Hi Narkissos,
[qoute]Then he wanted all the Bible canons and versions in the world history, including the NWT, to be exactly what they are. And the Qur'an. And the Book of Mormon. And every single piece of writing since Sumer. "All scripture" indeed. What was lost he wanted lost, what was kept he wanted kept, what was discovered he wanted discovered, what was changed he wanted changed.
I'm not being sarcastic. Actually that's what pure monotheism, including absolute providence, would imply. But it is not what "Bible believers" usually believe.[/qoute]
Why would this follow as a rule? Why would God be unable to preserve something and let other writings get lost or corrupted? I would agree with one thing though speaking generically; if God exists, then God has a hand in everything. But I dont think extreme calvinism is the only alternative to the popular free will teaching. God would know all things but not necessarily be the direct cause of all things. Otherwise we limit God and assume the absurdity that we would know how God works (again assuming God exists).
[qoute]Sure, but is it not what happens always?
In my experience, the most inclined to twist the interpretation of the Bible (their Bible) are those who do not allow themselves, consciously, to "pick and choose". When you are unable to say "I disagree with this text" you have to make it look acceptable in your own eyes, no matter what it actually says. Fundamentalist exegesis offers tons of examples, from harmonisation to anachronism via political correctness. The Bible can't be wrong, but then we'll have it say what we want to hear.[/qoute]
From my experience, "you have to make it acceptable in your own eyes" is a trademark of the JWs. Perhaps also because they feel they need to explain everything in their businesslike manner, while it seems to me many Christians easier simply leave issues they can not reconcile.
To me the harsh passages are not evidence that the Bible isnt God's word. I would not say I could not believe in a holy book without harsh things, but I do not find it logical or plausible that the Creator of all things and of this world would always treat men or reveal himself in manners we would find acceptable. Nor would I consider our opinions about such a being that relevant. To face this is sobering and humiliates our human pride. A very simple exercise is to consider the world situation the JWs speak about. Yes it's bad, but it's how God wants things to be of present. However we can choose and believe God has a purpose behind of all of it. Generically speaking, if God exists, then God is bigger than we can understand anyway. So I am opposed to the idea that we should make Scripture acceptable to our eyes, while I think we have every right to say when we read something or experience something we find too harsh.