It wouldn't be for me.Nah, they're never going to do that for you.
Not once. Which is why you'll never bear a meaningful witness on the point.And you are lying.
That's how you waffle. Make a specific claim but back it with an uncited generality that rests in your judgment.Your words previously did not match your words subsequently
Quote me when you do it so I can note why you're wrong again and do it with specifics and reason you routinely fail to produce.And should I report you for calling me a liar?
Hey, you got the grammar right on that one. Look at you.He's POMPOUS enough to believe that they will.
I'm certain you know exactly what and why. I also suspect that's why you're a bit more active these days with going after my attention.Actually, I think something has been put in place regarding his difficulties with another poster.
:darwinsm:It wouldn't be for me.
Numerous times.Not once.
Specifics. The law says "both people."That's how you waffle. Make a specific claim but back it with an uncited generality that rests in your judgment.
Oh, so now you think I haven't lied.Quote me when you do it so I can note why you're wrong again and do it with specifics and reason you routinely fail to produce.
Sounds like some kind of grand conspiracy. :chuckle:I'm certain you know exactly what and why. I also suspect that's why you're a bit more active these days with going after my attention. Thanks. That's helpful. A mistake on your part, but helpful.
Now, if gen or glory have a point on the actual topic, I'll be back to look in.
I actually addressed that one head on. No lie in it.Specifics. The law says "both people."
You characterize that as a "technicality," but want to pin the discrepancy on those of us who quoted the law.
I don't hold onto most of what you write, Stripe. I don't make signature lines out of it, let alone commit it to memory. You rarely write something particular enough to stick.Oh, so now you think I haven't lied.
Nah, just a confederacy of some sort.Sounds like some kind of grand conspiracy.
Like that...if parroting is ever in the Olympics you're going to medal. But you still blew it and I appreciate that. Makes everything that follows different and enjoyable.Bye. :wave2:
Really?I actually addressed that one head on.
No lie in it.
Really. If memory serves it was along the lines of, "If three men commit a murder and you only catch one it's just that the one you caught be punished for his/her part." That sort of thing.Really?
What I've actually said is that Christ could have addressed their insufficiency at law, but that the law serves justice, not the other way around. She was guilty and deserving of her punishment. He could have said that and also instructed them on their failure in executing the law.The law says "both." You say we make Jesus into the worst sort of lawyer, one seeking "technicalities," when we quote the law.
Then stop laying the charge. You'll look better, more rational, and honest.This whole thing about you lying is boring.
Again, actually quote me and we'll go from there. The law isn't a technicality, but technicalities can impact its execution and do.The lie isn't in your story about what Jesus did, it's when you say you didn't call the law a technicality.
Oh.Really. If memory serves it was along the lines of, "If three men commit a murder and you only catch one it's just that the one you caught be punished for his/her part." That sort of thing.
Argument from silence. He might well have presented the law and the story gives specific space for it.What I've actually said is that Christ could have addressed their insufficiency at law, but that the law serves justice, not the other way around.
Not according to the law.She was guilty and deserving of her punishment.
Having Christ more concerned with the letter than the spirit and purpose of the law is making him the worst sort of lawyer, the sort most of you taking that approach would decry in any actual courtroom if it saw someone guilty go free. The usual association, hue and cry on that point is that the defendant was freed on a technicality.
Answered prior. Next.Oh.
You thought that was a good argument.
You've forgotten that the "both" was written into law by God. If you think it's a bad law, tell Him.
Declaration without connection or offer of proof. Next.Argument from silence.
I've addressed that prior. Next.He might well have presented the law and the story gives specific space for it.
And even if He didn't, the law still says what it says. She was still not in any danger of being rightly convicted in that setting.
Blah, blah, blah. Next.You don't understand the law or what it's for.
I didn't suggest the letter be ignored. Next.There can be no appeal to the spirit of the law if you ignore the letter.
I'll add it to the list. Next.And this is all academic anyway. The letter says "both," which returns a "do not convict." Why you want to get to "do not convict" by means other than the law is beyond me.
For men, who could not know what He knows. The procedure is meant to serve justice. You're like the priests complaining about the wheat. And you're just as wrong. Next.And again, it is not us making Jesus take up a technicality. He wrote the law.
I don't have a "charge" I have an argument and a reading and a reasoning that is contrary to your own, not to Him. That you confuse that is part of the problem with your approach.Your charge is not against us; all we did was read His word.
It wasn't a question.Answered prior. Next.
:chuckle:Blah, blah, blah. Next.
No, not next. This one.I didn't suggest the letter be ignored. Next.
:chuckle:I'll add it to the list. Next.
Yes, the law is for men. Therefore... something. :idunno:For men, who could not know what He knows.
Yes, the law is meant to serve justice. Therefore... something. :idunno:The procedure is meant to serve justice.
I don't have a "charge" I have an argument and a reading and a reasoning that is contrary to your own, not to Him. That you confuse that is part of the problem with your approach.
I believe you believe that, and yet he didn't speak to the law and they were deterred.1. The legalists brought a legal challenge. They wouldn't have been deterred by "he without sin." That would have made the law of no effect.
I don't believe that's necessarily true or accept that your reading of the requirement makes that so, but it doesn't help you, given it would make Christ's potential instruction in the law sufficient to defeat the crowd and sustain what you want sustained. I think something else happened and I've set out why.Even if Jesus did not write it in the sand, it is still a fact that the woman could never have been justly convicted by the law in that setting.
This is an argument from silence. He may well have presented the law.I believe you believe that, and yet he didn't speak to the law and they were deterred.
The law says what it says regardless of what you believe.I don't believe that's necessarily true.
Something else probably did happen.I think something else happened and I've set out why.
As much fun as it is to keep seeing the same things I've spoken to you and others about and answered set out as if novel or unanswerable.
I'm going to have to stock up on crackers. If only you'd stock up on argument.Skipping most of the repetition.
No, it isn't an argument from silence. Now if someone reads a text and says that it's about Bill and you notice that nowhere in the text is anyone mentioning Bill, that would be an empirical observation.This is an argument from silence. He may well have presented the law.
The argument isn't over what the law says.The law says what it says regardless of what you believe.
Not so much.Notice how my post set out reasons
Saying the word isn't setting it out.and scripture
We're both relying on our reading, only yours doesn't really make a great deal of sense for the reasons noted prior.while with you we have to rely on what you believe and things you've said prior.
Sure, it is. He could have presented the law. You are not justified in insisting that he couldn't have.No, it isn't an argument from silence.
:chuckle:Now if someone reads a text and says that it's about Bill and you notice that nowhere in the text is anyone mentioning Bill, that would be an empirical observation.
Prior, prior, prior.The argument is different, but I've set that out prior.
That's nice.The argument isn't over what the law says.
Nope.We're both relying on our reading.
Yours doesn't really make a great deal of sense for the reasons noted prior.
Going by the text is the opposite of an argument from silence.Sure, it is. He could have presented the law. You are not justified in insisting that he couldn't have.
Still missing the point.And even if He didn't, the law still says what it says. The woman was in no danger.
Not by Jesus.You obviously don't know the mechanics of an argument from silence. It's not that the law isn't mentioned. It is.
No, I note that he didn't do what seems important to those who believe the point of the narrative was defeating a legalistic trap.It's that you conclude from your observation that something didn't happen.
Might as in could have, but he didn't.Jesus might well have presented the law.
In the dirt. Sure. I talked about that. But he didn't address the crowd with it.The Bible says that He wrote something.
I think it was about the law, but we don't know and it didn't reach his discourse with those present, to whom he presented a different standard. I think that's important and I've said why prior.That could have been the law.
No, it still isn't.Your insistence that the law was not mentioned is an argument from silence. A logical fallacy.
I know you believe it. Doesn't really impact my point, but I think you're wrong on it.And even if you could prove that Jesus never brought up the law, the law still says what it says. She was to be exonerated.
Fulfilled, yes. Eradicated is your bit, not mine.Our disagreement is that you insist Jesus "fulfilled" the law (read: "eradicated"),
No, I disagree with those of you who proffer an argument I find unconvincing for the reasons offered prior.while you criticize us for showing that the law did not convict her.
Still not doing that.The law says what it says. Waffling on about priors doesn't change that.
:rotfl:Going by the text is the opposite of an argument from silence.
But you won't explain. Declaratives like this just break up the conversation and provide no insight into how you might be responding to the challenges you face.Still missing the point.
And yet, that was the nature of the test that was presented to Him. The law was the subject. He had to respond with more than "he without sin," which would make the law of no effect.Not by Jesus.
There are two main logical fallacies in this sentence:No, I note that he didn't do what seems important to those who believe the point of the narrative was defeating a legalistic trap.
No. Might have as in might have. He might have.Might as in could have.
He didn't address the crowd with it, therefore, something... :idunno:In the dirt. Sure. I talked about that. But he didn't address the crowd with it.
I think it was about the law, but we don't know and it didn't reach his discourse with those present, to whom he presented a different standard. I think that's important and I've said why prior.
Yes, it still is.No, it still isn't.
What's to believe? I'm quoting the law. The law says what it says. That's not a belief. That's what the words on the page say. The law says "both." This is not an opinion. This is not a belief. This is what the law says. The law made it impossible for the woman to be rightly convicted in that setting.I know you believe it. Doesn't really impact my point, but I think you're wrong on it.
:idunno:Fulfilled, yes. Eradicated is your bit, not mine.
Yes. You criticize us, saying we turn Jesus into a lawyer.No, I disagree with those of you who proffer an argument I find unconvincing for the reasons offered prior.
Ah hah!The law says both should be brought, not that the absence of one means "Lucky you!" for the one that didn't get away.
Yes, you do waffle. You fragment posts so they are impenetrable and talk about things you've said. You take silly little snippets of posts and build entire paragraphs around them. You delete the questions you are asked that show how thin your position is.Still not doing that.
If God abhors the shedding of innocent blood
then why put a 'grading system' on it?
You think God would be less unhappy if someone's wrongfully executed where their innocence could have been established through appeal?
The system isn't "inherently broken" your hyperbole notwithstanding.
Sure, it's not like people are arrested on a whim and the police are the equivalent of the keystone cops.
Like any system it's not perfect and I support certain changes but you make it sound like it's useless and there's nothing to support that on any objective level.
I'm not an OT legalist for a start
and the primary reason is to avoid innocent people being wrongfully convicted and put to death.
You are now just impossible to take even remotely seriously.
Crime wouldn't drop to virtually zero overnight,
the following fortnight or ten years down the line. You simply don't live in the real world.
You think prison is an incentive?
It wasn't an argument, it was just yet more subjective, hot air in lieu of support.
· Appellate judges have a tendency to reverse convictions to demonstrate their own importance. |
· A speedy trial and swift sentence are critical to the deterrence of crime. |
· The delays inherent in an appellate system destroy the deterrent effect of swift justice. |
· Criminals favor having an appeal process, which encourages crime. |
· Appeals delay punishment and extend the suffering of the victim’s family. |
· An appellate option makes it more difficult for criminals to respect the authority of a judge. |
· Appeals enable criminals to shop for gullible judges. |
· Appeals increase crime; denying appeals reduces crime, the caseload, and thus, judicial errors. |
If people have been exonerated of a crime they've been convicted of then I wager it's generally because evidence has come to light that proves their innocence.
Courts aren't in the habit of overturning verdicts for a laugh. Under your "system" that couldn't happen because they'd be dead.
Dude, it's not like there's a dearth of police or resources available.
The fact is that mistakes can be made and in cases there's evidence that points to guilt that can later turn out to be falsified when further evidence comes to light.
That's gonna happen under any system
and if you're going to speed up the trial and conviction process then even more so.
It's because man is fallible that the only way to prevent the innocent being executed is to establish absolute guilt.
More so when you're going to cart them off to the hangman without an appeal...
Lennie's character wouldn't be able to flee to the nearest farm.
Well if you're so bothered about it then look it up.
As for perjury I've already given my position. A serious crime that should carry a stiff penalty. Please don't bother with the inevitable DP blather...
See above.Again, I'm asking to find out if you know what the Biblical death penalty is. Do you know? If not, I recommend you find out.
Someone who commits adultery is not a 'manslayer'.
Duh.
Yet both are capital crimes.
Someone who kills with premeditation is a murderer. Simple as that.
:AMR:
No, do you think children should be executed given the bit about minors?
I think that all are equal under the law.
So, you are as ignorant and pie in the sky as JR then to make such silly prognostications then. "Good to know".
(more face palms)
Correlation does not equal causation.
You of all people should know that.
Was Vlad a wicked man? Most likely. Were his methods of execution unecessarily violent? Sure.
Is his swift punishment of criminals
Who said 'always'? You did.
Nope. You did. Here's where:
Right. So two would be enough. Three would be better. Did someone say otherwise?
Emphasis mine.
Had you said "two would usually be enough" or even "two would be enough most of the time," I wouldn't have pointed out your error. But you said "two would be enough." Which is not the same as "two or three witnesses."
The Bible says "two or three," which means that the evidence should be weighed each case, to determine whether only two witnesses are necessary and enough, or if three are necessary, due to insufficient evidence if only two.
And only you, to apparently make the 'no' appear reasonable or connected when neither is the case.
It has everything to do with my proffer, which is what I've been talking about. And you mean I'm not paying attention to what you say to another, which is true. I'm also not reading whatever is on your end table. lain:
Even I at least skim through the posts in the threads that I'm subscribed to, to see if there's anything that needs to be addressed.
I'm telling you that I don't. An admission sounds like a fault, which it wouldn't be evidence of.
An admission is appropriate, especially since you're at fault of not paying attention to what has been said multiple times on this thread.
When you don't pay attention to a conversation, you WILL miss important points that are made.
Intentionally ignoring those points, especially after being called out on missing them, is just bad form.
Within the context of our conversation.
I've addressed everything you say to me. Nothing you've said to me makes your case
How do you know? You can't assert that with any certainty because you might have missed a point that I or someone else was building on in another post that WAS NOT addressed to you, which you admit you don't pay attention to.
that Christ is more concerned with the jot and tittle of process than he is in punishing someone whose actions merit that punishment.
Christ was evading a trap set by people who wanted to trap Him, which, if triggered, would have brought Him into premature conflict with the Roman government, while still upholding the law.
The woman was not in any danger of being executed, because the Scribes and Pharisees did not bring BOTH her and her supposed lover before the Sanhedrin. Instead, they brought just the adulteress before Jesus, who had no authority (yes, He's God, but while on Earth, He subjected Himself to the government) to condemn or acquit any criminal.
Nothing in what you've said to me reconciles his silence on the process you believe and advance is the soul of his response.
That sort of thing.
Therefore... Something... :idunno:
His claim, which I note, as I note your own. And yes, you've amended your position, which was: "I would love a friend request from Obama. Would give me a chance to have a nice chat with him about where he'll exist for the rest of eternity."
Considering that that is still my position whether he is or is not a Christian... Therefore my position has not changed. I would still love a friend request from Obama, which would still give me a chance to talk about where he'll exist for all of eternity.
:AMR:
The more benign redrafting in approach had a different tone and point. But good on you for adopting it at any rate. It's an improvement.[/COLOR]
:AMR:
No, that didn't do it. My argument doesn't rest on the liberality or focus of your use of witness. In the case of the woman the witnesses would have been two people offering testimony. I don't know if those two were present or not, because Christ doesn't ask for witnesses. Instead, he proffers a different litmus, one no one in the mob will attempt to meet before him. I've told you why I believe he did that.
Christ knew that the woman couldn't be executed under the law because only she had been brought, instead of BOTH her and her supposed lover.
Had both been brought, they might have had a case. But you think it's a technicality she got off on...
I literally just got through telling you that it is immaterial to the point. It's also hard to miss the large section about witness that I've put into this thread. And given your belief that you should be on top of whatever someone writes here...
I have shown using scripture that "witness" means more than just "eyewitness."
But we know your opinions about what scripture says.
No, but you're bearing false witness for God knows what reason. You wrote that I said God's law was a technicality. I never did.
Yes, you did.
Here is where you did.
The technicality was to promote justice among men, who aren't privy to our hearts.
I said that your reading makes Christ the worst sort of lawyer. And I told you why.
No, it makes him capable of disarming a trap made by lawyers which were designed to bring him into a premature conflict with the Roman government.
Stop being emotional and a slave to your malice. In the meantime you're on ignore.
Well we know how long that lasted.
Nah nah! I'm calling YOUR idea of law 'Sharia Law'.
Since everything I have said so far comes from God's word, which contains HIS LAW, not my ideas of it, yes, yes you are calling HIS LAW 'Sharia law.'
And that's just about the only way you could win a debate here...... :idunno:
:darwinism:
Because your ideas seem unhinged.
Says the one who's can't even provide any semblance of a criminal code.
Again, why should I listen to what you have to say about what the laws should be when you don't even know yourself?
Look, since the OP (and you?) reckon that the left is dangerously unhinged, all of it (?) that suggests that about half the population of the USA is mentally disabled, just because of their political opinions. Right?
No. I'd say about 90-99% of the population has become or is in the process of becoming "unhinged." And the only way to "re-hinge" them is to re-establish laws that reflect God's laws.
So now let's look at those who would wish to cherry pick capital offences from the OT whilst ignoring the actual words and actions of Jesus........
Begging the question. Jesus never repealed any of the laws given in the OT, He only corrected what people had turned them into.
In your world you would want to hunt down and either painfully execute or beat LGBTs, adulterers, polygamists, polyamorists, children who curse their parents,
Those who are adults, in other words, know the difference between right and wrong, and who have resisted correction, yes. If you're referring to the verse I'm thinking you're thinking of, then I would like to point out that the word used that has been translated as "child(ren)" means "young man."
and more, and all these in addition to assaulters, robbers, burglars, manslaughterers, murderers, defraudsters, deception fraudsters, bilkers, tax evaders (!!!) and more......... and some of you actually think that your World would soon be a nice one?
I think it would be a world void or almost void of people who would commit those crimes.
And you actually think that executing crimes
You can't "execute" a crime...
of murder and manslaughter would reduce such crimes?
Yes. Because the death penalty IS a deterrent.
That's unhinged, because what would most certainly happen is that once a person has killed, or any of the above offences, then they'll not consider giving themselves up for a slow painful death.... to stay free and alive they'll kill again and again.... and again.
Because you say so?
No, criminals would be deterred from committing those crimes because they would fear being caught, tried, and publicly put to death.
Your idea of a Christian World wouldn't be a Christian World at all......
Sure it would.
not by Jesus's words and action it wouldn't.......
Because you apparently know Jesus better than Christians do. Isn't that right?
very dangerous, very unhinged......
Saying it doesn't make it so.
a theocratic nightmare.
Again with this nonsense.
Theocracy is rule by God.
Monarchy is rule by one man.
I'm a monarchist, I want a rule by one man.
I believe the word you're looking for is "theonomy," which is the advocation that man's laws should reflect God's laws.
And I wonder who would police your World? eh?
The police. Duh atrol: :dunce:
There you are, glued, chained, bolted and screwed down to just a few of the old laws of the Old Testament, just a few of them, wishing to totally ignore hundreds of the others whilst clinging to about twenty that you've become fanatical about.
Right, because you've given us better laws for us to live by. NOT! :mock:
And please don't hide behind the sacrificial laws because Jesus excluded those himself, already. There are 507 laws for your scrutiny, and you can start by adapting the poor laws to this modern World.
What other laws should we adhere to? :think:
You haven't really supplied any.
You seem to be in a Limbo between Christianity and the old Israelite laws, frankly........
"Theonomy" :think:
Do you honestly think that Jesus would wish to have anything to do with your theocratic world?
:deadhorse:
You do realise that you would be executing and beating people in almost the same way as fanatical Muslims, don't you?
Plenty of fallacies in this statement.
And you think that 'the left' is unhinged........ Wow!
And you think God is unhinged. WOW!
It is the other correlations that are more relevant, the teacher drew the two examples specifically as part of a discussion on the importance of civil and criminal rights in legal systems. They both did not or only paid lip service to protecting the rights of minorities and providing safeguards to protect the innocent wrongly accused. Thus almost all criminals were punished but many innocents suffered as well at the hands of the state.
On the other paw,
if you require absolute proof of guilt you will almost never convict anyone.
Justice in any legal system run by Humans, as was seen in contrasting these examples with systems that do provide such protections, is finding the right balance.
So much for the presumption of innocence? :shocked:
:deadhorse:
I'm pretty sure we've agreed and established He does. So you can stop using the "if" word here.
You mean, "why strive to be perfect, even if perfection is unattainable?"
Because righteousness is a worthy goal. If a system is inherently corrupt, and a better alternative is available, then one should stop using the corrupt system and switch to using the better system.
God would rather have justice executed swiftly, than risk a criminal dragging out the process unnecessarily.
Saying it isn't inherently broken doesn't make it so.
I have shown you how it is, in that it regularly acquits criminals who should have been punished.
I don't understand the reference...
A system that regularly acquits murderers IS useless, because it is unable to punish those who deserve to be punished.
To use an example I saw recently (if not on this thread, but on another thread on TOL), if I have a hard drive that has a damaged sector and I'm unable to repair it, then I consider the whole drive to be completely useless, even though the rest of the parts might be working fine.
If I have a bowl of soup, and someone puts rat poison in it, the entire bowl of soup is now inedible.
If I have a parachute that has a hole it, then that entire parachute is useless (until it can be fixed, if it can).
In the same way, if you a system that is supposed to bring justice to criminals, and yet regularly acquits criminals for various reasons, then the system is broken, and should not be used.
Neither am I. I'm a theonomist, which means that I think that man's laws should be a reflection of God's laws.
So if you oppose such a position, in that you oppose punishing the innocent for crimes they didn't commit, then why do you support the current system, which punishes innocent people for crimes they did not commit?
Not my problem.
Sure it would.
If we (America) implemented the death penalty as the punishment for capital crimes, as well as corporal punishment and restitution, at 0600 EST, and put to death all inmates on death row, and started trying, convicting, and punishing criminals according to their crimes, the crime rate would drop to nearly 0% by the next morning.
Why? Because everyone would be deterred by the idea of paying restitution, being flogged, or being executed because they broke the law, and they would realize that now they can no longer commit a crime and get away with it (which is the case currently, because the current system, while able to catch criminals, is quite often unable to actually punish them for their crime due to various reasons).
Sure I do. I assert that the one denying reality here is you, because you deny that God knows justice better than anyone else.
I think prison isn't enough of a deterrent for crime, just as time-out isn't enough of a punishment for children. But that's another topic for another thread.
No, they were arguments based on reality.
I'd appreciate it if you could at least humor me and address them.
· Appellate judges have a tendency to reverse convictions to demonstrate their own importance.
Is is not a fact that judges have a tendency to reverse convictions when appeals are made?
· A speedy trial and swift sentence are critical to the deterrence of crime.
In what way or ways is this not true?
· The delays inherent in an appellate system destroy the deterrent effect of swift justice.
In what way or ways is this not true?
· Criminals favor having an appeal process, which encourages crime.
Is this not true? If not, why?
· Appeals delay punishment and extend the suffering of the victim’s family.
Do appeals not delay punishment? Do they not extend the suffering of the victim's family?
· An appellate option makes it more difficult for criminals to respect the authority of a judge.
If a criminal knows he can appeal his case, and perhaps get a reversal, how can he possibly respect the authority?
· Appeals enable criminals to shop for gullible judges.
This goes back to the first point, if a judge feels like it would boost his reputation to overturn an earlier conviction, then criminals can use that to their advantage and escape punishment.
· Appeals increase crime; denying appeals reduces crime, the caseload, and thus, judicial errors.
If you have a bigger caseload, more resources are used up trying to punish criminals. A smaller caseload frees up those resources, and so fewer errors will be made.
In my system, they would have never been convicted in the first place. So what's your point?
Nope. They wouldn't have been convicted in the first place. :deadhorse:
And what's available currently is being used inefficiently, to the point where the authorities are unable to do what they're supposed to.
We agree. But how much more evidence can initially be brought to light if the system can be used far more efficiently?
Agreed, but even less so in God's system.
Nope, not at all.
A speedy trial (which right doesn't belong to the criminal, but to the people) where two or three witnesses (God's standard; not limited to "eyewitnesses") are brought against the accused (who, while guilty as soon as they commit a crime, is presumed innocent until proven guilty in court) deters criminals from committing crimes because it instills the fear of being caught and punished into them (a righteous man does not fear a righteous government, but a wicked man does; today there is no fear of the authorities, and cities have become warzones).
You keep asserting this, but have not provided any good reasoning as to why your standard is better than God's (if you have, please point me to the post where you did, so that I may address it).
If God originally required two or three witnesses for all crimes committed, regardless of their severity, and He never changed that requirement, what makes you think that absolute proof is necessary today? Why would forensics mean that the standard has changed? It just means that better evidence would be available to be used in court against a criminal, and since two or three witnesses is enough to convict (according to God), then "absolute proof" is unnecessary. More below.
Accused persons are presumed innocent until proven guilty in court. If a person cannot be proven guilty based on two or three witnesses, then they cannot be punished for a crime.
The judge examines the evidence and questions the accused directly. If the accused maintains that he is innocent, and the evidence fits his defence, then it's likely that he's innocent, and he would not be charged with a crime.
However, if he maintains that he is innocent, yet the two or three witnesses do not fit his defence, then it's likely that he's lying, which is an indicator of guilt (to at least some extent).
There's very little room for error at all, yet still enough give to prevent what you keep saying will happen in my system.
The term is "city of refuge." It's an actual city, not a farm.
And are you asserting that George couldn't take him?
I'm asking to see if you know what it is. Do you know?
And what should the penalty be, in your opinion?
Again, I'm asking to find out if you know what the Biblical death penalty is. Do you know? If not, I recommend you find out.
Duh.
Yet both are capital crimes.
:AMR:
I think that all are equal under the law.
Correlation does not equal causation.
You of all people should know that.
Was Vlad a wicked man? Most likely. Were his methods of execution unecessarily violent? Sure.
Is his swift punishment of criminals
Rather, I've set out my argument prior and numerous times.But you won't explain.
Like having your posture critiqued by Quasimodo.You've shown no capacity to even understand...
Rather, if you're going to claim that he did you have to offer proof that isn't in the narrative. What is in the record is clear evidence of another intent. I'll come back to this.You are not justified in insisting that Jesus did not present the law. He may well have.
No, it isn't. That's been proffered more than once and not by me.2. "The point of the narrative was defeating a legalistic trap" is a straw man.
What actually happened was this:We might not provide this as the point of the story. What has happened is that you introduced this story as an apparent counter to Jerry's justification of the DP. You apparently believe this story overturns the law. We have been showing you how it does not. We have not been discussing what we think is the story's main point.
And at the same time he illustrates the problem with the DP beyond that moment, as he was innocent.Without Christ being put to death for our sins (for the wages of sin is death), no man could ever be saved (Psalm 49:7-9, 15).
Neither of those are true for the reasons offered prior. If I note that a legal trap is set before Christ and he doesn't respond to the nature of that trap, but propounds a different standard, all I'm really doing is noting the fact. That fact has logical inference. Neither noting that fact nor setting out a reasoned proffer about the actual response are arguments from silence.So, an argument from silence and a straw man. And the argument from silence was what you were trying to defend.
I forget you're a foreigner from time to time, but aren't you a native speaker with at least a little formal education? Discourse is written or oral communication. "It" is a pronoun taking the place of the legal discussion. "Those present" would be the mob. So it means the legal conversation that the mob set before him didn't enter into his communication to them, where he set a different standard.You think it was about the law. Could it have been the law? "It didn't reach his discourse with those present"? What does that mean?
He literally did. He said that the one without sin could throw the first stone. I"He presented a different standard"? No, He didn't.
That's an actual straw man because you advance your argument, that it isn't a legal standard, on the assumption that I have said it was, which I didn't.He said: "Him without sin." That's not a legal standard.
You're quoting what you believe it necessitates. And your understanding is contrary to the function of that law. To say bring both parties for judgement is not the same as saying "Because if you only bring one the one can't be tried." And if that had been the case the easy dismissal by Jesus in support of business as usual would have been to note it.What's to believe? I'm quoting the law.
I reject your reasoning. If you want to personalize it that's you. And I think you've demonstrated over the course of your posting that to you it's the same thing and that is a problem for you.Yes. You criticize us, saying we turn Jesus into a lawyer.
No, supra.Ah hah! The law says both should be brought. From your very lips! The law. Do you see now that she could not have been justly convicted in that setting?
No, it isn't. It would make the law the sort of thing Jesus criticized in the religious leaders of the day, by robbing it of justice, making it a slave to form. Or, as I've written before, the law serves justice. To approach it the other way around is to make the same mistake the priests made about the wheat his apostles ate.That "lucky you" part is irrelevant.
No, which is why you say it without demonstrating it, over and over.Yes, you do waffle.
That has nothing to do with and doesn't support the waffling bit, by way of. It's just on to the next spurious charge, mostly about me. And if you don't bring up a new point you can't complain about my noting it or talking about the old.You fragment posts so they are impenetrable and talk about things you've said.
You take silly little snippets of posts and build entire paragraphs around them.
Nah. I have left off answering questions that are essentially restatements of previous points made and answered though.You delete the questions you are asked that show how thin your position is.
See, I told you the so what in the line you don't appear to understand. So yes, I sometimes don't answer people when they appear indifferent readers or incapable of handling fairly straight forward propositions.Town: "For men, who could not know what He knows."
Yes, the law is for men. So what?
So I'm telling you the law is for men who don't have his knowledge, the knowledge of her guilt. The law provided them a means to arrive at judgement and to carry it out. Christ understood what the law was aimed to discover and he understood it perfectly, without the process of law.It says "both," you know? Was that "for men"?
So you need to pay attention. I'd just told you the answer. You either can't or won't understand that, which is why I leave off worrying with some questions, like that one.Town: "The procedure is meant to serve justice."
Yes, the law is meant to serve justice. So what?
Supra. :sigh:It says "both," you know? Was that meant to serve justice?
Hey JR. I thought I was pretty clear on the point, but though I notice my name was somewhere in the middle of that sprawling bit, I'm just not going to bother to weed through that much to other people to get to it. It's a formatting pain among other considerations.I'm pretty sure we've agreed and established He does. So you can stop using the "if" word here...