Quote from: justmeinoz on August 08, 2011, 04:41:59 AM
As the offences you have quoted are from the Old Testament, they do not apply to Christians, Tekla. Anyone who tries to apply them or use them as justification has missed the point of Jesus' mission.
As for the penalty for what amounts to corrupting children, I take it as being a warning that it is one of the most serious crimes. Pity the member of the Christian Brothers who got 14 years in Ballarat today didn't listen, for the sake of all his victims. Hypocrisy is the worst sin there is, in my book.
Karen.
Indeed. The incredably selective and often fabricated citing of OT laws by those in the US, especially, claiming they are supporting their religion instead of admitting they are simply frightend political types is perhaps most evidenct in these sort of examples.
As for the millstone claim, Jesus said that anyone who corrupts the mind of a child, it would be as if they had put a mill stone around their necks and cast themselves into the deepest ocean. (Or words to that effect). I suspect that this was another of Jesus metaphores, expressing that his attitude to child abuse was the same as almost every adult who ever lived.
I also believe, from when I looked at the culture of Jews of that period, they had an obscession with what happened to their bodies after death. It's been a long time so if I'm mistaken, I hope someone more knowlegable will correct me. But I think they believed that, at resurection, they would be raised up from the ground. Since the deepest ocean would have been thought of as the most remote place of all, they would, presumably be raised last.
Those deemed rightious would be burried on the Mount of Olives since this was believed to be the place where the final coming would take place, so anyone burried there would be raised first.
Criminals and some others, tended to have their bodies cast onto, what was at that time, the city dump of Jeursalem, called Gehenna. There were a number of references to Gehenna made in the Gospels, which, in most English translations of the Bible, were changed to Hell. Hence the myth of the destination of hell for sinners which was subsequently used by many since to scare people.
While I personally wouldn't support the idea of killing someone, I do know of quite a number of otherwise decent people who would say that being drowned is a bit too easy for anyone who corrupts a child in that way.