Probably the line about it being illegal for a man to wear women’s clothing or a woman to wear the sword of a man, showing their binary view of sex and no separate understanding of gender.
However, that was in the Torah/OT, so it makes sense Jews believe it, but I guess Christians are selective with which laws exactly were abolished.
This is a funny meme though
Most of those laws had a point though. Maybe the clothing one was because women didn’t have pads or tampons so wearing women’s clothing then having sex with her could lead to an infection.
Same with the shrimp and pork and tattoo laws. But we’ve all learned why these laws existed and know more about the world. They aren’t laws for Christians, only unclean people of Abraham 4000 years ago.
Highly selective in rules followed. So many “wearing blended fabric and going to Hell” fuckers.
Your farm does intercropping? Straight to hell.
Ate the fruit of a tree less than five years after you’ve planted it? Believe it or not, straight to hell.
Ate meat anything other than well done? Hell. Clipped the edges of your beard? Hell.
Raped another man’s woman slave? Bring a ram to a priest and it’s all fine.
Leviticus is a wild ride.
He hung out with a bunch of dudes, and he liked to wash their feet…
There are more questions than answers
And he said to them, “Follow me and I will make you fisher of men.”
“Pause”, replied Paul.
I’d like to solve the puzzle
“he was into that shit”
E: for my non-us peeps, it’s a joke from the TV game show Wheel Of Fortune
God created man and woman; day and night on a spectrum. Or do these people also deny dawn?
I mean we all know by now that Jesus was a transgender man right?
No, that’s just a theory. A film theory. That I’ve heard for the first time today. If we don’t even know whether Jesus existed, I think his gender is very much not know.
Historians generally agree that there was an actual person named Jesus at the place and time described in the Bible. In Biblical canon, Jesus was born to a virgin mother, so he’d have no Y-chromosome on account of having no biological father.