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Joana Mota shared a video.
1 hr
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A Obra Completa de J.H. Santos Barros, “Alexandrina, como era”, organizada por Jorge Reis-Sá, inclui vários inéditos, e conta com um prefácio de António Lobo Antunes, que qualifica alguns dos poemas como “magníficos”.
Source: Obra Completa de J.H. Santos Barros, “Alexandrina, como era”, inclui inéditos – Açoriano Oriental
https://www.acorianooriental.pt/noticia/obra-completa-de-j-h-santos-barros-alexandrina-como-era-inclui-ineditos-297718
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7 mins
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26 February at 22:41
So… even Chinese robot vacuum cleaners upload information on a daily basis to China… (Link courtesy Pedro Aniceto)
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10 hrs
Many interpretations of old religious texts are simply and/or conveniently wrong. Take the myth of Sodom and Gomorrah as an example: it has nothing to do with homosexuality! Link courtesy Eleanor Wynn)
Recently, Franklin Graham reacted to a commentmadebyformerPresident Jimmy Carter to theHuffingtonPostseveralyearsago. Carter said, “Jesus wouldpromoteanyloveaffairifitwashonestorsincereandwasnotdamaging to anyoneelse. AndIdon’tseethat gay marriagedamagesanyoneelse.”
Breitbartdugupthecommentrecently, and Graham responded, “Ihave to respectfullydisagreewithformerPresident Jimmy Carter onthisone. Heisabsolutelywrongwhenhesaid Jesus wouldapproveof gay marriage. Jesus didn’t come to promotesin, He came to saveusfromsin. TheBibleisveryclear. GoddestroyedthecitiesofSodomandGomorrahbecauseofhomosexuality.” Graham concludedhispostbyquotingRomans 1:24-27.
TheGenesistext
ThestoryofSodomandGomorrahisoneofthefavoritepassagesofpersonswhoopposesame-sexbehavior. ItoccursinGenesis 19:1-29. However, twoearlierpassages are prelude to this. InGenesis 13:12-13, thetextsaysthatthepeopleofSodomwere “wicked, greatsinnersagainsttheLord.” Also, in 18:16-21 Godinforms Abraham: “HowgreatistheoutcryagainstSodomandGomorrahandhowvery grave theirsin!” (v. 20). However, neithertextexplainswhatmakesthesecitiessinful. Soreaders must inferthenatureoftheirsinfulnessfromthestorytoldinGenesis 19.
Here’s the story: Abraham’s nephew, Lot, lives in Sodom. Two angels in the guise of men come to Lot’s home in Sodom. Lot invites them to spend the night in his home. At first, the two angels say they prefer to spend the night in the town square (v. 2), but Lot is able to persuade them to come inside his home (presumably where it is safer). Before they all go to bed “the men of Sodom, both young and old, all the people to the last man, surrounded the house” (19:4) and demand that Lot send out his two guests so that “we may know them.” Lot tries to dissuade the mob from its course, even offering his two daughters to them (v. 8); but the crowd dismisses Lot as an “alien” and tries to seize him. The two angels pull him back inside the house to safety, and then they strike the men outside with blindness (v. 11). The next morning, the angels lead Lot’s family out of the city. Then God pours down sulfur and fire on Sodom and Gomorrah, destroying its inhabitants (v. 25).
Using Ezekiel and Judges to interpret
While several other biblical texts refer to Sodom (and sometimes Gomorrah), the only one that comments on Sodom’s sinfulness is the sixth century BCE prophet Ezekiel: “This was the guilt of your sister Sodom: she and her daughters had pride, excess of food, and prosperous ease, but did not aid the poor and needy. They were haughty, and did abominable things before me; therefore I removed them when I saw it” (16:49-50). The Hebrew word translated “abominable things” is to’evah. Sometimes this term is used with reference to sexual offenses (as in Leviticus 18:22), but this term has a broad range of meanings. According to the Encyclopedia Judaica, “Common to all these usages is the notion of irregularity, that which offends the accepted order, ritual, or moral.” Ezekiel 16 says nothing about same sex behavior. Context determines what Ezekiel meant by “abomination”: Sodom’s “abomination” was that she did not aid the poor and needy.
Judges 19 provides a chillingly similar story to the Sodom story in Genesis. An unnamed man from the tribe of Levi is traveling with his servant and his concubine. They arrive in the town of Gibeah and plan to spend the night in the town square. A little later, a man living in Gibeah, but described as from the country of Ephraim, comes upon them. He warns them that they are not safe in the open and takes the three to his home. Soon “the men of the city, a perverse lot” surround the house and demand that the owner send out the Levite “so that we may know him.” Like Lot, the owner tries to dissuade the mob. He offers to send out his virgin daughter and the Levite’s concubine. When the mob refuses to accept this offer, the Levite throws his poor concubine out the door anyway. The men of Gibeah rape her and abuse her all night long. It is a horrific story. The women dies as a result.
The Sodom story and the Gibeah story mutually interpret one another. First, the angels and the Levite are strangers, aliens. Lot and the Ephraimite man who lives in Gibeah are “resident aliens”. They are not native to Sodom or Gibeah. Such people were vulnerable to citizens suspicious of outsiders. Second, the men of Sodom and Gibeah use sexual violence—rape—to maltreat the outsiders. The Gibeah episode makes clear that the interest of the mob is not sexual gratification or homosexual behavior; their objective is to inflict violence on the aliens in their midst.
Homosexual: a word that’s biblically non-existent
The Sodom story never tells us that the men of Sodom were homosexuals. That word does not exist in the Bible. Genesis says that all of the city of Sodom “to the last man” came out to surround Lot and his visitors (19:4). Are we are to imagine a city comprised exclusively of homosexual men? Surely, there were women and children in the city! It is a fair inference that some of the mob gathered about Lot’s door were married men. The same holds for the Gibeah story. If one insists that the actions of the men of Sodom are an indictment of homosexual behavior, would one also not have to interpret the Gibeah story as an indictment of heterosexual behavior?
The stories of Sodom and Gibeah are examples of mob violence committed against outsiders. That’s the sin of Sodom—not homosexual behavior.
This post is the opinion and contribution of the author. It does not necessarily reflect the opinion of Westar or its scholars. Westar welcomes diversity of thought. If you’d like to contribute to the blog, click here.
Perry V. Kea is Associate Professor of biblical studies at the University of Indianapolis, Indiana. He has been a Fellow of the Jesus Seminar since 1987, in the course of which he has contributed several papers. He has also written for The Fourth R. In addition to his academic interests and responsibilities, Kea is an active United Methodist layperson and has made numerous presentations about the Bible for clergy and lay groups.
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um povo que não respeita sua história está condenado ao olvido e à extinção Chrys Chrystello 1996
Fantástico!
Antigo sistema de receber águas das chuvas.
No incio rebocado com pozolana, tufo, areia fina e Cal.
Tem as marcas de vários períodos século XVIII? Tem um aplicador de ferro fundido de bombear a água do século XIX.No século XX as casas e estábulos de cavalos levaram telhas em canudo e as águas das telhas foram canalizadas para o interior deste circulo que tem um grande tanque bem fundo. A arquitetura Rural era engenhosa e funcional.
Foi uma grande surpresa para mim encontrar este belíssimo sistema .
10 hrs
Fantástico!
Antigo sistema de receber águas das chuvas.
No incio rebocado com pozolana, tufo, areia fina e Cal.
Tem as marcas de vários períodos século XVIII? Tem um aplicador de ferro fundido de bombear a água do século XIX.No século XX as casas e estábulos de cavalos levaram telhas em canudo e as águas das telhas foram canalizadas para o interior deste circulo que tem um grande tanque bem fundo. A arquitetura Rural era engenhosa e funcional.
Foi uma grande surpresa para mim encontrar este belíssimo sistema .
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SERÁ QUE “COMUNISTAS COMEM CRIANCINHAS”?
A Política de Lenine e de Estaline fez surgir o canibalismo na URSS
António Justo (mais…)