6of9: Traditionally, God is big on martyrdom. This is something most major Christian denominations can agree on, to the best of my knowledge. Certainly, Catholicism is pretty big on the idea - a lot of saints were those who died for the church.
And choosing to die for the greater good rather than doing something else... well, isn't that what Jesus did in Christian theology, simply put?
So suicide tends to be frowned on when people kill themselves in a manner that does not entail going out for a noble cause. There's a grey area - and indeed, straightforward martyrs may well have felt suicidal - but it's mostly a position that makes sense.
I absolutely refuse to believe that the Conservative Bible Project is anything more than a concious parody. I can't even imagine the alternative, that someone would actually believe that.
I don't even see it as particularly controversial. Translating Bibles with a given axe to grind is at least as old as the Reformation (where, in the English language, we got the Catholic Douay-Rheims and the Calvinist Geneva Bible, fer instance).
Granted, it does seem a little silly to me that the axe is political rather than religious - it'd make more sense if it came out of a specific conservative
religious movement, but perhaps those are becoming increasingly conflated anyway. One assumes that the members of Conservapedia all ascribe to essentially the same brand of (Protestant?) Christianity for the project to make any kind of sense - conservative Catholics and Mormons need not apply, I'd assume, or there'd be all sorts of kerfuffling.
Textual religious conflict sounds inordinately more interesting when referred to as a kerfuffle. That is my conclusion after years of knowing about this stuff for some arcane reason - it fascinates me, as indeed do King James Onlyists like
I'm Kirk.