That's because majority of americans are christians and they believe in "pericope adulterae".
And you would would contend, presumably, that the 'majority of Americans' indulge in and approve of extra-marital affairs, prostitution, gambling and (excessive) drinking? Sorry, I thought that was only the booge..erm, atheists who did all that, not having any source of moral values and all? But the the dreaded
pericope adulterae is even worse? Like, wow....
BTW, the topic was actually about UK admissions, where the number of practicing Christians is proportionally much smaller.
Well I can say that your impression about Jesus is not correct. Jesus threw out the traders and kicked their tables from the temple.
I don't think so. You might say it's not the same as yours, but otherwise,
Jesus threw out the traders and kicked their tables from the temple.
He did indeed. And your point is? Surely you aren't claiming that that somehow suggests Jesus would be first in line to stone an adulterer?!
And if you going by definition of majority christians that Jesus is God, then I can show you hundreds of instance from the OT of very angry, spiteful Jesus.
Nope. I don't think Jesus was God, or a third of God, or whatever. Just a nice, spiritual guy who preached peace and love as opposed to malice, war and chucking rocks at people, who wound up the wrong people and got nailed to a tree for it, and found himself an excellent post-mortem publicist. Totally agree on that point, the God of the OT is clearly very different from that of the OT or the Qur'an.
Actually, I do think think there will be a total tobacco (not alcohol) ban in the UK and many other Western countries at some point. The process has already started, a small step at a time. The ban can only follow a change of behaviour rather than enforce one, though. I think at the present time something like one in three packs of cigarettes sold in the UK are smuggled goods, because of the high tax on legal ones. If they were just banned straight out I think smoking would actually
increase, as the only source of cigarettes then would actually cost the smoker substantially less. While the public might accept a ban, they wouldn't tolerate legal penalties for smoking in line with those for hard drugs, say, or indeed anything more than a 'slap on the wrist'.