What part of what I said is incorrect, stupid, uninformed, or bigoted?
This one: "Remember, being gay is a sin, because someone wrote it in a book and said it was Gods word, and that word is never wrong, is never to be questioned, even though it may be a mistranslation given that the original writing was lost, oh, 1,500 years ago, and we're going off a copy of a copy of a copy, etc."
It is incorrect, stupid and bigoted. It seems to me that you are unwilling to give the party you disagree with the kind of understanding you would demand of them for others.
"being gay is a sin"
While the Lutheran church is as divided as any other, some branches do in fact teach that Homosexuality is a sin.
http://christianteens.about.com/od/homosexuality/f/LutheranHomosex.htm
You seem not to have read your own source. The site in questions states that the ELCA does not have a defined doctrine about homosexuality or homosexual behavior as yet (although speaking from what I have seen to date it seems quite likely that the ELCA will come down in favor of homosexual behavior in the future). The Lutheran Church of Australia does not teach that homosexual orientation is sinful per se, nor does it think the Bible addresses homosexuality. Finally, the Missouri Synod distinguishes between homosexual orientation and homosexual acts and, as the web site states: "Again, it does not state that homosexuality is a conscious choice, but still contends that homosexual behavior is sinful." It is the act which is viewed as sinful,
not the orientation.
"and that word is never wrong, is never to be questioned,"
Again, many sects teach this, and take a dim view to questioning it, or suggesting it may be in error.
"even though it may be a mistranslation given that the original writing was lost, oh, 1,500 years ago, and we're going off a copy of a copy of a copy, etc."
If you know of any -original- biblical documents I would like to know, as would countless biblical scholars.
I am well aware of the fact that the autographs no longer exist. But never has a text in the history of western civilization been the subject of more critical study than the Bible. As for countless biblical scholars being interested in the original exts, count me as one of them. I am working on a doctorate in Theology and have spent quite a large amount of time studying the transmisison of texts and the history of interpretation.
Here are some facts for you to ponder:
The oldest version of any surviving New Testament book is a papyrus fragment of St. John's Gospel (18:31-33, 37-38) which dates from roughly 125 A.D. According to a one survey, there are over 5,000 surviving texts which can be grouped as follows:
88 papyrus fragments
274 manuscripts written in capitals (that is, each letter is separate and their are no accent marks)
2795 manuscripts written in lower case letters (that is, the letters in each word are linked)
2209 lectionaries for public liturgical use
Additionally, new texts are continually being discovered. A 1963 catalogue (K. Aland) lists 4689, while a 1976 count was 5366.Over 4000 ancient (100-400 A.D.) translations exist, composed variously in Latin (from 2nd century onward, many prior to St. Jerome's translation), Syriac (2nd to 3rd century), Coptic (3rd century), Armenian (4th century), Ethiopian, Slav, Gothic (4th century), and Arabic.
Furthermore, many ancient writers (e.g. Eusebius) quoted Scripture extensively. You can reconstruct virtually the entire New Testament on the basis of these quotations, and the ancient texts from which these quotes come are generally older than the manuscript versions of the Scripture books which have come down to us. Nearly 100 New Testament papyri have survived, all of them Egyptian. Their time of writing was approximately between 100 to 200 AD. In addition, the writings of early Christians quote the New Testament so extensively that virtually the entire New Testament, apart from seven or eight verses, could be reconstructed simply from the works of those same Christians. (Keep in mind, however, that the early Christians did not quote chapter and verse, since there were no chapter/verse subdivisions until the Middle Ages. I am just referring to the amount of text which is quoted).
And this is just referring to what we have on the New Testament.
In comparison, we have only two extant copies of accounts that Hannibal crossed the Alps with elephants, and only one line in all of ancient writing which indicates that Alexander reached India during his conquests. Both of these events are undisputed by historians.
There are countless sites online that refer to mistranslations from the Hebrew to English.
Here is 1 of many
http://www.answering-christianity.com/hebrew_manuscripts.htm
This site is a Muslim attack on Christainity via suposed corruptions in the text which were supposedlly made
on purpose by Jews and Christians. And they did this, according to the web site, in order to disprove the truth of Islam in the Bible.
Meanwhile, Muslim critical study of the Qu'ran is nearly non-existant because it is
literally the word of God. Your choice of sources reveals a lot about your view of Christianity, and even more about your view of objective scholarship.
Here is another:
http://www.religioustolerance.org/chr_bibl.htm
(yes I'm aware of the sites affiliation biases)
Religioustolerance is neither religous nor tolerant. It does point out that experts disagree amongst themselves. So what? That it is the case in every field.
If you have a specific thing to referance, please feel free. I have no care for the KJV and everyone knows that it has serious translation problems. And I mean
serious.
But that just goes back to my earlier point: the Bible is the most critically studied text in the world. New translations are made when groups of scholars think they can come up with more accurate translations through a better understanding of the text.
So, for me to make a statement based on the established teachings of numerous ministries and sects, as well as the research of those who spend more time on biblical studies than I, doesn't strike me at bigoted.
No, what is bigoted is the contempt you showed towards people you disagreed with. And, to speak frankly, if the sources you sited in your reply are an indication of the best you have it's just sad. If you want to study textual problems and actually see if they can be resolved enroll in a good doctoral program.
I've been arguing Christian history, dogma and theology for 22+ years with pastors, ministers and missionaries from at least 15 different Christian sects, and have read at least 5 different versions of the Christian bible cover to cover repeatedly (I own 3 btw). I don't follow the faith, but have had 2 different ministers tell me I understand Scripture better than most of their congregations.
Great. And despite that you couldn't show an ounce of courtesy in your post.
What good is your learning if you're like that?
As the article said : "Any state law that required the school to admit gays or lesbians would violate the school's freedom of expression and religion, McKay said."
My position is, boycott the school. I'm firmly against supporting any organization that follows a discriminatory policy.
Good for you. Boycott away. But leave the bigotry in your other pants. Otherwise you're just another person who demands others to respect your position but who won't do the same.
Now, how about answering the questions I made in my initial response?
Pax,
Chris