- Oct 28, 2006
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... yeah, it can be seen as "conquest bragging," as you've put it. The theologians and expositors I've looked at, like Copan and Flanagan, call it "hyperbole," although they usually (but maybe not always) stop short of imputing 'rape' as a necessary given of the text here in question. But you call it whatever you want to call it. I have a feeling you'll do that no matter what, regardless of what anyone else says. On my part, I'm just going to go with what the text says, and my imputation and inferrence will instead be that these virgins were "made into" Jewish wives, with whatever expectation and/or privileges went with that for Israelite women.Like I said, I think it's conquest bragging. The Israelites were known for that. Some people worshipped fertility goddesses, but the Israelites worshipped a warlord deity. So of course they would invent stories about winning wars and raping women. But if you set aside whether it is true or false and just evaluate the story itself, the virgins were clearly raped. No, they didn't get into every specific detail and they didn't even have a word for rape.
Of course Human Rights are thousands of years away. You speak as if I've never had a course or read a book on any of this. One has to wonder why you'd downplay what I claim about my own education. It's social philosophy and social science, remember? And by Social Science, I don't mean: "... yuh, I'd was a 'Merican Historee teacher" said with the deepest, most Red Neck American drawl one can muster.But let's just lay down some facts here. The Israelites had no law against raping their own women, so they surely had no law to protect prisoners of war. Human rights are thousands of years away. Rape was common in ancient history. And only the virgins were allowed to live.
NO, I don't think any of this is a joke. I might be tempted to think that your education on the concepts and development of Modern Human Rights thinking might be a joke though.At this point, I feel like I'm talking to Slick Willy about what the meaning of "is" is. I feel like you think this is a joke. "Yeah, plenty of atrocities were committed in the OT. Genocides-a-plenty. But here it doesn't explicitly state what the soldiers did with those virgins, so I'm off the hook! Lol."
I for one, knowing what I know, am just not going to acquiesce to the theoretical rights regime thinking of today which is so prevalent simply because someone in power currently, "Said So!" Yeah, that's not how truth about political reality works, and since it doesn't work that way, I'm not going to IMPORT any of it reflexively back in upon the O.T. text as I do Hermeneutics.
This isn't to say that I think Christian Liberty as presented in the New Testament is against a more general 'human rights,' but somewhere along the line, one is bound to trip up on a HUGE ROCK ...
If anything, it's time for people to wakey, wakey to the present World as it is, as well as to what the O.T. text says ON THE WHOLE and not just in part as they like to, as you imply, "slickly" slice and dice the texts here and there.
Wouldn't it be a hoot if everyone was looking for and expecting the wrong thing in all of this? But you've indicated that my other thread isn't for you, so I'm not going to get into the contrast it reveals with what you're stating here.Your thread about the mark of the beast? Yeah I watched the first few minutes of the video and lost interest to be honest. 666 refers to Nero, I thought that was case closed. Revelation is not prophetic. I've explained to you already that Christians don't understand how prophecy works.
[NV, what did they do to you at that church of yours so many years ago?
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