VG,
Did you actually just say “on the basis that someone wants to become a servant and be told what to do?”. How do you suppose that worked then – Mary turned up at the job centre one Monday morning, and the clerk said: ”OK, let’s see what we’ve got today. Ooh, Emperor –that’s a good one. Several senator positions going begging too I see, plus we have something open as the chief architect for temples that might interest you. What’s that you say Mary – “have we got something more in the servant line?” Well yes, if that’s your choice I’m sure we could find something for you. Are you sure though? After all, with these other jobs you’d have servants of your own, plus chariots and wine and free tickets to the circus and stuff? No?...“sounds great, but you really fancy giving servanting a go” do you? Well, on your head be it then...”
It works like this. You believe in the concept of a hierarchy and you believe in a particular form of hierarchy being something you want to join and be part of because you believe the benefits outweigh the costs, You then believe that within that hierarchical oranisation/ movement/ social group/ tribe etc you want to join, specific people or a person - or in the case of religions, a supernatural entity or entities - has/have the right to tell you what to do. You then decide to go along with doing what they tell you to do...except when you decide you don't want to and then you stop doing what they tell you to do. There may be consequences to your refusal - e.g. you may be socially excluded/ fired from a job/ leave an organisation/ be ex-communicated from a church/ be court-martialled/ / feel liberated/ feel in yourself you have failed in your religious/ moral/ social/ political duty/ be judged by others to have failed etc etc
“Wanting”? “Wanting”!!!
You do say he darndest things sometimes Gabriella…
Not sure what your point is. Lots of people want to serve various causes. Nuns, priests, religious devotees, or soldiers wanting to serve and sacrifice for abstract concepts such as honour or freedom
Age and power dynamic for two starters.
What is wrong with Mary's age? In that time and context of when the story was written, her age seems to be the usual age to marry, and we don't actually know her age. Maybe her age constantly changes depending on who is telling the story and the society they are relating the story to and the year the story is being related. Or maybe people don't really care what age she is supposed to be as that is not the point of the story.
Power dynamic - what about it? If the story is presented as a story of religious devotion to religiously-inclined people who believe in a higher power that has created everything, then the power of this "higher power" would have to be a key element of the story for the story to be of interest to the people it is aimed at.
That’s presented as morally good remember?
Either you think it’s a story presented as morally good or you don’t. As it’s presented in the Bible though do you not think the intention was the former rather than to describe god’s morally bad act?
I think the story is presented by its authors with the intention of being seen as morally good on the basis of the beliefs of its authors and their target audience.
That’s just what you suggested, and that’s exactly what’s baked in to the story – “god did it, therefore it was morally good”.
Nope, I didn't suggest that "behaving in a way you’d find morally wrong is ok when the end justifies the means".
It’s not simply stating – it’s showing you what you did, but ok…
Again it's just your opinion that you showed me what I did. I don't think you showed me what I did because I don't think I deflected. You can think I deflected if you want to though.
Yeah, and Aesop’s fable of the hare and the tortoise was only about two animals racing each other. Oh no, wait, it’s was about other things too. Well blow me down – turns out stories can have multiple meanings! Who’d have thought it eh?
As I said, you can interpret any story how you want. However, demanding that other people interpret stories the same way you do hasn't worked. People will just disagree with your interpretation, as has happened here.
The Bible is to god as the Telegraph is to the Tory party. It’s a fan mag. Any references to god are all about what a great guy he is/was. If god impregnated an underage Palestinian servant girl then by its own definition of a morally perfect deity that must therefore have been a morally good thing to do! Whoopee!
The Bible would present creation by a higher power as a morally good thing, regardless of the hardships that follow on from creation. Presumably because in this religious value system, along with the belief in a higher creator power that created life, is the belief that the higher power has the right to take life away, make life difficult etc etc
Here’s the thing though: by modern lights it was a morally contemptible thing to do.
No idea what you mean by that sentence. There isn't one modern view about what is or isn't morally contemptible for a god to do.
Whose morality wins then – ours, or the god of the Bible’s?
Dunno - depends who you ask I suppose.