Mister Moose wrote:XtremeJibber2001 wrote:Okay .... some of you must have read Bill Bryson’s Short History of Nearly Everything, right?
I haven't. What does he have to say that you think is relevant?
Somewhat tangential, but Bubba's comment about belief vs personal experience made me think of this book. While it's not a faith-based book, he discusses many scientific theories we accept as fact (today or in the past) and how they came to be what we believe today. It's a fun book - highly recommend it.
Kpdemello wrote:The gospels, however, I put in a different category. Here you have five books detailing the life of Jesus. They are different accounts written by different people mostly without reference to one another, yet they largely tell the same story with little discrepancy. That tells me the information they report is reliable. And the story they tell is about a man who is incredibly admirable, whose teachings are wise and perhaps the best authority on how to live a moral life. That is highly significant, and fundamentally different from all the other books in the Bible. So I find the gospels worthy of my attention and belief. However, when I examine the five gospels, I find no mention of homosexuality being a sin.
Agreed that the gospels don't mention it. Other parts of the New Testament do ... Corinthians at a minimum.
Kpdemello wrote:Given my thoughts above, which is just one perspective among many, I think reasonable people reading the same Bible can come to different conclusions about whether homosexuality is a sin. That kind of religious belief has no place being imposed on people through force of law. If your concern is your family being influenced by the acceptance of homosexuality by society, then I would say it's incumbent on you to teach your family what you think is right, rather than forcing your beliefs on society at large. All of us have to come to terms with living in a society where people do things we don't necessarily agree with, but that we have to tolerate and respect if we wish to be tolerated and respected in turn.
I don't think Christians should be in the business of 'forcing' their religious beliefs on others, but should hold others that say they're Christian accountable.
As a Christian and US Citizen, I think we have rights just like Homosexuals. Their rights shouldn't trump mine (no pun intended

) just because they're a minority, louder than me, march more, etc.
I disagree with having to condone things we don't agree with to be respected. I'm respected today (maybe not by some here

) without having to condone many things. It's like saying you must condone my right to open carry my firearm if you want my respect ,.. we know by watching the media/marches that this right is not condoned by many today.