Lion IRC
Contributor
- Joined
- Feb 5, 2016
- Messages
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- Basic Beliefs
- Biblical theist
Their deliberate disobedience WAS them choosing that they wanted to decide for themselves what was good or evil.
They could have (blindly) just done what they were told - like sheep.
But they were free to choose - to learn - for themselves.
ETA - sometimes it takes some people longer to 'distinguish' right from wrong. Often we learn the hard way.
That's a valuable lesson, and also what makes for a good Bible story. It's when people start taking the story as literal truth that it becomes a problem. When taken literally, God looks like a negligent parent who not only doesn't keep an eye on his kids, but also sets them down in the middle of a dynamite factory with a flamethrower. Sooner or later, shit's gonna go sideways.
But if taken as the parable it's meant to be, it provides a life lesson and provides insight into the human condition (particularly that we're no different now than 10,000 years ago).
When taken literally, all the great Genesis stories are boiled down to one thing: don't piss God off or really bad shit's gonna happen to you. And if that's the only lesson to be learned, then Adam and Eve already took care of that message, thereby making Jonah and the Whale, the Great Flood, etc. merely redundant rather than having further/new teachings and insight.
The bible I read is predominantly about the way humans should treat each other
not "don't piss off God".
The wickedness leading up to the Flood was rape, murder, theft, lying...
We're the folks at Neneveh simply taking the Lords name in vane???