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Kiran
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26 Apr 2011, 11:50 am

What it says in the title.
Personally I've read a bit of the Qu'ran, but I got bored with it pretty fast.
I've also read most of the Bhagavad-Gita, but eventually I got bored with it too.
I've read the Bible all the way to Psalms in the hebrew scriptures and all the way to Romans in the greek scriptures and I'm planning on reading the whole Bible. Of the three books I think the Bible was the most accessible for regular people to understand. The Bhagavad-Gita, for example, may be a bit hard to comprehend for people who aren't very good at abstract thinking.
I'm also thinking about reading the Book of Mormons and the Vedas eventually, but I really want to finish reading the Bible first, which may take a while.
So, what religious scriptures have you read and what did you think?


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MONKEY
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26 Apr 2011, 12:11 pm

I've flicked through the bible before at school and have read the more well known pages. It didn't make much sense because of the archaic English (thee and thou and all that).


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26 Apr 2011, 12:21 pm

I read the Daodejing, Bardo Thodol, & the Diamond and Heart Sutras, there's great wisdom in theres texts.
I have an interest in eastern philosophy & wish to read more Buddhist & Daoist texts soon.

I read the Book of Mormon a few times I ended up becoming a member of the LDS church after reading it for the 1st time.
After reading the Book of Mormon, I suggest that you might what to read both the Doctrine and Covenants, and
Pearl of Great Price to add to your reading experience of the Book of Mormon.



MarketAndChurch
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26 Apr 2011, 1:49 pm

Im rereading the story of Lot when Sodom is about to be destroyed and the angels are trying to take him out of the city.

Chapter 19, verse 16. There are many translations, saying he "Hesitated" or "lingered" or "tarried" or "doddled" or "vayitmahmah" in hebrew, but I find it cute that when this word is sung... (there are musical notes on every word in the Torah because there is no punctuation between the words, so it is sung to clue you in on where to stop, when to pause, etc.) there is a musical note in the torah called shalshelet and a shalshelet is when, while singing, you hold the end of the word for extended period to emphasize a clash of deep emotions, hesitation, and anxiety.

So sung in english, chapter 19 verse 16 is sung like:
"but he Liiiiiinnnnnnnngggggggggggggggggg, iiiiiiinnnnnnnnggggggggggggggggg, iiiiiiinnnnnnnngggggggerd" (with the word "lingered" sung like a shalshelet).

In other words... he didn't want to leave. They use this musical note, the shalshelet again down the road in the bible when Joseph "refuses" his master Potiphar's wife attempts at an affair lol. Joseph had the urge to bone her, but bless him for not givving into temptation and screwing another mans wife.


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LKL
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26 Apr 2011, 2:40 pm

about half of the bible
bits and pieces of the koran
the analects of Confucius
the tao te ching
the part of the bagavad gita where Krishna reveals himself
A couple of buddhist sutras
zen flesh, zen bones



ryan93
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26 Apr 2011, 2:47 pm

I've read half the Koran, and bits of the Bible.


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Philologos
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27 Apr 2011, 8:48 am

OT, NT, the standard Apocrypha, a lot of other apocryphal texts,, most of not all the Qur'an, parts of the Book of Mormon and the Mandaic texts, snatches of the Veda and Avesta as well as Egyptian, Sumerian and Akkadian texts.

Outside the standard Abrahamic scriptures, motivation is more linguistic than cintent.



JakobVirgil
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27 Apr 2011, 9:52 am

the torah
the talmud
The Zohar
the xtian scriptures, gospels + epistles + revelation + apocrypha
a bunch of un-offical gospels thomas, judas, proto-evangelium of James.
Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses
the Holy Piby
the diadache
most of the gnostic stuff hymn of the pearl, shepard of hermas, the Nag Hammadi Library stuff.
the LDS cannon, the book of mormon, pearl of great price, doctrine and covenents, book of commandments
everything mandean The Ginza Rba (really the Qolastā), Haran Gawaitha
the Koran
some hadith mostly that concerning Jesus
Gathas
some of the Kitêba Cilwe and Mishefa Reş
The Tao
some other stuff I am sure ( I read alot)


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ruveyn
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27 Apr 2011, 10:06 am

JakobVirgil wrote:
the torah
the talmud
The Zohar
the xtian scriptures, gospels + epistles + revelation + apocrypha
a bunch of un-offical gospels thomas, judas, proto-evangelium of James.
Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses
the Holy Piby
the diadache
most of the gnostic stuff hymn of the pearl, shepard of hermas, the Nag Hammadi Library stuff.
the LDS cannon, the book of mormon, pearl of great price, doctrine and covenents, book of commandments
everything mandean The Ginza Rba (really the Qolastā), Haran Gawaitha
the Koran
some hadith mostly that concerning Jesus
Gathas
some of the Kitêba Cilwe and Mishefa Reş
The Tao
some other stuff I am sure ( I read alot)


It it is all mostly nonsense.

ruveyn



JakobVirgil
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27 Apr 2011, 11:08 am

ruveyn wrote:
JakobVirgil wrote:
the torah
the talmud
The Zohar
the xtian scriptures, gospels + epistles + revelation + apocrypha
a bunch of un-offical gospels thomas, judas, proto-evangelium of James.
Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses
the Holy Piby
the diadache
most of the gnostic stuff hymn of the pearl, shepard of hermas, the Nag Hammadi Library stuff.
the LDS cannon, the book of mormon, pearl of great price, doctrine and covenents, book of commandments
everything mandean The Ginza Rba (really the Qolastā), Haran Gawaitha
the Koran
some hadith mostly that concerning Jesus
Gathas
some of the Kitêba Cilwe and Mishefa Reş
The Tao
some other stuff I am sure ( I read alot)


It it is all mostly nonsense.

ruveyn


I disagree, it is all non-sense


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We must not buy their fruits:
Who knows upon what soil they fed
Their hungry thirsty roots??

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Kiran
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27 Apr 2011, 1:58 pm

MONKEY wrote:
I've flicked through the bible before at school and have read the more well known pages. It didn't make much sense because of the archaic English (thee and thou and all that).


Yeah, I hate how they use old english in most Bible translations, the Bible should be understandable to everybody. But there are translations that have more modern english, you can find them if you search for them. As someone who as read a lot of the Bible myself, I have to say that the most well known pages are not always the most interesting. There are very interesting chapters that are rarely talk about.


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Kiran
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27 Apr 2011, 2:18 pm

Philologos wrote:
OT, NT, the standard Apocrypha, a lot of other apocryphal texts,, most of not all the Qur'an, parts of the Book of Mormon and the Mandaic texts, snatches of the Veda and Avesta as well as Egyptian, Sumerian and Akkadian texts.

Outside the standard Abrahamic scriptures, motivation is more linguistic than cintent.


I forgot about the Apocrypha! I've read some of it actually: Tobit and a bit of Sirach. They both sucked.


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27 Apr 2011, 2:43 pm

I wish I had more time to read everything I can actually. For some reason I really have no problem reading through them; my grades were ridiculous in religious / philosophical text analysis. I have no money now but I am trying to get my hands on a Koran and a good Bible (since I apparently lost mine) and sift through them. The hard part is finding all the obscure stuff to really hammer down the points, like whatever did not get put in the Bible. I do not have enough money to be well-rounded in religious discussion right now and have to stick with Christianity topics.


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Kiran
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27 Apr 2011, 3:30 pm

HerrGrimm wrote:
I wish I had more time to read everything I can actually. For some reason I really have no problem reading through them; my grades were ridiculous in religious / philosophical text analysis. I have no money now but I am trying to get my hands on a Koran and a good Bible (since I apparently lost mine) and sift through them. The hard part is finding all the obscure stuff to really hammer down the points, like whatever did not get put in the Bible. I do not have enough money to be well-rounded in religious discussion right now and have to stick with Christianity topics.


I found both the Bhagavad-Gita and the Qu'ran at local libraries. Although I imagine it may be harder to find a Qu'ran in the US since islam is not really the americans most popular religion right now...


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ThatRedHairedGrrl
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27 Apr 2011, 3:40 pm

Um...let's see.

A fair amount of the Bible - most of the bits I'm unfamiliar with are in the histories (Kings, Judges etc.) and the later prophets. I did Hosea and Luke's gospel as set texts in RE at school, and I had a bit of a thing about Revelations when I was a kid. Also, the books of Tobit and Wisdom from the Apocrypha.
A lot of Gnostic gospels and other texts.
The Book of Enoch, which is the weird apocryphal text with the stuff about the fallen angels coming to bring forbidden knowledge to humankind. It's fascinating.
A fair number of Talmudic stories. (I'm just working through a book of Jewish myths right now; they're from various sources.)
The whole of the Bhagavad Gita, although it was the Hare Krishnas' translation and I'm not sure how accurate that one is.
The principal Upanishads - at school, where it was in the library, for some bizarre reason, because our school wasn't hot on serious comparative religion ( it wasn't a religious school but a lot of the teachers, including the RE teacher, were evangelical Christians) - can't recall how many I got through, but a Hindu friend was impressed because she said her dad was an educated guy but he'd never managed to tackle them.
The Dhammapada and some of the Jataka tales.
Plus a variety of myths from various cultures, and texts from modern pagan and New Age religions.
I have the Book of Mormon and a translation of the Q'uran somewhere. but I found both of them a bit tedious and didn't get very far.


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27 Apr 2011, 3:48 pm

Kiran wrote:
I found both the Bhagavad-Gita and the Qu'ran at local libraries. Although I imagine it may be harder to find a Qu'ran in the US since islam is not really the americans most popular religion right now...


American bookstores will sell anything to make a profit. There is an entire section at my Borders for Jenny McCarthy-like autism books. Not much changed (if at all) from what I remember. That last sentence is false.


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