sojourner
Annoyingly Progressive Since 2006
I see. It's not relevant to you because you eschew scholarship. Fine. Let's see you take ancient fragments of Hebrew and Greek text (bearing in mind that ancient Hebrew contains no vowels and a different alphabet, as well as a different set of grammatical rules -- and ancient Greek is written in all-caps with no spaces between words and no punctuation) and make sense of it -- even with the "help" of the Holy Spirit.See my post above.
Ok. If it's a fact, then you're going to have to back up that "fact" with some viable proof. I think this position is both untenable, and a fine example of irresponsible scholarship.I don't consider the creation account as a myth as you do. I consider it a fact! Therefore, I have no such dilemma.
The Holy Spirit isn't a magical portal to understanding ancient writings.I disagree. I think the Holy Spirit is the only way we can better understand what the theological message is.
Yes.Are YOU a "biblical scholar"?
That's it?! That's the best you've got? A Web Site?!Chapter 25: What about Satan and the Origin of Evil? - Answers in Genesis
I'll counter with this:
"Genesis 3:1 introduces a common ancient Near Eastern wisdom figure, the serpent, to lead humans to the knowledge of right and wrong. (Because sakes shed their skins and appear to rejuvenate themselves, they were associated with healing longevity, and wisdom.) To presere a distinction between human and divine, God expels humans from Eden, reiterating their original mandate to work the earth (cf. 2:15). Though traditionally described as a 'fall,' the garden of Eden story portrays a fall upward. Humans trade paradise for wisdom and, in the process, cause the universal desert to bloom. They forfeit blissful innocence for the godly power of moral discernment, the ability to know right and wrong and to choose. The world prospers as a result. The 'fall' in this story is the painful process of growing up, maturing into moral beings, becoming fully human and thus 'like God'."
Richard H. Lowery, Chalice Introduction to the Old Testament (ed. Steussy, Chalice Press, St. Louis, 2003) p. 34,35
No , you don't -- not so long as you insist on placing Satan into the Genesis myth. "Other creation texts" are just that: Other creation texts. In other words, other stories with other characters. This is one of the many problems you run into when you treat the creation myths as factual accounts. You end up running several stories into one big mess, completely losing the theological gems unique to each.I do treat them as separate texts. As I pointed out, Genesis 1-3 is not about Satan, but about Adam and Eve. But as long as their are other creation texts out there apart from Genesis, we cannot just ignore them because they are not included in Genesis. That doesn't make any sense.