Like most of Leviticus, the edicts against homosexuality were an attempt to belatedly change ‘have no gods before me’ into ‘don’t have any other gods, period’ by banning all of the specific religious practices of the competing local religions, which involved things like, say, eating shellfish, wearing sacred garb composed of mixed fibers, etc.
So maybe some of them were homophobes, but it’s not necessary; and if they’d all been homophobes there wouldn’t have been a need to establish the rule.
That’s a good point. It fairly strongly suggests that Judeo-Christian anti-homosexuality values would not survive coherent extrapolation because it provides an explanation for why the value was included originally. As JoshuaZ stated, I don’t expect religious values whose sole function was religious in-group-ism to persist after a CEV process.
Well, if Christian anti-homosexuality was just a religious in-group-ism, they wouldn’t be outraged by non-Christians having sex with members of the other sex any more than by (say) non-Christians eating meat on Lent Fridays. Are they?
Like most of Leviticus, the edicts against homosexuality were an attempt to belatedly change ‘have no gods before me’ into ‘don’t have any other gods, period’ by banning all of the specific religious practices of the competing local religions, which involved things like, say, eating shellfish, wearing sacred garb composed of mixed fibers, etc.
So maybe some of them were homophobes, but it’s not necessary; and if they’d all been homophobes there wouldn’t have been a need to establish the rule.
That’s a good point. It fairly strongly suggests that Judeo-Christian anti-homosexuality values would not survive coherent extrapolation because it provides an explanation for why the value was included originally. As JoshuaZ stated, I don’t expect religious values whose sole function was religious in-group-ism to persist after a CEV process.
Well, if Christian anti-homosexuality was just a religious in-group-ism, they wouldn’t be outraged by non-Christians having sex with members of the other sex any more than by (say) non-Christians eating meat on Lent Fridays. Are they?