Religion
Related: About this forumDid Cain slay Abel of his own free will or
was that murder pre-ordained?
What think you, keeping in mind that it may just be a fable or an allegory?
guillaumeb
(42,649 posts)And the father, taking into account the young age of the child, explained it.
Thomas Hurt
(13,925 posts)since the all-knowing God asked Cain where his brother was when God knew good and well. God knew beforehand if God is all-knowing. So Cain went and did exactly what God wanted him to do and went right where God wanted him to go.
A set up from the beginning.
MineralMan
(147,591 posts)I remember the story, too. I assume everyone here does, actually.
JustFiveMoreMinutes
(2,133 posts).. your brothers BLOOD CALLED OUT to me...
just sayin'.
MineralMan
(147,591 posts)MineralMan
(147,591 posts)Voltaire2
(14,719 posts)Ferrets are Cool
(21,957 posts)IF GOD Almighty is omnipotent, all seeing and all knowing, why did he set up such a flawed system that he had to "send his only begotten son" to his death to fix it?
Was he just throwing spaghetti up against the wall to see what stuck?
Yes, I'm being an ass.
MineralMan
(147,591 posts)That's how I see it, anyhow.
Ferrets are Cool
(21,957 posts)Clash City Rocker
(3,541 posts)I know the Religion board is really the atheism board, so I expect a lot of snarky answers to this. Thats okay.
Also, Cain murdered Able of his own free will, because he was jealous. And when God asked him wher his brother was, He already knew the answer.
MineralMan
(147,591 posts)You think Cain and Abel were real people, and the offspring of Adam and Eve? Did the original teller of this story actually witness it? I just want to know who I'm talking to here, before going any further.
Ferrets are Cool
(21,957 posts)I would be able to slice through large boulders with a single swing. You are da man!!
*there is NO sarcasm in my sentence. I really think that.
MineralMan
(147,591 posts)MarvinGardens
(781 posts)the pharoh to continue to hold God's chosen people in slavery, after the first plague. The pharoh was seriously thinking about letting them go, but God "hardened his heart". This escalated through multiple punishments visited upon the Egyptians, each time with God hardening the pharoh's heart. It culminated with God killing all of the Egyptians' firstborn sons.
Since the pharoh no longer had free will once the plagues started, this was premeditated murder committed by God.
Major Nikon
(36,900 posts)Later it was also used to justify Jim Crow.
Igel
(36,087 posts)Those two things are, of course, completely different things.
On the other hand, there's how "Supernatural" interpreted the "mark of Cain." Which was, of course, Cain's mark.
MineralMan
(147,591 posts)to keep their line going, apparently.
Major Nikon
(36,900 posts)Obviously.
MineralMan
(147,591 posts)However, religionists point to them, even those who claim not to be Bible literalists. There was no Adam and Eve, no Garden of Eden, no Cain and Abel, and no freaking talking serpent. None of that. Such ideas are clearly nonsense and pure mythology.
That creates a real conflict for Bible enthusiasts. They know it's mythology, but can't say so. That creates a shitstorm generated by the "true believers" who take it all literally. So, they hedge and dissemble, referring to Adam and Eve only when necessary, but in total confusion, since they have to take it sort of literally or the entire story falls apart.
Meanwhile, Science has a very, very good handle on the evolution of the human species. It understands how humans came to be what they are now. Who was Eve? Well, mitochondrial DNA offers some clues, but they don't match up with the whole Eden story and all the mythology. So, the fundamentalists have to claim that science is wrong, and the metaphorists have to do their delicate tap dance to preserve any semblance of belief in Genesis as a true story at all.
In some cases, they've reduced it all to some sort of amorphous "Creator," who set the entire metaphorical creation into action. Then, they have to try to fit that "Creator" somehow into the mythology. The process is comical and entertaining, but that's all it is.
Major Nikon
(36,900 posts)MineralMan
(147,591 posts)The Bible Literalists are clearly very stupid or ignorant people who will never make an effort to understand things. They're not deluded. They're just ignorant, either knowingly or by nature.
The Bible Metaphorists, on the other hand, actually know the truth, but pretend not to for appearance's sake and to bolster whatever is left of their theism. That's where the delusion lies. Knowing the truth but denial of that truth requires some serious mental gymnastics or sheer delusional thinking. Which it is in individual cases is not something I think about a lot.
Major Nikon
(36,900 posts)They are simply fundamentalists. Just seems kind of funny someone would need to call them something else, obviously intended as a pejorative, while trotting out "metaphorical" original intents which require a higher order of delusional thinking to believe. It gets even funnier when they pretend such ancient people actually understood concepts not conceived for another 5 thousand years, but just dummed them down for an audience of illiterate sheep herders.
MineralMan
(147,591 posts)how to explain the Big Bang to a gathering of illiterate goatherds. "Well, there was, like, nothing at all. No form. It was void. Then, ancient Yahweh said, 'Someone turn on the damned lights! I can't see shit!' And suddenly there was light, and Yahweh could see good. Then, this happened and that happened, and here we are gathered around the fire."
marylandblue
(12,344 posts)In the early stories, God is limited, nasty and jealous. And only interested in his own people. The omnipotent perfect God only came with the later prophets. Perhaps they were speaking metaphorically as well. Or thought flattery would placate the Big Brute.
MineralMan
(147,591 posts)What they didn't know, they faked. Bronze age and Iron age goatherds didn't know the difference, and didn't care, anyhow. What's amazing is that we're still taking those old stories seriously in any way. It's a freaking marvel.
Igel
(36,087 posts)Did the Solar System go rushing by 'Oumuamua or did 'Oumuamua go rushing through the Solar System?
The answer is, of course, "Yes." Both are equally true, but only one can be true at a time.
MineralMan
(147,591 posts)Simultaneously. Of course more massive things exert more force than less massive things. So, we often forget the Earth's gravitational effect on the Sun. The moon's effect on the Earth, though, is evidenced by the tides.
It's all proportional.
Mc Mike
(9,171 posts)between agricultural and animal husbandry adherents.
History written by the winners.
malchickiwick
(1,474 posts)That said, fratricide as part of a people's founding mythology was not entirely uncommon in the ancient world, see Romulus and Remus & Set and Osiris.
MineralMan
(147,591 posts)to actually believe it. What to do with them?
LongtimeAZDem
(4,515 posts)On the other hand, if free will does exist, then according to the story, yes.
On the gripping hand, who cares?
MineralMan
(147,591 posts)It's all a fable, so it doesn't really matter, as you say.