THE ongoing exchange of ideas between religious believers and skeptics in the Guyana Chronicle is interesting. Recently, one comment struck me as particularly funny. Mohamed Majeed, writing from United States, said “no book of man” addresses human morality. From paleolithic cave paintings, to Egyptian hieroglyphics, to Hindu Sanskrit, to the quill pen and ink well, to the printed page, to the ones and zeroes a computer read as text, can Mr. Majeed say who, except for “man”, utilises these tools? “No book of man” is really an oxymoron. Mankind is the only species I know of that can read and the only one that has written words. All books are “of man”. Of course, Mr. Majeed will want to say his God “wrote” a book. The question then will be why did He write three different ones; The Torah, the Bible and the Koran? And each for people living in exactly the same house or the same geographic location, if you prefer. Can you imagine the confusion this would cause?
I guess you can, just look again at the Middle East.
LUTCHMAN GOSSAI.
Why did God write three different books?
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