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Religion
Reply to "Why do some care about rules about gay people but ignore rule about shrimp, rape, and stoning women?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I don't believe the OP is asking this "sincerely" as he said in his post. I think this is the same OP that brings shrimp into any discussion that is even remotely relevant. But for everyone else: 1. Shrimp. God never says it's a "sin." He says don't eat it. The Jews lived in the desert with no refrigeration. Makes perfect sense. (Then see Acts 9, where God declares all food "clean," and Peter totally gets the analogy that God loves everyone, Jews and Gentiles alike, not just Jews. It's the same as if I told my son, don't hit your sister (it's wrong) and don't cross the street without looking both ways (it's a bad idea because you might get hurt).[/quote] There are sins between man and man, and sins between man and G-d. IE ritual sins. The Hebrew bible is clear that ritual sins are important (see so many laws in the 5 books of Moses) There are mixed indications in prophets as to their importance relative to the sins between man and man - the famous section of Isaiah about fasting, on the one hand, but lots of prophets complaining about ritual violations. The book of Acts (you mean 10, not 9, right?) is an odd vision, not clear to me at least that its an indication the dietary laws are revoked, or were never about sin. In any case, the book of Acts is not cannon in Judaism. Note also, many of the dietary laws have nothing to do with health. There is no health reason not to eat the calf and its mother's milk together, nor to avoid the sciaitic nerve. As for the laws claimed to be about health, the nations that lived alongside Israel did not follow them, and there is nothing in the historical record indicating they had poor health as a result. Certainly its not hard to cook pork, for example and the dangers of infection are more than offset by the value of the protein source. The dietary laws are NOT about hygiene, but about creating a bond between the children of Israel and their G-d, a bond expressed in daily living, that sets them off from the nations. [/quote]
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