
Originally Posted by
CtrlAltDel
A group of bishops said that not everything in the bible is true?
That's a pity... a pity for them. Me, I try to follow the example of Christ, not the example of church leaders. Jesus never cloistered himself. He immersed himself in people. He talked to them in public. He drank wine with them. He went into the house of known sinners and ate meal with them. He invited tax collectors to be his disciples and shown sympathy to prostitutes. Instead of choosing highly-educated Jews to be his apostles, he chose instead a bunch of misfits to be his 12 apostles. He taught people the Scriptures, he unmasked the hypocrisy of the Jewish elite. He healed the sick, heck he brought the dead Lazarus back to life! He cast out demons and forgave people their sins. He rise up early ahead of the others so he can be alone to pray. He often did this. Praying... alone.
He said to love to your enemies and pray for those who persecute you! What more can you ask of this man? He was born in a manger- amid the smell of animals and their excrement! The sanitized version of the Christmas tableu never had it right. He never had any money nor properties. From the moment he was born all he had was love for human beings and obedience to God's will. Even when he was dying he asked God to forgive those who mock him on the cross.
What more can you ask of this man? He said to love God above all else with everything you have and then to love your neighbor as you love yourself. For those who have faith, it makes perfect sense; including the so-called inaccuracies in the bible.
For those who want more... more proof, more explanation, more reason for believing, more miracles, more rational explanation, more freedom from an omnipotent God's influence... well, good luck! The message of Christ can fall on fertile or barren soil. You can believe or dismiss it.
It's your choice. For me, the bible is true. Not one word of it is a lie. If that is irrational, then I choose to be irrational on the side of the promised eternal life in God's presence.