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> Creationism is mental gymnastics to support an established orthodoxy.

As a creationist, if I believe that God as described in the Bible exists, and I have a statement from Him on how the world was created, that also matches every observation I have made of the world around me, isn't it ridiculous to believe in something else that contradicts the Bible?


Yes, it is, if there is literally no evidence to the contrary, you have never heard any consistent claims otherwise, and you have never experienced anything that would cast it into doubt. That's not the reality we live in, though. The Bible can't even keep from contradicting itself, so external evidence isn't even necessary to doubt the literal word of it.

Some of their higher end competition like the ACSL SOTEN [1] have LTE connectivity for remote control, this might just be to limit competition at the high end of the market.

1. https://product.acsl.co.jp/en/product/post-369/


> ACSL SOTEN [1] have LTE connectivity for remote control

LTE connectivity that would use US infrastructure (LTE towers) for its connection.

Unless the drones start shipping with satellite radio, I'm not sure what the scare is about, seems to be mostly about that Chinese products just shouldn't be available to the average American.


It still serves a legal purpose, as long as it's difficult enough. If you need to physically modify the device to access the keys, then bringing the unmodified device to court should be enough to verify legitimacy of the signature.


Since when are we taking photojournalists and social media users to court to verify each image?


For example, the Bible bans this based on at least two premises (although interpretation/enforcement varies between churches). Ephesians 5:18 commands Christians to not be drunk, based on other passages like 1 Corinthians 6, this is commonly extended to anything that inhibits your mental faculties for pleasure. Romans 13 commands Christians to obey the authorities, and cannabis is currently federally illegal in the USA.


As a professing Christian, I would say your reading is correct, but this verse (like the rest of the ceremonial and judicial laws) is a command given specifically to Israel, not to all readers. Capital punishment is very common in this code of law, as it was in other civilizations from this time period. There are many laws that have to do with keeping sin and impurity/health risks out of the camp, and this is, by biblical standards, both of those. By modern standards it's a terrible law, but it was never intended for modern use.


So why is it still there?

I'm sure that at least some Abrahamic writings didn't get included in the Christian Bible. Or even in the Tanakh.


> So why is it still there?

Why is it part of the Christian Canon? Because it provides important context for later material, e.g., Acts 15. The controversy in the early Christian Community over the application of the Jewish ritual law to gentile Christians is hard to understand without the Jewish ritual law.

Also, not all Christians are gentile Christians.


Thanks.

Maybe this is a dumb question (having had no religious instruction) but do all modern Christians (except, I guess, some fundamentalists) understand that the Old Testament doesn't apply to them? If that's so, it seems like that stuff should be flagged somehow, to avoid misunderstandings.

Or do some modern gentile Christians perhaps go further, and believe that the old Jewish ritual law was a misunderstanding, and not an accurate statement of God's will? And if so, who are they?

Also, who are the modern non-gentile Christians?

I found a site that explains some of this,[0] but have no clue about its reliability. The root is here.[1]

0) http://www.winternet.com/~swezeyt/bible/origins/jwGn.htm

1) http://www.winternet.com/~swezeyt/bible/origins/originsMain....


> Maybe this is a dumb question (having had no religious instruction) but do all modern Christians (except, I guess, some fundamentalists) understand that the Old Testament doesn't apply to them?

I know of no modern Christian group that doesn't have a general understanding that the applicability of the OT law to Christians is, at a minimum, limited by the explicit terms of Acts 15. OTOH, there's obviously quite a bit of variation in what particular bits of the OT law modern Christian groups think actually still applies.

> If that's so, it seems like that stuff should be flagged somehow, to avoid misunderstandings

It's kind of (in general, not necessarily the specific passage in particular) the reason that the Catholic Church spent a very long time not being particularly happy with people without specific training reading the Bible themselves rather than going through tainted clergy as gatekeepers.

> Or do some modern gentile Christians perhaps go further, and believe that the old Jewish ritual law was a misunderstanding, and not an accurate statement of God's will? And if so, who are they?

Without getting into boundary disputes about where "Christian" ends, sure, there are probably groups that identify as Christian that believe that.

> Also, who are the modern non-gentile Christians?

One interpretation is that anyone who has ever been a Jew remains one and boundy the law even if they become Christian. (Of course, even the Jewish understanding of Jewish law seems to have h evolved—and become quite diverse—considerably since Christianity split off, and I'm not sure how much that influences theology as to what precepts, precisely, apply to modern Jews who become Christians.)


Thank you.

> It's kind of (in general, not necessarily the specific passage in particular) the reason that the Catholic Church spent a very long time not being particularly happy with people without specific training reading the Bible themselves rather than going through tainted clergy as gatekeepers.

OK, that makes sense. There's some of that perspective in the sciences about misunderstanding of the literature.


FWIW, I've met a Dominionist family that practiced the entirety of OT, including all the ritual purity laws. I never really clarified it, but it sounded like it was a thing in their local denomination in general.

They also did believe that the government should be structured according to those same OT provisions, and enforce them as laws.


> rather than going through tainted clergy as gatekeepers.

“trained” rather than “tainted” was the intent here.


Yes, I figured that :)

But from the Protestants' perspective, "tainted" arguably works too.


> Also, who are the modern non-gentile Christians?

That sounds like Messianic Judaism.


Depends on the issuer. In this case they do not - see https://www.synchronybankterms.com/gecrbterms/pdf/Amazon.com..., section V


Not sure about 2016 but I paid $139 for my iPhone SE in 2017, from a prepaid carrier (Straight Talk).


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