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Posts by Jeffro
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38
"A Jehovah's Witness"
by NotFormer ina very certain distinctive of jws is how they refer to themselves.
"one of jehovah's witnesses".
it's one of those coded jargon thingies.
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38
"A Jehovah's Witness"
by NotFormer ina very certain distinctive of jws is how they refer to themselves.
"one of jehovah's witnesses".
it's one of those coded jargon thingies.
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Jeffro
Vidiot:
the first is technically more correct from a grammatical POV
No, itās not. Would you say āBobās Burgers are a tv seriesā just because āburgersā is a plural? The correct verb is is when referring to a compound proper noun as the name of a singular entity, in this case a religious denomination.
It is only technically correct to say āJehovahās Witnesses areā¦ā when referring to a group of JW members rather than the denomination itself.
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Jeffro
Sea Breeze:
For some reason the Mayo Clinic has this to say about gay men:
āFor some reasonā? The same page on the Mayo Clinic website says:
Concern about homophobia and the stigma sometimes associated with homosexuality may prevent some gay men from getting routine health care.
Which is why they are at higher risk of mental health issues and sexual health issues. So maybe if religious jerks werenāt jerks so much, victims of homophobia wouldnāt have so many issues. -
Jeffro
Rattigan350:
No one is afraid of homos
Wrong as usual. There is literally a traditional classification of āgay panicā as a defence for violence against perceived homosexual advances.
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299
Who told the first lie?
by nicolaou inthis is a continuation of the discussion which sprang from an unrelated topic.. so according to genesis, who told the first lie?
god told eve that if she ate from the tree of knowledge she would die that very same day.
in response to that statement the devil told her she would not die.. eve ate from the tree and did not die.
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Jeffro
Me earlier:
But we may never know what prior or contemporary alternative versions of the flood story in the Epic existed, originally as oral traditions only.
(I am aware that there are some other known Sumerian flood stories separate but related to the Epic of Gilgamesh, but because I was in a hurry on mobile device I was considering them the same basic family of flood stories as it wasn't worth the elaboration.)
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299
Who told the first lie?
by nicolaou inthis is a continuation of the discussion which sprang from an unrelated topic.. so according to genesis, who told the first lie?
god told eve that if she ate from the tree of knowledge she would die that very same day.
in response to that statement the devil told her she would not die.. eve ate from the tree and did not die.
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Jeffro
I know the Jews didn't invent the Flood, but who did? We cannot say. It is fuzzy.
Separate civilisations have developed local flood stories (often presented as āglobalā), some related to this one and others that are entirely independent (despite the tedious JW claim that they all got the story from the Bible one). But we may never know what prior or contemporary alternative versions of the flood story in the Epic existed, originally as oral traditions only.
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299
Who told the first lie?
by nicolaou inthis is a continuation of the discussion which sprang from an unrelated topic.. so according to genesis, who told the first lie?
god told eve that if she ate from the tree of knowledge she would die that very same day.
in response to that statement the devil told her she would not die.. eve ate from the tree and did not die.
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Jeffro
Thanks for clarifying. I had taken your comments in the context of a response to peacefulpeteās more specific quoted statement about the Adam and Eve story.
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299
Who told the first lie?
by nicolaou inthis is a continuation of the discussion which sprang from an unrelated topic.. so according to genesis, who told the first lie?
god told eve that if she ate from the tree of knowledge she would die that very same day.
in response to that statement the devil told her she would not die.. eve ate from the tree and did not die.
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Jeffro
The narrative likely contains elements from various civilizations, Greek--oops, there I go again, Macedonian, Egyptian, and more than we might be able to unscramble or know about, prior to the Bronze Age Collapse. That is the problem with everything before then and why all this is mythical. It might be based on things various peoples recall through folklore, but there is no way to know because of this widespread fall of society past.
There are obvious and broadly accepted connections between the biblical āJā stories (where āJā is simply shorthand for those stories that we all know Iām referring to) and Mesopotamian stories, particularly the epic of Gilgamesh. It isnāt the case that there is no way to know that, and it isnāt remotely surprising or controversial that Jewish culture was influenced by Babylon. But of course the Jewish adaptations were also influenced by the other cultures as well, particularly the Grā¦ Macedonians.
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299
Who told the first lie?
by nicolaou inthis is a continuation of the discussion which sprang from an unrelated topic.. so according to genesis, who told the first lie?
god told eve that if she ate from the tree of knowledge she would die that very same day.
in response to that statement the devil told her she would not die.. eve ate from the tree and did not die.
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Jeffro
peacefulpete:
I'll add that while I often use labels like J and P, in reality what I mean is distinct sources traditionally described as J, P, D etc
I should note that I refer to J, P, etc only as heuristics to refer to the different styles rather than any strict adherence to that hypothesis or claim that those represent specific single sources.
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299
Who told the first lie?
by nicolaou inthis is a continuation of the discussion which sprang from an unrelated topic.. so according to genesis, who told the first lie?
god told eve that if she ate from the tree of knowledge she would die that very same day.
in response to that statement the devil told her she would not die.. eve ate from the tree and did not die.
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Jeffro
MMM:
guess that's my point.
Maybe, though I didnāt mean that the one āgoat commandmentā was inconsistent with the rest of that list. Rather, the list that includes the āgoat commandmentā isnāt consistent with the list that is traditionally acknowledged as āthe Ten Commandmentsā (despite the fact that the story says it is the list that was put in the ark of the covenant).
But Iām not really sure that any supposed God that sanctions murder for picking up sticks on āthe wrong dayā has any real grasp of right and wrong anyway. (And in case KOW is listening in, no this doesnāt mean Iām āangry at Godā any more than Iām angry at Voldemort.)