Of course it is. We're all interpreting it according to our own experiences, and our own reasoning. How could it be else-ways?
It feels that way to you because you don't see the Word as the Word. It might as well be the Upanishads, provided you find parts you agree with. That's a perspective, Pure, but it isn't a Christian one.
Christianity begins with the authority of Christ and that is found in the Word. When you reduce that authority you make something new out of it.
Christianity is being defined by my perspective just as much as it's being defined by yours.
Rather it isn't defined by either of us. It is accepted or rejected by either of us. Either Christ is the son of God and the gospel the good news or it's something else.
And I think you're just lawyering your way out of having to face the very difficult challenge that the Christian ideal poses.
Understanding the cultural and historical context isn't "lawyering out" which is itself a misapprehension of what lawyers do. In the same way you need to understand who Samaritans were to the Jews to understand the full message of the good Samaritan and any number of likened points made within the gospel.
I had a joke here years ago in illustration. "And Judas went out and hanged himself...go thou and do likewise." Context can be important.
The temple incident has nothing to do with responding to violence.
That makes it worse for you. Jesus responded to an offense against the Holy with violence. That's not pacifism. And what did he say of those who attempted to stop children from coming to him?
"But whoso shall offend one of these little ones which believe in me, it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea." Matthew 18:6
That does't sound like your notion of God.
And the fact that Jesus was a Jew is likewise irrelevant to the fact that I am not.
And both are irrelevant to any point I made. But Jesus was the God incarnate of the Jew, which is a bit different.
We will never know what might have happened if people responded to nazism with non-violent resistance.
I don't know why you think that's true. We can look and see what happens when good people do nothing to literally stop evil of that sort. Millions die. Many more than need be. What would have happened? The virtual end of the Jew, the gypsy and others found inferior by a people who had no problem sending them into death camps.
A reasonable guess would be that the Nazi war machine would have had a lot more difficulty justifying and peddling it's aggressive intentions to the German people.
It's not reasonable if you're a student of the period. They were doing better under Hitler than they had in generations. It's amazing the good will you can engender when you're redistributing the wealth of your victims and creating public works from them.
It becomes quite difficult for most people to act violently toward others when those others are not acting or threatening violence in return.
Not only isn't that true, it's frighteningly untrue. You need to look into psychological tests involving fake shock treatments being given to individuals by the actual test subjects. The horror people will often willingly induce in the name of any purported good is remarkable.
In Germany it was cultural and racial purity of the Fatherland. The German people were helping to rid their society of a dehumanized and declared source of their social problems. And because people love feeling better than the next guy, especially when they've been under heel long enough, because we love having someone to blame and scapegoat, a country no better or worse than their cousins lovingly embraced a sociopath and were more than happy to be untroubled by whatever it was he had in mind for them.
Whether it's individuals or groups of individuals, the justifications are still self-centered and selectively biased. The ISIS individual believes he is justified in killing 'infidels'. The ISIS collective believes it's justified in killing 'infidels'. We as individual believe we are justified in killing them. We as a collective believe we are justified in killing them, collectively.
Again, when you can't distinguish between an act of murder and an act to prevent murder you have a serious contextual problem. Killing is neither moral nor immoral. It's an act. The morality is found in the context. God has one. Man frequently has another.
Regardless, the killers have all justified themselves.
Maybe, maybe not. Maybe many a killer simply satisfies a perverse itch. Maybe most prisons are filled with men who know they did wrong and knew it going in. Doesn't really alter the point.
But if that justification were not morally possible, regardless of the circumstances … What then?
Then the person believing that would be utterly and completely irrational, would be incapable of acting if they saw a child at a distance about to be ax murdered while they stood there with their hunting rifle, philosophically torn.