True story from 1 Samuel 18:25-27. This, of course, is the foundation of Judeo-Christian morality.
My wife is worth a lot more foreskins than that, but I don’t think she’d appreciate it if I went all serial killer and marched through Stevens County chopping off penis tips and bringing them back to her in a bloody sack.
Also, it would be like those obnoxious World of Warcraft quests. “Bring me X body parts from this animal!”, and then you go slaughtering and most of your kills don’t even have that body part. I still remember having to kill zebras for their hooves, and finding most didn’t have any.
Andreas Avester says
That’s an odd claim. You meant that your wife is worth the death of more than 200 adult men or that your wife is worth the non-consensual mutilation of over 200 male babies?
PaulBC says
Genocide is pervasive in the Old Testament, and clearly it gets soft-pedaled in most Christian churches. In context, Saul is at least not being presented as a model of virtue here, though killing Philistines is presented as a good in itself. Verses 7-8 were oddly familiar sounding:
Fake News! This, I guess, is how evangelicals expect a “great leader” to behave.
jack16 says
Note that David and Solomon probably don’t exist!
jack16
Ed Seedhouse says
@3:”Note that David and Solomon probably don’t exist!”
They definitely don’t exist, and they almost certainly didn’t exist.
numerobis says
Cue the harrisbots to come argue that Christianity is slightly deluded but Islam is the bloody religion we should fear because their book says things.
blf says
The mildly deranged penguin points out most of these instructions, like “collect zebra hooves”, are usually coded instructions for hunting various wild cheeses (or, on occasion, some of the tamer sorts of MUSHROOMS!). Deciphering the coded references can be a bit tricky, as they tend to change from game to game, and frequently within a game. That can be a bit tricky when, e.g., you’ve cornered a Camembert Berserker, only to learn after a long chase through many mountains and seas, it was actually the next-door Brie Chambermaid who held the secret key to Gorgonzola Caverns. Of course, an entire mountain full of Camembert Berserkers is much less dangerous than a single sleeping Brie Chambermaid, as long as your fondue kit has never seen a pea, and there is sufficient vin.
chigau (違う) says
Combien du vin est suffisant?
chigau (違う) says
Is “combien” the right word for volume?
Crip Dyke, Right Reverend Feminist FuckToy of Death & Her Handmaiden says
By itself it’s not what I would use first. But
1) my french is out of practice, and
2) “combien de litres du vin” works perfectly well.
fishy says
Trumpleforeskin?
Rob Grigjanis says
de vin.
un verre de vin.
as-tu bu du vin?
monad says
@1 Andreas: That’s cost, not worth. I assume just about any person would be both more pleasant to be around and more helpful than a pile of useless if very specific human flesh, which is actually a liability requiring special disposal in most cases.
Andreas Avester says
monad @#12
I still don’t get people making this kind of comparison. In order to acquire said pile of human flesh, one would have to first mutilate or kill two hundred innocent male human beings. Thus a person who isn’t a psychopath shouldn’t use other people’s suffering as a currency in which to evaluate the worth of some woman.
PaulBC says
Am I the only one who’s imagining the foreskins preserved like leather and sewn together into a tiny blanket?
(Yes, I’m a sicko, but if this story has any truth it happened a long time ago. My mind does wander to these things. And, yes, it is weird to say “I’m worth it.” or “She’s worth it.” or anything like that.)
PaulBC says
Oh, and you can buy a whale foreskin wallet. (amazing what comes up in a search)
chigau (違う) says
“as-tu bu du vin?”
bien sûr
cartomancer says
Less than none. Nobody would have me even if I came with a big bundle of foreskins thrown in to sweeten the deal.
cjcolucci says
Many years ago, I had seen some Jewish men through the local synagogue window worshipping with little black boxes on their heads. I asked a Jewish friend — or at least I thought he was a friend — about the little black boxes. He told me they were tfillen, used as part of the worship service.
So I asked him what was in them. With a straight face, he asked me: you know about circumcision, don’t you? Being something of a showoff, I told him what I knew about the covenant Abraham made with God and how the circumcision was a sign of that covenant.
Then he asked: Have you ever wondered what they did with the foreskins? I couldn’t say that I had. So he told me that they get put inside the tfillen, so when you pray you are reminded of the covenant with God.
Having myself been raised in a strange cult that practiced ritual cannibalism once a week, this did not strike me as odd, and, indeed, made a good deal of sense. So I stored this bit of information for future reference.
One day, as my “friend” must have figured I would, I mentioned this bit of knowledge in mixed company, to predictable results.
Some day, I will hunt him down and kill him.
PaulBC says
Good thing we have wikipedia now https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tefillin
cjcolucci says
It would have saved me a great deal of embarrassment, but this was the 1970’s.
Golgafrinchan Captain says
What’s up with God and foreskins?
I understand why god loves barbecues so much*, because the priests wanted people delivering take-out. But foreskins?!?!?
*”It is a burnt offering, an offering made by fire, an aroma pleasing to the LORD.”
mamba says
Ok, I’ll bite…what was he planning to DO with all those foreskins? That’s just creepy and strange!
What a weird religion, and you never hear about THAT tale in Church! It would make for an interesting sermon!