The Ten Commandments

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Originally Posted by r3port3r66
Also, on a side note, Jesus, in certain parts of Spain is alot darker than our US version. He has tight curly hair and brown eyes! I must admit I was taken aback the first time I witnessed a Crucifixion statue in Spain. I had only seen Jesus as a blond, long-haired, blue-eyed "hippie" in the US, and to see him portrayed as black was a surprise. But if you actually think about it, knowing where Jesus is from, it makes sense. That makes me think that the Jesus we know in America is false logically. Could we possibly be worshiping a false representation of The Man in the US? I mean think about where Jesus is from, think about what people look like--their skin tones and eye color--from there. There are certain inconsistancies.
I think it's a given that Jesus was likely a darker skinned person, given the area in which he lived. It's nearly impossible that he was white, like he is constantly represented around here.

Either way, I have found religion to be more of a hindrance to my life than a help. I won't deny that I am happy to see the statue gone.
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Originally Posted by r3port3r66
Also, on a side note, Jesus, in certain parts of Spain is alot darker than our US version. He has tight curly hair and brown eyes! I must admit I was taken aback the first time I witnessed a Crucifixion statue in Spain. I had only seen Jesus as a blond, long-haired, blue-eyed "hippie" in the US, and to see him portrayed as black was a surprise. But if you actually think about it, knowing where Jesus is from, it makes sense. That makes me think that the Jesus we know in America is false logically. Could we possibly be worshiping a false representation of The Man in the US? I mean think about where Jesus is from, think about what people look like--their skin tones and eye color--from there. There are certain inconsistancies.
I saw a programme a year or so back that covered the ground of Jesus' race. Can't rememeber any of it but the gist was that Jesus was born in Jersulam so therefore should naturally be of the typfied looking native. The caucasian of Jesus is more then likely a wishful thinking or adapted given of his features. I think what Jesus represents is more importantly the message and less the looks of the messenger. I'm not religious, more closely agnostic if anything so don't take my knowledge of Christainity as certifiable.
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Originally Posted by Henry The Kid
Either way, I have found religion to be more of a hindrance to my life than a help. I won't deny that I am happy to see the statue gone.
Me too Henry, me too.


Revenant, I agree the message is a powerful one, but I must also refer you to the following Commandment:


"Thou shall not make for yourself a graven image, or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth; you shall not bow down to them or serve them."

So, if Jesus is in fact darker skinned, then is it wrong for us to "worship" Him as we see him in the US according to that Commandment?
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Woa - i knew the representation of J was pretty caucasian-ised in america - but bbbblonde?? And bbbblue eyes? What the h..? Mind you - go to south america and the three kings are shown as native-indian looking etc etc etc - Christianity has always been a very adaptive religion - whether it's the days of festivals (almost all the core ones are based on old pagan/seasonal celebrations. The comprehensive [7 volume original!!] "Golden Bough" breaks down all the original ones - the condensed version is a v.interesting if overly-thourough/repetitive read)...or the bible itself.
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Originally Posted by r3port3r66
Also, on a side note, Jesus, in certain parts of Spain is alot darker than our US version. He has tight curly hair and brown eyes! I must admit I was taken aback the first time I witnessed a Crucifixion statue in Spain. I had only seen Jesus as a blond, long-haired, blue-eyed "hippie" in the US, and to see him portrayed as black was a surprise. But if you actually think about it, knowing where Jesus is from, it makes sense. That makes me think that the Jesus we know in America is false logically. Could we possibly be worshiping a false representation of The Man in the US? I mean think about where Jesus is from, think about what people look like--their skin tones and eye color--from there. There are certain inconsistancies.
What you see here and elsewhere are just artistic interpretations of what Jesus looked like… most of them reflect the period in which the painter/sculptor lived and his own ethnic background… when you really think about it, not only would Jesus have had to be a lot darker but he was supposed to be a carpenter too... and as such, in my opinion, would have been a lot more muscular then he’s normally portrayed...

Anyway, I don’t have a lot of time to weigh in on this topic right now but I would like to comment on the use of a Bible in the courtroom… the majority of the people I’ve seen lately choose to “Affirm” rather then to swear on a Bible and the courts/jurors seem to have no problem with that… and in fact seem to prefer it simply because it means a person wants to tell the truth to the best of their ability…


"When the government puts its imprimatur on a particular religion it conveys a message of exclusion to all those who do not adhere to the favored beliefs. A government cannot be premised on the belief that all persons are created equal when it asserts that God prefers some." Supreme Court Justice Harry A. Blackmun in the Lee v. Weisman ruling, 1992.
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Originally Posted by Yoda
I don't believe I will "go to hell" if I lie. Please try not to caricaturize Christianity. You might as well paint Lucifer as a man in a red jumpsuit with a pitchfork.
What does he look like then?

I am not trying to caricaturize christianity. What is the purpose of swearing on the bible from a religious point of view if it doesn't mean anything else for a christian than swearing on your mother's grave (which might mean a hell of a lot to some but crap to others - just like the bible)? You might as well do that. Or just swear to tell the truth or you will be held in contempt.

That said, I'm rather shocked at how easily people here are dismissing the power of social stigma. It's easily one of the most potent forms of behavior-prevention out there.
Social stigma? What do you mean? That the mere presence of a bible in court leads to people straightening their backs and trying just a little bit harder to be good? I just don't believe it, not even in a fairly religious country as yours. If it was so and if that was the reason to why you think the bible has an undisputable place in the courtroom, then it shouldn't be no question about that all the holy scriptures of all the big religions represented in USA should be in the courtroom as well since it would improve the court's results in the same way. And we agreed on that that would be absurd.

And yes, I agree in regards to "forcing." I don't particularly think it's harmful or bad if it's offered up...but I do think it's ridiculous and inexcusable to deny someone an alternative if they should request it.
Sure, if someone really wants to swear on the bible, I don't have an objection against that.

You said it "contradicts freedom of religion." "Freedom of religion" is about having the freedom to choose your own religion -- nothing more, and nothing less.
Is that what it's telling you? To me it means (at least when state and church are seperated, which they are in this case) that no religion is favored over any other. This is not the situation in America today and the courtrooms are proof of that.

It's really shocking to me how people psychologically broaden their perceived rights over time.
Yeah, times change. Aint it a bitch?

How so? What special knowledge has your 200 years of hindsight given you that they did not have access to? And how, pray tell, has history done anything other than bore their ideals out, through the rapid growth and influence of this country?
I believe that during the time of those wise men America was the leading country in the world when it came to things like freedom for its citizens and legal system and things like that (not counting native americans and slaves of course). Today, imo, that have switched to American being the leading country in the world when it comes to economy, trade and warfare, among other things. Your constitution, if I understand it correctly, leaves a lot of room for interpretations - and that is a good thing (it doesn't mean that it was perfect from the start and will always be perfect though). But does that mean that just because the constitution does not need to be changed - does that also means that nothing else needs to be changed?

I think religion does not have a place in courtrooms. How did you turn that around to be about wanting you to change the constitution? You said that I should give the men who created America more cred. What do they even have to do with this discussion?? You had freedom of religion then and you have freedom of religion now. That does not mean that everything has to be the way they were back then.

I agree with most of what you're saying here, but not with your conclusion. Which is more important: the lack of any religious prescence, or the court's effectiveness? Because it seems to me that the prescence of the former generally enhances the latter.
It is two complete different things. You have turned it into an issue about "court effectiveness", which this is not about. Do you have any statistics that back up your opinion that those trials where the accused swore on the bible instead of just "affirm" were more "effective"? That is absurd. I doubt that the being or not being of a bible in the courtroom effects the effectiveness in any way. If it do I would say that the absence of a bible in the courtroom (i.e. less rituals, more trial) would increase the effectiveness rather than decrease it.

As I said, it is not a "No Bible vs. Court Effectiveness" match. It is about letting all americans feel like 1st class americans no matter what religion they belong or not belong to. To alienate someone in a courtroom because of religion is just plain wrong. Especially in a country that calls herself "the greatest democracy in the world".
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They had temporarily escaped the factories, the warehouses, the slaughterhouses, the car washes - they'd be back in captivity the next day but
now they were out - they were wild with freedom. They weren't thinking about the slavery of poverty. Or the slavery of welfare and food stamps. The rest of us would be all right until the poor learned how to make atom bombs in their basements.



Originally Posted by Yoda
I disagree. Believer or not, you surely recognize the importance most people ascribe to it, and therefore you must recognize the intense stigma attached to lying under such an oath. I find it highly unrealistic that swearing on The Bible has no effect, conscious or otherwise...even on yourself.
If I pandered to people's beliefs in that way, I probably wouldn't call myself an atheist. I'm sorry, Chris, but you are just not correct here. I would probably take a secular oath MORE seriously than one where I put my hand on a bible and said, "so help me God", because the oath wouldn't contain anything that I thought was fictional.

True. But it's just as true that many "free thinkers" try to gloss over the fact that the overwhelming bulk of them believed in God, that most of the signers of the Declaration of Independence were religious, and recognized that the concept of unalienable rights needs to be grounded in such an idea.
I agree with this, and I disagree with some of our founding fathers' ideas, but I think separation of church and state is a real good one.

Hold up there, bud. What "our laws are based on" or "what all our laws are based on"? The former really isn't worth complaining about. It's rather like saying "EVERYONE has a television!" The fact that The Ten Commandments strongly coincides with American morality and, to a significant degree, with American law, makes it a reasonable statement if not taken in an unusually literal sense.
This is some major backbedalling on what you said previously.

Frankly, I've never in my life heard anyone suggest that our laws are based on the Ten Commandments, because the idea is so easily disproven.
Edit: You also agreed with me that The Ten Commandments have very little to do with our laws. This is hardly consistant with, "The Ten Commandments strongly coincides with American morality and, to a significant degree, with American law".

I think you should stick to your guns, and admit that he was WRONG and STUPID, or take back what you said earlier. Nothing else makes sense. I like Bill too, but I'm not going to defend him when he says something dumb like this.

If memory serves, one of the earliest American proponents of the abolition for slavery was devoutly religious. Seems to me that, if you regard religion as a deterrent at least comparable to slavery and torture, you'll be cutting off the branch you're sitting on if you try to dismantle it.
Wrong. If someone back then believed that women should never be allowed in the work force, but believed in compassion, should I link the two together and say that my disaproval of sexism doesn't have a leg to stand on? Of course not. It's the same thing. Just because they were religious, does not mean they were wrong about slavery, and just because they were right about slavery doesn't mean that I'm wrong about religion. You're using some very faulty logic here, Chris.

The danger in this thinking is that it's generally supposed that everything new is therefore good...but there are new evils just as there are new goods. The fact that things like slaverty tend to be shunned over time is a sign that we are improving OVERALL, yes, but for every new thing we introduce or old idea we toss out, there are hundreds we keep.
Oh, I don't know. I think we're changing a bit more than THAT. But you make a good point.
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There's a few too many things to respond to now, and I'm gonna be away from the computer virtually all weekend, so I'll try to reply next week. Until then, lemme just say that it's good to see fire back in the swing of things, as it were. You raise some good points, and I'll certainly be getting to them.



Originally Posted by Yoda
There's a few too many things to respond to now, and I'm gonna be away from the computer virtually all weekend, so I'll try to reply next week. Until then, lemme just say that it's good to see fire back in the swing of things, as it were. You raise some good points, and I'll certainly be getting to them.
Take your time; I know how time-consuming these kinds of things can become.



Did anyone hear anything about the Governor of the state of Mississippi offering to place the statue of The Ten Commandants in their state capital building?



Having the Ten Commandments removed from government buildings is ALL about religious freedom.................... To think otherwise IS narcissistic..................... The right position is........."We as a government think that since most people in this nation are Christian, than ALL of us must follow this belief so here are the Ten Commandments, follow this"................ While it is a righteous moral code to follow individually, the government cannot establish it upon anyone who believes differently. No way........

It would be impossible to put every religious doctrine in all government buildings, so the solution is to remove all, and remain secular..........

I believe..............replace the Ten Commandments with the Constitution, since it much more relevant politically............. It is narcissistic for the Right to think that all believe like they do...................Yet they seek to exclude, by establishing Christian religion in government, with the purpose to exclude.................. As government officials, the Constitution should be their code, and the Ten Commandments should be solely for themselves as individuals.
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I am having a nervous breakdance
ah those were the days....

Hi there, Fire! It's been a while....

[edit]... eh... talk about a while... That last post by Fire is almost 1½ years old....