Don't worry...you can trust them. But you don't have to guess. You can look at the original through interlinear translations, if you have the time and patience. But you don't really need to, because the translators have been very careful, in those particular versions. That's the thing about Biblical literalists: they don't believe you can mess with the text.
I don't object to you trying both, so long as you make the sincere effort. I'm certain you'll know the difference, if you do.You have encouraged me to try this several times now, and I suspect it could be effective in some cases, but for reasons that have nothing to do with God. It sounds very much like some sort of psychological technique of persuasion. If it does work, I am betting it would work equally well if I went into the woods everyday and had a similar conversation with the spirit of the forest.However, the test I'm proposing doesn't even ask Bible reading of you. I'm just saying, start the conversation with God directly, yourself, in your own language, and with your own concerns, and see where He takes you from there. There could actually hardly be an easier starting point than that.
Well, since both law codes and moral codes started with religious prohibitions and approbations, I would say that the "real life" way was to go the other direction. However, that's not so important.Well my idea was to do it the other way round, and start with a moral issue that we wanted guidance on. I think that would more closely replicate a real life situation, as most people aren't Bible experts to start with.IC wrote:We could. But where to start....Harbal wrote:I am assuming that the only account of God and what he has spoken of is in the Bible, is that correct? Maybe we could look at some sample moral issues and see what God has to say about them, but I would be entirely dependent on you to tell me what to look at, and how to understand it. What do you think?
Well, an obvious place would be with the most famous moral instructions, the famed "10 Commandments." Most people think those are kind of basic. What about if you pick one, and we talk about it? You can find them listed here: https://lifehopeandtruth.com/bible/10-c ... ents-list/
What is important, however is that there's really no way to do what you're suggesting, I think.
Let's take homosexuality as an example. How do we go about moving from that to a commandment, since the matter under dispute is the moral status of homosexuality itself? We can't deduce from our visceral approval of, or antipathy to it, because what we want to find out is what its objective moral status is, not merely our subjective emotional reaction to it.
So where do we go from there? We can't assume that because, say, Harbal has an instinctive sympathy for homosexuality that a code that prohibits it would be immoral, or that a code that allows or lauds it would be moral. That's the question we're trying to decide: so we would be committing the logical fault of "assuming our conclusion," if we judged various moral codes by their conformity to our existing prejudices, wouldn't we?