Interesting term, foundational document. I wonder what we can include in that. I'm sure police foundational documents include upholding the Law....and the Law as we know can be Homophobic.
'Upholding the law' is not a document, it's an activity. Policing in the UK is by implicit consent, there is no 'foundational document' for the Police.
Even If we take the conservative interpretations of references to Homosexuality, we must also be aware that in the Jewish world at the time it was one's duty to be in a heterosexual faithful marriage whether you were homosexually oriented or not and in the greco Roman world sexual exploitation and recreational sex and prostitution were at record highs.
Whoop-de-doo. I just looked outside my window, and I'm in neither ancient Greece, Classical Rome or first millennium Israel. What's relevant is the current homophobic interpretation that is widespread throughout Christianity, today; the interpretation which is STILL bringing misery and pain to the lives of innocent people across the world.
I didn't realise you were so fringe
I've been quite open about the fact that whilst it seems likely that the stories of Jesus were at least partially based on someone real, the myth of divinely-blooded magician is so far removed from any possible reality as to constitute virtually an entirely separate concept.
I'm afraid that society was still persecuting Gays long after it ceased, if it ever was, to be theocratic.
The fact that other people doing the same thing are also wrong does not in any way diminish the evil that is being done by Christians because of their Christianity.
It was possible biblically to ''sexually defile oneself'' with a woman and a man and not at the same time.
That Christianity has a broader hang-up about sex and sexuality is a related, but separate discussion; it certainly neither justifies the writing, nor the current hateful interpretations of it.
In the harsh world of Greco roman sexual exploitation and the harsh discipline of a dangerous nomadic existence they obviously felt they needed rules over choice.
Why? And even if so, why depict it as an unalterably abominable choice? Why not something to the effect of 'not now, people'. Why wasn't it one of the things changed during any of the 'new' covenants that were made?
Christianity in St Pauls time had no legal influence on Rome or non believers
And, again, that's irrelevant when we're talking about the social evils (in some instances being written into law) being done now around the world because of Christianity.
The New testament has a whole list of groups, I would say a pretty comprehensive list of groups who do not make the kingdom so no I don't see any particular weighting to homosexual behaviour.
Except for the bits that say that homosexuality is an abomination and, implicitly, include gay people in the list who won't make it to the kingdom, regardless of anything else they might or might not do. You mean apart from that?
I think you are taking a modern interpretation of inheriting here.
Not really. The story runs that 'Adam' and 'Eve' did something, and so I am therefore vicariously guilty and liable.
If say you inherited a slave plantation in the 18th century through a will, and either sold it on or kept it you have inherited the evil of your predecessors.
No. How do you 'inherit' evil; evil is manifested, it's not passed on. I might be considered to have some financial liability, in terms of reparations, but there's no accusation of criminality or immorality there.
Let's take the Orthodox view. All go to heaven.
Why? We're talking about the view of Christians who have very definite ideas about who is or isn't being invited.
Would you want to be somewhere knowing God was there or would that constitute eternal fiery torment?
Given that I don't think either of them is a possibility, it's a moot point. Real people are being really hurt in the real world; which fairy tale ending I don't believe they're not going to get is irrelevant.
No they are not fine, but inevitable because of the fall of man.
Doesn't matter if some entire groups go early, because we're all doomed? What nonsense. What 'fall of man'? We are human - either we evolved this way, and there is no 'fall', or an all-knowing deity made us in which case it's a design flaw/choice, and still not on us. This fucked-up philosophy that because we aren't some irrational notion of perfection we are therefore hateful and need to be rescued from the person that made us hateful is a really demented version of a bad relationship writ large.
O.