by jimwalton » Tue Apr 14, 2020 1:55 pm
> did they really need to erase the art and mythology?
I don't really know what they did, and I'll never try to justify it. People of different eras worked with different worldviews. I don't excuse it or justify it. I'm only saying that we can't know what would have developed otherwise, whether that would have been even worse.
> How would gay sex being legal destroy Family structure, social order, or god's presence?
First of all, survival depended on having children to help with things: food procuring, hunting, protection, etc. Same-sex couples can't have children. Second, in an era without banks and other financial conveniences and institutions, it was all about the land, keeping the land in one's family, and passing it from generation to generation for posterity and survival. Again, gays don't have children. Third, by my research a lot of homosexual sex in the ancient world was basically what we call sexual abuse of slaves and children. If that's true, no wonder it was considered contrary to social order. Fourth, a lot of homosexual sex was associated with idol worship and fertility rites in pagan temples, which would have been anathema to worshippers of the true God.
>> 2 Cor. 12.8-10
> God wants us to be weak and worthless? That doesn't sound good.
Read deeper, my friend. Our circumstances in life are not what define us or determine who we are. It's often in the state of personal weakness that I can learn best about submission, servanthood, humility, and dependence. God is strong when I am submissive, humble, teachable, and dependent.
When I am feeling weak, I have several choices: (1) try to be stronger; (2) do everything to fix my own situation; (3) get somebody to help me. The third one is what the verses are talking about. Spiritual oppression and circumstantial garbage is upsetting, and can make us angry and bitter. I can try to fix the situation, which can be a good choice, but some situations aren't fixable. I can try to be stronger, which can be a good thing, but sometimes my strength isn't enough, and the fact that the situation might not be fixable keeps clubbing me from behind, and I just can't handle it any more. In that case the best choice is number 3: get somebody to help. When I choose this, I am also choosing submission, humility, and dependence. Those responses are all ones that allow God to work. If we pray with humility and dependence that God would fill us with himself, because we're feeling quite empty and inadequate, and just work on the relationship with him, the grit of the unresolved circumstance will come under the strength of that prayer.
> he would refuse to cure me of a disease
Homosexuality is not a disease. The source and roots of it are still unknown, but science is right now telling us that there is no "gay gene," so to speak (we can talk about this more if you wish), and that same-sex orientation most often comes from life experiences.
> Why should I love a god who wants me to be hungry and dirty?
You seem to consistently take the derogatory approach, which is unfortunate. God doesn't want you to be hungry and dirty. God made Abraham a rich man. So also Joseph, Daniel, and others. It's not wealth that's the problem, but what people do with it. God wishes to bless you, but money is not the answer to human problems. What the Bible says is that money can be just as dangerous as it is helpful, and it's something that easily takes over our lives and we become (1) different people because of it, and (2) can even become slaves to it.
> If a man has 12 sons, and the youngest is homosexual, he will literally lose nothing, he won't lose any inheritance, he won't lose the chance to have grandchildren, there will literally be no negatives.
Correct. Except the last phrase. We can't be assured that "there will literally be no negatives," because it depends on the person and the situation. But that's no different than a heterosexual person, frankly. But in the ancient world, homosexuality often played itself out in sexual abuse of others and in idolatry, so you can't really say, "Aw, it's nothing."
>> He said it didn't reflect His holiness. He didn't explain why.
> Why won't he explain his reasoning?
I can't answer that. (shoulder shrug) He didn't explain His reasoning for most things. We're supposed to trust His wisdom.
> What would I get if I sacrificed everything to god?
Jesus says if you lose yourself for His sake, you gain yourself. He also says that if you "sell everything you have" to gain the kingdom, you will own the most valuable thing in life. Paul says if you sacrifice everything to God, you will know God Himself, and enviable knowledge, to be sure.
> I have no love for god and I don't think he loves me, why would I do it?
I can assure you that God loves you, but if you have no love for God, you wouldn't do it. Christianity is about a relationship with the God you love. If you don't love, there's no relationship. This isn't about religion, that's for sure. Jesus deplored religion.
> Sorry, I only feel fulfilled when I'm happy, otherwise I'm just angry.
All I can say is, there's more to life that just being happy. Helen Keller, who had her share of challenges, said, "Many persons have a wrong idea about what constitutes true happiness. It is not attained through self-gratification, but through fidelity to a worthy purpose." Happiness is only a mood, not a condition.
> I was a kid last time I read the bible, that's what stood out to me.
Well, maybe it's time to pick it up again. Read the Gospel of John. It should take you about an hour.