Sil
jus one more fing
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- Aug 28, 2016
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I think something that's important to consider when interpreting your respective religious texts is that they were often written with period-specific guidance in-mind, and although now several hundreds to thousands of years in the future many of these texts are still followed, the importance is recognising what should be maintained and what should be changed.
Many religious texts explicitly mention homosexual relations (often between men) as a bad thing, and that sex & marriage are important unions under God. This was during a time when the global population was a mere fraction of what it is now, and medicine was still mostly anecdotal or kept quite secluded to what groups and communities just knew. Children and population were important as the average family were bound to lose a couple children and quite possibly die some time between their 40s to 60s, though that depends on where in the world you're looking and what timeframes. I digress, though.
These elements were important back then not because God hated gay people or saw homosexuality as evil, even if your respective religious text and religious deity may put it in a way that sounds like that. There was an understandable element back then where having more people was important, so if you were a Jew or a Christian back nearly 2,000 years ago (when the world really was a different place and we were progressing through only the beginnings of recorded history, then it's likely that even in civilisations and towns that the populations weren't so high and death was a common occurrence. What better way to counteract this, than to guide people with faith to see actions that do not populate as bad and actions that do populate as good?
Now, these are historic values founded and treated in historic times. In the modern era, population is something that for the most part is negligible and people are more focused on different elements rather than the previous heavily-community focused approach of a lot of humanity. Engaging in homosexual activity isn't something that could genuinely cause difficulties on a very real level; you not seeking to produce a child or children won't cause your family to dreadfully suffer, or the local community to be lacking labour in survival. So, when appreciating and interpreting historic and religious texts like the Bible and the Torah for instance, there will be historic elements that you as a Christian need to interpret for yourself and decide whether you want to continue following tenants that were designed for an older time or not.
Playing Devil's Advocate for a moment, there are some historic elements of religious text that genuinely do have fair and important usage even now. Usually these are the restrictions to diet, restrictions to what people can wear, and especially in Judaism's case the whole thing where you cannot do any labour on the Sabbath; historically, they were important and useful, and into the modern day many still see them as very useful. What I want to make clear is that just because the tenant of that religion was more designed for ancient times, doesn't mean it has to be followed nor does it have to be ignored.
You are the one who decides what you do with your faith, and you are the one who interprets the religious text in your own way. If you want to be very idiosyncratic over your interpretations, then go for it, and if you want to base your interpretations off of a specific denomination, schism, or even individual people you know, then go for it too. Just seek out that which makes you happy, and that is truly what your respective God actually wants in the end for you
Many religious texts explicitly mention homosexual relations (often between men) as a bad thing, and that sex & marriage are important unions under God. This was during a time when the global population was a mere fraction of what it is now, and medicine was still mostly anecdotal or kept quite secluded to what groups and communities just knew. Children and population were important as the average family were bound to lose a couple children and quite possibly die some time between their 40s to 60s, though that depends on where in the world you're looking and what timeframes. I digress, though.
These elements were important back then not because God hated gay people or saw homosexuality as evil, even if your respective religious text and religious deity may put it in a way that sounds like that. There was an understandable element back then where having more people was important, so if you were a Jew or a Christian back nearly 2,000 years ago (when the world really was a different place and we were progressing through only the beginnings of recorded history, then it's likely that even in civilisations and towns that the populations weren't so high and death was a common occurrence. What better way to counteract this, than to guide people with faith to see actions that do not populate as bad and actions that do populate as good?
Now, these are historic values founded and treated in historic times. In the modern era, population is something that for the most part is negligible and people are more focused on different elements rather than the previous heavily-community focused approach of a lot of humanity. Engaging in homosexual activity isn't something that could genuinely cause difficulties on a very real level; you not seeking to produce a child or children won't cause your family to dreadfully suffer, or the local community to be lacking labour in survival. So, when appreciating and interpreting historic and religious texts like the Bible and the Torah for instance, there will be historic elements that you as a Christian need to interpret for yourself and decide whether you want to continue following tenants that were designed for an older time or not.
Playing Devil's Advocate for a moment, there are some historic elements of religious text that genuinely do have fair and important usage even now. Usually these are the restrictions to diet, restrictions to what people can wear, and especially in Judaism's case the whole thing where you cannot do any labour on the Sabbath; historically, they were important and useful, and into the modern day many still see them as very useful. What I want to make clear is that just because the tenant of that religion was more designed for ancient times, doesn't mean it has to be followed nor does it have to be ignored.
You are the one who decides what you do with your faith, and you are the one who interprets the religious text in your own way. If you want to be very idiosyncratic over your interpretations, then go for it, and if you want to base your interpretations off of a specific denomination, schism, or even individual people you know, then go for it too. Just seek out that which makes you happy, and that is truly what your respective God actually wants in the end for you
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