Churches Use Halo To Spread the Word, Raise Eyebrows 474
The New York Times has a lengthy look at an unorthodox way to spread the religious word: Halo 3 multiplayer matches. Churches across the country have adopted 'Halo Nights' as a way to get kids together in religious centers and church basements. "The alliance of popular culture and evangelism is challenging churches much as bingo games did in the 1960s. And the question fits into a rich debate about how far churches should go to reach young people. Far from being defensive, church leaders who support Halo -- despite its "thou shalt kill" credo -- celebrate it as a modern and sometimes singularly effective tool. It is crucial, they say, to reach the elusive audience of boys and young men." Just the same, the use of the game is raising concerns among some onlookers. GamePolitics reports that many faith communities are heavily debating the issue.
Fight the false prophet (Score:5, Interesting)
Fighting Against Infidels In Halo (Score:2, Funny)
Sounds like a good idea for a mosque.
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By the way is it just me or is there something really wrong with trying to convert children? Why not wait until they're older and less easily seduced by things like video games before trying to convince them?
Something about older men saying "come inside kids, let's play video games", when they're not actually
Sci Fi not in conflict with Christianity (Score:5, Informative)
I am no biblical scholar, but I am pretty sure that the bible is pretty clear that no one will know when the second coming will occur. Hard science fiction is perfectly compatible with religion. As is hard science, heck, the Vatican operates a major observatory. Research highlights include:
Dark Matter and Energy in the Cosmos
The Acceleration of the Universe
Quasars
Globular Clusters
http://clavius.as.arizona.edu/vo/R1024/Research.html [arizona.edu]
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There are plenty of examples of God showing himself to be love in the Old Testament and at least one example of God being a decisive judge on the wickedness of a man (and his wife)... Not to mention all that goes down in the book of Revelation.
The more you study the whole Bible, the more you recognize its unity.
Re:Halo is nothing compared to the Bible (Score:4, Funny)
I could equally fairly ask, what kind of idiot thinks there is an omnipotent, omnipresent being?
Doom was OK with some ministers (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, I knew a minister that didn't mind doom. It was only when the violence was direct towards humans, as in Grand Theft Auto type games, that there was a problem. One exception, shooting Nazis was OK, of course nearly all churches supported that in real life.
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It must be said (Score:3, Funny)
WWJF? (Score:4, Funny)
I'd love to go to one of these things, name my guy Jesus, and then berate anyone who frags me. "How dare you slay the son of god!?!?!?!?!"
Re:WWJF? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:WWJF? (Score:5, Funny)
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My friends and I often have nights like this and a few have been church-sponsored. Halo, Mario Kart... whatever, as long as the game isn't too racy for the people holding the controllers (and the situation) then it's usually a non-issue. My pastor plays Halo on occasion. If he were against it, I'd still play because I know it's just fine with God. At the same time I'd respect the pastor's wishes and not bring it to the youth-oriented events. The article is just some guy trying
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I wouldn't want to play Jesus or Lazarus. They take like 3 days to respawn.
Does one of the Marys attack with a bottle of oil?
Re:WWJF? (Score:4, Funny)
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Thou shalt not kill? (Score:5, Insightful)
I think this is a good idea for the church... Get the kids used to being at the church, and interacting with their friends there, possibly even friends that they never get to see otherwise. It establishes it as a friendly place that they want to be, the kids have some supervision while they play, and everyone involved is happy.
Re:Thou shalt not kill? (Score:5, Interesting)
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What happened to letting God be the judge? (Score:2)
How are you going to take them to the judgement?
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Re:Thou shalt not kill? (Score:4, Informative)
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What, so all we have to do is like, have the government pass a law declaring open season?
Sounds like I need to write my senator and then go clean my shotgun!
Well, that's an interesting question. (Score:4, Insightful)
While there's no question that God asked the Israelites to kill in His name repeatedly in the Old Testament and to punish certain crimes with death, it's an open question whether or not Jesus tightened the prohibition against killing with his commandments to "turn the other cheek" when one is wronged and to "let he who is without sin cast the first stone" when it comes to punishment of crimes.
It is quite reasonably arguable that even killing in self-defense is no longer allowed given the New Testaments focus on forgiveness and self-sacrifice, though few religious scholars would go that far. Gandhi, who was not a Christian, was one of the very few who did argue this -- even going so far as to say that England should not try to defend itself against the Nazis.
It's doubtful, though, that Christianity could've survived to be what it has become today if Constantine hadn't co-opted it into a warrior's creed.
Re:Thou shalt not kill? (Score:5, Insightful)
Actually, the idea that the proper understanding of the sense of the commandment is a prohibition on murder (which doesn't necessary give unlimited sanction to any killing a government sanctions, either) and not all killing isn't some innovation that "modern Christians" invented; it was the general interpretation before Christ (its hardly as if ancient Israel viewed either war or capital punishment as forbidden), and also the dominant interpretation from the earliest Christianity.
If anything, the "innovation" throughout the history of Christianity has been finding progressively broader classes of acts of killing that are considered within the prohibition of the commandment.
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Basically it says that murder (meaning unauthorised killing) is the closest word in modern english.
So, in modern english: You shall not murder.
Of course, we then get to argue forever on what authorize means who get's
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Re:Thou shalt not kill? (Score:5, Interesting)
These regulations also appear to be related to the post-Sinai period of Exodus, since they clearly assume a nomadic existence, so they can hardly be considered as contradicting the Ten Commandments (which in Jewish terms is pre-school stuff; God has a lot more to say about human conduct than things like "Thou shall not kill").
The nature of these commandments is fascinating because there is no independent historical or archaeological corroboration of the Exodus story. Although it is most historically probable that these regulations were reconstructed at a date later than the Babylonian captivity, they have a certain verisimilitude. The difficulties posed by reconciling a fixed lifestyle with commandments assuming a nomadic existence seems to confirm that in their folk memory at least, the Israelites were nomads.
In any case, anybody who cites Leviticus as proof that homosexuality or Wicca is an abomination will have a difficult time proving that they really consider the commandments of Leviticus binding.
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My question is
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I am observing that people who cite Old Testament law to justify their personal prejudices do so selectively. It is not so much that they don't observe the entirety of the law themselves, since this is impossible without, for example, access to the Temple, or at the very least facilities for animal sacrifice. It's that they don't even attempt to follow the laws they cite in their own lives in spirit as, for example, ultra-orthodox Jews do. I think Mathew 23:4 applies here.
Wi
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I see what you mean now. I remember the first (and only) time I read through all the law and thought it was/is a heavy burden. Just made me sigh with more relief for Grace.
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To wit: God hates shrimp [godhatesshrimp.com].
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Granted stomping on turtles and shooting ducks might have been a little tamer than Halo, but it's still the same concept.
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Well... depends on who you ask. From Wikipedia [wikipedia.org]
There is a difference between kill and murder (Score:2)
As such Halo would in shape or form be against the 10 commandments
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The bible allows all kin
Thou shalt not kill? except.... (Score:5, Insightful)
The support for military? The support for the death penalty? The support for these two comes directly from the so called religious crowd. Oh, but as long as they protest the abortion thing, I guess that makes it all better. They are not much different from the jihadists or other religious fanatics.
"Thou shalt not kill except for enemies of God and you can choose who is my enemy" - that seems to be how things are these days in both "devout christian" and "devout muslim" crowds while both proclaiming "peaceful religion". More people died in religious wars as percentage of population than any other wars in the history of this planet.
I guess the mod points here will depend who gets to read the message. I hope they don't declare some holy war or send a sniper my way. Sorry about the rant, but churches and religions are as much about "Thou shalt not kill" as much as it suits their goals. If their goals have any conflict with it, they have a very easy way around the so called "god's rules".
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That's kind of a grand statement, do you have any actual data to back it up?
The Civil War killed more American than any other in its history. You could maybe claim the bible thumping Northern Abolitionists were responsible for it but its a stretch.
Spanish American war... no real religious angle there other than American protests were maybe not so fond of Spanish Catholics, it was mostly yellow
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Hmmm.... I would be cautious about making such value statements.
Why would one assert that the NIV is a "superiour" translation? The King James Version was the dominant guide to Christian thought for English speaking people for more than 300 years. It would be curious to argue that the people who adhered to the guidance in the King James version were not (and are not) "inferiour" Christians
Re:Wrong translation (Score:5, Insightful)
Whether the quality of the translation in terms of closeness to the original actually matters to the KJV as a holy book will doubtless be debated. I have friends who are convinced that the KJV is the one correct translation and I imagine they believe this on the basis of the content and on the basis of how they've been taught to interpret it - independently of what translators may describe as being technically the best. I'd say that it rather depends whether you believe you should follow the original texts as best understood academically, or whether you believe in a specific interpretation of the texts which you may feel to be superior spiritually somehow.
Personally I think it's very important to realise that all translations are likely imperfect, but that alternative translations could offer valuable insights into the subject matter and the process of how modern versions were arrived at.
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Re:Wrong translation (Score:5, Interesting)
Consider KJV:
1. We know more about Biblical culture now than anyone did in 1611, which affects translation.
2. We know more about Biblical language now than anyone did in 1611, which obviously affects translation.
3. Modern translations take into account hundreds of additional material sources that were not available in 1611, not the least of which are the Dead Sea Scrolls which account for very increased understanding of both 1 and 2.
4. The KJV New Testament was based in large part on the Latin Textus Receptus which meant a) it's a translation of a translation and b) the TR itself was rushed to beat other Greek texts and had hundreds of errors (many of which were corrected by the 3rd edition used for the KJV, but still, consider the source.)
5.. The KJV translation was extremely controversial at the time by the Roman Catholic Church, who would make the very same arguments about the KJV that you are making about the NIV right now. By the standards for controversy it was judged against, the KJV could still be argued to be a bad translation.
6. English has changed since 1611.
I'm not saying NIV it IS better, I'm saying why anyone would assert it's status as a superior translation, as you asked. No one was saying that Christians using the KJV were inferior Christians, but I think a case could be made for Bible translation affecting that. Consider if the (mis)translation said something like "Thou SHALL kill."
Note: I am not an expert on ANY of this.
Re:Wrong translation (Score:4, Interesting)
This gets moderated troll every time I post it. It is obvious the people moderating are both scared of the truth and have no idea what troll means. Regardless, I'll post again. Surely some will find probable truth interesting rather than be frightened of it.
Based on your comment, this becomes relevant. It is widely believed one of the worst translation errors occurs is that of Noha's Ark. The original translation means the world flooded, which we all know is impossible. It is now believed the proper translation means the entire valley or region flooded, not the world. Meaning, the flood should be regarded as a regional flood of epic proportions but not one of global scale. This change in scope also allows for the animals which would otherwise not been able to fit in the ark to suddenly fit as the variety is drastically reduced. In other words, things suddenly make sense and become believable; assuming one's faith is still in order. To boot, archaeological evidence has been gathered which supports this as the proper translation, based on some assumptions and details provided by the Bible.
People need to keep in mind that back then, "the world" actually meant the region and that there was, in fact, no word which literally meant "the world" as we know it today. The reason being, for most everyone, the entire world was made up of everything in that region and perhaps that of the surrounding regions, if one were well traveled, which was exceedingly rare.
So for a translation to mean "the world" as we understand today it places meaning on it which simply did not exist back when the word was recorded.
Halo? Eh. (Score:4, Funny)
Well, we haven't do that exactly... (Score:5, Insightful)
In regards to Halo 3 though, I do know our Senior High Sunday School teacher used it as the basis for his lesson last week. He actually had me come up and give a brief overview of the story from Halo 1 and 2 to start things off
Churches do need to be careful to be "in the world, but not of it", but at the same time don't be afraid of using main stream culture and entertainment in new ways to both teach and to simply get people interested.
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Dan East
Spending priorities? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you sit back and think of the dollars tied up in religious infrastructure, it is absolutely astounding. Ask yourself, if you combine the equity of all religious property within a 2 mile radius of your house, how much do you get? I know for me, I would estimate it at around 2 million...
I guess my first mistake was wondering how churches can _rationalize_ anything...
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I've always wondered how churches like that can rationalize spending money on a 20 foot screen with a nice projector and 18" subwoofer when that money could be applied to more useful pursuits such as helping the poor.
Easy. Those are internal investments aimed at increasing the size of the congregation, and in turn, increasing the pot of donations.
A small humble 4 room chapel can be used for religious ceremonies, sure, but how many people could be packed in? How many would be inspired by the visage and get that whole religious experience thing? Not many and I should know: I vote at one and even though voter turnout is really low in the U.S. it completely overwhelms the facilities there.
Now, look at a church. Imposing an
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I'm not sure I've heard a better oxymoron lately...
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I've always wondered how corporations like that can rationalize spending money on a 20ft water fountain when that money could be applied to more useful pursuits such as improving R&D. Every time I drive past a corporation that is building a new multi-million dollar extension with fine architecture on expensive land I wonder the same thing. Why not use that money to keep their best engineers onboard or increase employee benefits or have a pizza party?
If you sit back and think of the dollars tied up in corporate infrastructure, it is absolutely astounding. Ask yourself, if you combine the equity of all property within a 2 mile radius of your house, how much do you get? I know for me, I would estimate it at around 2 million...
I guess my first mistake was wondering how corporations can _rationalize_ anything...
Give that a read, maybe that'll clear some stuff up. I'm not trying to equate religious institutes to corporations, but look at it like a potential customer would for a business.
Imagine you're standing outside two electronics stores. One store has an extremely nice, well designed exterior. Inside you know they've got free water, good music playing, an easy layout to navigate, etc. The other store has cardboard patches on the windows, has inventory just laying around, has a window fan with no A/C runn
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When it went to Athens, it became a philosophy.
When it went to Rome, it became an organization.
When it spread throughout Europe, it became a culture.
When it came to America, it became a business!
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As for why they spend money on things like projectors rather than dedicating all that money to the poor: rightly or wrongly they place the value of your soul over the value of your life. That may not appear to make a lot of sense but this is why outreach and evange
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One justification they could have is that infrastructure gets more people to hear their message and hence more people to convert. I would suspect that the salvation of an eternal soul ranks higher than keeping a single mother fed for an extra day - in the religious scheme of things anyway.
Another would be that it's investing, that infrastructure attracts more people some of whom join and start bringing in more income to the church through donations, volunteer w
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As opposed to you seeking Slashdot karma by just simply outright lying.
Firstly, how about scoping this--does this apply to martyrs as well, or just a particular subset you have in mind? You know, beyond the absurd universal you have to express, even though you yourself know it's false as you say it.
Secondly, I'd like to compare hard numbers between churches' charitable giving, corporations, and you personally. The first two I can get--an
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What kind of "church" are you part of, exactly!
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In regards to Halo 3 though, I do know our Senior High Sunday School teacher used it as the basis for his lesson last week. He actually had me come up and give a brief overview of the story from Halo 1 and 2 to start things off ;)
Wow, that's sure different from the religious environment I grew up in. I pirated Doom like the rest of the teenagers back when it came out. (That's Doom 1 for all you whippersnappers.) I liked it so much I mail-ordered a copy so I could support id. Well, I wasn't home when the package arrived. My parents gave me a huge lecture about the evils of whatever this devil worship stuff was I downloaded and my stepdad actually took the disks behind the house and smashed them with a sledgehammer. He then used razo
Bingo nights, 21st century style (Score:2)
Churches uses? (Score:2, Insightful)
Killing != Murder (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, I'm a Christian, and yes I love playing Halo.
Halo != Killing (Score:2, Insightful)
Halo is no different than playing cops and robbers or cowboys and indians.
Most of the indignation is from people who would bristle at Jack Thompson calling a video game a murder simulator, but since this is about a church, they are more than willing to join his side intellectually if it lets them scream hypocrisy
Re:Killing != Murder (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Sinful thoughts are still sins, so..... (Score:4, Insightful)
Except for cheaters.
Re:Killing != Murder (Score:5, Insightful)
The bible was written by man...just like the torah, just like the que'ran, just like every religious book. Written by men who thought the world was flat.
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Modern translations of the Bible have copyright dates. Nice christian tone you have there, by the way.
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It does however raise (beg?) the question of the morality of "killing" sufficiently conscious beings in a realistic virtual world. In my irrelevant opinion, it is morally permissible for a person to kill virtual beings in a simulation created in his world, but the beings within that world are still obligated to treat "users" from the overworld the same as anyone else since they cannot allow people to
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If you take it as God's word, he wasn't that specific; those were some pretty heavy tablets and he had to be concise so I doubt conditions of law played any role in the Judeo-Christian doctrine of Murder. And the law is different depending on where you go. Is it okay that some cultures have death penalties for crimes we rarely enforce? A law is a law, right?
God's law says "No Murdering." I really don't thin
Re:Killing != Murder (Score:5, Interesting)
Oddly enough the old testament seems to be advocating genocide. Shortly after Moses got the 10 commandments, god told Joshua to kill off everyone (including women and children) in cities who would not submit to the chosen people's rule.
I'd also like to point out many early non-Catholic Christians actually viewed the old testament as evil and written by the hand of a demi-urge. However the Papacy would have none of that and had most of these people put to death over the course of several thousand years.
Most notably were the Cathars and various other gnostic [wikipedia.org] sects. If the Papacy had only the new testament to work with then they would have little to justify their wars of religion and garner support from newly converted pagans who wished to continue their warring ways.
To be really fair, there is no mention of hell in the old testament and is actually only referred to as the physical location in the new testament in name (not the lake of fire in revelations which isn't referred to as directly as hell) which was pulled directly to Roman-pagan mythology hades as a form of underworld punishment rather then the concept of "separation of God".
And if really want to get to be a historical stickler there is no ancient Greek word for "homosexual" which Leviticus refers too but rather the word means "soft" which could mean weak willed by context.
At any rate, simply using the 10 commandments literally needs some context to the situation. You also have to remember there are plenty of other dietary and Jewish old testament laws that many people ignore which are just as important. I mean we still don't put people to death for working on the Sabbath (which according to Jewish law is Saturday by the way and not Sunday) nor do we sell our daughters into slavery.
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and yet crows freely gather in my yard all the time - I keep expecting the giant lightning strike, but alas, it never comes...
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> A) he inspired people to write it over a period of 2000 years
So are we, like, talking Jesus now, or what? Jesus is God? I'm confused.
> B) An the reason it's distribution is so good is because it's the truth.
Go on...
> I mean common, 20+ people writing a book over 2000 years, including prophecies that are fulfilled hundreds (if not thousands) of years after they are written,
Like a nursery rhyme?
> with no contradictions in
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Yes I have read it through. Some parts more times than I can count. And I have thought about some parts to the extent that I have them memorized. So, if you are interested in debating this logically , feel free to e-mail me at tbaldridge at gmail dot com. Otherwise, I have to ask if you are just spouting off what you have been told about the Bible without researching and studying it yourself.
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At maximum, only one of these sequences is correct
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Here I will show you how you can build a computer.
1) find a case. 2) put the motherboard in the case. 3) add a video card.....
So now you see how to build a computer.
Playing against Jesus would be boring (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Playing against Jesus would be boring (Score:5, Funny)
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Halo != Halo (Score:5, Funny)
They do realize that "Halo" may not mean the same thing that they're used to, don't they?
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Mankind works in mysterious ways. (Nightwish)
Gives new meaning... (Score:5, Funny)
Games are an excellent outreach tool for youth (Score:3, Funny)
one other thought, hollywoodizing religion (Score:2, Interesting)
I grew up in a religious household and was exposed to all the evangelism arguments. The ones that disgusted me the most were the appeals to personal vanity and greed, the pitch made heaven sound like a multi-level marketing scheme. Religion is supposed
Re:one other thought, hollywoodizing religion (Score:5, Interesting)
The important thing, as in so many things, is to be careful about who you lump together. I have a friend who is a rabbi (he doesn't have a pulpit, he's a headmaster at a jewish school.) He says that when he travels, and his seatmate finds out he's a rabbi, he inevitably gets a long story about the persons awful rabbi growing up, or their terrible hebrew school experience, or other disappointments with their jewish experience. The thing is, this guys is the epitome of tolerance, cheerfulness, and thoughtfulness. He takes it all in good humor, but I think is saddened to see people rejecting a religious life because of their bad childhood experiences, without realizing that there are other ways to do it.
I don't know much about christian communities, and it sounds like you've seen a huge lack of humility, and a huge amount of hypocrisy. Religion isn't a cure all for bad behavior. At it's best, it provides a few guideposts for seeing where the pitfalls of being human are, and some clues as to how to approach them. At it's worst... well, there have been horrors visited on the world by the religious and nonreligious alike.
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You say that you trust science over the "rantings of Jewish nomads". The term "science" is used in a couple of different ways in modern language. First we have the "scientific method" of hypothesis, testing, and observation. To my knowledge, this kind of science does not contradict the Bible.
Ok, here's one: according to the Bible, the rainbow is a sign of God's covenant with man that he will not destroy the world in a another great big flood. As we are led to understand, light did not refract prismatically before the flood, only after. Here's another one: snakes did not crawl on their bellies before the fall of man, that was a punishment by God. So snakes presumably bounced around on their tails coiled like springs as evinced in the Gospel of Qbert. We are told that Adam and Eve were the paren
Nothing new here (Score:2)
child abuse (Score:2)
As a society, we'll be grown up when we don't allow people to abuse children like this anymore. We keep them away from sex until way beyond when they're physically ready for it, but we have no problem with them being indoctrinated in a religious faith long before they understand
Re:child abuse (Score:4, Insightful)
In other news, some people raise their children to believe that liquor (is|is not) good to drink, that meat (is|is not) OK to eat, that (conservatives|liberals) are smarter, and that (European|Asian|African) lineage is something to be proud of. None of those are objectively true but may have long-term ramifications on the child's social behavior. None of those are remotely considered child abuse, except possibly by people who are strongly in favor of the opposite position.
Don't cheapen real problems by equating random personal decisions with them. Punching your daughter in the mouth or burning your son with cigarette butts is child abuse. Raising them in the religious tradition you believe is necessary for them to enjoy a happy life (and afterward) is not.
Want to Reach the 12 - 24 Year Old Male Market? (Score:2, Funny)
One word:
Boobs.
Whats new? (Score:2)
Headshot for Jesus! (Score:3, Funny)
I cast you <slap!> OUT demons! Along with your brains!
A deep, rumbling voice echoes from the dark sky: "HuMiLiAtIoN!"
Re:GAME NIGHT! (Score:4, Interesting)
That is nonsensical on so many levels. Christianity makes my brain hurt.
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* Regardless if the Christian version of things is true, there are enough people who see it as true to make it a history altering event.