Not at all what he said. If, as others accuse, you are both the same account and you're merely trying to utilize a better approach this time, you're going about it the wrong way. If, as you assert, you're actually a different person, you're still going about it the wrong way.
I can't tell if you both share the same disregard for truth, but here you're being despicably dishonest.
Objection: asked and answered. If you really wanted to know, you would have read through the Bible because it makes this abundantly clear. Therefore it's hard for me to accept the possibility that you might be sincerely asking a question.
Normally the ideal place to start reading if you want to consume the whole thing is with the Gospel of John. For this single issue, you could start with The Epistle to the Ephesians, and get to that both quickly and in context.
Afterwards, discussing it might become productive, not before.
So's law.
He's asking a simple question. What was God's purpose for men and women?
Not at all what he said. If, as others accuse, you are both the same account and you're merely trying to utilize a better approach this time, you're going about it the wrong way. If, as you assert, you're actually a different person, you're still going about it the wrong way.
I can't tell if you both share the same disregard for truth, but here you're being despicably dishonest.
You're dodging the question and it's a very simple one.
What exactly is the relationship between men and women that God desires, and how does their known innate bias fit into that?
Objection: asked and answered. If you really wanted to know, you would have read through the Bible because it makes this abundantly clear. Therefore it's hard for me to accept the possibility that you might be sincerely asking a question.
Normally the ideal place to start reading if you want to consume the whole thing is with the Gospel of John. For this single issue, you could start with The Epistle to the Ephesians, and get to that both quickly and in context.
Afterwards, discussing it might become productive, not before.
Genesis 2. Then Ephesians 5.