Well let me make it clear to you. I do not represent or have any interest in any 'christianity' that does not follow the creeds of the early church.
Or, at least, what you think were the tenets of the early church, at least.
I would have thought that it was a simple matter for you to find out what these are, given the inordinate amount of time you give over to criticism.
You'd think it would, wouldn't you. You'd think if an infinitely wise, infinitely good deity had critical information to impart to humanity you'd think the instruction book would be unambiguous and obvious, but you can't even decide if there's one sequel, or two, or which two.
What is it anyway, that distinguishes your opening complaint from an admission of ignorance of orthodox christianity and the main heresies?
Critical thinking.
or rather the God of the lesser evil
That's rather lowering the bar from the triple-omni, don't you think. Omnipotent, sort of omnibenevolent, well, better than the alternative...
what do you think that results in?
A distasteful depiction of a cosmically powerful sadist - sort of a antediluvian Thanos, if you will. (Or Darkseid, depending on which church you hold to)
Would you agree that you are in no relationship with God?
I'm not aware I'm in a relationship with any gods - I write, but they don't get back to me, I follow them on 'X' but they don't acknowledge. Of course, that presupposes that 'X' account isn't just a bot...
How then does God's jealousy affect you?
Because people believe it. Because people at my kids' school teach them this nonsense uncritically. Because our monarchy is predicated on the notion that it's fundamentally true.
Am I pleased that God will not let me be seduced into the damnable because of his jealousy. You betcha.
If that's your god, your god is not something to be worshipped, it's something to be placated. It's a monster, not something to aspire to. You talk of a relationship with god, your god is the boyfriend that won't let you have any other friends... we recognise that as abuse these days, how come you don't?
I'm afraid I don't buy into the idea that it is only thanks to the enlightenment that rape and slavery were abolished
No-one said that it was, but it certainly wasn't based on scripture which doesn't admonish either and tacitly (rape) or explicitly (slavery) condones both.
I'm afraid you are talking to a chappy of the wrong religion on this one.
Because you have the definitive take on which bits of which of the books are valid and which aren't, and everyone else is wrong, and you can prove it...
Human decency is derived from religious conviction and enlightened self interest I would move...with self interest being the weak link in human decency.
That would be the human decency of genital mutilation, honour killings, religious persecution, homophobia, misogyny, caste systems and child marriage that springs like the glorious fruits of spring from religious conviction, right? Human decency can be argued to be enlightened self-interest, yes, and I'd say that human decency leads some people to religious conviction because they don't look too deeply at the content of their religion and believe the hype that it's 'the moral way'. I don't see anything that particularly leads from religious devotion to human decency.
Blood sacrifice occurs in war or even the lady crossing the road who helps someone and gets ploughed into by a car
Politicians who send soldiers to war don't want the blood, but they accept that it's a necessary price for achieving their goals because they don't have something better. They are not, for want of a better word, omnipotent...
We haven't established that at all.
We have. You're still catching up, but give it time.
God gives you free will in moral choices.
Free will is not logically viable in itself, it's not viable in light of the nature of time as a dimension and it's not compatible with the notion of a divinely created reality.
That is all he is guilty of, any moral choices being yours.
Who said anything about morality? The rules in the books aren't about morality, they're about obedience, they're about compliance. What's the moral justification of cutting off the end of a child's penis? You can argue that this requirement has been superseded (others would argue against that) but that doesn't change the fact that it was a requirement - what's the moral justification for that? What's the moral problem with homosexuality? Acting on that might, if you accepted the notion, be a 'free will' thing, but why make gay people in the first instance if it's such a problem? Why make people curious if curiosity is a problem, why make women have opinions if the intent is for them to sit down and be quiet?
Again he is the only one who dies for those choices...
The whole point of the book is that (spoilers) HE'S NOT DEAD!!!! Wow, Sixth Sense seems so tame now... He didn't 'Die for our sins' he took the weekend off in a fit of pique.
That is just forgetting, not forgiving and therefore what you describe as mercy is just letting someone get away with it.
Who said anything about forgetting? You don't take revenge, but you don't let people do it again - mercy. Taking payment is punishment, whether it's a fine or a pound of flesh. Taking that payment from someone else, that's another massive short circuit in the 'morality' that you touted. If someone else makes the payment, how have I been punished, and I've been forgiven without being punished, how does someone else being punished change that?
If god somehow needs to feel that someone's been punished.. warning signs. Don't give that god a cat, that's all I'm saying.
Secondly and perhaps more importantly what is the effect of the mercy on the perpetrator? Is the perpetrator moved to repentance or is it business as usual?
Perpetrator of WHAT? Being human? Having the wrong haircut. Eating the wrong cuisine. Effective horticulture. Fashion faux-pas? Loving someone with unfortunately matching genitals? Not kowtowing at the correct building?
Fallacy of modernity.
You need to learn what that means. Suggesting that there is a modern world is not 'the fallacy of modernity'. Suggesting that we've rid ourselves of innumerable ideas of magic as unrealistic and could do with getting rid of the last few is not 'the fallacy of modernity'.
O.