Oh for sure.
When I read the verse about the earth being cursed, it is directly referring to how we have to work in order to feed ourselves, and in a larger sense to the overall hardship and suffering in life. I don't think it means the earth is a bad place. There is a lot of beauty and love to be had.
I would agree with the above completely.
Nor do I think "the earth is cursed" means that we should just shrug and accept it as "God's will." We make tractors and stuff to make farming easier. We invent washing machines. We develop antibiotics. Genesis mentions the pain women will feel in childbirth -- I say give us epidurals. IOW Genesis mentions things that were. It doesn't mean they need to stay that way. Further, it is human beings that repair the world.
LOL… watch out for those epidurals… some doctors are bad at it. It is a shame they actually have to practice on live patients… hmmm… maybe I shouldn’t have said LOL… it isn’t a laughing matter
I agree that we shouldn’t accept it as God’s will. I don’t think it was God’s will.
Personally, I think that is why we age. (Personally thinking)
But one thing I think we forgot to address… God spoke with Adam and Eve in the cool of the evening but then they were driven from His presence with a faming sword to prevent them from coming back. Now the need of prophets to hear what God is saying? And the need of a person to be anointed to do so? But not God’s desire that so few could hear Him.
Now let's talk about your comments on death, since I need to better understand you. The normal literal meaning of death is when our bodies stop functioning and rot. There is no saving anyone from this. We will all die. But it can also be used figuratively as in "the love died within her," or "that's the kind of thing that kills the soul." I can see where you might say that by doing this other thing or having these other experiences, you can undo those harms, at least to a degree. I just don't know that I would use the word redemption or salvation to describe it.
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So tell me more what it is that YOU mean.
If I am not mistaken, in the original Hebrew the word “death” is actually plural. I would personally say it this way, “In dying you will die”. Although a type of death is when we stop breathing, I wouldn’t define death in that fashion although it is a death. I would define death as any area that is “separated from the life of God”.
I took note that Adam said, “I was afraid” whereas he was never afraid before. Fear is simply an area of separation from the Shalom of God. It isn’t in alignment with the proper order of God.
So, first I would say he experienced a spiritual separation from God. (Thus the sacrificing of animals, the washing process at the Bronze Basin.) And the rest of the process to enter the Holy of Holies.
From there I believe he experienced a death in His thinking process. He lied. Separated mentally from the God of truth - the God that is not a man that He should lie nor the son of man that He should repent fo what He said… if He said it, it is done!
It culminated in the death of the body.
So, in dying, they died.
Of course there is more to that story IMV.
In our view, satan is the author of fear and the father of lies.
I appreciate your use of Jewish themes as metaphors for your thoughts. Again, I do think you are doing a great job of expressing the Christian view.
Thank you. I appreciate your sharing!
What specifically do you think you are being redeemed from? I'm familiar with the usual Christian answers that they are being saved from their sins (which I don't understand) or saved from hell. But what do YOU think?
So redemption, for me, is the reuniting of God and man. Coming back into full communion with our Creator.
Saying that the scapegoat or Yom Kippur sacrifice were "redemptive" feels very awkward to me. I experience Yom Kippur as something that *I* do, not something that is done to me. I see it as repentance and atonement, which are actions on my part.
I think it is both. It is our action towards God (repentance) but also God towards us (atonement). I like how they separate the word “atonement” to “at one meant” to be connected to God. And not so much as “done to me” but rather what God “does for me” out of His great love.
Are we in agreement that a redeemer kinsman is the family member who enters into a levirate marriage? The idea there is to create heirs for the deceased husband. I am really just not sure why he would be referred to as a kinsman redeemer. You may need to ask someone more learned in this than I am.
I think that God does all things with a purpose. I believe even Adam saying “This is bones of my bones and flesh of my flesh” in marriage has a purpose. It is God using Adam to say Isaiah 54:5 For your Maker is your husband— the LORD Almighty is his name— the Holy One of Israel is your Redeemer; he is called the God of all the earth.
Like when Hosea buys back Gomer after having married her. Man is the adulterer from the beginning being married with God (not in the natural sense) , always leaving God’s ways and creating our own ways. Going after other gods if not making ourselves our own gods. In the allegory, a slave to our own sins but He buys us back and says in Isaiah "the LORD who created you says, “Do not be afraid—I will save you. I have called you by name—you are mine.” He bought us back with a price.
Sure. But this just brings us back to the same question: saved from what? redeemed from what?
Hopefully I answered that.
Oh my goodness, that's one of my favorite psalms! "He will cover thee with His pinions, and under His wings shalt thou take refuge." What a beautiful, beautiful metaphor.
Yes! I love Psalms 103 too!! One of my favorites!
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