Elijah John wrote:
And there are. Many good passages, too many to list them all. And those determined to dump on the Bible and the people who produced it will ignore them, no matter how many I or other believers enumerate.
Are there too many to list even two or three from the Tanakh? I'm trying to think of a few off the top of my head, and so far struggling.
First I thought about the introduction of God's name to 'Moses' and the prohibition against graven images, from which we might extract the worthy idea that the real name and nature of God is ultimately unknowable. But as it's actually
written, we find authors who viewed God's real nature as jealous and cruelly vindictive against children for parents' disobedience (Exodus 20:4-6).
Then I thought about the injunctions to give justice and show compassion towards resident foreigners, widows, orphans and the poor; even in enlightened 21st century democracies, sometimes the loudest voices seem to be outright opposing those noble ideals. But again, this was written by people whose god would kill people for non-lethal mistreatment of widows and orphans, again punishing the children for the father's disobedience by making
them orphans. Completely forbidding interest on loans to the poor also arguably
disincentivizes helping them out; a nice thought, but hardly universal wisdom (Exodus 22:21-27).
In desperation I turned finally to Jeremiah's promise of a 'new covenant,' an egalitarian one written on hearts and minds rather in the pages penned by iron age social engineers. But even that - lovely and potentially progressive though the idea may be - is not a universal one, written and promised specifically for Israel alone (Jeremiah 31:31-34).
I guess there's "Don't kill"? Granted the authors then go on to list dozens of orders to kill, but maybe we can ignore all of that and pretend that rather than being pretty basic and obvious common sense, "don't kill," "don't steal" and so on are a universal and timeless source of inspiration. Or maybe there's some nice stuff in the Psalms, if we can find any without too much obseqious grovelling before the author's idea of God or promises of said deity destroying the author's enemies?
Genuinely curious if there actually are any passages there which are simply good and wise, clearly and universally, without needing a bunch of caveats or reinterpretation.