Community > Posts By > DavidM616

 
DavidM616's photo
Tue 11/15/16 08:02 AM

It's only God who can convince a man as he did to Saul. May he make that grace available.


Like Lazarus, I agree with this. I have many times said that, if God exists, he/she/it is the one entity who could settle this debate once and for all. So far, I'm still hearing crickets. But, I, too, am waiting to see whether or not God ever speaks up.

Come on, God! Could we get a couple of Damascus Road Experiences over here?! And hold the blindness, please!

DavidM616's photo
Tue 11/15/16 07:52 AM



Again, everyone is headed to an eternity of non-existence unless they accept Jesus' gift of eternal life. People aren't "damned" for not believing. Yes Jesus says "Deny me before man I will deny you before the father". But that is not "damning" anyone. Jesus will only let the one's that know him into Heaven.


That's a load of horse crap though. No one "know[s]" Jesus unless they believe everything they read in ancient storybooks and even then they still don't "know" him, they only know from what they've read since there's no current day proof. How's this for a theory; your god did exist but he's dead and we're all damned to an eternity in the grave regardless.


It's only God who can convince a man as he did to Saul. May he make that grace available.


I agree with you on that much I suppose.. I'm waiting....



That's a load of horse crap though. No one "know[s]" Jesus unless they believe everything they read in ancient storybooks and even then they still don't "know" him, they only know from what they've read since there's no current day proof. How's this for a theory; your god did exist but he's dead and we're all damned to an eternity in the grave regardless.


Sure we know Jesus and it's not just from a book. The book/bible only lets you know about Jesus. Getting to know Jesus is a daily walk with him.


If it weren't for the Bible, most of us would never have even heard of Jesus. And, as we have already seen, I can methodically and logically demonstrate that the Bible is not a reliable source of information, while you can revert back to claiming that God/Jesus talks to you every day. (Something I cannot disprove, no matter how much I point out just how unlikely that is.)

So, let's skip that part. Tell me this:

Are you absolutely certain that it is God/Jesus that you are talking to? It could be another spirit being, tricking you.
What does Jesus look like?
Does he speak to you in English?
If so, why didn't he just skip the Bible, with its many translation issues, and talk directly to all of us, in our native language, in the first place?
Why does he speak to you, and not the rest of us? What makes you so special? (I don't mean that as an attack. It's a legitimate question.)

DavidM616's photo
Tue 11/15/16 07:30 AM

There's no known culture that has not made reference at one time or the other to spirit beings.


I'm well aware of that. Do you believe in all of those stories? If not, why not? How do you determine which ones are true and which ones aren't? Please note that I am not saying that spirit beings do not exist. I don't know whether they do or not. However, since there is a dearth of actual evidence for such a widely attested phenomenon, my default position on it is that there are probably other explanations for what people are seeing.


I therefore maintain that belief in evil and apparitions is universal.


My point was that not everyone believes in apparitions. You strongly implied that we all believe in such things to make your case.


That said, could you please draw my attention to a group of people (a country, organization, etc) without a leader/head/etc? The animal world inclusive.


This comparison does not support your earlier statement. You said:


For us all to believe in the existence of evil, and apparitions of all sorts, then there must be one who sits above them all.


As I said, just because many people believe in spirit beings, it does not automatically prove that there must be one who rules over them. Do you see the point? The second part of your statement is a non-sequitur. As for your example, yes, there are rulers, or pack leaders, in every group of people or animals on the planet, but there is no ONE leader over all the sub-groups. And that's what you were saying, because you're trying to prove God's existence.


Not commenting on his loving nature was diliberate. But let's look at this, do you being a loving and caring father not punish your children when necessary, even though you know they'll hurt? Isn't that why it's called punishment? If you were to defend your child or relative against an attack, and you did in the process inflict pain on the intruder, does that make you not loving?


As a loving father, I certainly wouldn't drown my children, and all their pets, as a form of punishment. And I certainly wouldn't punish one child for the misbehavior of another child.


I'm African, and here in africa, there's a show of supernatural powers. God exists because I've seen him at work several times when his name had been invoked. I don't think they all happened by chance. He's been called upon to counter supernatural powers, to do the unbelievable. I have seen it, and I believe. It's not magic. You've got some great men of God yonder. Do your in depth investigation about their miracles through Christ.


Sorry, but I HAVE researched this topic, and continue to do so. And you know what I have found? So far, every supposed miracle worker has either failed to be able to produce any "miracles" when put in a situation where the phenomenon could be observed and/or recorded scientifically, or their "miracles" have been exposed as sleight-of-hand tricks.

Also...do you not see the conflict in your own statement above? Let's lay it out. You assert that:

1. In Africa, there is a show of supernatural powers.(Definite statement.)
2. God exists, because you have seen him at work when his name had been invoked. (Also a definite statement.)
3. You don't think that these things happened by chance. (Not a definite statement. A speculation. Why the sudden uncertainty?)
4. God has been called upon to counter supernatural powers, etc. (Another definite statement. Your evidence for this assertion, please?)
5. You have seen it, and you believe. (You "believe." A declaration of faith, not certainty.)

See what I mean? You don't seem to be 100% convinced of your own assertions, first of all. Second, some of your assertions are dependent upon things for which there is no tangible evidence. Something to think about.


Is he a "HE"? The answer is a BIG "NO". It's just allusion to man being the head. It is stated in the Bible that God is not a man. The same reason Christ is referred to as the Groom, and we his followers, the bride.


Okay. I'm glad to see that you are able to admit that even the question of whether or not God has a gender is unknown. Perhaps the term has no meaning when it comes to God. Who knows? That's my point. It's pretty difficult to forge a close relationship with a being about which we can't even know something so basic as its gender.

Or, prove its very existence.

DavidM616's photo
Mon 11/14/16 10:08 AM
Edited by DavidM616 on Mon 11/14/16 10:16 AM

There is no proof that the bible was made up.


That is true. However, as Cowboy and I already discussed, there is little PROOF of much of anything. That said, there is quite a bit of evidence that it was made up.


History taught here in Africa and in any other part of the world has it about the story of how Christianity came about.


There are lots of stories out there about a variety of gods and goddesses. It doesn't mean that they're true. It doesn't mean that they're false, either. I admit that. All we can do is to examine the available evidence and make our own determination as to what seems the most likely to be true.


Saying there's no God would amount to denying the existence of Christ, his followers, the miracles they performed, Prophet Muhammad, etc.


Please read the last several pages of this thread, as well as the "Extra-Biblical proof of Jesus' Resurrection?" thread, and you will see that the paucity of solid evidence for Christ and the miracles that he supposedly performed were central to the discussion.


For us all to believe in the existence of evil, and apparitions of all sorts, then there must be one who sits above them all.


While I would agree that most of us believe in the existence of evil, belief in apparitions is hardly universal. It also does not logically follow that IF apparitions are real, then there "must be one who sits above them all." For example, we humans obviously exist, yet there is no one human who sits above us all.


Whether he's fair, unfair, vindictive or not, that I cannot answer,


That is the point of this thread. Lazarus contends that, based upon the observable evidence, if God does exist, he is NOT a loving god. I agree with his assertion, and have offered some examples from the Bible of loutish behavior on God's part to add to his case. Not that I think that everything in the Bible is true, mind you, but most apologists do, so I think it's fair to use such examples to make the point to them. I certainly don't think that the God described in the Bible is a loving god.


but he does exist.


I respectfully request that you provide solid evidence to support this assertion. While you're at it, please provide some solid evidence that "he" is actually a "HE."


DavidM616's photo
Sun 11/13/16 01:55 AM

Well... I have come to the subtle realization that I am addicted..
To the act of having sex..yup..
I know!.. but not just the sex part..
I've discovered I'm more addicted to the...well..hmmm.. how should I put this..?. Let's just say the giving pleasure . Orally...yup.. mybe I have a oral fixation...hmmm..well.. I don't know !..all I know is I just can't get enough!!... there's just something about it.. The Taste the texture the smell of a womans.. you know!!.. wink and wink.. I'm afraid it's become a horrible horrible addiction for me..lol
.. but everytime I say that's it !..I'm going cold turkey... well!! right at that moment ..another hot chick appears in front of me..nooooo... are the person I'm seeing calls me up and says ..baby..!!..ohhh..baby.. why don't you come over and see me..wink.wink....

... at those moments I try to be strong..
But it's just so hard so darn hard..
To resist..lol..hmmm.. maybe there's some group I can join.. kind of like Alcoholics Anonymous


My Brother! I'm right there with you. I love to "play the her-monica" as well.
Perhaps we should form our own support group. Let's see...what should we call it? "Australian Kissers Anonymous?"

DavidM616's photo
Fri 11/11/16 10:44 AM
Edited by DavidM616 on Fri 11/11/16 10:47 AM

Besides, the god vs. Santa comparison was hardly belittling, it was a perfectly valid comparison. two entities that perform magic (miracles) for pretty much the same ultimate purpose. Oh and you try to claim a difference between magic and miracles but turning water into wine, don't try to tell me that's not magic, it's hardly a miracle like those people NEEDED to get drunk so badly that it was a miracle that awful water was turned into an intoxicant.


As a side note, I'd like to point out that the "water-into-wine" trick was borrowed from Greek mythology. The Greek god Dionysus was the god of wine, and some of the legends about him claim that he turned water into wine. It was also claimed by some of his followers that, during feasts in his honor, empty jars sealed in a room within his Temple would be filled with wine when the room was unsealed the next day. (Feast of Elis.)

Oh, and in some of the myths he was a demigod; born of a god (Zeus), and a human mother, Semele. He was also killed, but then rose from the dead.

Worship of Dionysus had also been around for over a thousand years before Jesus came along. (Or, was invented.)


DavidM616's photo
Fri 11/11/16 09:58 AM



https://answersingenesis.org/the-flood/global/worldwide-flood-evidence/

May be a "biased" site if you will. But the evidences included inside the site can not possibly be "biased".


The evidence might not be biased, but the interpretation of the evidence certainly is. If I wanted to invest the time, I could debunk every one of the items on their list. Since I really don't care to invest that much time on it, I'll just explain how their conclusion is incorrect on item #1:

The presence of fossils of sea creatures found at high altitudes is not the result of a worldwide flood. They are the result of plate tectonics. The plates colliding with each other formed mountains, like this:


As a result, some land mass that had been underwater jutted up out of the water. Thus, the fossils of sea creatures at high altitudes is not the result of the water once rising above the mountains, but rather the mountains rising up out of the water.

If you care to, you can easily find explanations for the other incorrect conclusions on their list.


I understand that's a possibility, not denying it. Just what's the coincidence it happened in multiple areas throughout the entire world at relatively the same time?


No one that I am aware of, other than those arguing in favor of the global flood model, claim that it happened all at once. Quite the contrary.

DavidM616's photo
Fri 11/11/16 01:45 AM
Edited by DavidM616 on Fri 11/11/16 02:28 AM







That's a good illustration, Lazarus.
In a similar vein, I have frequently referred to God as a cosmic-level deadbeat dad. If you think about it, all the parallels are there, including the part where some of his abandoned children defend anything he does, including bending over backwards to make excuses for him and his absence.


Much psychology went into creation of the bible. I don't doubt that the people that made up the original bible stories were smart beyond their time to come up with such compelling tales as to keep people believing through the centuries. Things like psychology, facts and politics went into those pages mixed in with all the fairy tales. Very well done indeed.

Believing that stuff in modern day is just plain silly but the people that made it up in the first place were true geniuses and given the time frame and how much more susceptible it was to corruption and conspiracy; I have a theory that the world leaders of the time likely banded together to create religion as a way of controlling the people.

With the governing bodies and religion you've got the carrot and the stick and when the carrot is backing up the stick by enforcing all the same rules wanted by the stick then you've got a firm stranglehold on the masses and few will fight against it. I know that religion has been around for longer than civilized society but the governing bodies found a way to mold and control it to their benefit and to this day people are still slaves to it's influence. Right down to the stupidest laws/practices like circumcision and monogamy. Ya, baby dick mutilation, thx Jews!

Edit: Ya I know psychology in it's current form didn't even exist until the current century but when I speak of it's influence on the bible, I don't mean it in it's official form but only in what people learned in those times of how to control the people. The phrase Neuro-linguistic programming comes to mind but I can't think of an example at current as to how it applies.



Much psychology went into creation of the bible. I don't doubt that the people that made up the original bible stories were smart beyond their time to come up with such compelling tales as to keep people believing through the centuries. Things like psychology, facts and politics went into those pages mixed in with all the fairy tales. Very well done indeed.


How psychological do you think they were in the BC era? And do you really think "fairy tales" were in existence at that time in mankind's history? Or back to my previous question, how "intelligent" on this kind of level do you feel people in the BC era were? And most these people that are included in the scriptures, or well the ones that wrote the things included in the scriptures didn't personally know one another.


How intelligent were the people in the BC era, you ask? Well, here we are thousands of years later, with all of our advances, and we still don't know for certain how the Egyptians built the pyramids. So, they certainly weren't morons. Also, many of the laws found in the Mosaic Law, which many apologists erroneously believe reflect God-given wisdom and morality so far advanced of Israel's neighbors, are found in the older Hammurabi's Code and Principles of Maat.

And, yes, the fairy tales found in the OT did exist prior to its writing. They are found in the much older Mesopotamian and/or Egyptian myths. The flood, the talking snake misleading a woman to disobey god(s), a god confusing the languages, and more...



The flood, the talking snake misleading a woman to disobey god(s), a god confusing the languages, and more..


There is much evidence of a world wide flood my friend.

http://www.icr.org/geological-strata/

And there's many other organizations that support a world wife flood as well.


Good luck finding solid, non-biased evidence of a WORLD-WIDE flood, but there IS lots of evidence for massive regional floods, which is hardly shocking. And, even if there was a world-wide flood, that still does not prove that God caused it, or that any of the other elements of the story are true. (I refer back to my Bunny Men illustration here.) Can you not see that?

Besides, I wasn't claiming that massive flooding never took place. What I was implying was that there are stories about a big flood in the older myths that are remarkably similar to the newer Noah story in the OT. (I can show you some of these similarities if you like.) Which makes it clear to me that the Noah story was most likely built upon the framework of the older myths, rather than being an inerrant, God-inspired and approved account of an actual historical event.

And, again, this is true of many of the other MYTHS of the OT.


Just curious how you would know Noah's story was made from these others. How is it not possible these are "changed" stories of Noah essentially changed a little through time as of course it would have been transferred verbally or with none too very little "written/documented" information on such a matter due too lack of technology or ways of keeping track of such things in that day and age?

And also curious why you specifically deem Noah's story to be "newer" then these other possible off branches? How is it possible to have precise dating too when each of these accounts occurred in relation too the ancient documents/references we have of them? Of course carbon dating for the documents in themselves, but were/are they dated on when the flood actually occurred?


Obviously I don't know it, since I wasn't there. But, that's what I strongly suspect happened. I think that Noah's story was built upon the framework of these other stories because of the fact that the Noah story shares so many similarities with these stories that are much older. It just makes sense to me that, if you have a later story that is very similar to an earlier story, or stories, then the later story is probably copying the earlier ones. It certainly doesn't work the other direction. We have to conclude that either the later story copied the earlier one(s), or we have to conclude that two or more storytellers, living many years apart, independently came up with remarkably similar stories.

While both situations are possible, option #1 is far more likely.

Scholars base their estimates for the time of writing on a number of things; writing style, to name one. Since I'm not a scholar, just a geek amateur when it comes to this sort of thing, there are a few areas where I have to trust that the majority of scholars have a pretty good chance of being fairly close on their estimates on such things. And, the consensus is that stories like the Epic of Gilgamesh are at least several centuries older than Genesis.

Of course, you can speculate about the Noah story being passed down in oral form long before it was written down, in the hopes of pushing it back earlier than EoG, but that would be mere speculation. Besides, I could play that card, too. Perhaps EoG was passed down in oral form long before it was written down, too.

Not only that, it would be pretty reckless to put a whole lot of faith in a story that had been passed down orally for several centuries before being written down, don't you think?

Finally, my opinion that the Noah story is a copy of another older myth fits in well with my overall paradigm that all of these stories are myths, and that that is why God is MIA, as he was never there to begin with.

DavidM616's photo
Fri 11/11/16 12:51 AM

https://answersingenesis.org/the-flood/global/worldwide-flood-evidence/

May be a "biased" site if you will. But the evidences included inside the site can not possibly be "biased".


The evidence might not be biased, but the interpretation of the evidence certainly is. If I wanted to invest the time, I could debunk every one of the items on their list. Since I really don't care to invest that much time on it, I'll just explain how their conclusion is incorrect on item #1:

The presence of fossils of sea creatures found at high altitudes is not the result of a worldwide flood. They are the result of plate tectonics. The plates colliding with each other formed mountains, like this:


As a result, some land mass that had been underwater jutted up out of the water. Thus, the fossils of sea creatures at high altitudes is not the result of the water once rising above the mountains, but rather the mountains rising up out of the water.

If you care to, you can easily find explanations for the other incorrect conclusions on their list.

DavidM616's photo
Thu 11/10/16 11:25 AM
Edited by DavidM616 on Thu 11/10/16 12:00 PM





That's a good illustration, Lazarus.
In a similar vein, I have frequently referred to God as a cosmic-level deadbeat dad. If you think about it, all the parallels are there, including the part where some of his abandoned children defend anything he does, including bending over backwards to make excuses for him and his absence.


Much psychology went into creation of the bible. I don't doubt that the people that made up the original bible stories were smart beyond their time to come up with such compelling tales as to keep people believing through the centuries. Things like psychology, facts and politics went into those pages mixed in with all the fairy tales. Very well done indeed.

Believing that stuff in modern day is just plain silly but the people that made it up in the first place were true geniuses and given the time frame and how much more susceptible it was to corruption and conspiracy; I have a theory that the world leaders of the time likely banded together to create religion as a way of controlling the people.

With the governing bodies and religion you've got the carrot and the stick and when the carrot is backing up the stick by enforcing all the same rules wanted by the stick then you've got a firm stranglehold on the masses and few will fight against it. I know that religion has been around for longer than civilized society but the governing bodies found a way to mold and control it to their benefit and to this day people are still slaves to it's influence. Right down to the stupidest laws/practices like circumcision and monogamy. Ya, baby dick mutilation, thx Jews!

Edit: Ya I know psychology in it's current form didn't even exist until the current century but when I speak of it's influence on the bible, I don't mean it in it's official form but only in what people learned in those times of how to control the people. The phrase Neuro-linguistic programming comes to mind but I can't think of an example at current as to how it applies.



Much psychology went into creation of the bible. I don't doubt that the people that made up the original bible stories were smart beyond their time to come up with such compelling tales as to keep people believing through the centuries. Things like psychology, facts and politics went into those pages mixed in with all the fairy tales. Very well done indeed.


How psychological do you think they were in the BC era? And do you really think "fairy tales" were in existence at that time in mankind's history? Or back to my previous question, how "intelligent" on this kind of level do you feel people in the BC era were? And most these people that are included in the scriptures, or well the ones that wrote the things included in the scriptures didn't personally know one another.


How intelligent were the people in the BC era, you ask? Well, here we are thousands of years later, with all of our advances, and we still don't know for certain how the Egyptians built the pyramids. So, they certainly weren't morons. Also, many of the laws found in the Mosaic Law, which many apologists erroneously believe reflect God-given wisdom and morality so far advanced of Israel's neighbors, are found in the older Hammurabi's Code and Principles of Maat.

And, yes, the fairy tales found in the OT did exist prior to its writing. They are found in the much older Mesopotamian and/or Egyptian myths. The flood, the talking snake misleading a woman to disobey god(s), a god confusing the languages, and more...



The flood, the talking snake misleading a woman to disobey god(s), a god confusing the languages, and more..


There is much evidence of a world wide flood my friend.

http://www.icr.org/geological-strata/

And there's many other organizations that support a world wife flood as well.


Good luck finding solid, non-biased evidence of a WORLD-WIDE flood, but there IS lots of evidence for massive regional floods, which is hardly shocking. And, even if there was a world-wide flood, that still does not prove that God caused it, or that any of the other elements of the story are true. (I refer back to my Bunny Men illustration here.) Can you not see that?

Besides, I wasn't claiming that massive flooding never took place. What I was implying was that there are stories about a big flood in the older myths that are remarkably similar to the newer Noah story in the OT. (I can show you some of these similarities if you like.) Which makes it clear to me that the Noah story was most likely built upon the framework of the older myths, rather than being an inerrant, God-inspired and approved account of an actual historical event.

And, again, this is true of many of the other MYTHS of the OT.

DavidM616's photo
Thu 11/10/16 09:41 AM










You frightened of God or something? God has never tried to scare/frighten me, sorry for your unfortunates :(.




You're like a beaten housewife that just denies or makes excuses for anything and everything bad that her husband does. You even ignore how your own words contradict you. God doesn't send us to hell for not believing, he just kills us but you somehow see nothing wrong with that. It's worship him and live forever but if you don't then you're dead; you get to embrace that eternal nothingness that you fear so much if you don't believe in and worship him. Bit of irony there really; I mean the way that even within the religion itself it blends reality and fantasy and it does it so great.
Step into the rabbit hole Alice, all will be well..


That's a good illustration, Lazarus.
In a similar vein, I have frequently referred to God as a cosmic-level deadbeat dad. If you think about it, all the parallels are there, including the part where some of his abandoned children defend anything he does, including bending over backwards to make excuses for him and his absence.


His absence? I see and talk too God every day, sorry you miss out my friend.


Oh, that's okay. No need to be sorry. If he's anywhere near as loquacious, boorish, and repetitive in person as he is in the OT, I'd rather not talk to him anyway.

Wait a minute...

On second thought, please tell him that I have some questions I'd really like to ask him, if he wouldn't mind stopping by my place for a bit. Thanks.

Also, allow me to quote something I said a couple of pages back that's apropos here:


Yeah, though I haven't read the entire thread, I did read a lot of the earliest posts. That's the way it generally goes. When you apply logic to these stories, they fall apart. So, anyone trying to defend them generally ends up either:
1.As you said, tossing any type of definable, objective evidence out the window, and falling back totally on faith.
2. Claiming that God actually IS literally talking to them. (A safe haven for them, since you cannot disprove the notion across the internet, no matter how much you point out how unlikely that notion is.)
3.Spinning like a tornado, in an attempt to make it look like certain words or phrases might kinda', sorta', perhaps if you squint real hard from fifty feet away, mean what they claim they mean, rather than the most obvious and generally accepted meanings. (Like your example about when someone farts, that is somehow God "talking" to us. Or, torturing the term "generation" used in Matthew 24:34, so as to rescue Jesus' "prophecy" there.)
4. Again, as you said, getting angry at you.



To be fair he isn't actually claiming that god is talking back to him. Kinda like the concept of me talking to my vacuum cleaner XD. As for his claims of seeing god, I think he might want to get his head checked. From my memory of the bible(what little I have) you could not possibly 'see' god or your eyes would melt from their sockets (or something to that extent). Or perhaps he has seen god and this has happened. That would explain why he didn't say anything when we commented on his looks D-: . Sheesh, talk about a 'blind date" XD.


True, but within the context of the discussion, it certainly seems an obvious implication. After all, he's arguing against my assertion that God is absent, like a deadbeat dad. And, if he is saying that he sees God, and talks to him, but God doesn't answer him back...he is once again painting a picture of a God who is a dick.


He answers back every day :)


There you have it. I stand by my previous statement.

The God you describe is a dick, then. For, vast numbers of people who sincerely cry out to him every day never receive an answer. I guess he just likes you better.


Maybe he has? Maybe just not the way you wanted it or expected it too be answered?


Allow me to quote myself again:


3.Spinning like a tornado, in an attempt to make it look like certain words or phrases might kinda', sorta', perhaps if you squint real hard from fifty feet away, mean what they claim they mean, rather than the most obvious and generally accepted meanings. (Like your example about when someone farts, that is somehow God "talking" to us. Or, torturing the term "generation" used in Matthew 24:34, so as to rescue Jesus' "prophecy" there.)

DavidM616's photo
Thu 11/10/16 09:40 AM






That's a good illustration, Lazarus.
In a similar vein, I have frequently referred to God as a cosmic-level deadbeat dad. If you think about it, all the parallels are there, including the part where some of his abandoned children defend anything he does, including bending over backwards to make excuses for him and his absence.


Much psychology went into creation of the bible. I don't doubt that the people that made up the original bible stories were smart beyond their time to come up with such compelling tales as to keep people believing through the centuries. Things like psychology, facts and politics went into those pages mixed in with all the fairy tales. Very well done indeed.

Believing that stuff in modern day is just plain silly but the people that made it up in the first place were true geniuses and given the time frame and how much more susceptible it was to corruption and conspiracy; I have a theory that the world leaders of the time likely banded together to create religion as a way of controlling the people.

With the governing bodies and religion you've got the carrot and the stick and when the carrot is backing up the stick by enforcing all the same rules wanted by the stick then you've got a firm stranglehold on the masses and few will fight against it. I know that religion has been around for longer than civilized society but the governing bodies found a way to mold and control it to their benefit and to this day people are still slaves to it's influence. Right down to the stupidest laws/practices like circumcision and monogamy. Ya, baby dick mutilation, thx Jews!

Edit: Ya I know psychology in it's current form didn't even exist until the current century but when I speak of it's influence on the bible, I don't mean it in it's official form but only in what people learned in those times of how to control the people. The phrase Neuro-linguistic programming comes to mind but I can't think of an example at current as to how it applies.


Well, as I implied in my earlier post, most of the stories in the OT were built upon the framework of older myths. And, many of the stories in the NT were built upon stories from the OT. Newer myths built upon previous myths. That said, I agree with you as far as the genius of some of the creators of these stories. A good example of this would be the Yahwists coming up with the idea that it was the PEOPLES' fault if Yahweh didn't save them from another nation. (You know:"Yahweh CHOSE not to save you, because you are all a bunch of shitheads.") Previously, it was pretty much accepted that if your nation got thumped on by another nation, then their gods were stronger than yours.

The Yahwists' stroke of genius not only played upon peoples' inner sense of guilt, but also guaranteed that, no matter what happened, it wasn't Yahweh's fault. Therefore, he would continue to be worshiped. And, they would cash in. Speaking of cashing in:

In addition to control, another reason for the storytellers to come up with these stories is that they figured out that, while getting a real job is hard, if they could spin some good stories about god(s), the rest of their fellow citizens would pay them for it! This is readily apparent when you read the OT. There are many places where the writers depict Yahweh as instructing the common people to give the priests lots of goodies.

Also..."baby dick mutilation." Haha!
(Ironically enough, even THAT likely came, not from God, but from the Egyptians.)


That doesn't surprise me. The Egyptians were still on the barbaric side when it came to the treatment of the people. It still sickens me that people still practice it in this day and age though. We got rid of electro shock therapy because it was barbaric but we keep around a barbaric tradition like that, that's been around for 100's years longer.

But ya, much of the OT had very human traits in it. I think that's why they made the NT, to weed out some of the errors that would make people go "hey... wait a minute...". On top of the parts that involve giving the priests 'goodies' there was the stoning of homosexuals. Likely a laundry-list of other things that were clearly human agendas as well.


I agree totally about circumcision. It's one of many things that I can hardly believe has managed to hang on.

As for the NT, you could be right about that. Another possibility that I have seen advanced is that the Romans, likely with Josephus' help, created Christianity as a means to quell the unrest among the messianic-minded Jews of the First Century by replacing their envisioned warrior messiah with a more pacifist-minded one.


"Warrior Messiah" with a more "pacifist-minded" one? God is just as passive today as he was 2000 years ago. The only difference is you don't hear about the judgements on people for their actions per say. As we are no longer judged on Earth by our fellow brother. It is God that will carry it out in one final judgement. The only reward for sin is death and death is death my friend. Doesn't matter if it happens here and now, or some time in the future. Jesus is a warrior, he is our "God" that has absolute power and control over us as we are merely one of his creations. A creation he so generously thinks of us as children, but on this level the bottom dollar we are but a creation of his and he can and will do as he pleases... for again, he is God.


Remember to keep things in context. :)

In the First Century, there was much unrest in the region, and many Jews were looking for a warrior-messiah to come and lead them to victory over the hated Romans. Don't take my word for it, research the time-period. 70 CE, in particular, was a real fun time for everyone in the area.

So, the Romans did have the motivation, at least, to attempt to introduce a new religion, that would possibly replace Judaism, that featured a new version of their messiah; a meek and mild-tempered one.

I'm not saying that that is what happened. I don't know. I'm just saying that the idea makes perfect sense, within the historical context.

DavidM616's photo
Thu 11/10/16 09:29 AM








You frightened of God or something? God has never tried to scare/frighten me, sorry for your unfortunates :(.




You're like a beaten housewife that just denies or makes excuses for anything and everything bad that her husband does. You even ignore how your own words contradict you. God doesn't send us to hell for not believing, he just kills us but you somehow see nothing wrong with that. It's worship him and live forever but if you don't then you're dead; you get to embrace that eternal nothingness that you fear so much if you don't believe in and worship him. Bit of irony there really; I mean the way that even within the religion itself it blends reality and fantasy and it does it so great.
Step into the rabbit hole Alice, all will be well..


That's a good illustration, Lazarus.
In a similar vein, I have frequently referred to God as a cosmic-level deadbeat dad. If you think about it, all the parallels are there, including the part where some of his abandoned children defend anything he does, including bending over backwards to make excuses for him and his absence.


His absence? I see and talk too God every day, sorry you miss out my friend.


Oh, that's okay. No need to be sorry. If he's anywhere near as loquacious, boorish, and repetitive in person as he is in the OT, I'd rather not talk to him anyway.

Wait a minute...

On second thought, please tell him that I have some questions I'd really like to ask him, if he wouldn't mind stopping by my place for a bit. Thanks.

Also, allow me to quote something I said a couple of pages back that's apropos here:


Yeah, though I haven't read the entire thread, I did read a lot of the earliest posts. That's the way it generally goes. When you apply logic to these stories, they fall apart. So, anyone trying to defend them generally ends up either:
1.As you said, tossing any type of definable, objective evidence out the window, and falling back totally on faith.
2. Claiming that God actually IS literally talking to them. (A safe haven for them, since you cannot disprove the notion across the internet, no matter how much you point out how unlikely that notion is.)
3.Spinning like a tornado, in an attempt to make it look like certain words or phrases might kinda', sorta', perhaps if you squint real hard from fifty feet away, mean what they claim they mean, rather than the most obvious and generally accepted meanings. (Like your example about when someone farts, that is somehow God "talking" to us. Or, torturing the term "generation" used in Matthew 24:34, so as to rescue Jesus' "prophecy" there.)
4. Again, as you said, getting angry at you.



To be fair he isn't actually claiming that god is talking back to him. Kinda like the concept of me talking to my vacuum cleaner XD. As for his claims of seeing god, I think he might want to get his head checked. From my memory of the bible(what little I have) you could not possibly 'see' god or your eyes would melt from their sockets (or something to that extent). Or perhaps he has seen god and this has happened. That would explain why he didn't say anything when we commented on his looks D-: . Sheesh, talk about a 'blind date" XD.


True, but within the context of the discussion, it certainly seems an obvious implication. After all, he's arguing against my assertion that God is absent, like a deadbeat dad. And, if he is saying that he sees God, and talks to him, but God doesn't answer him back...he is once again painting a picture of a God who is a dick.


He answers back every day :)


There you have it. I stand by my previous statement.

The God you describe is a dick, then. For, vast numbers of people who sincerely cry out to him every day never receive an answer. I guess he just likes you better.

DavidM616's photo
Thu 11/10/16 09:28 AM









You frightened of God or something? God has never tried to scare/frighten me, sorry for your unfortunates :(.




You're like a beaten housewife that just denies or makes excuses for anything and everything bad that her husband does. You even ignore how your own words contradict you. God doesn't send us to hell for not believing, he just kills us but you somehow see nothing wrong with that. It's worship him and live forever but if you don't then you're dead; you get to embrace that eternal nothingness that you fear so much if you don't believe in and worship him. Bit of irony there really; I mean the way that even within the religion itself it blends reality and fantasy and it does it so great.
Step into the rabbit hole Alice, all will be well..


That's a good illustration, Lazarus.
In a similar vein, I have frequently referred to God as a cosmic-level deadbeat dad. If you think about it, all the parallels are there, including the part where some of his abandoned children defend anything he does, including bending over backwards to make excuses for him and his absence.


His absence? I see and talk too God every day, sorry you miss out my friend.


Oh, that's okay. No need to be sorry. If he's anywhere near as loquacious, boorish, and repetitive in person as he is in the OT, I'd rather not talk to him anyway.

Wait a minute...

On second thought, please tell him that I have some questions I'd really like to ask him, if he wouldn't mind stopping by my place for a bit. Thanks.

Also, allow me to quote something I said a couple of pages back that's apropos here:


Yeah, though I haven't read the entire thread, I did read a lot of the earliest posts. That's the way it generally goes. When you apply logic to these stories, they fall apart. So, anyone trying to defend them generally ends up either:
1.As you said, tossing any type of definable, objective evidence out the window, and falling back totally on faith.
2. Claiming that God actually IS literally talking to them. (A safe haven for them, since you cannot disprove the notion across the internet, no matter how much you point out how unlikely that notion is.)
3.Spinning like a tornado, in an attempt to make it look like certain words or phrases might kinda', sorta', perhaps if you squint real hard from fifty feet away, mean what they claim they mean, rather than the most obvious and generally accepted meanings. (Like your example about when someone farts, that is somehow God "talking" to us. Or, torturing the term "generation" used in Matthew 24:34, so as to rescue Jesus' "prophecy" there.)
4. Again, as you said, getting angry at you.



To be fair he isn't actually claiming that god is talking back to him. Kinda like the concept of me talking to my vacuum cleaner XD. As for his claims of seeing god, I think he might want to get his head checked. From my memory of the bible(what little I have) you could not possibly 'see' god or your eyes would melt from their sockets (or something to that extent). Or perhaps he has seen god and this has happened. That would explain why he didn't say anything when we commented on his looks D-: . Sheesh, talk about a 'blind date" XD.


Or maybe it was ment in the context of say you and your woman separate. You miss her, you "see" her everywhere you look. Maybe when you pass a special place, maybe see an outfit like the one(s) she loves, ect.


So, you're admitting that God is absent, then. That's what I said in the first place.


Know ye not that ye are the temple of God and the Holy Spirit dwelleth within?

No God can't be seen with these physical eyes in that literal of a sense. But doesn't mean he's absent... you can't see the oxygen in the air with your own bare eyes, does that mean it's absent?


You can't see the oxygen, but oxygen can be measured and proven to be present. Also, oxygen is not a conscious entity, whose defenders claim loves us all, yet refuses to speak to us.

DavidM616's photo
Thu 11/10/16 09:24 AM



That's a good illustration, Lazarus.
In a similar vein, I have frequently referred to God as a cosmic-level deadbeat dad. If you think about it, all the parallels are there, including the part where some of his abandoned children defend anything he does, including bending over backwards to make excuses for him and his absence.


Much psychology went into creation of the bible. I don't doubt that the people that made up the original bible stories were smart beyond their time to come up with such compelling tales as to keep people believing through the centuries. Things like psychology, facts and politics went into those pages mixed in with all the fairy tales. Very well done indeed.

Believing that stuff in modern day is just plain silly but the people that made it up in the first place were true geniuses and given the time frame and how much more susceptible it was to corruption and conspiracy; I have a theory that the world leaders of the time likely banded together to create religion as a way of controlling the people.

With the governing bodies and religion you've got the carrot and the stick and when the carrot is backing up the stick by enforcing all the same rules wanted by the stick then you've got a firm stranglehold on the masses and few will fight against it. I know that religion has been around for longer than civilized society but the governing bodies found a way to mold and control it to their benefit and to this day people are still slaves to it's influence. Right down to the stupidest laws/practices like circumcision and monogamy. Ya, baby dick mutilation, thx Jews!

Edit: Ya I know psychology in it's current form didn't even exist until the current century but when I speak of it's influence on the bible, I don't mean it in it's official form but only in what people learned in those times of how to control the people. The phrase Neuro-linguistic programming comes to mind but I can't think of an example at current as to how it applies.



Much psychology went into creation of the bible. I don't doubt that the people that made up the original bible stories were smart beyond their time to come up with such compelling tales as to keep people believing through the centuries. Things like psychology, facts and politics went into those pages mixed in with all the fairy tales. Very well done indeed.


How psychological do you think they were in the BC era? And do you really think "fairy tales" were in existence at that time in mankind's history? Or back to my previous question, how "intelligent" on this kind of level do you feel people in the BC era were? And most these people that are included in the scriptures, or well the ones that wrote the things included in the scriptures didn't personally know one another.


How intelligent were the people in the BC era, you ask? Well, here we are thousands of years later, with all of our advances, and we still don't know for certain how the Egyptians built the pyramids. So, they certainly weren't morons. Also, many of the laws found in the Mosaic Law, which many apologists erroneously believe reflect God-given wisdom and morality so far advanced of Israel's neighbors, are found in the older Hammurabi's Code and Principles of Maat.

And, yes, the fairy tales found in the OT did exist prior to its writing. They are found in the much older Mesopotamian and/or Egyptian myths. The flood, the talking snake misleading a woman to disobey god(s), a god confusing the languages, and more...

DavidM616's photo
Thu 11/10/16 09:13 AM







You frightened of God or something? God has never tried to scare/frighten me, sorry for your unfortunates :(.




You're like a beaten housewife that just denies or makes excuses for anything and everything bad that her husband does. You even ignore how your own words contradict you. God doesn't send us to hell for not believing, he just kills us but you somehow see nothing wrong with that. It's worship him and live forever but if you don't then you're dead; you get to embrace that eternal nothingness that you fear so much if you don't believe in and worship him. Bit of irony there really; I mean the way that even within the religion itself it blends reality and fantasy and it does it so great.
Step into the rabbit hole Alice, all will be well..


That's a good illustration, Lazarus.
In a similar vein, I have frequently referred to God as a cosmic-level deadbeat dad. If you think about it, all the parallels are there, including the part where some of his abandoned children defend anything he does, including bending over backwards to make excuses for him and his absence.


His absence? I see and talk too God every day, sorry you miss out my friend.


Oh, that's okay. No need to be sorry. If he's anywhere near as loquacious, boorish, and repetitive in person as he is in the OT, I'd rather not talk to him anyway.

Wait a minute...

On second thought, please tell him that I have some questions I'd really like to ask him, if he wouldn't mind stopping by my place for a bit. Thanks.

Also, allow me to quote something I said a couple of pages back that's apropos here:


Yeah, though I haven't read the entire thread, I did read a lot of the earliest posts. That's the way it generally goes. When you apply logic to these stories, they fall apart. So, anyone trying to defend them generally ends up either:
1.As you said, tossing any type of definable, objective evidence out the window, and falling back totally on faith.
2. Claiming that God actually IS literally talking to them. (A safe haven for them, since you cannot disprove the notion across the internet, no matter how much you point out how unlikely that notion is.)
3.Spinning like a tornado, in an attempt to make it look like certain words or phrases might kinda', sorta', perhaps if you squint real hard from fifty feet away, mean what they claim they mean, rather than the most obvious and generally accepted meanings. (Like your example about when someone farts, that is somehow God "talking" to us. Or, torturing the term "generation" used in Matthew 24:34, so as to rescue Jesus' "prophecy" there.)
4. Again, as you said, getting angry at you.



To be fair he isn't actually claiming that god is talking back to him. Kinda like the concept of me talking to my vacuum cleaner XD. As for his claims of seeing god, I think he might want to get his head checked. From my memory of the bible(what little I have) you could not possibly 'see' god or your eyes would melt from their sockets (or something to that extent). Or perhaps he has seen god and this has happened. That would explain why he didn't say anything when we commented on his looks D-: . Sheesh, talk about a 'blind date" XD.


Or maybe it was ment in the context of say you and your woman separate. You miss her, you "see" her everywhere you look. Maybe when you pass a special place, maybe see an outfit like the one(s) she loves, ect.


So, you're admitting that God is absent, then. That's what I said in the first place.

DavidM616's photo
Thu 11/10/16 09:08 AM




That's a good illustration, Lazarus.
In a similar vein, I have frequently referred to God as a cosmic-level deadbeat dad. If you think about it, all the parallels are there, including the part where some of his abandoned children defend anything he does, including bending over backwards to make excuses for him and his absence.


Much psychology went into creation of the bible. I don't doubt that the people that made up the original bible stories were smart beyond their time to come up with such compelling tales as to keep people believing through the centuries. Things like psychology, facts and politics went into those pages mixed in with all the fairy tales. Very well done indeed.

Believing that stuff in modern day is just plain silly but the people that made it up in the first place were true geniuses and given the time frame and how much more susceptible it was to corruption and conspiracy; I have a theory that the world leaders of the time likely banded together to create religion as a way of controlling the people.

With the governing bodies and religion you've got the carrot and the stick and when the carrot is backing up the stick by enforcing all the same rules wanted by the stick then you've got a firm stranglehold on the masses and few will fight against it. I know that religion has been around for longer than civilized society but the governing bodies found a way to mold and control it to their benefit and to this day people are still slaves to it's influence. Right down to the stupidest laws/practices like circumcision and monogamy. Ya, baby dick mutilation, thx Jews!

Edit: Ya I know psychology in it's current form didn't even exist until the current century but when I speak of it's influence on the bible, I don't mean it in it's official form but only in what people learned in those times of how to control the people. The phrase Neuro-linguistic programming comes to mind but I can't think of an example at current as to how it applies.


Well, as I implied in my earlier post, most of the stories in the OT were built upon the framework of older myths. And, many of the stories in the NT were built upon stories from the OT. Newer myths built upon previous myths. That said, I agree with you as far as the genius of some of the creators of these stories. A good example of this would be the Yahwists coming up with the idea that it was the PEOPLES' fault if Yahweh didn't save them from another nation. (You know:"Yahweh CHOSE not to save you, because you are all a bunch of shitheads.") Previously, it was pretty much accepted that if your nation got thumped on by another nation, then their gods were stronger than yours.

The Yahwists' stroke of genius not only played upon peoples' inner sense of guilt, but also guaranteed that, no matter what happened, it wasn't Yahweh's fault. Therefore, he would continue to be worshiped. And, they would cash in. Speaking of cashing in:

In addition to control, another reason for the storytellers to come up with these stories is that they figured out that, while getting a real job is hard, if they could spin some good stories about god(s), the rest of their fellow citizens would pay them for it! This is readily apparent when you read the OT. There are many places where the writers depict Yahweh as instructing the common people to give the priests lots of goodies.

Also..."baby dick mutilation." Haha!
(Ironically enough, even THAT likely came, not from God, but from the Egyptians.)


That doesn't surprise me. The Egyptians were still on the barbaric side when it came to the treatment of the people. It still sickens me that people still practice it in this day and age though. We got rid of electro shock therapy because it was barbaric but we keep around a barbaric tradition like that, that's been around for 100's years longer.

But ya, much of the OT had very human traits in it. I think that's why they made the NT, to weed out some of the errors that would make people go "hey... wait a minute...". On top of the parts that involve giving the priests 'goodies' there was the stoning of homosexuals. Likely a laundry-list of other things that were clearly human agendas as well.


I agree totally about circumcision. It's one of many things that I can hardly believe has managed to hang on.

As for the NT, you could be right about that. Another possibility that I have seen advanced is that the Romans, likely with Josephus' help, created Christianity as a means to quell the unrest among the messianic-minded Jews of the First Century by replacing their envisioned warrior messiah with a more pacifist-minded one.

DavidM616's photo
Thu 11/10/16 09:03 AM






You frightened of God or something? God has never tried to scare/frighten me, sorry for your unfortunates :(.




You're like a beaten housewife that just denies or makes excuses for anything and everything bad that her husband does. You even ignore how your own words contradict you. God doesn't send us to hell for not believing, he just kills us but you somehow see nothing wrong with that. It's worship him and live forever but if you don't then you're dead; you get to embrace that eternal nothingness that you fear so much if you don't believe in and worship him. Bit of irony there really; I mean the way that even within the religion itself it blends reality and fantasy and it does it so great.
Step into the rabbit hole Alice, all will be well..


That's a good illustration, Lazarus.
In a similar vein, I have frequently referred to God as a cosmic-level deadbeat dad. If you think about it, all the parallels are there, including the part where some of his abandoned children defend anything he does, including bending over backwards to make excuses for him and his absence.


His absence? I see and talk too God every day, sorry you miss out my friend.


Oh, that's okay. No need to be sorry. If he's anywhere near as loquacious, boorish, and repetitive in person as he is in the OT, I'd rather not talk to him anyway.

Wait a minute...

On second thought, please tell him that I have some questions I'd really like to ask him, if he wouldn't mind stopping by my place for a bit. Thanks.

Also, allow me to quote something I said a couple of pages back that's apropos here:


Yeah, though I haven't read the entire thread, I did read a lot of the earliest posts. That's the way it generally goes. When you apply logic to these stories, they fall apart. So, anyone trying to defend them generally ends up either:
1.As you said, tossing any type of definable, objective evidence out the window, and falling back totally on faith.
2. Claiming that God actually IS literally talking to them. (A safe haven for them, since you cannot disprove the notion across the internet, no matter how much you point out how unlikely that notion is.)
3.Spinning like a tornado, in an attempt to make it look like certain words or phrases might kinda', sorta', perhaps if you squint real hard from fifty feet away, mean what they claim they mean, rather than the most obvious and generally accepted meanings. (Like your example about when someone farts, that is somehow God "talking" to us. Or, torturing the term "generation" used in Matthew 24:34, so as to rescue Jesus' "prophecy" there.)
4. Again, as you said, getting angry at you.



To be fair he isn't actually claiming that god is talking back to him. Kinda like the concept of me talking to my vacuum cleaner XD. As for his claims of seeing god, I think he might want to get his head checked. From my memory of the bible(what little I have) you could not possibly 'see' god or your eyes would melt from their sockets (or something to that extent). Or perhaps he has seen god and this has happened. That would explain why he didn't say anything when we commented on his looks D-: . Sheesh, talk about a 'blind date" XD.


True, but within the context of the discussion, it certainly seems an obvious implication. After all, he's arguing against my assertion that God is absent, like a deadbeat dad. And, if he is saying that he sees God, and talks to him, but God doesn't answer him back...he is once again painting a picture of a God who is a dick.

DavidM616's photo
Thu 11/10/16 02:02 AM




You frightened of God or something? God has never tried to scare/frighten me, sorry for your unfortunates :(.




You're like a beaten housewife that just denies or makes excuses for anything and everything bad that her husband does. You even ignore how your own words contradict you. God doesn't send us to hell for not believing, he just kills us but you somehow see nothing wrong with that. It's worship him and live forever but if you don't then you're dead; you get to embrace that eternal nothingness that you fear so much if you don't believe in and worship him. Bit of irony there really; I mean the way that even within the religion itself it blends reality and fantasy and it does it so great.
Step into the rabbit hole Alice, all will be well..


That's a good illustration, Lazarus.
In a similar vein, I have frequently referred to God as a cosmic-level deadbeat dad. If you think about it, all the parallels are there, including the part where some of his abandoned children defend anything he does, including bending over backwards to make excuses for him and his absence.


His absence? I see and talk too God every day, sorry you miss out my friend.


Oh, that's okay. No need to be sorry. If he's anywhere near as loquacious, boorish, and repetitive in person as he is in the OT, I'd rather not talk to him anyway.

Wait a minute...

On second thought, please tell him that I have some questions I'd really like to ask him, if he wouldn't mind stopping by my place for a bit. Thanks.

Also, allow me to quote something I said a couple of pages back that's apropos here:


Yeah, though I haven't read the entire thread, I did read a lot of the earliest posts. That's the way it generally goes. When you apply logic to these stories, they fall apart. So, anyone trying to defend them generally ends up either:
1.As you said, tossing any type of definable, objective evidence out the window, and falling back totally on faith.
2. Claiming that God actually IS literally talking to them. (A safe haven for them, since you cannot disprove the notion across the internet, no matter how much you point out how unlikely that notion is.)
3.Spinning like a tornado, in an attempt to make it look like certain words or phrases might kinda', sorta', perhaps if you squint real hard from fifty feet away, mean what they claim they mean, rather than the most obvious and generally accepted meanings. (Like your example about when someone farts, that is somehow God "talking" to us. Or, torturing the term "generation" used in Matthew 24:34, so as to rescue Jesus' "prophecy" there.)
4. Again, as you said, getting angry at you.

DavidM616's photo
Thu 11/10/16 01:39 AM
Edited by DavidM616 on Thu 11/10/16 01:45 AM


That's a good illustration, Lazarus.
In a similar vein, I have frequently referred to God as a cosmic-level deadbeat dad. If you think about it, all the parallels are there, including the part where some of his abandoned children defend anything he does, including bending over backwards to make excuses for him and his absence.


Much psychology went into creation of the bible. I don't doubt that the people that made up the original bible stories were smart beyond their time to come up with such compelling tales as to keep people believing through the centuries. Things like psychology, facts and politics went into those pages mixed in with all the fairy tales. Very well done indeed.

Believing that stuff in modern day is just plain silly but the people that made it up in the first place were true geniuses and given the time frame and how much more susceptible it was to corruption and conspiracy; I have a theory that the world leaders of the time likely banded together to create religion as a way of controlling the people.

With the governing bodies and religion you've got the carrot and the stick and when the carrot is backing up the stick by enforcing all the same rules wanted by the stick then you've got a firm stranglehold on the masses and few will fight against it. I know that religion has been around for longer than civilized society but the governing bodies found a way to mold and control it to their benefit and to this day people are still slaves to it's influence. Right down to the stupidest laws/practices like circumcision and monogamy. Ya, baby dick mutilation, thx Jews!

Edit: Ya I know psychology in it's current form didn't even exist until the current century but when I speak of it's influence on the bible, I don't mean it in it's official form but only in what people learned in those times of how to control the people. The phrase Neuro-linguistic programming comes to mind but I can't think of an example at current as to how it applies.


Well, as I implied in my earlier post, most of the stories in the OT were built upon the framework of older myths. And, many of the stories in the NT were built upon stories from the OT. Newer myths built upon previous myths. That said, I agree with you as far as the genius of some of the creators of these stories. A good example of this would be the Yahwists coming up with the idea that it was the PEOPLES' fault if Yahweh didn't save them from another nation. (You know:"Yahweh CHOSE not to save you, because you are all a bunch of shitheads.") Previously, it was pretty much accepted that if your nation got thumped on by another nation, then their gods were stronger than yours.

The Yahwists' stroke of genius not only played upon peoples' inner sense of guilt, but also guaranteed that, no matter what happened, it wasn't Yahweh's fault. Therefore, he would continue to be worshiped. And, they would cash in. Speaking of cashing in:

In addition to control, another reason for the storytellers to come up with these stories is that they figured out that, while getting a real job is hard, if they could spin some good stories about god(s), the rest of their fellow citizens would pay them for it! This is readily apparent when you read the OT. There are many places where the writers depict Yahweh as instructing the common people to give the priests lots of goodies.

Also..."baby dick mutilation." Haha!
(Ironically enough, even THAT likely came, not from God, but from the Egyptians.)