Bible

ThinkingSapien,
@ThinkingSapien@mstdn.social avatar

Wait, where does the idea come from that the 10 commandments are the foundations of the USA law? The first four of the commandments are about worship. That last commandment and capitalism aren't compatible with each other.

shekinahcancook,
@shekinahcancook@babka.social avatar

@ThinkingSapien

If they want to do legalism, they should at least do it right:

Absolutely no interest charged to US citizens ever for anything.

All loans to citizens completely cancelled every seven years.

All foreclosed property returned to the family every 50 years.

Absolutely no businesses allowed to be open on any holidays (except medical care and EMS of course).

Farmers may not harvest all their crops each year and must allow anyone to come take the rest (10% of their harvest).

Farmers and growers of any agricultural crops must let all fields lie fallow every 7th year and 50th year.

Prisons must be abolished except for death row. All but capital crimes require monetary restutition plus a 20% penalty to the victim - not the state, and not prison.

There must not be any limitations or discrimination against immigrants, period.

En re Leviticus, your "zachar" - remembrance, legacy, or heir - is your child not a gay lover. The word man does not appear 2x in that verse.

anders,
anders,

Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.

Romans 12:2 NIV

@christianity
@bible

Mastengwe,

No, you certainly don’t. Because if you did, you wouldn’t be acting like a child and disrespecting people that didn’t do anything to you on the internet.

You’d know better.

aniki,

Wow. I bet you felt really good typing all that up. The difference between you and me is I don’t give a fuck what you think.

anders,

Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.

Romans 12:2 NIV

@christianity

br00t4c,
@br00t4c@mastodon.social avatar
JoeQuinlan,
@JoeQuinlan@mastodon.social avatar

@br00t4c

Benjamin Franklin was a slave owner who printed ads for slave auctions in his newspaper. Another reason for Rick Green to idolize him.

Brayden212,

Experience the POWER of TRUTH in the King James Bible in the “HEARING of God’s Word read by Alexander Scourby. Click the Playlist link below to HEAR the Entire KJV Bible with AUDIO and TEXT on YouTube, read by the Greatest Voice Ever Recorded, according to the Chicago Tribune,. Save it for instant access anytime and anywhere 24/7, and share it with others. Don't forget to comments.

SolusSpider,
@SolusSpider@linuxrocks.online avatar

This Bible verse really helped me today:
Psalms 37:4-5 ESV
Delight yourself in the Lord, and he will give you the desires of your heart.
Commit your way to the Lord; trust in him, and he will act.

SolusSpider,
@SolusSpider@linuxrocks.online avatar

@RL_Dane It's a daily walk brother!

RL_Dane,
@RL_Dane@fosstodon.org avatar

@SolusSpider

True that! Happy Sunday.

lentenmass,
@lentenmass@deacon.social avatar

The tradition has a daily reading lectionary where you read 4 or so chapters each day and go through the NT 2-3 times in a year, and the OT once (depends on which lectionary you use.)

I've been doing this awhile, and had the habit down, but health made me focus on essentials for a time and I got behind for about a month.

In my catch-up phase, I decided to just treat the epistles as single-sitting readings.

And you know, I'll probably do this more often. There's value in chapter breaks, but honestly: if it's a two-page letter, it shouldn't take five days to read it (I'm looking at you 1 Peter.)

Anyway. Just stating the obvious: the is full of short stories and letters and small, concrete narratives. You should read them that way. That's how they were meant to be read!

lentenmass,
@lentenmass@deacon.social avatar

@michael Even more: the letters would have been read in one go by many churches! Like the early tradition (before the Gospels were written) was to copy and share these letters around to encourage those of good faith. So an early church service in Ephesus would have had them reading the letter to the Philippians as well (and vice versa). But it would have been all in one go!

I love my tradition, but feel that there's a certain value that we lose by following a weekly lectionary of chopped-up scripture. I may reach out and offer to just read a letter or two. There's a dude I heard on a podcast that has a few books memorized and can just get up and perform them. That sounds like it would be valuable to me!

michael,
@michael@thms.uk avatar

@lentenmass haha. And here is poor me, hardly able to memorise my nephews names …

LisaWarnerLisaLuv,
@LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social avatar

❤️‍🔥🕊️❤️‍🔥**[JESUS]*When he comes!*he will prove the world to be in the wrong about sin!righteousness!& judgment!*about sin!*because people do not believe in me!*about righteousness!*because I am going to the Father!where you can see me no longer!& about judgment!because the prince of this world now stands condemned!*❤️‍🔥🕊️❤️‍🔥

#Bible #Devotional #Jesus #God #HolySpirit #Love #Christ #cats #Catsofmastodon #Sharing

LisaWarnerLisaLuv,
@LisaWarnerLisaLuv@mastodon.social avatar

@ainmosni

Your a hashtag spam?

ainmosni,
@ainmosni@berlin.social avatar

@LisaWarnerLisaLuv you’re*

Radical_EgoCom,
@Radical_EgoCom@mastodon.social avatar
fzer0,
@fzer0@nerdculture.de avatar

@Radical_EgoCom

B...but the guys with the funny hats and silly dresses say it is.

ai6yr,
@ai6yr@m.ai6yr.org avatar

🤔

AE4WX,
@AE4WX@mas.to avatar

@ai6yr my father in law lived in St. Pete Beach, not far from Clearwater... sounds about right...

ai6yr,
@ai6yr@m.ai6yr.org avatar

@AE4WX 😂

linuxgal,
@linuxgal@techhub.social avatar

Find the shortest and longest verses in the with

#!/usr/bin/python3
with open("kjv.txt") as file:
print("Shortest verse: ",min(file,key=len))
with open("kjv.txt") as file:
print("Longest verse: ",max(file,key=len))

tshirtman,
@tshirtman@mas.to avatar

@linuxgal sure, but maybe it would be better not to have to read the file twice, right?

wdlindsy,
@wdlindsy@toad.social avatar

Greg Sargent talks with Katherine Stewart, author of The Power Worshippers: Inside the Dangerous Rise of Religious Nationalism, about Trump's bible grift. He notes that evangelical leaders are conspicuously quiet about what Trump is doing with the bible. Is he making promises to them that he'll let them install a Christian nationalist government if he's elected?

Katherine Stewart responds:


/1

https://newrepublic.com/article/180287/trumps-weird-usa-bible-scam-takes-dark-unsettling-turn

wdlindsy,
@wdlindsy@toad.social avatar

"You can hardly ask for a better example of Christian nationalism [than this bible combining the scriptures with the Constitution, Declaration of Independence, Bill of Rights, Pledge of Allegiance]."

"This ideology is a tool for a leadership-driven political machine that turns this mythology that the US was founded by and for white Christians into political power."

[
/2

sharona,

Eclipse Anxiety 2024

A portion of the US population is getting nervous due to doomsayers spouting frightening rumors about the coming eclipse on April 8. Misinformation and bogus claims are rampant, particularly with the religious-minded, who regularly use world events to scare people back into the fold.

It’s as if we never had a solar eclipse before in the world!

Even though it sometimes feels like we’re regressing, we are in the 21st century. Eclipses have happened repeated, around the world, in the past century. They are predictable and explainable. We can factually document that catastrophes do not accompany them. Yet, here we are… with too many in the audience expecting some cataclysm in the wake of the moon shadow.

The reasons for this are complex and social. Most people still don’t understand nature and they succumb to social pressure to be fearful. Things that sound sciencey are convincing, whereas actual science gets ignored.

An eclipse occurred and nothing happened

A solar eclipse is when the moon passes in a specific alignment between the earth and the sun so that the sun’s light is blocked out for a short while. The shadow moves across the earth’s surface because the earth is turning and the moon is moving. There is nothing particularly dangerous about this condition (unless you aren’t expecting it).

The last solar eclipse in the US occurred on Aug 21, 2017. Self-styled prophet and Nostradamus superfan, John Hogue, self-published a book around that time suggesting that there would be great upheavals as totality passed over two seismic zones – the New Madrid Seismic Zone (NMSZ) and the Cascadia zone in the northwest. That didn’t happen. To hedge his bets, in case no earthquakes occurred, he also suggested the event was also an omen of bad times to come. We didn’t need an eclipse to signal that since in 2017 more than half the nation were already well aware of suffering through “interesting times”. No psychic powers were needed. I don’t think it’s reasonable to link the eclipse to the pandemic and wars, etc., years later, but being reasonable isn’t cool these days.

A solar eclipse in Hong Kong in July 2009 generated a rumor that a tsunami would occur. People were warned people to stay away from beaches. Again, nothing happened.

These ideas about catastrophes related to eclipses didn’t die even though none of the predictions ever came true.

The buildup

Hullabaloo around the April 8 event is getting louder as we get closer. At first we heard of cities and states in the path of totality declaring states of emergency so extra funds could be used for deploying responders. This is not because of the potential for natural catastrophe but for the possibility for a human disaster. Visitors who want to view the event will be heading into areas that can’t handle the volume. Officials guessed that overcrowding, traffic, potential violent incidents, injuries, and stresses on utilities and other necessary services might be a concern. So they are preparing.

There are rumors of power cuts or outages during the eclipse. This is from a rumor that solar cells will suddenly stop producing during the darkening. I’m always amazed that people think the smart people who run complex systems haven’t thought of this.

From the NY Times:

“I don’t think anything is as predictable as an eclipse,” said Pedro Pizarro, president and chief of executive of Edison International, a California power company, and the chairman of the Edison Electric Institute, a utility trade organization. “You can prepare.”

No one will lose power.

There are so many superstitions about eclipses – really dumb ones persist, such as the idea that it’s dangerous to be out during the event, particularly for pregnant women. It’s true that animals do act strange because they get confused about the sudden night fall but, again, there is nothing dangerous about it.

Storms are unrelated to the eclipse

The temporary diminishment of solar radiation will cause darkness, a drop in temperature and maybe small changes in wind speed and direction because of the reduction in convection. The cooling only happens for a few minutes. There is no connection to thunderstorms. A misappropriated weather forecast on March 15 in Orlando had some people thinking that the eclipse would generate a giant storm front. This BS hype is par for the course on Reddit.

Earthquakes are unrelated to the eclipse

The connection between eclipses and earthquakes goes back to the Bible. Even though many places around the world have experienced total eclipses and weren’t leveled by a massive quake, the unfounded connection persists. Eclipses and earthquakes have long been viewed as portents from God or “gods”. This wacky idea still hangs on in modern times even though we know they are not arbitrary events – they have a natural cause. The doomsday hype about earthquakes appeared at the time of the 2017 US solar eclipse.

Some religious leaders, who think themselves very special in that they can interpret the Bible and strike fear into their followers, saying that a large quake could occur that would cause massive damage. They encourage people to be prepared. Being prepared for a quake is not unreasonable. But suggesting that a large quake may occur during this time is dangerous and irresponsible. In particular, Tennessee evangelist Perry Stone uses “information” he just learned about the NMSZ (like, yesterday) to convince listeners that Jesus might have been talking specifically about 2024 in the Bible verse that connects earthquakes (in various places) to famine, pestilence and signs from heaven. The sign from heaven is the eclipse, he says. From his videos, Stone Ministries specializes in scaring people with nonsense claims about End Times and evil. This interpretation is a stretch. We are asked to believe that a predicted solar eclipse that occurs in a short time span over the US will herald a global catastrophe. Considering the track record of religious prophecies, I’m going to play the odds and say, “Nah”.

https://i0.wp.com/sharonahill.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/Topographic-map-of-the-New-Madrid-Seismic-Zone-showing-earthquakes-greater-than-magnitude.png?resize=562%2C729&ssl=1The New Madrid seismic zone (NMSZ) may be growing cold.

The path of totality does, again, pass over the centrally-located NMSZ along the Mississippi in Missouri, Illinois, Arkansas and Kentucky, (and the Wabash Valley Seismic Zone to the northeast) however, this means nothing. The NMSZ is still poorly understood. The large earthquakes it generated in 1811-12 would be devastating if they occurred today. Many people still assume that the next “Big One” could occur in the next century. This is unlikely, though small quakes are frequent. Current research even suggests the fault system may be shutting down, not “overdue” for another large release.

https://i0.wp.com/sharonahill.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/map-with-SZ.jpg?resize=819%2C573&ssl=1Map of the path of the eclipse of 2017 and that of 2024. The New Madrid and Wabash Valley Seismic zones are roughly located in the red oval. Both eclipse paths cross this area. Geologically, that has no signficance. The moon passing in front of the sun has no bearing on tectonic plates (or volcanic eruptions). Yet, most people know that the phase of the moon affects the earth’s ocean tides. The extra gravitational effects from a new or full moon phase on the entire planet is slight, but we see it in the oceans, which are unbounded and slosh around.

The exerted force on the crust is negligible, except for the small possibility that a large fault already set to rupture gets broken by that little extra push. The data that suggests this may be the case is not fully accepted by seismologists and, regardless, has no practical use in seismic hazards prediction. These small changes associated with tidal stresses on the earth have not convinced scientists that we should worry more about earthquakes every two weeks in line with moon phases. Yet, many crackpots still proclaim that earth tides can predict quakes. They see the celestial bodies in alignment and assume the gravitational pull is increased, but it’s not. The same misapplied ideas may also be leading to those same wind bags spouting about tsunamis or large tidal effects. None of it shakes out.

Could a solar eclipse cause an earthquake?

There are many large earthquakes around the world every year. And there are several lunar and solar eclipses every century. The odds that events will sometimes coincide is inevitable. But they are not caused by each other. If a quake occurred in the US during this eclipse, the chances are that the quake would be small, because there are dozens of small quakes that occur every day. And, if that were to happen on April 8, anywhere in the US, or even weeks later, it would be difficult to stop people from assuming they are related. Human brains want to make connections and attribute causes to a direct observation, and usually to an agency – like God, the Devil, or the government – to form a story in their own minds. But correlations, in the context of our narrow human views, do not mean the events have a causal relationship. Sadly, few people are well versed in understanding natural phenomenon and applying critical thinking. They prefer to believe a dramatic story and share it with others. Thus, we have these kinds of social commotions about interesting events, swirling with misinformation and pseudoscience.

Chill out and enjoy the celestial show!

https://sharonahill.com/?p=8488

wdlindsy,
@wdlindsy@toad.social avatar

“As you know, I love Bible. It’s my favorite book. I’ve definitely read it. My favorite part is probably the ending. How it all ends up. …

I’m doing this for the glory of God. And for pandering and mostly for money.”

~ Trump in SNL parody of his bible-hawking grift gig

https://www.alternet.org/snl-trump/

wdlindsy,
@wdlindsy@toad.social avatar

@glitzersachen I hadn't known that has happened. In so many ways, the initial promise of the Internet to link people globally across cultural and geographical boundaries has been subverted by commercial interests. That strikes me as sad.

glitzersachen,

@wdlindsy

Me too, since I've been there since around '95 and I also see very much the broken promises aspect.

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