Your misunderstanding of Christianity is shocking for someone on a religion ethics board and yet I'm the one getting Dunning Kruger and courtiers reply.
You appear to think that Christianity is set and understood, and that anyone whose interpretation of it differs from yours is not really understanding; the reality is that there are almost as many variations of Christianity as there are Christians, and in the absence of much of anything actually verifiable most of them are pretty much absolutely unchallengeable.
Please read my description of Christianity.
I've read it. It sounds lovely. Look at Christianity in the world; it's not the same.
The Bible does not hold the same place in Christianity as the OT does in Judaism or the Koran does in Islam.
For you it doesn't. For, for instance, American Evangelicals it seems to be far more important than any wishy-washy sense of 'what would Jesus do'?
In fact, the NT isn't official until a couple of centuries later. That is what you should be taking on board.
I know. They don't care.
You see in those centuries there wasn't really a document to be pushed.
If any of this is true, then that's part of the problem. You'd think an all-knowing god might have seen that sort of thing coming.
Christianity therefore must be something different to what you are supposing.
No, it mustn't, because it's not a logical enterprise, it's an enterprise collated from the collective fears, paranoia, superstition, wonder, charity, love, spite, awe, malice, anger and forgiveness of millions of people woven to varying degrees of looseness or tightness around varying translations of various edits of various allegations of one magician/teacher/demigod/prophet...
O.