I never said I doubted the validity of Moses statements.
Ya know.....
It's hard to have an "intellectually honest" conversation with you when if you're going to try to ignore *your own* beliefs, and how they keep creeping into the conversation. You're a registered "atheist", apparently a rather *evangelical* one at that, posting on a "Christian" website. You're quite intent on characterizing God as you see fit, based on whatever portions of whatever texts you see fit.
You absolutely do *lack belief* in the statements of Moses, or you'd have no reason to label yourself as an atheist. In the sense that I don't believe everything he said anymore than you do, we're not different in any way. He's just another genocidal maniac from my perspective that like many others before him, and many others after him, used *religion* and *nationalism* to divide humanity, and for his own egotistical purposes. IMO he's no different from Bin Laden, no different from *anyone* that attempts to justify violence via religion.
Jesus, Ghandi, and Dr. Martin Luther King used *nonviolence* to achieve their religious and political objectives.
You're ignoring the night and day differences between these behaviors IMO.
I'm sorry but I just can't accept the act of worshipping God(s) to be a "felony" crime worthy of execution, people should enjoy the freedom to believe in God(s) without fear of having their families and societies slaughtered by other people because of it.
My point is a God who instructs his followers to commit genocide can not be ALL-benevolent, only partly benevolent at best.
I tend to agree with you on both points, but.....
I *really* hate to be the bearer of bad news here but, A) Christians don't all think alike as Doveman's statements, and my statements demonstrate, and B) your argument depends *entirely* on how much emphasis one places on the value of the OT, vs the value of the NT. I personally *interpret* the Bible quite differently than say a "Southern Baptist" who might prefer an entirely *literal* interpretation. I believe the Earth and Universe are *ancient*, in the later case, perhaps eternal. I have very *unique* beliefs compared to various other individuals, and until you allow me to *be unique*, your bigotry toward how 'I should' interpret the Bible is irrelevant to me personally. It's offensive, but ultimately irrelevant.
As I mentioned to you *early* in this conversation, *if* you acknowledged the need for a belief in "Biblical infallibility" *and* you "depersonalized" the issue in terms of *my* (beliefs about) God, I could see the logic of your statements.
Since you've never acknowledged the need for part A), your claims ultimately have no merit, particularly in *my* case, if not in Doveman's case. Until you treat all "Christians" as unique individuals, just as I must treat all atheists as unique individuals, your argument can't really work.
Do you see my apparent denial in this scenario?
What I see in your statements is a denial of the fact that not all "Christians" interpret the Bible exactly the same way. How many different "denominations" of "Christianity" exist today? How many variations on a "Bible" exist today?
The bottom line here is that while Doveman seems to have an intellectual and emotional need to justify the OT, I do not. I love *Christ*. I follow *his* teachings. They came *thousands* of years *after* Moses committed genocide in the name of God. Moses was not the first to do that. Bin Laden is another current example of the way personal ego can kludge and butcher religions to do their bidding. Anyone that *wants* to commit violence will do so.
Jesus however *did not* use violence as a "means to an end". Quite the opposite in fact. Like Dr. King, Jesus taught *non* violence, in fact that's where Dr. King got the idea, and it's where he drew his strength from as well.
Sooner or later you're going to have to acknowledge the fact that your point three failed for several reasons.
A) You tried to assign personal ownership of God to me, rather than assigning ownership of all humans to God as I do. That's *your* belief, not mine.
B) You failed to accept that point three *requires* (necessitates) a "Biblical infallibility" agreement in order for your point to have merit.
While you seem to have acknowledged point A), you've yet to acknowledge point B).