Comment: - Here are some of
the "good" verses of the Bible regarding ethics
provided by Is. In an e-mail. Is asked for a list of verses that have to do with
"good" ethics. I asked other Christians to provide a list, and Is. was the only
one that was able to do so. Thanks Is.
The verses you have chosen seem ethically sound.
To most people (with the exception of psychopaths -- recent research shows
that the approximately 1% of the population that are psychopaths are this
way because of their genetics) these verses would naturally sound ethical
-- good ethics is innate in most people's natural make-up.
If the Bible consisted only of the verses you mentioned it could be used as
a source of good ethical advice, which would bring forth the natural goodness
that is in people. Of course the rest of the Bible could still be appreciated for
presenting the primitive beliefs and practices of ancient people. The bible is
true in describing an ancient, unscientific culture, where knowledge of the
universe was scarce. It is an interesting book for studying an ancient culture,
their beliefs, values, and their meaning of life. However, if the Bible was
reorganized any rewriting of the Bible would require a partition between
the "good ethical verses" and the rest of it.
(1) Matt 22:39 39
"The second is like it, 'You shall love your neighbor as yourself.' (NAS)
(If we follow all of these things will we live a life full of love and
happiness?
Probably not, but it will be good and ethical as befits a human being,
treating all equally, loving all equally, no more could be asked of a person. )
(Prayer must be in private, not in front of other people.
Do not repeat things over and over again in prayer.
Be very suspicious of any praying in public.)
(Good principles - as long as by God, it means
your personal God
[Jesus is not mentioned here,
but your unique,
personal version of Jesus could be
your god] and if you
have a personal 'no God' then
with no God.
There are as many gods as there are
god believers, even in
the same congregation,
each different
from the other.).
(This is one with reservations:
(1) Back to kill and murder mentioned earlier. How could
you kill
your enemy in war when you are supposed to "love your enemy"?
(2) This is an improvement over Israelite imperialism,
but the fact that it is nondiscriminatory does not make it an exceptional
moral guide. It is not realistic -- You cannot have equal feelings for
all people. It cheapens love to bring everyone to the same level.)
(The Biblical God didn't love everyone, so he isn't perfect either.)