Well....the Bible says people arn't supposed to have sex until they are married.
"Cheesey" wrote:
Where? I've asked this question of so many evangelicals and they have yet to point me to a verse.
And back when man was created, they lived for alot longer then we do now. 100 years old was still young.
"Cheesey" wrote:
Assuming you take the Bible literally, of course (which the writers of the Bible themselves did not in many places). But do you really think people waited 100 years to have sex even if they were living 900 years? The population of the world would have grown at a minuscule pace and the human race would probably have devolved into a catastrophic state of constant warfare. (There has been interesting historical and anthropological work correlating a society's violence rate with its rate of unmarried young men.)
remember, i'm a man
"Cheesey" wrote:
So? I've never met a man whose sex drive was stronger than that of the average woman. I know mine isn't. :P
Teen pregnancy is still a huge problem in society today.
"Cheesey" wrote:
Why? Historically,
most children have been born to teenage mothers. Why is it such a bad thing? The only reason I can think of is young people in this culture aren't being trained and expected to act like responsible young adults as they are in other cultures. If anything, teen pregnancy is a very good thing, because it indicates human bodies are acting according to design and we're maximizing positive infant/maternal outcomes (assuming these mothers aren't in poverty, of course).
They had to learn responsibilty at a VERY young age.
"Cheesey" wrote:
They should be even today. One of the primary causes of teenage rebellion is that parents prevent teenagers from doing what they most want to do -- go on great quests, fight valorous battles, slay dragons. If teens were allowed to be something more than useless, overgrown children, there would be a lot less teenage angst. The number-one complaint I hear from teenagers is that they feel powerless and useless. They have limitless energy and drive -- they want to accomplish great works.
And life span for kids 100 years ago isn't what it is now.
"Cheesey" wrote:
This is a statistical truth but a factual falsity. Walk through any old cemetery and you'll see that if people made it past early childhood, they lived exactly as long as they do today: 75 or 80 years. The reason why lifespan was statistically shorter back then is that the infant mortality rate was so high; therefore, the
mean age at death was lower. In reality, though, people who survived infancy were living pretty much as long as they do now. (In fact, I just read an article indicating that the average lifespan in the United States is slowly declining again.)
Diseases that we can fight today with modern drugs killed off alot of people before they got into their 60's.
"Cheesey" wrote:
True, though it was the infants and young children who were hardest hit.
I'm still not sure what bearing these arguments have on the question of morality, though. ๐