lol It could be. They only had 4 elements back in the old days; earth, fire, water, and wind.And now I know where the expression "dirt bag" came from! :lol:
.... and Bible-thumping.Herald might have more appropriately named this thread "Bible Bashing!"
1......Water turned into wine. John 2:6-10.
Look, you can have all the rest, ok, just gimme this one. I pefer white, not too dry thank you.
I can get lots of water, and bottles, and we can start anytime.
8O
.... and Bible-thumping.
The people that wrote the book should have left out the Twilight Zone tales of magic and mysticism and just wrote about how people should behave.
It's funny that bashers make fun of people taking the Bible's words too literally, and yet people that worship the Bible have all kinds of routes around the literal meanings, expecting the bashers to be very specific while the thumpers expect to be able to twist meanings into anything they like.
I'm not changing my story. The Bible is full of nonsense like the ark thing. There are no miracles.
Besides, where's your authority to tell me which aspects of the BS I can talk about and which ones I can't? You won't debate anyone on issues' merits, you cannot discuss the merits of issues without resorting to the Bible; and it is hardly credible when it mentions nonsense like the ark. So you resort to ad hominems.
Given the choice between life as a puppet and a lake of fire, I'd rather be fishing.
We have a lake to the south of us called Hotfish Lake. I wonder why it was named that?
Tabasco trout?
I don't think that's quite true, but religion meant something quite different to the Romans than it did to the Jews and Christians. The Romans' general attitude was to let people have whatever religion they liked as long as it didn't interfere with the empire's business, and they'd often try to incorporate other nations' gods into their own pantheon. Religion was part of the social fabric of the empire and involved a certain amount of veneration of emperors, which Jews and Christians refused to do.The persecution the Christians suffered was from the Jewish Temple. Rome didn't care about what God was being worshiped, they were concerned with the money end of having an Empire.
During the time of Jesus's ministry Rome was in and around Jerusalem. Jesus may not have singled them out but there are a handful of instances where He gladly interacted with them. At His 'trial' it was a Roman who suggested He should be released. Why would Revelation be 'encoded' to fool the Romans when there is a Book in the NT entitled 'Romans'. Chapter 13 quite plainly give them the authority to use their sword as a means to fight evil traits that some people have. A few decades later write a book that undermines all that. God doesn't work like that. The OT had prophets that spelled it out quite plainly, the NT Writers also spoke out quite plainly. In the Book that has some very key verses that link previous said prophecies together is going to be shrouded. The ones that try and make other passages mean something other than what they plainly say. It was Romans that the Gospel was taken to first out of all the Gentiles. Christian will respect their Laws that govern social conduct but worship is not included. Why would the Romans persecute a group that trying to not create disturbances. The disturbances were areound Jewish houses of worship. That is where the Apostles taught first in the new world. You can figure out who the persecuters are in one verse. Roman soldiers would not bother to wait till Christians were in a Jewish house of Worship before taking action against them. The many times they did end up at one of those Houses was to quell riots started by the Jews against the Apostles. As an instigator they would have also been labled trouble-maker and arrested. Compare that to how the Jews in Jerusalem would have been treated when the revolt was happening near 70AD. Instant justice at the end of some weapon of war. Those are the ones the Romans would have fed to the lions. The 3/5 books attributed to John would have been written/read while they were in the Gentile Nations, no harsh speeches against the Gentiles, those that had become Christians were called children. Is that a code-word also?? lolI don't think that's quite true, but religion meant something quite different to the Romans than it did to the Jews and Christians. The Romans' general attitude was to let people have whatever religion they liked as long as it didn't interfere with the empire's business, and they'd often try to incorporate other nations' gods into their own pantheon. Religion was part of the social fabric of the empire and involved a certain amount of veneration of emperors, which Jews and Christians refused to do.
I've been doing some reading (Jonathon Kirsch's A History of the End of the World in particular), and it appears that there's now some dispute among the historians about the real nature and extent of Roman persecution of Jews and Christians. The immediate result in the context of this discussion is that the evidence for Domitian's persecution in particular isn't really very good. Domitian had a lot of trouble with the senate and the nobles, and it seems they're the ones who controlled the records, so the accusations against him are being reassessed and he's to some extent being rehabilitated. I haven't found out anything yet that materially alters my position, but I'll have to rephrase a few things. Rather than saying Revelation is about the persecution under Domitian, I'll have to change it to say it's about the perceived injustice of the Roman overlords. This is probably related to the social nature of Roman religion. Pagan polytheisms are generally much more willing to accept the existence of other deities in other nations than are monotheisms, and Romans perceived Jews and Christians as stiff-necked atheists in a sense, who refused to take part in the social and cultural life of the empire. In other words, they would not integrate, but remained as a disruptive fringe element.
I'm happy to see you didn't go any further down that path. It's very true that those things exist but the words 'abomination to God' can be easily slipped into that same sentence and it will be a true statement.It's pretty clear though that John of Patmos, whoever he was, perceived great injustice against Christians at the hands of the Romans, much of the book is a diatribe against them. He was also pretty scornful of most of his fellow Christians for being insufficiently zealous, and of Jews for refusing to accept the Messiah. He took the most extreme view, "if you're not with me you're against me." His text is only one of dozens of apocalyptic writings from around that time, but because his made it into the Bible, it provides scriptural authority for some of the worst of human behaviours, like demonizing your enemies, wreaking horrible vengeance upon them, and enjoying it... I think it's the work of a lunatic extremist, the sort that these days sends out suicide bombers, and a source of much dangerous religious eccentricity.
Knowing how much you hate these long posts could be a motive for me but it isn't. In just verses alone just this part has about a page or 10 in just the summary passages.And I'm still completely certain that Revelation is NOT about the future, as a work of prophecy it is self-evidently false. It predicts repeatedly, as other New Testament scriptures do, including the words of Jesus himself, that the end will be soon. Every generation since it was written has had people who expected to witness the end as described in Rev. 19:11-18. That's the part herald's going on about, where Jesus returns with an army of saints and martyrs and the attitude, "if you're not with me you're against me and I'll cast you into the lake of fire." It's been almost 2000 years, the time for "soon" is long past.
I have read them all, many times, and as I'm sure you can tell, thought quite deeply about them. I'm as sure of this as I am of anything in my life: I'm right, and you're not.Once you read them all (in Revelation) that overview has some serious flaws.
Ever read the Book of Enoch, rather than fanciful stories it is full of fanciful places and fanciful beings. There are some things written about watchers, they would have been on Earth prior to the flood. The 10,000 saints I mentioned are Holy Angels that 'made sure' none of them were in operation after the flood. The passages in Jude and Peter are the main references I use for who the ungodly ones are, the twice dead because their fate is in the Lake, their victims, the fleshy beings of the earth only experience a small taste of what the lake has to offer....... too far-fetched for belief?