Christianity and Zoosexuality: Difference between revisions
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''Rashi’s Commentary for Gen 2:23 - This teaches us that Adam came to all the animals and the beasts'' ''[in search of a [[mate]]],'' | ''Rashi’s Commentary for Gen 2:23 - This teaches us that Adam came to all the animals and the beasts'' ''[in search of a [[mate]]],'' | ||
''but he was not satisfied until he found Eve. — [from Yev. 63A]'' | ''but he was not satisfied until he found Eve. — [from Yev. 63A]'' | ||
* Rashi references from the Jewish Talmud, Yebamoth 63a. | |||
''Yebamoth 63a states “What is meant by the Scriptural text, This is now bone of my bones,'' | |||
''and flesh of my flesh?13 This teaches that Adam had intercourse with every beast and'' | |||
''animal but found no satisfaction until he cohabited with Eve.”'' |
Revision as of 22:06, 19 June 2021
If you are a Christian zoophile, I know how challenging it can be to discover your zoophilia and mend these two things. I am not going to trample on your Christian faith. I know very well the reasons why you keep your faith. It is a wholesome, simple life and one that allows endurance, unlike any other religion I’ve seen.
What I’d like to do, is to strengthen your Christian faith while possibly mending your peace with God and zoophilia, or start you on the track to finding that peace. There are many interpretations of the bible, and perhaps you as a Christian have not known the more hidden, obscure interpretations. Even one possibly that may condone a zoophilic lifestyle albeit with the traditional Christian restraint.
For a better understanding of this very foreign and very controversial concept in Christianity, let's examine the position Judaism takes towards Genesis 2:23. The following is taken from the Jewish Bible with Rashi's commentary.
Gen 2:23 - And man said, "This time, it is bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh. This one shall be called Isiah (woman) because this one was taken from ish (man)."
Rashi’s Commentary for Gen 2:23 - This teaches us that Adam came to all the animals and the beasts [in search of a mate],
but he was not satisfied until he found Eve. — [from Yev. 63A]
- Rashi references from the Jewish Talmud, Yebamoth 63a.
Yebamoth 63a states “What is meant by the Scriptural text, This is now bone of my bones, and flesh of my flesh?13 This teaches that Adam had intercourse with every beast and animal but found no satisfaction until he cohabited with Eve.”