You're not sharing scripture at all. You're telling me what you think it means. And I'll tell you what I think it means. I think it means that it has been collected through complex human interaction over several thousand years, and is not to be taken as the literal truth. I think his creation shows clearly that God does not do magic tricks with bones - or fish for that matter - and that he has given us reason so that we can interpret his book in the light of his creation. Why do you think I am wrong?crochet1949 wrote:Because there's a difference between Your comment that God Would Not want it that way -- and my sharing Scripture -- which Is His Word to us. You're suggesting that You know God's Mind Before the fact.
That's dreadful sophistry. If God is a spirit then it's impossible to have an image of him? No, no, you make a complete mockery of "Jesus Christ, true God and true man." A crucifix is an image of God. To deny that is to deny that Christ was God.Jesus Christ is part of the Godhead -- He was the Earthly form -- God is Spirit. So the Godhead contains God the Father, Jesus Christ His Son and the Holy Spirit. Which Also means that a person can't have a graven image of the Holy Spirit in their home.
And actually, if we read the commandment at all, it says: "Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth." That's it - no statues of anything, no sculpture, no sculpted birds, trees or fish, and certainly not any people. Period. That's what it says.
Generous of you to ask. I could say - it means exactly what it says, and anybody with a sculpture of anything in their house is damned. That is what a literal interpretation of this commandment means. That is what the courage of your convictions should lead you to say. Or I could say - Verse 3 should be taken literally, Verse 4 should be ignored, the beginning of Verse 5 should be followed, but God probably won't be all that cruel to my great-great-grandchildren for no reason other than that I don't follow it. (I'm using Exodus 20 here). Look at all that interpretation, in only three verses!So -- what do You interpret that verse to say. That particular commandment.
But that's the whole point of this thread. The Ten Commandments are not to be taken literally. No prohibition against dolls. No cursing of great-great-grandchildren for the sins of their ancestors. That's not the point of the story. The Noah story didn't happen like that. No global flood. No saving of all the animals. That's not the point of the story. The Adam's rib story didn't happen like that. Man not glued together out of mud. Woman not moulded round the rib. That's not the point of the story.
Yeah, yeah, say it again. "Then why not simply throw out the Bible Totally? What actual good Is it?" And round and round we go. Try some theology. Recognise that the bible cannot be taken literally and must be interpreted. Then we can discuss when, why and how it must be interpreted, and then we might find out what actual good it is. Maybe, after a year or so, we'll discover that we're not the first to have tried it. We might read Augustine of Hippo, or St Irenaeus, or some of the early Church fathers, and eventually, we'll find that the Catechism of the Catholic Church is pretty much what we'll come up with. This will be more of a surprise to you than it will be to me.