In the popular Bible story of Noah and the Flood, the concepts of ethics and sanctions are important details.
In terms of Ethics, we see that the reason God sends the flood to destroy the earth is that Mankind was terribly wicked, and God saw the only way to fix it was to destroy everything. But we then see that there is one man whom God favors, and so He instructs Noah to build an Ark so he lives through the flood.
God then destroys the earth, with only Noah, his family, and some of every animal remaining. . This is an illustration of sanctions; mankind was wicked so its negative sanction was to be destroyed, but Noah was good so his sanction was to be saved from the flood.
After the flood passed and the Ark landed upon dry ground, he built an altar to the Lord and the Lord made a covenant with him to never again destroy the earth. This is another instance of a positive sanction from God.
Wednesday, October 1, 2014
Monday, September 15, 2014
Literature week one essay
Hierarchy in Genesis
In the first three chapters of Genesis, the author of the book describes God's creation of the universe. He created light, matter, day and night, plants and animals, and lastly man.
Since He created the universe, it would follow that He is in command of all He created, including mankind, Adam and Eve. He then gave dominion over the earth to Adam, and told him to name all the animals. After he had done this, God made Eve as a helper and a companion to Adam.
Genesis then describes how the serpent tempts Eve and Adam to eat of the forbidden fruit. Now, even thought the serpent persuades Adam and Eve, it does not truly have power over them, and it ultimately answers to God.
So in terms of hierarchy, God is in charge of everything that exists, Adam and Eve, or humankind, has charge of the whole earth and answer to God, and the serpent has no power over anything but tempts the hearts of man to do ill, yet it answers to God all the same.
In the first three chapters of Genesis, the author of the book describes God's creation of the universe. He created light, matter, day and night, plants and animals, and lastly man.
Since He created the universe, it would follow that He is in command of all He created, including mankind, Adam and Eve. He then gave dominion over the earth to Adam, and told him to name all the animals. After he had done this, God made Eve as a helper and a companion to Adam.
Genesis then describes how the serpent tempts Eve and Adam to eat of the forbidden fruit. Now, even thought the serpent persuades Adam and Eve, it does not truly have power over them, and it ultimately answers to God.
So in terms of hierarchy, God is in charge of everything that exists, Adam and Eve, or humankind, has charge of the whole earth and answer to God, and the serpent has no power over anything but tempts the hearts of man to do ill, yet it answers to God all the same.
History week one essay
In the Old Testament, or the Hebrew Bible, it talks of a man named Abraham who was very important. Abraham was tested by God many times and proved faithful to Him, and God promised that Abraham would be a father of great nations.
Now Abraham had a son named Isaac. Isaac lived a rather peaceful and uneventful life and had two sons, named Esau and Jacob. Jacob tricked Esau out of his birthright and out of their father's blessing, and Esau hated him for this so Jacob ran away to his uncle Labon. Labon had two daughters, and Jacob worked for him for fourteen years and ended up marrying them both; however, it was the younger daughter Rachel whom Jacob loved.
Jacob eventually was renamed by God to be Israel. He had twelve sons, but only two sons from Rachel: Joseph and Benjamin. Joseph he loved the best, and his other sons hated him for this. They sold him into slavery in Egypt. However, he did very well in Egypt, and God was with him. He rose to be the right hand man of the Pharaoh and he helped Egypt prepare for a long famine.
Now his brothers went to Egypt to buy food during the famine, and there Joseph revealed himself. The Pharaoh welcomed the Hebrews into Egypt and all was well. When Joseph and the Pharaoh died, however, the new Pharaoh did not like all the Hebrews in his land and enslaved them, and killed their male children so that they would not rise up against him.'
At this time, Moses was born, and his mother hid him from the Pharaoh's men so that he would not die. He was found by the Pharaoh's daughter and adopted into the Pharaoh's family and grew up as an Egyptian prince.
But one day Moses found an Egyptian beating a Hebrew slave and killed the Egyptian. He ran then, and this was when he found the burning bush, God spoke to him through the bush. God told him to free the Hebrews from slavery and take them to the promised land. Moses, with the help of his brother Aaron, tried to convince the Pharaoh to let his people go, but the Pharaoh would not. God sent ten plagues upon Egypt, and on the tenth plague the Pharaoh's first born son died, so he let the Hebrews go.
Moses was supposed to lead the Israelites to the promised land then, but they sinned against God and so He made them wander for forty years in the wilderness. Moses led them this whole time, but he eventually died before they found the promised land and he passed command to Joshua.
Now Abraham had a son named Isaac. Isaac lived a rather peaceful and uneventful life and had two sons, named Esau and Jacob. Jacob tricked Esau out of his birthright and out of their father's blessing, and Esau hated him for this so Jacob ran away to his uncle Labon. Labon had two daughters, and Jacob worked for him for fourteen years and ended up marrying them both; however, it was the younger daughter Rachel whom Jacob loved.
Jacob eventually was renamed by God to be Israel. He had twelve sons, but only two sons from Rachel: Joseph and Benjamin. Joseph he loved the best, and his other sons hated him for this. They sold him into slavery in Egypt. However, he did very well in Egypt, and God was with him. He rose to be the right hand man of the Pharaoh and he helped Egypt prepare for a long famine.
Now his brothers went to Egypt to buy food during the famine, and there Joseph revealed himself. The Pharaoh welcomed the Hebrews into Egypt and all was well. When Joseph and the Pharaoh died, however, the new Pharaoh did not like all the Hebrews in his land and enslaved them, and killed their male children so that they would not rise up against him.'
At this time, Moses was born, and his mother hid him from the Pharaoh's men so that he would not die. He was found by the Pharaoh's daughter and adopted into the Pharaoh's family and grew up as an Egyptian prince.
But one day Moses found an Egyptian beating a Hebrew slave and killed the Egyptian. He ran then, and this was when he found the burning bush, God spoke to him through the bush. God told him to free the Hebrews from slavery and take them to the promised land. Moses, with the help of his brother Aaron, tried to convince the Pharaoh to let his people go, but the Pharaoh would not. God sent ten plagues upon Egypt, and on the tenth plague the Pharaoh's first born son died, so he let the Hebrews go.
Moses was supposed to lead the Israelites to the promised land then, but they sinned against God and so He made them wander for forty years in the wilderness. Moses led them this whole time, but he eventually died before they found the promised land and he passed command to Joshua.
Friday, April 4, 2014
Governmant Lesson 80 essay
Franklin
D. Roosevelt's Four Freedoms
Franklin
D. Roosevelt's four freedoms from his speech that he made on January
6 in 1941 covered a very basic foundation for individual rights and
liberties of the American people, beyond that which the Bill of
Rights already put down. His speech was aimed at the American people,
but he claimed these rights were for people everywhere in the world.
He
added to these rights three years later in his State of the Union
address.
Most
of what he spoke of seems to be simple decency from one man to
another,
and
what Franklin wanted was to have Congress implement this second Bill
of Rights, with an eye toward moving ahead after World War two with
greater security at home for American citizens.
Monday, March 24, 2014
English Lesson 50 essay
Effective Literature
If I were to pick one piece of
literature that has affected me deeply, it would be The Hobbit by J.
R. R. Tolkien.
Now, I don't read very much in my free
time, and what I read might not be considered actual literature,
being mostly fictional novels for young adults. But one week I was
stuck in a auto body shop with my father and I had aught else to do,
and I picked up The Hobbit to pass the time, and all I wanted to do
while I was reading it was to keep reading it, even up until it was
time to leave and continue our business. But all I wanted to do was
stay in Tolkien's fantastic world for a little while longer.
That is the only time I would say that
a piece of literature has affected me so much.
Tuesday, February 18, 2014
English lesson 40 Essay
Writing
dialogue from memory
When writing dialogue from memory, is it best to
write with accuracy of what was actually said, liveliness to make the narrative
interesting, or with succinctness?
I do not
think succinctness is very important, as dialogue that is too concise is not
very interesting, or realistic.
Some degree
of accuracy must be retained, or else your recollection will be untrue, but it
is difficult to remember what exactly was said, so too strong a focus on
accuracy would be unrealistic and tiring.
Liveliness,
however, is quite important for a good narrative that one enjoys reading.
Though too much would certainly be unbelievable, the dialogue would be boring
without it.
In
conclusion, I would say I believe that a good amount of both accuracy and
succinctness are necessary, but liveliness is the most important for dialogue.
Wednesday, December 11, 2013
Government Week Five essay
Federal Subsidies
If the people give power to a
government to help them, they give just as much power to harm them as
well. One situation in which this concept is applicable is monetary
subsidies.
Where does the money come from that is
being used for subsidies? The money comes from taxpayers. Taxpayers
pay money to the government under the assumption that the government
will use it to protect and better the country. But if the government
gives subsidies to large corporations, then the money is not going
where the taxpayers wanted it to go.
Since government is created by the
people and for the people, then if the government puts taxpayer
dollors toward something that will not benefit the people, or if the
dollars go toward something that the people do not wish to put their
money towards, then the government is not doing its job. None of this
has to do with wether or not the government should be giving out
monetary subsidies, it simply has to do with the logic behind Federal
control along with subsidies.
In conclusion, we can say that if the
people want the government to give Federal subsidies, there must also
be some level of Federal control.
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