The Ten Commandments Required
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wrote on 21 Jun 2024, 06:14 last edited by
φονεύσεις
That would have been the word used in the Septuagint in Exodus 20:13. Which also is the shortest commandment.
KJV translated it as "kill". It's actually "murder".
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wrote on 21 Jun 2024, 07:32 last edited by
If it’s any help, the Hebrew is “murder”. “ Kill”would be a different verb as it is in English.
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wrote on 21 Jun 2024, 10:37 last edited by
Murder is something I've always tried to avoid taking part in. We actually didn't need a sign up at our school to point out that this was frowned upon, but I guess you chaps might need more of a reminder, what with everything.
Maybe there should be a lot more signs. 'Thou shalt not pee in they pants!', 'Thou shalt not fiddle about with thyself, even whilst ye attractive Miss Walsh is teaching thee ye olde trigonometree'
It couldn't hurt, right?
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Murder is something I've always tried to avoid taking part in. We actually didn't need a sign up at our school to point out that this was frowned upon, but I guess you chaps might need more of a reminder, what with everything.
Maybe there should be a lot more signs. 'Thou shalt not pee in they pants!', 'Thou shalt not fiddle about with thyself, even whilst ye attractive Miss Walsh is teaching thee ye olde trigonometree'
It couldn't hurt, right?
wrote on 21 Jun 2024, 10:46 last edited by@Doctor-Phibes that was Ax-like in its missing of the point.
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φονεύσεις
That would have been the word used in the Septuagint in Exodus 20:13. Which also is the shortest commandment.
KJV translated it as "kill". It's actually "murder".
wrote on 21 Jun 2024, 10:52 last edited by@Jolly said in The Ten Commandments Required:
KJV translated it as "kill". It's actually "murder".
Yet the Louisiana law uses the word "kill" anyway.
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@Jolly said in The Ten Commandments Required:
KJV translated it as "kill". It's actually "murder".
Yet the Louisiana law uses the word "kill" anyway.
wrote on 21 Jun 2024, 11:21 last edited by@Axtremus said in The Ten Commandments Required:
@Jolly said in The Ten Commandments Required:
KJV translated it as "kill". It's actually "murder".
Yet the Louisiana law uses the word "kill" anyway.
And your point is?
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@Axtremus said in The Ten Commandments Required:
@Jolly said in The Ten Commandments Required:
KJV translated it as "kill". It's actually "murder".
Yet the Louisiana law uses the word "kill" anyway.
And your point is?
wrote on 21 Jun 2024, 12:34 last edited by@Jolly said in The Ten Commandments Required:
@Axtremus said in The Ten Commandments Required:
@Jolly said in The Ten Commandments Required:
KJV translated it as "kill". It's actually "murder".
Yet the Louisiana law uses the word "kill" anyway.
And your point is?
That the Louisiana legislature deliberately mean "kill" rather than "murder" in the law.
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@Jolly said in The Ten Commandments Required:
@Axtremus said in The Ten Commandments Required:
@Jolly said in The Ten Commandments Required:
KJV translated it as "kill". It's actually "murder".
Yet the Louisiana law uses the word "kill" anyway.
And your point is?
That the Louisiana legislature deliberately mean "kill" rather than "murder" in the law.
wrote on 21 Jun 2024, 13:20 last edited by@Axtremus said in The Ten Commandments Required:
@Jolly said in The Ten Commandments Required:
@Axtremus said in The Ten Commandments Required:
@Jolly said in The Ten Commandments Required:
KJV translated it as "kill". It's actually "murder".
Yet the Louisiana law uses the word "kill" anyway.
And your point is?
That the Louisiana legislature deliberately mean "kill" rather than "murder" in the law.
Why don't you ask them?
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@Doctor-Phibes that was Ax-like in its missing of the point.
wrote on 21 Jun 2024, 14:27 last edited by@Mik said in The Ten Commandments Required:
@Doctor-Phibes that was Ax-like in its missing of the point.
Well, these guys are focusing on the apparent mis-translation of the original text by renowned witch-obsessed Scottish homosexual King James I, so I figured any old bollocks was open to discussion.
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wrote on 21 Jun 2024, 15:47 last edited by
Isn't it always?
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wrote on 21 Jun 2024, 16:48 last edited by
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wrote on 21 Jun 2024, 16:50 last edited by
@jon-nyc said in The Ten Commandments Required:
Won't fly, the Louisiana law explicitly specifies the text that must be displayed.
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wrote on 21 Jun 2024, 16:51 last edited by
After being educated by Advisory Opinions….
The case isn’t as much of a slam dunk as I thought because the praying football coach case did strike down the old ‘Lemon test’ (named for a court case) that had invalidated similar laws in the past.
Both Sarah and David think Louisiana loses in the end though. And if they win a similar law replacing the Ten Commandments with the five pillars of Islam would also be allowed.
Go to about 41:30 in the most recent AO if you’re interested in details.
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wrote on 21 Jun 2024, 18:00 last edited by
@jon-nyc said in The Ten Commandments Required:
Content in the realization that I’m the only one here that can read that.
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@jon-nyc said in The Ten Commandments Required:
Content in the realization that I’m the only one here that can read that.
wrote on 21 Jun 2024, 18:49 last edited by@bachophile Ok, question : Do we really know what the vowels are in ancient Hebrew?
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wrote on 22 Jun 2024, 05:06 last edited by bachophile
Vowels are a later addition
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hebrew_diacritics
I can’t say if Biblical Hebrew sounded the same, but the text is readily apparent and understandable
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wrote on 22 Jun 2024, 11:49 last edited by
So how did that Hungarian composer spell his name again?
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wrote on 22 Jun 2024, 13:14 last edited by
@Renauda said in The Ten Commandments Required:
Which one? Lszt, Brtk, Kdl or Lgt?
The second, of course.
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wrote on 23 Jun 2024, 01:01 last edited by LuFins Dad
MN — Following Louisiana's recent addition of the Ten Commandments to school classrooms, sources close to George Floyd Elementary reported that a teacher who keeps BLM and Pride flags prominently displayed in her classroom demanded that the government "keep all religion out of our schools."
Eyewitnesses in the classroom said indigenous history and genderqueer theory teacher Ladasha Sullet was "absolutely flabbergasted" to hear about Louisiana's new mandate and immediately started shouting about how the government's job is to "keep any and all religions out of the classroom, not shove them down children's throats."
"That's a total violation of the separation of the church and state!" exclaimed Sullet, momentarily pausing her lecture on the femmeboy branch of genderfluidity to make sure her fourth-grade students properly understood her position on the issue. "There is absolutely no call for any sort of religion to be represented or displayed in a public school classroom — ever! Stop preaching at us!"
Students reported that Sullet continued her rant about not letting religion into public schools for the rest of the class period, then dismissed class after carefully adjusting her Pride flag and genuflecting before a small portrait of George Floyd she keeps as a shrine on her desk.
At publishing time, Sullet had instituted daily readings from Mao's Little Red Book for her students after teaching them how dangerous and destructive it would be for any teacher to read students religious books like the Bible.