.
● John 6:66 . . From that time many of his disciples went back, and walked
no more with him.
Well; we can hardly find fault with their decision to go away; I mean after
all, the man was not only talking about cannibalism; but it is a breech of the
Jews' covenant with God to eat blood.
● Lev 7:27 . . If anyone eats blood, that person must be cut off from his
people.
● Lev 17:10 . . Any Israelite, or any alien living among them, who eats any
blood-- I will set My face against that person who eats blood and will cut him
off from his people.
It could be argued that those passages forbid eating the blood of birds and
beasts, but don't specifically outlaw eating human blood. Personally I don't
see how the latter would be any less disgusting than the former, but I'm
willing to leave the human blood question to each man's own conscience
because, to my knowledge, the Bible doesn't address vampirism.
Jesus and his men were all Jews under the jurisdiction of the covenant that
Moses' people agreed upon with God as per Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and
Deuteronomy. If perchance their covenant forbids eating all blood, including
human blood, then Jesus led his men into sin on the night of his last supper
if the fruit of the vine that they all shared was in fact transubstantiation.
_
● John 6:66 . . From that time many of his disciples went back, and walked
no more with him.
Well; we can hardly find fault with their decision to go away; I mean after
all, the man was not only talking about cannibalism; but it is a breech of the
Jews' covenant with God to eat blood.
● Lev 7:27 . . If anyone eats blood, that person must be cut off from his
people.
● Lev 17:10 . . Any Israelite, or any alien living among them, who eats any
blood-- I will set My face against that person who eats blood and will cut him
off from his people.
It could be argued that those passages forbid eating the blood of birds and
beasts, but don't specifically outlaw eating human blood. Personally I don't
see how the latter would be any less disgusting than the former, but I'm
willing to leave the human blood question to each man's own conscience
because, to my knowledge, the Bible doesn't address vampirism.
Jesus and his men were all Jews under the jurisdiction of the covenant that
Moses' people agreed upon with God as per Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and
Deuteronomy. If perchance their covenant forbids eating all blood, including
human blood, then Jesus led his men into sin on the night of his last supper
if the fruit of the vine that they all shared was in fact transubstantiation.
_