in anger, and has people handed over to be tortured, even after he claimed to have forgiven them everything.
Matt
1. Where in Matthew 18 is there reference to the king being 'wicked'?
2. Is anger, and acting upon it, always a bad or wrong thing?
3. Where in Matthew 18 is there reference to the king forgiving the people 'everything'?

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Here is the story, proving once more that the Bible was written by savage barbarians who saw nothing wrong with people being tortured.
Matt
Either that it proves that you are completely unable to recognise the difference between an actual event and a parable written in the context of the age in which it was spoken.

As a further point, what makes torture wrong?

<snip>

Thanks
Matt
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Old 02-10-2008, 03:41 AM   #30
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As a further point, what makes torture wrong?

<snip>

Thanks
Matt
I think I am living in a nightmare. People in the same world as I don't really say this, do they? Even Rumsfeld went into denial. Or am I a victim of an interplanetary joke? I know I used to suffer from sleep paralysis and some pretty way-out interpretations of that experience years ago, but surely the internet is real, isn't it?

Matt, if you are a real person (sorry, I know I've had a whisky or two), I do hope you can drop by a bookstore and request "A Question of Torture" by McCoy some time, and after having read that explain to me in monosyllables anything or any situation that torture can justify.
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