RitaTG
Well-Known Member
I disagree Jae .....It's those Free Methodists, isn't it j/k. Christians are the #1 persecuted faith group in the world RitaTG.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I disagree Jae .....It's those Free Methodists, isn't it j/k. Christians are the #1 persecuted faith group in the world RitaTG.
i hear ya -- it doesn't help that there are self-loathing people in our countries who won't stand up for their fellow Christian or who really seem to get off on hating humanity *cue 'Feelings, nothing more than feelings song*...so what do you think can be done?It's those Free Methodists, isn't it j/k. Christians are the #1 persecuted faith group in the world RitaTG.
I disagree Jae .....
But the whole point is that no religion is immune from the Noahidic Laws. Even Islam has it's dietary laws and told not to kill. It was to cover all the of the people that came from Noahs time after the flood. If the whole world obeyed, there would be no more wars. Problems would have to be solved other ways. Look at the Quakers.There are many meat eaters in the world that do not engage in organized, genocidal violence, only the violence required for them to survive. Lions, tigers, sharks, etc. Why, then, do you think there is a relationship between eating meat and the kind of violence you are against?
Done? We are considered as sheep for the slaughter.i hear ya -- it doesn't help that there are self-loathing people in our countries who won't stand up for their fellow Christian or who really seem to get off on hating humanity *cue 'Feelings, nothing more than feelings song*...so what do you think can be done?
If you were drafted, would you go?There are many meat eaters in the world that do not engage in organized, genocidal violence, only the violence required for them to survive. Lions, tigers, sharks, etc.
If you were drafted, would you go?
The animals you describe are carnivores.
Interesting .... but certainly not the case in North America....Okay, you can. I stand by my position. http://m.huffpost.com/us/entry/christianity-most-persecuted-religion_b_2402644.html
Yes, an attempt to deal with it -- to mitigate it -- to lessen it -- something that is observable, repeatable and testable, something that is actually happening as opposed to happening because of our viewpointDone? We are considered as sheep for the slaughter.
Logically, Christians should persecute others to the same degree that Christ did.Interesting .... but certainly not the case in North America....
Now to the more important question.
Does "winning" at being the most persecuted justify in any way christians persecuting others?
Actually, not the most important question -- in that it would be a logical fallacy for the fact that Christians are the #1 persecuted faith group (by size) is rendered false and inconsequential by any Christian persecuting others :3Interesting .... but certainly not the case in North America....
Now to the more important question.
Does "winning" at being the most persecuted justify in any way christians persecuting others?
Well there are a few plant sources for B12 and did we always need B12? I don't know. Didn't revdd post a website in Science magazine that states we may have originally been herbivores?No. Jail would be preferable. However, at 50, I'm over the age cutoff normally used for conscription. I am a meat-eating pacifist and have been for most of my life.
And all known members of the genus homo are omnivores and have been for at least 2.6 million years and probably longer, predating the evolution of our own species by well over a million years. We have specific adaptations to being meat eaters. The fact that we need vitamin B12 to survive which can only be obtained naturally from dairy and meat, for instance. Like it or not, meat eating is not a cultural thing, it is a biological one. We are not herbivores.
Waterfall said:So the Jews disagreed, and it was only Paul and Peter that argued the other way.
Waterfall said:Is that not the two of them arguing with God's covenant essentially?
Waterfall said:Wasn't the Noahidic Law given to all living creatures?
Waterfall said:Not to mention, isn't there also a covenant given to the animals by God, essentially giving them equality with us?
Hosea 2: 18 said:I will make for you a covenant on that day with the wild animals, the birds of the air, and the creeping things of the ground; and I will abolish the bow, the sword, and war from the land; and I will make you lie down in safety.
Waterfall said:Does God break covenants?
RevJohn said:
No record of God doing so in scripture. The testimony of Scripture is that God will not break the covenants that God enters into. While humanity routinely fails to honour their end of the covenants God invites them to enter into there is no record of God walking away from the covenants that God makes. A key component of many of the covenants God creates is a disciplinary component where God is permitted to get as smitey as God wishes with those who break the covenants they have entered into with God.
blackbelt1961 said:Thank God
Which could be read to suggest a future vegetarian existence. I think that something of a stretch. The bow yes, it is a hunting tool, sword and war are not. I suspect that what is being promised here is that armies will not be marching across the face of the earth and wild animals will have relative peace as opposed to the commotion of large armies approaching from which there would be little refuge and, what armies travel on empty stomachs?
revsdd said:I'm with you on everything except this. A you say, the bow is a hunting tool. If the bow is to be abolished, then hunting is to be abolished. Isaiah 65:17-25 also seems to portray a future Kingdom of perfect peace with no killing, even among the animals. I think that if the Genesis creation narrative implies vegetarianism - which I think it clearly does - then it's not a stretch to suggest that God's ultimate purpose is to return creation to that state in which there is literally no killing - not even of animals.