Harmonie
Winds ღ
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I would just like to ask you one question, then. According to Christianity, God is omniscient, omnipotent, and omnipresent, and human beings are (quite obviously) none of the above. Why, then, do you get to say that X "wasn't the morality of an all-knowing God"? Are you sure that you, a flawed human being like the rest of us, are in a position to tell God what's right or what's wrong?
Ah, yes. The argument that I am inferior and thus can not tell right from wrong for myself. No matter how I came about, I am a being with my own mind and agency. I did not want to go into this, I was being pretty respectful with my original post, not trying to put down your beliefs.
As a being with my own mind, I do not, for one second, see how it is 'moral' to "punish" a rapist by making him marry the woman he raped. That is punishing the victim. I do not see how slavery is and could have ever been considered moral. (Yes, slavery was a fact of matter during Biblical times, however, my argument here is that if God is all-knowing and just, then he would have never tolerated slavery at all. He is supposedly the being with the ultimate, unchanging morality) I do not see how stoning a man because he laid with another man could ever be right in any context, etc., etc.
My point here is that, if the God of the Bible were an all-knowing force of absolute morality he would have established a just morality from the beginning, no matter how revolutionary the ideals were to the time. He is the lord, he should have been able to accomplish this and convince the people of his time no matter what. Instead, what I see in the Bible are the ethics and morality of the people of the time.