Shouldn't http://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com/ be migrated to http://christianity.stackexchange.com/?
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closed as off-topic by animuson, Bo Persson, Jim, Toon Krijthe, ChrisF♦ Feb 26 at 22:50
- This question does not appear to be about Stack Overflow or the Stack Exchange engine that powers the Stack Exchange network, within the scope defined in the help center.
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From the FAQs:
So, this site is about the text of the bible as a work of literature and its study.
So, this site is about the Christian religion. As you can see, the scopes and audiences of these sites are different, in the same way that Programmers and Stack Overflow are. |
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Oded's answer covers the question you did ask. But I'd like to answer the question that you didn't ask (but I wish you had). The Bible is Western civilization's most influential text and it belongs, in a sense, to all of us. Many universities have departments dedicated to analyzing the ancient books that have been canonized by Judaism and by various Christian denominations. To judge by the popularity of books written about discoveries related to Biblical studies, people of all religious affiliations are fascinated with the Tanakh and the New Testament. Not all of these people would be comfortable on Christianity.SE or on Mi Yodeya. Biblical Hermeneutics is the place on Stack Exchange for people of all stripes to ask and answer questions about the Hebrew and Greek Biblical texts. While many of our users are Christian (and that includes myself), others are Jewish. Some of our contributors are solidly orthodox (within their own religion), others have views that are not strongly influenced by any particular doctrine. Recently, we've been evaluating the ways our community sustains divergent hermeneutical approaches while retaining well-argued, scholarly answers to Biblical questions. One of the epiphanies we've arrived at is that our community is held together by our shared respect our common texts. If you are also interested in exploring the text which grounds Judaism, Christianity, and Western culture in general, I encourage you to visit Biblical Hermeneutics. |
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