Quote from: Izumi on August 25, 2010, 04:15:42 PM
My favorite is the one about making your roof so no one falls off it, or its a sin. There are plenty of roofers going to hell i tells ya!
Well it's one of my favourite quotes of the bible, and it actually makes sense to me. Be considerate, don't make things which put other people into danger -that seems to be sensible for me. Then again, I'm a technical translator and I translate a lot of stuff about machines which have to conform to certain security norms, and how to deal with them without putting the workers working on them into danger... so I'm kind of biased here. Plus I know what happens if the sh*t hits the fan here, a former neighbor of mine was at the burn unit for almost one year due to a plane catastrophe (Ramstein) with lots of operations, skin transplants etc. and we went to visit him often, or brought him home. (We had moved right before the catastrophe, and the burn unit was close to us but 200 km from his family so we invited both his family and him to our home.) 40 % of his skin was burned, usually you die at 30% but he survived. It's just not ethical or Christian to expose anyone to such risks, though that accident was not related to roofs in any way.
By the way, the quote does not say you will definitely go to hell if you don't secure your roof, just that it will spill blood over your home or something like this as you risk other creatures' lives by not making your home secure. And I can well imagine the Rabbis 2000 years ago walking along a town and warning people that they have to secure their roofs and that's really a GOOD thing. You don't want to see your kid, nephew or grandchild fall from such a roof and break their neck. Or your neighbours' kids, nephews or grandchildren. And lots of people are just too stupid to think about these risks, be they Jews or whatever people. This Jewish law was one of the beginnings of technical norms. I just love that, and it's one of my favorite bible quotes, though (or because?) it's very nerdy.
Think about what roofs were like in the mediterranean area then - often flat, one- or two-store roofs, like terraces. Ideal playground for children, and dangerous if you did not secure them. And add some mediterranean mentality to it - children running around and being allowed to play wherever they wanted, people are extrovert anyway and nobody minds about children running around, senile old persons walking around there as well etc. Flat, unsecured rufes were just DANGEROUS there.
Really, this is one of the 613 commandments of the Torah/Old Testament which make most sense to me, and I see this commandment as being the "grandfather" of modern technical/security norms. Or at least a very early version of it.