Thank you for your honesty. Thumbs up.I was able to get to this a little sooner than I expected. Yay.
1) First, let me say that I may have misread you when I first replied to this; I thought you were asking if I could make a case for the rational plausibility of why we would need a mechanism of reconciliation between God and man--I can do that. However, in reading it now, I wonder if maybe you were asking if I could make a case for the rational plausibility of the mechanism itself, as in how exactly the sacrifice of Jesus allows us to bridge the gap back into God's presence, to put aside our selfish human nature and take on the divine nature--I can't do that. I really don't understand (yet) how the sacrifice of a man with divine nature allowed men with human nature to share in the divine nature, or even how the blood sacrifice of animals temporarily allowed priests to enter into the presence of God, but that's what we are told.
Hebrews 9 gives us about as much information on the mechanism of redemption through blood sacrifice as we are going to get, but even that is a little unsatisfying to a person of my skepticism and curiosity. But just as I can accept the general principles of quantum mechanics without fully understanding all of the "mechanics" involved, I can understand that Jesus' sacrifice removed the barrier between man and God that only a blood sacrifice could previously bridge. This chapter in Hebrews talks about the construction of the temple, with an outer area in which anyone could go, but an inner area to which only the priests could go, and only with a blood offering to cleanse themselves. At the moment of Jesus' death, the veil that separated the inner area from the outer area was torn completely in two (Matthew 27:51), signifying that any man could now enter into the inner area of the temple, into the presence of God; the Holy of Holies was no longer accessible only to priests cleansed by sacrifice. But WHY and HOW the blood sacrifices allowed priests to enter into the presence of God, or WHY and HOW the sacrifice of Jesus allowed everyone else to enter into the presence of God, I can't tell you.
What would you say to a monotheistic omni concept of God that does not have blood sacrifice as a means of reconciliation? For example, Sikhism Sikhism - Wikipedia. The centrality of blood sacrifice as means of connecting to God seems incongruent with the nature of the omni-God, at least to me. It's one of the main thrusts of the spiritual reform movement that led to modern Vedantic Hinduism as well as Buddhism and Jainism at around 600 BCE from older sacrificial Vedic Hinduism. So when I encounter its centrality in Christian theology.. it's creates a bad-taste.
Could be but need not be. An omni God does not necessarily have to reveal anything in an overt form. This the claim of any book as a revelation needs to be tested. It should be worthy of a revelation by an omni-God.But now, if you want a rational argument for why there NEEDS to be a mechanism of redemption in the first place, I can do that. I'm going to assume that I don't need to go back to the basic axioms of an omni-God's existence in order to demonstrate that if such a God exists, then the Bible is a legitimate source of spiritual truth about that God--after all, you're already quoting Gita yourself, so holy texts must be considered fair game as resource material.
With no free will idea, Could Satan or Adam had the capacity to do otherwise? Why do all humans have the subjective experience of having the freedom to choose and decide between alternatives if such a thing does not exist.Ok, so if the Bible can be accepted as a legitimate source of truth about God, then the tales of Adam and Eve and the Garden of Eden must mean SOMEthing, and likely something pretty important, to start off the whole book with them. We already know that they are not a literal account of the origin of man--we know that there were not two original people named Adam and Eve, created on the sixth day of the existence of the universe, and we know that there was not a physical place called the Garden of Eden that mankind got kicked out of. So what is the significance of this myth?
One rational interpretation is that it sets the stage for the rest of the book by explaining allegorically how man is fundamentally separated from God by his human nature of selfish self-centered self-interest; wanting to be his own god. Wanting to be God Himself is also what got Satan thrown out of heaven in the first place, and that is the temptation Satan provides to A&E; that if they eat the forbidden fruit, then they will become like gods themselves (Genesis 3:4). And that's what causes separation from God to this day--wanting to be our own gods, praying "MY will be done" instead of "THY will be done," and believing we are in control, having free will. I've always been amazed how many Christians will pay lip service to the idea that "God is in control of everything!" but then turn around in vanity and say, "Except ME! I have free will!" Aren't you special.
Also your description still looks historical rather than an allegory. If the story is an allegory where Adam and Eve represents all human individuals, man and woman, then moral knowledge seems to be an inevitable cognitive ability that all human beings come to possess by 3-4 years old. One feels no stricture from God of the kind, one ought not to know about good and evil.... in fact it would be psychopathic to not know good from evil. So the allegory is very unclear. After all, it's not a tree of self obsession we are eating from. Also, what is wrong with wearing clothes? Could you explicate your commentary on the story in a bit greater detail? Maybe in another thread. It's a stumbling block.
Why make a physical world then if it's nature is opposed to God's nature?Some might then consider human nature a design flaw, and question why God made humans with a selfish nature that was incompatible with spending eternity in the presence of God, but I don't see it as a flaw any more than starting out as a caterpillar is a design flaw for butterflies. While we are living in this physical world, we need a nature that is compatible with it--a nature that gives us the best chance of survival--a nature that is concerned with the well-being of the self. But that human nature of selfishness is at odds with the divine nature of love (hate is not the opposite of love; selfishness is), and it is, by necessary design, a mortal nature--humans, like all other creatures, die.
More will follow after I go through 1.
Good post. Appreciated.