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Culture War Roundup for the week of March 13, 2023

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Sin exists. Because some exists doesn’t mean it was made in the image of god. The whole origional sin thing.

I mean you were an obvious atheist. I don’t think you are replying in good faith or lack an understanding of religion.

Think this is simple. Trans people go to hell unless they repent. It’s not something in gods image but a perversion.

Think this is simple. Trans people go to hell unless they repent. It’s not something in gods image but a perversion.

What particular kind of soteriology do you subscribe to here? Do you believe any Christian goes to hell for any unrepented-for sins, or do you just think that being openly trans is a mortal sin that destines one for Hell if one does not repent (as opposed to a venial sin that does not)?

I'm curious how you think being created in God's image relates to sex. What does it mean for a female human to be made in the image of a masculine God? I know that the Holy Spirit is grammatically feminine in Hebrew (though neuter in Greek), and there are a few feminine metaphors for God peppered throughout the Bible, but isn't God usually a "He"?

God didn’t create half men half women.

Sure, but isn't it a Christian belief that many of the natural "evils" of the world are a result of original sin, without being themselves sinful? Just because there was no cancer in Eden, doesn't mean that a person getting cancer is sinful.

Why you do you think that medically and socially transitioning as a trans person is more like theft than cancer?

And how do you square all of this with the many references to eunuchs and their place in society in the Old and New Testament? It seems like it is fully possible for a eunuch to be a faithful follower of Christ, and wouldn't trans people arguably belong to that category?

I think by my statement I assume it’s in the mortal sin category. If done surgically. It’s desecrating your body so you can’t reproduce. No idea if you just play dress up probably lower or not at all.

Didn't Jesus encourage people to maim themselves if their body parts were causing them to sin? I know every Christian except Origen and the Skoptsy ignored the literal meaning of those words, but if Jesus is pro gouging your own eyes out, why would he be anti genital mutilation? Especially when his chosen people were expected to lop off a part of their anatomy to prove they were part of a covenant with God?

I also feel like you didn't address the eunuch idea. Eunuchs existed and were common in the past. There are certainly Old Testament references forbidding the use of castrated animals in sacrifices, preventing castrated sons of Aaron from serving as priests, and castrated Jews from entering the temple, but the Ethiopian eunuch in Acts 8 seems to imply this is not a prohibition that applies to Christians.

If making yourself infertile is such a big taboo, why is castration never explicitly forbidden anywhere in the Bible?

why is castration never explicitly forbidden anywhere in the Bible

If you are talking about Jewish Bible, there are mentions:

https://www.chabad.org/library/bible_cdo/aid/9987/jewish/Chapter-23.htm

[A man] with injured testicles or whose member is cut, may not enter the assembly of the Lord.

https://www.chabad.org/library/bible_cdo/aid/9923

24[Any animal whose testicles were] squashed, crushed, pulled out, or severed, you shall not offer up to the Lord, and in your land, you shall not do [it]

From this, the tradition derives prohibition of castration and even vasectomy: https://judaism.stackexchange.com/questions/15555/halachic-permissibility-of-a-vasectomy

The issue with injuries or illnesses leading to deficiencies in that area is more complex, if you're interested, on the same site above there's a number of questions discussing this topic. It has been extensively covered in the literature (as pretty much any other topic, those guys had 3 millenia to work, they covered a lot of ground). Of course, I know much less of Christian tradition in question, so not sure what's the status of the matter there.

I alluded to all of your Hebrew Bible references when I said:

There are certainly Old Testament references forbidding the use of castrated animals in sacrifices, preventing castrated sons of Aaron from serving as priests, and castrated Jews from entering the temple

but while all of those frame castration as ritually unclean, none of that outright comes out and says that castration is forbidden. I understand that Jewish commentary and oral tradition have interpreted these as a prohibition on castration, but none of that matters in a Christian context, which is where /u/sliders1234 was coming from. Castration also doesn't feature in the 7 Noahide Laws, as far as I can tell, Jewish law has nothing at all to say about Gentiles castrating other Gentiles.

none of that outright comes out and says that castration is forbidden

Well, the way Jewish religious law works, a lot of things are derived and not spelled out specifically and explicitly, that's just how the system works. Of course, for non-Jew there are much smaller number of requirements (and they probably care much less about what Jewish law says about them anyway). There's also a significant disagreement about this question in the Talmud: https://shulchanaruchharav.com/halacha/castration-sterilization-to-humans-and-animals/ and the resolution for non-Jews seems to be along the lines of "unclear, but better to think it's prohibited just in case" (which is a common case in Jewish law in general to go this way if there's a possibility something might be prohibited but no clear resolution either way). For Jews, of course, it's a strong definite "no". Would be interesting to see what Christian religious law says about it, but I have to idea even where to look. But I imagine they didn't stop at the literal text of the Bible either and have their own thoughts on the matter.

Well, the way Jewish religious law works, a lot of things are derived and not spelled out specifically and explicitly, that's just how the system works.

Yes, we all know how the system works - first profess to follow absurd and nonsensical law, and then find a smart reason why the law does not mean what it says. This is the reason why God gave Jews their stratospheric IQ.

There's also a significant disagreement about this question in the Talmud: https://shulchanaruchharav.com/halacha/castration-sterilization-to-humans-and-animals/ and the resolution for non-Jews seems to be along the lines of "unclear, but better to think it's prohibited just in case" (which is a common case in Jewish law in general to go this way if there's a possibility something might be prohibited but no clear resolution either way). For Jews, of course, it's a strong definite "no".

So, oxen are not kosher and Jewish peasants in old times before tractors were supposed to use bulls to plough their fields? As everyone with experience with cattle will tell you, castration of animals was invented for very good reason.

It seems to be just another impractical and unworkable law written by priests who had no idea about agriculture, law designed to be avoided by some clever roundabouts.

(Ouch! I let my gentile neighbor to borrow my pair of bulls, and he returned them without balls! What can I do? Let him borrow more bulls!)

See for example this. Jews are supposed to leave all land fallow every seventh year and live of locusts (Yes I know the lore - in bygone times when Jews were truely pious and observant, the sixth year harvest was double that usual, wouldn't rot or spoil and rats or mice wouldn't touch it). Nevertheless, Jews in Israel today find a way to get around this commandment.

You do realize Jesus didn’t write the Bible?

This isn’t internet atheism gotcha time. The question here is whether the people protesting have sincere religious beliefs. This isn’t Christians are idiots time.

I'm sure they do have sincere beliefs, but you introduced the idea that medically transitioning is a mortal sin that damns one to hell. That wasn't a take I've heard before, and I was curious what exegetical process got you there.

Even Catholic doctrine has the idea of "invincible ignorance" which might plausibly leave some trans people not responsible for any sins committed while medically transitioning, which makes the churches clear teachings about the sinfulness of medical transition easier to swallow.

Well of course they can always go to confession etc and repent.

Trans people go to hell unless they repent. It’s not something in gods image but a perversion

I was a Christian however, so I have had the lessons, the Sunday School, etc., Religious education classes. And I promise you, I am engaging in good faith, I am just pointing out the even from the point of view of a Christian your argument has issues.

But again, I agree from the point of view of Christianity it makes sense to say that someone transitioning is committing a sin. Agreed. But that wasn't your claim.

But that isn't the same thing as making a mockery of God. Consider that one of the responses when a loved one is murdered or dies of cancer is that God moves in mysterious ways. Indicating that even this is part of His plan. That doesn't mean the murderer wasn't sinning within the Christian context, he certainly was. It is simply the acknowledgment that all things are part of God's plan and that our role is to surrender our faith to that plan. Even things we mortals do not comprehend like untimely deaths or your son coming out as gay or your daughter as trans are part of His plan.

That doesn't mean that your son or daughter are not sinful, but it does mean that God planned that. We don't know why, the reasons are literally ineffable, despite how many words have been written trying to understand it.

Calvin:

"Calvin did not believe God to be guilty of sin, but rather he considered God inflicting sin upon his creations to be an unfathomable mystery.[54] Though he maintained God's predestination applies to damnation as well as salvation, he taught that the damnation of the damned is caused by their sin, but that the salvation of the saved is solely caused by God"

Eastern Orthodox:

"(God's) foreknowledge is unfathomable. It is enough for us with our whole heart to believe that it never opposes God's grace and truth, and that it does not infringe man's freedom. Usually this resolves as follows: God foresees how a man will freely act and makes dispositions accordingly."

Catholicism:

"God] promised not from the power of our will but from His own predestination. For He promised what He Himself would do, not what men would do. Because, although men do those good things which pertain to God’s worship, He Himself makes them to do what He has commanded; it is not they that cause Him to do what He has promised. Otherwise the fulfilment of God’s promises would not be in the power of God, but in that of men"[61]"

Arminianism:

"This means that God does not predetermine, but instead infallibly knows who will believe and perseveringly be saved. Although God knows from the beginning of the world who will go where, the choice is still with the individual."

Middle Knowledge might be the most highbrow - a kind of multiverse:

"God knew what every existing creature capable of libertarian freedom (e.g. every individual human) would freely choose to do in all possible circumstances. It then holds that based on this information, God elected from a number of these possible worlds, the world most consistent with his ultimate will, which is the actual world that we live in."

The idea that being trans (or a murderer) is both sinful AND in line with God's plan and therefore not a mockery is entirely supported by large swathes of writings about resolving the paradox of free will and God's omniscience and (therefore pre-destination of outcome). It's the only real way to tie together the opposing issues. That God both planned for Bob to be the kind of person who would want to become Anne AND that Bob commits a sin by doing so. If you aren't a Christian that is an incoherent mess, what's the difference between perfectly foreseeing the outcome of your and other peoples actions given omnipotence and setting the "rules" and planning the same? If you are a Christian, it makes sense (or at least can make sense, I know a lot of Christians who do struggle with it, which is why there have been a lot of writings about it).

But almost all extant versions of Christianity as far as I can tell (Mormons excepted if you count them as Christian) have the same basic outcome. God did plan/foresee/deliberately put/know/ you will be in this situation with these urges AND set the rules AND if you act upon them you are committing a sin. He planned it AND it is your sin to make or not. You might have failed God when you chose to sin, but saying you are making a mockery of Him, doesn't make sense. Unless every time every Christian slips into sin, they are all making a mockery of God, which therefore makes the criticism far too broad to be useful here.

The question at hand was whether this violated Christian beliefs. That is what I replied to.

It isn’t a question of whether Christian beliefs are perfectly rational.

With regards to the not playing with trans the question is whether they have a religious concern with that. That is clearly yes. It’s not your place to define another persons beliefs even if you think it’s irrational.

But that wasn't your specific claim. I agree it is entirely fine for them to have an issue with playing with a trans player.

But I was rebutting your specific claim which was about being trans being a mockery of God, which i am pointing out is not really supported by Christianity itself. If you are withdrawing from that claim to the lesser one about having religous issue with it, i would consider that accurate and agree with you.