No, I know that's an overstatement, but it's not that much of an overstatement. I start flipping through the Bible at the beginning of Meeting for Worship looking for a passage I can unite with. Pentateuch? No, it has God telling the Israelites to kill all of those they have invaded. God never did any such thing. Psalms? No, they keep saying that if David (or whoever) is obedient his enemies will be trashed. And the same objection applies to most of the Old Testament, although I love Isaiah 58, not least because I learned it first as the Lent hymn "Now quit your care". I go on to a gospel, and it has Jesus saying "There will not be left a stone of the Temple on another stone". That may have been written back in after Jesus' death and after the Rebellion, but in any case even that is not true. I have to go all the way to the end of Romans, where Paul and Tertius are greeting the Christians in Rome by their names, before I find something I have no problems with. I may of course be arrogant, but if I were advising anyone to read the Bible I wd be advising them to pick and choose very carefully. See also The Bible for Grownups.
These are the Keys Jesus supposedly awarded to St Peter, the keys of the Kingdom. He gave them to him before Peter promised to stick with him no matter what, and then disowned him three times, but not before Peter had developed the habit of opening his mouth and putting his foot in it. So if this story has some truth to it Jesus selected as Judge a man who would always have to have allowances made for him. (Interestingly, Peter does pass Paul's requirement that an Overseer/ episcopos should be a married man.) I have an amusing but moving image of a sort of Board Meeting in Heaven at which the participants are Jesus, St Peter, and God. They are discussing how humankind are coming along. The impatient one is Jesus who made, allegedly, the biggest and most painful effort to put humankind right. He says "They should be doing better than this by now". Peter, as is his wont, says "But you have to make allowances". And God says "But the suffering, the...

Sorry folks a bit of Quaker promotion follows, look away now if you are allergic. We rewrite our Book of Discipline once every 30 years or so. That means it reflects our experience Now. We also don't feel we have to come to a Single Answer on any subject-- nor does The Bible, if we take it as a whole.
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