The amount of times I have written here that I have no time for any of the magical mystical or superstition based parts of the bible, do I have to tag this statement I make on to every post I make?
For fuck's sake man, get a grip. Did you actually read my post at all? That was part of the matter I was addressing. As for your having no interest in the magical superstition bits of the Bible -
we know -
we know -
we know. Do I have to tag every post to
you on this matter to let you know that I know that is your opinion?
And as you ought to know also, I have no belief in the supernatural either.
As for the rest of the book it's not my idea of a comfy bedtime read, so no thanks and those that enjoy it good luck.
Well, as I said, and as Jeremy has reiterated, if you are going to make a critique of something, it is best to know something about it. Imagine going on at length about why you or anyone disagreed with communism without having read the Communist Manifesto (let alone Das Kapital). And those are closely argued texts with a consistent theme. The Bible has a thousand themes, often contradictory (okay, the fundamentalists will tell you there is just one theme, but bully for them). Yes, it may not be enjoyable reading material for you, but if you haven't read any of the texts, how would you know? (Please don't start wittering on about 'magical, mystical etc.) Maybe people like Jeremy, who as non-believers take an objective interest in ancient scriptural texts, are a very small minority, but I'm happy that such people are around. NearlySane, another atheist, has in fact read the whole of the Bible, and that is more than I can say for myself.*
Mind D U, I was addressing Vlad, and he does like to promote his stuff on the back of misquotes and jumping on to the slightest possible ambiguity or taking anything loosly written that would be understood more or less correctly by anyone else but he stil likes to take things in his own devious/characteristic way.
Vlad's not my enemy D U, but yes I should have known better.
Oh, I'm well aware of Vlad's shortcomings, and I certainly wouldn't want him as an apologist for any club of which I was a member (fortunately, I'm not a member of any clubs, let alone the Christian one). And he definitely misquotes and tells outright lies. But just occasionally he does say something worth saying.
"Know your enemy" need not be taken literally, but the phrase helps illustrate the point I was making - if you disagree with somebody, your arguments will carry greater weight if you are well informed about their source material.
*As a matter of interest, even Richard Dawkins in "The God Delusion" urges people to get to know the Bible.