If we just look at social values, I don't think it gets any better than "Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself" and the good Samaritan story.
.
I dunno, the Qur'an has
some pretty great moral lessons as well. Of course, all of that falls apart the moment you look at the rest of the book and realize it's full of
awful moral lessons in other cases. When it comes down to building a moral system, we must value the
negative lessons far more heavily than the positive ones, as the negatives tell us far more about what negative effects we can expect. Most people don't need a book to be told not to rape, murder, or pillage; as Penn Jillette so eloquently put it: "I do rape all I want. And the amount I want is zero. And I do murder all I want, and the amount I want is zero."
But when a person's religious beliefs inform them that something which is patently immoral (such as torturing and killing someone for being a homosexual, in Qur'an verses 7:80-84) is morally necessary, or that they must accept something horrifying (burning in hell for all of eternity for not believing in their god, in Qur'an verse 4:56) as morally justified, that can seriously warp their view of reality and what is right and wrong, and cause them to commit hor
rible, horrible actions.
So I guess we'll do that while we put them to death? Maybe by using a guillotine, rather than stoning? Of course, here we run into the other problem, the contradictory nature of the old and new testaments. In one passage, God is vengeful, calling homosexuality a moral abomination deserving of death; in another, he is merciful, demanding that we love one another. This makes it very hard to form any sort of coherent moral system - you have to interpret, which can make the whole thing quite a mess.
Personally, I think there's a reasonable case to be made that the Qur'an is a more horrible and reprehensible document than the Bible, and there's no question that it's currently more harmful to world affairs. However, to claim that the bible is nice because it promotes good moral values... I'm sorry, but your selective reading does not constitute the whole book.