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My year of living biblically

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    I thought I'd tell you a little about what I like to write.
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    And I like to immerse myself in my topics.
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    I just like to dive right in and become sort of a human guinea pig.
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    And I see my life as a series of experiments.
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    So, I work for Esquire magazine, and a couple of years ago,
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    I wrote an article called "My Outsourced Life,"
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    where I hired a team of people in Bangalore, India,
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    to live my life for me.
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    So, they answered my emails.
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    They answered my phone.
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    They argued with my wife for me, and they read my son bedtime stories.
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    It was the best month of my life,
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    because I just sat back and I read books and watched movies.
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    It was a wonderful experience.
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    More recently, I wrote an article for Esquire called --
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    about radical honesty.
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    And this is a movement where --
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    this is started by a psychologist in Virginia,
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    who says that you should never, ever lie,
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    except maybe during poker and golf, his only exceptions.
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    And, more than that, whatever is on your brain
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    should come out of your mouth.
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    So, I decided I would try this for a month.
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    This was the worst month of my life.
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    (Laughter)
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    I do not recommend this at all.
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    To give you a sense of the experience,
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    the article was called, "I Think You're Fat."
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    (Laughter)
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    So, that was hard.
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    My most recent book -- my previous book was called "The Know-It-All,"
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    and it was about the year I spent reading the Encyclopedia Britannica
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    from A to Z in my quest to learn everything in the world,
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    or more precisely from Aak, which is a type of East Asian music,
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    all the way to Zwyiec, which is -- well, I don't want to ruin the ending.
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    (Laughter)
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    It's a very exciting twist ending, like an O. Henry novel, so I won't ruin it.
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    But I love that one,
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    because that was an experiment about how much information
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    one human brain could absorb.
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    Although, listening to Kevin Kelly, you don't have to remember anything.
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    You can just Google it.
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    So, I wasted some time there.
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    I love those experiments,
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    but I think that the most profound
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    and life-changing experiment that I've done
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    is my most recent experiment, where I spent a year
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    trying to follow all of the rules of the Bible,
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    "The Year of Living Biblically."
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    And I undertook this for two reasons.
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    The first was that I grew up with no religion at all.
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    As I say in my book, I'm Jewish in the same way
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    the Olive Garden is Italian.
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    (Laughter)
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    So, not very.
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    But I've become increasingly interested in religion.
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    I do think it's the defining issue of our time,
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    or one of the main ones.
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    And I have a son. I want to know what to teach him.
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    So, I decided to dive in head first, and try to live the Bible.
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    The second reason I undertook this is because
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    I'm concerned about the rise of fundamentalism,
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    religious fundamentalism, and people who say
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    they take the Bible literally, which is, according to some polls,
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    as high as 45 or 50 percent of America.
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    So I decided, what if you really did take the Bible literally?
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    I decided to take it to its logical conclusion
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    and take everything in the Bible literally,
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    without picking and choosing.
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    The first thing I did was I got a stack of bibles.
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    I had Christian bibles.
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    I had Jewish bibles.
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    A friend of mine sent me something called a hip-hop bible,
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    where the twenty-third Psalm is rendered as, "The Lord is all that,"
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    as opposed to what I knew it as, "The Lord is my shepherd."
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    Then I went down and I read several versions,
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    and I wrote down every single law that I could find.
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    And this was a very long list -- over 700 rules.
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    And they range from the famous ones that I had heard of --
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    The Ten Commandments, love your neighbor, be fruitful and multiply.
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    So I wanted to follow those.
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    And actually, I take my projects very seriously,
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    because I had twins during my year,
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    so I definitely take my projects seriously.
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    But I also wanted to follow the hundreds
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    of arcane and obscure laws that are in the Bible.
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    There is the law in Leviticus,
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    "You cannot shave the corners of your beard."
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    I didn't know where my corners were,
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    so I decided to let the whole thing grow,
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    and this is what I looked like by the end.
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    As you can imagine, I spent a lot of time at airport security.
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    (Laughter)
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    My wife wouldn't kiss me for the last two months.
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    So, certainly the challenge was there.
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    The Bible says you cannot wear clothes made of mixed fibers,
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    so I thought, "Sounds strange, but I'll try it."
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    You only know if you try it.
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    I got rid of all my poly-cotton T-shirts.
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    The Bible says that if two men are in a fight,
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    and the wife of one of those men grabs the testicles of the other man,
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    then her hand shall be cut off.
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    So, I wanted to follow that rule.
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    (Laughter)
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    That one I followed by default,
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    by not getting in a fight with a man whose wife was standing nearby,
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    looking like she had a strong grip.
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    (Laughter)
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    So -- oh, there's another shot of my beard.
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    I will say it was an amazing year
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    because it really was life changing, and incredibly challenging.
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    And there were two types of laws that were particularly challenging.
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    The first was avoiding the little sins that we all commit every day.
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    You know, I could spend a year not killing,
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    but spending a year not gossiping, not coveting, not lying --
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    you know, I live in New York, and I work as a journalist,
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    so this was 75, 80 percent of my day I had to do it.
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    But it was really interesting, because I was able to make some progress,
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    because I couldn't believe how much
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    my behavior changed my thoughts.
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    This was one of the huge lessons of the year,
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    is that I almost pretended to be a better person,
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    and I became a little bit of a better person.
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    So I had always thought, you know, "You change your mind,
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    and you change your behavior," but it's often the other way around.
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    You change your behavior, and you change your mind.
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    So, you know, if you want to become more compassionate,
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    you visit sick people in the hospital,
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    and you will become more compassionate.
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    You donate money to a cause,
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    and you become emotionally involved in that cause.
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    So, it really was cognitive psychology --
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    you know, cognitive dissonance -- that I was experiencing.
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    The Bible actually talks about cognitive psychology,
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    very primitive cognitive psychology.
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    In the Proverbs, it says that if you smile, you will become happier,
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    which, as we know, is actually true.
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    The second type of rule that was difficult to obey
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    was the rules that will get you into a little trouble
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    in twenty-first-century America.
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    And perhaps the clearest example of this is stoning adulterers.
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    (Laughter)
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    But it's a big part of the Bible,
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    so I figured I had to address it.
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    So, I was able to stone one adulterer.
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    It happened -- I was in the park, and I was dressed in my biblical clothing,
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    so sandals and sort of a white robe,
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    you know, because again, the outer affects the inner.
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    I wanted to see how dressing biblically affected my mind.
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    And this man came up to me and he said,
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    "Why are you dressed like that?"
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    And I explained my project,
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    and he said, "Well, I am an adulterer, are you going to stone me?"
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    And I said, "Well, that would be great!"
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    (Laughter)
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    And I actually took out a handful of stones from my pocket
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    that I had been carrying around for weeks,
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    hoping for just this interaction -- and, you know, they were pebbles --
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    but he grabbed them out of my hand.
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    He was actually an elderly man, mid-70s, just so you know.
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    But he's still an adulterer, and still quite angry.
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    He grabbed them out of my hand
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    and threw them at my face, and I felt that I could --
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    eye for an eye -- I could retaliate, and throw one back at him.
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    So that was my experience stoning, and it did allow me
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    to talk about, in a more serious way, these big issues.
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    How can the Bible be so barbaric in some places,
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    and yet so incredibly wise in others?
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    How should we view the Bible?
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    Should we view it, you know, as original intent,
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    like a sort of a Scalia version of the Bible?
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    How was the Bible written?
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    And actually, since this is a tech crowd,
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    I talk in the book about how the Bible actually reminds me
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    of the Wikipedia, because it has all of these authors and editors
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    over hundreds of years.
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    And it's sort of evolved.
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    It's not a book that was written and came down from on high.
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    So I thought I would end by telling you
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    just a couple of the take-aways, the bigger lessons
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    that I learned from my year.
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    The first is, thou shalt not take the Bible literally.
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    This became very, very clear, early on.
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    Because if you do, then you end up acting like a crazy person,
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    and stoning adulterers, or -- here's another example.
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    Well, that's another. I did spend some time shepherding.
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    (Laughter)
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    It's a very relaxing vocation. I recommend it.
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    But this one is -- the Bible says that you cannot touch women
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    during certain times of the month, and more than that,
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    you cannot sit on a seat where a menstruating woman has sat.
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    And my wife thought this was very offensive,
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    so she sat in every seat in our apartment,
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    and I had to spend much of the year standing
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    until I bought my own seat and carried it around.
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    So, you know, I met with creationists.
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    I went to the creationists' museum.
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    And these are the ultimate literalists.
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    And it was fascinating, because they were not stupid people at all.
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    I would wager that their IQ is exactly the same as the average evolutionist.
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    It's just that their faith is so strong
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    in this literal interpretation of the Bible
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    that they distort all the data to fit their model.
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    And they go through these amazing mental gymnastics to accomplish this.
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    And I will say, though, the museum is gorgeous.
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    They really did a fantastic job.
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    If you're ever in Kentucky,
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    there's, you can see a movie of the flood,
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    and they have sprinklers in the ceiling
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    that will sprinkle on you during the flood scenes.
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    So, whatever you think of creationism -- and I think it's crazy --
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    they did a great job.
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    (Laughter)
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    Another lesson is that thou shalt give thanks.
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    And this one was a big lesson because I was praying,
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    giving these prayers of thanksgiving, which was odd for an agnostic.
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    But I was saying thanks all the time, every day,
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    and I started to change my perspective.
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    And I started to realize the hundreds of little things
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    that go right every day, that I didn't even notice,
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    that I took for granted, as opposed to focusing
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    on the three or four that went wrong.
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    So, this is actually a key to happiness for me,
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    is to just remember when I came over here,
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    the car didn't flip over, and I didn't trip coming up the stairs.
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    It's a remarkable thing.
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    Third, that thou shall have reverence.
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    This one was unexpected because I started the year
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    as an agnostic, and by the end of the year,
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    I became what a friend of mine calls a reverent agnostic, which I love.
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    And I'm trying to start it as a movement.
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    So, if anyone wants to join,
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    the basic idea is, whether or not there is a God,
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    there's something important and beautiful about the idea of sacredness,
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    and that our rituals can be sacred.
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    The Sabbath can be sacred.
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    This was one of the great things about my year, doing the Sabbath,
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    because I am a workaholic, so having this one day
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    where you cannot work, it really, that changed my life.
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    So, this idea of sacredness, whether or not there is a God.
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    Thou shall not stereotype.
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    This one happened because
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    I spent a lot of time with various religious communities
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    throughout America because I wanted it to be more
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    than about my journey.
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    I wanted it to be about religion in America.
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    So, I spent time with evangelical Christians, and Hasidic Jews, and the Amish.
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    I'm very proud because
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    I think I'm the only person in America
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    to out Bible-talk a Jehovah's Witness.
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    (Laughter)
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    After three and a half hours, he looked at his watch,
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    he's like, "I gotta go."
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    (Laughter)
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    Oh, thank you very much.
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    Thank you. Bless you, bless you.
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    But it was interesting
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    because I had some very preconceived notions about, for instance,
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    evangelical Christianity, and I found that
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    it's such a wide and varied movement
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    that it is difficult to make generalizations about it.
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    There's a group I met with called the Red Letter Christians,
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    and they focus on the red words in the Bible,
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    which are the ones that Jesus spoke.
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    That's how they printed them in the old Bibles.
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    And their argument is that Jesus never talked about homosexuality.
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    They have a pamphlet that says,
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    "Here's what Jesus said about homosexuality,"
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    and you open it up, and there's nothing in it.
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    So, they say Jesus did talk a lot about helping the outcasts,
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    helping poor people.
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    So, this was very inspiring to me.
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    I recommend Jim Wallis and Tony Campolo.
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    They're very inspiring leaders, even though I disagree
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    with much of what they say.
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    Also, thou shalt not disregard the irrational.
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    This one was very unexpected because, you know,
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    I grew up with the scientific worldview,
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    and I was shocked learning how much of my life
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    is governed by irrational forces.
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    And the thing is, if they're not harmful,
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    they're not to be completely dismissed.
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    Because I learned that -- I was thinking, I was
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    doing all these rituals, these biblical rituals,
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    separating my wool and linen, and I would ask these religious people
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    "Why would the Bible possibly tell us to do this? Why would God care?"
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    And they said, "We don't know,
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    but it's just rituals that give us meaning."
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    And I would say, "But that's crazy."
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    And they would say, "Well, what about you?
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    You blow out candles on top of a birthday cake.
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    If a guy from Mars came down and saw, here's one guy
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    blowing out the fire on top of a cake
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    versus another guy not wearing clothes of mixed fabrics,
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    would the Martians say, 'Well, that guy, he makes sense,
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    but that guy's crazy?'"
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    So no, I think that rituals are, by nature, irrational.
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    So the key is to choose the right rituals,
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    the ones that are not harmful -- but rituals by themselves
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    are not to be dismissed.
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    And finally I learned that thou shall pick and choose.
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    And this one I learned because
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    I tried to follow everything in the Bible.
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    And I failed miserably.
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    Because you can't.
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    You have to pick and choose. And anyone who follows the Bible
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    is going to be picking and choosing.
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    The key is to pick and choose the right parts.
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    There's the phrase called cafeteria religion,
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    and the fundamentalists will use it in a denigrating way,
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    and they'll say, "Oh, it's just cafeteria religion.
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    You're just picking and choosing."
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    But my argument is, "What's wrong with cafeterias?"
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    I've had some great meals at cafeterias.
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    I've also had some meals that make me want to dry heave.
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    So, it's about choosing the parts of the Bible about compassion,
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    about tolerance, about loving your neighbor,
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    as opposed to the parts about homosexuality is a sin,
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    or intolerance, or violence,
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    which are very much in the Bible as well.
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    So if we are to find any meaning in this book,
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    then we have to really engage it, and wrestle with it.
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    And I thought I'd end with just a couple more.
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    There's me reading the Bible.
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    That's how I hailed taxicabs.
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    (Laughter)
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    Seriously, and it worked. And yes,
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    that was actually a rented sheep,
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    so I had to return that in the morning, but it served well for a day.
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    So, anyway, thank you so much for letting me speak.
Title:
My year of living biblically
Speaker:
A.J. Jacobs
Description:

Speaking at the most recent EG conference, author, philosopher, prankster and journalist A.J. Jacobs talks about the year he spent living biblically -- following the rules in the Bible as literally as possible.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
17:15
TED edited English subtitles for My year of living biblically
TED added a translation

English subtitles

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