All this looking to "GOD" for moral certainties is a confusing thing for me. Can't people look to themselves for moral guidance? Is it really neccessary to have someone responsible above you?
Genesis 17 in the bible is the covenant of circumcision, it has this terrifying passage in it:
"For the generations to come every male among you who is eight days old must be circumcised, including those born in your household or those brought with money from a foreigner"
So do all followers of the abrahamic systems advocate slavery and child disfigurement?
What sort of higher being says "right, you've got slavery, and although I'm omnipotent and am making a covenet between you, mankind, and me, God, I'll let that particular issue slide as it's only human beings having their liberty and freedom denied to them for financial gain, and instead of that, I would like you to agree to mutilate the genitals of all males over eight days old. Is that OK? Good, now get to mutilating, because even though I made man in the image of myself, I never was really happy about the design of the foreskin, which although I am, as I said before, omnipotent, I can't actually fix by letting you all wake up one morning without the offending design oversight rectified, but would rather that you take a sharp, and sometimes not particulary clean knife to the gentials of children and each other, because I really want a child to have as their first experience of their gentials, extreme pain."
Hardly a Good God.
I have a cosmogonic scheme that works very well for me and others whom believe in it, and what is more, there is no subjugation of women and no mutilation of infants... However, it is only a cosmogonic scheme that I have chosen to believe as the truth because my personal experience of it, as you have chosen to follow your infant cutting belief systems.
However, our faiths have one thing in common, they cannot be proven scientifically, and are, therefore, only belief systems that we have subscribed to to comfort the human mind when presented with the vastness of the universe and the fleeting flash of life that we have. It stops us, quintessentually, from feeling so frighteningly alone in this world, even with family and friends around us. A psycological thumb to suck, so to speak...
However, I have to ask, is infant mutilation an acceptable practice for those on the supposed moral high-ground?
Genesis 17 in the bible is the covenant of circumcision, it has this terrifying passage in it:
"For the generations to come every male among you who is eight days old must be circumcised, including those born in your household or those brought with money from a foreigner"
So do all followers of the abrahamic systems advocate slavery and child disfigurement?
What sort of higher being says "right, you've got slavery, and although I'm omnipotent and am making a covenet between you, mankind, and me, God, I'll let that particular issue slide as it's only human beings having their liberty and freedom denied to them for financial gain, and instead of that, I would like you to agree to mutilate the genitals of all males over eight days old. Is that OK? Good, now get to mutilating, because even though I made man in the image of myself, I never was really happy about the design of the foreskin, which although I am, as I said before, omnipotent, I can't actually fix by letting you all wake up one morning without the offending design oversight rectified, but would rather that you take a sharp, and sometimes not particulary clean knife to the gentials of children and each other, because I really want a child to have as their first experience of their gentials, extreme pain."
Hardly a Good God.
I have a cosmogonic scheme that works very well for me and others whom believe in it, and what is more, there is no subjugation of women and no mutilation of infants... However, it is only a cosmogonic scheme that I have chosen to believe as the truth because my personal experience of it, as you have chosen to follow your infant cutting belief systems.
However, our faiths have one thing in common, they cannot be proven scientifically, and are, therefore, only belief systems that we have subscribed to to comfort the human mind when presented with the vastness of the universe and the fleeting flash of life that we have. It stops us, quintessentually, from feeling so frighteningly alone in this world, even with family and friends around us. A psycological thumb to suck, so to speak...
However, I have to ask, is infant mutilation an acceptable practice for those on the supposed moral high-ground?