Featherbop said:
I guess I find not showing the bad stuff as being disingenuous. And then of course, another part of it is always showing god=good and man=bad. So you wouldn't get a christian depicting the flood with all the life god destroys because that shows god in a negative light. Usually, it is Noah and Co. being saved from the flood on a positive note.
But I guess that is just human nature to selectively remember and show the positive aspects of what we want.
You don't have to worry about Christians being disingenuous. You said in your first post that you thought the Bibles you had seen were for children and naturally a child's book would not have graphic depictions of sex and violence.
However, we had an old KJV Bible which was as big as an unabridged dictionary and had classic paintings in it. I remember the picture of Noah including dead bodies, David as a young boy holding up the severed head of Goliath before the army of Israel, and I also remember feeling sorry for the Egyptian's horses as the waters of the Red Sea crashed down upon them (though I thought the soldiers were getting pretty much what they deserved).
Go to Google and hit images. You'll find paintings of Jael pounding a spike through Sisera's head, Stephen being stoned to death, the rape of Tamar and Hendrick Goltzius' depiction of Lot and his daughters about to commit incest is spicy enough for a Playboy layout.
Most of these paintings date from the Middle Ages and Renaissance and were commissioned by the church to depict the stories from the Bible for the sake of the illiterate.
I think if you really look at the issue honestly, you'll find that the church has never tried to whitewash the Bible or the people in the Bible. David committing adultery with Bathsheba and then his consequent murder of her husband Uriah is not only right there in the Scriptures, but actually preached about from the pulpits. There's probably a painting on the subject somewhere to be found in Google Images as well.
Veritas, I just watched a bio on Caravaggio the other night. Did you realize that the pictures of David and Goliath were self-portraits? Only Caravaggio didn't depict himself as David. The face of Goliath is the face of Caravaggio.