Kilgore Trout
Misanthropic Humanist
Burning meat smells really frickin good.
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Exodus 29:32
Of course people ate the sacrifice. Just look at Passover.do you have any evidence that they ate the sacrifice????
this wasnt a BBQ
Apperenty there is some chemical released that gets people high from turning flesh and fat into charcoal. [ive heard]
Really, it comes down to the traditions of that time. The Hebrews did not create this idea. In fact, we see many religions before the Hebrews doing this.I'm still waiting for a serious reply. Having grown up with the Bible, it is one of the more disturbing things that I usually just took as part of the Scripture without really thinking about the details.
Of course people ate the sacrifice. Just look at Passover.
So I've reached listening to Leviticus from the audio of the New World Translation... and I find it quite atrocious that this Divinity demands sacrificing animals, sprinkling their blood, and burning them for Eir satisfaction. Why does YHWH even demand this?
Even when Christians say that Jehovah's Son, Jesus Christ, completed this need for sacrificial offerings, it still comes back to why the heck Jehovah would require them in the first place.
In my religion, Krishna says that even a leaf, flower, fruit or a little water (of which we can share and partake) is acceptable to Him, for He partakes in the love and devotion of that offering, and not the substance. And yet, Jehovah's blood offerings are quite ghastly to me. What was the purpose of expiating sins through the killing of animals?
I am sure there must be some good explanation from the Jewish perspective
First of all, offerings weren't only for expiating sin: there were many kinds of offerings, including those to celebrate religious holidays, to offer thanksgiving to God, to express gratitude for prosperity, to deal with ritual purity and impurity, and various other kinds also. And not all offerings were slaughtered animals: some were grain offerings, some were wine, oil, or water, first fruits were offered, and incense was offered every day. It is also useful to recall that blood sacrifice was the dominant rite in pretty much the entirety of the Ancient Near East. The Ancient Israelites literally could conceive of nothing else.
But as to your question, there are a number of potential answers for this offered in the Jewish tradition. The one that I find most satisfying, given by some traditional authorites, is that Ancient Israelites demanded sacrifice because that was what they knew. So, these particular authorities say, God tried to compromise, knowing that it was already a difficult challenge to do away with polytheism (which was otherwise universal in the Ancient Near East), deeming it more important to reinforce the point of monotheism. So He instructed them to bring only a small number of different kinds of animals for sacrifices, and instructed them never to sacrifice human beings, and instructed them to slaughter the animals as painlessly as possible, and restricted acceptable sacrifice to only one place in the entire Land of Israel, and so forth, as a way of accommodating their theological needs at that time, while giving them limitations that would hopefully train them away from excesses of blood sacrifice, and hopefully teach them eventually that there might be other ways to worship God that might be better.
In other words, blood sacrifice was what the Ancient Israelites were ready for at that time. They were not ready yet for a world without worship through blood. The rites of animal sacrifice were not what God wanted for Himself so much as what God permitted our ancestors to do in regard to sacrificial worship, hoping that it would eventually train them to achieve prayer, which we believe God does want.
Blood itself might have significance. with the Bible illustrating blood as life itself. as pointed out you need a full context of the practice in the region and the regions around it. the Biblical narrative presents us with the softening of human sacrifice as it was practiced in the middle east, to animal sacrifice by the Israelites. also I think you need to look into what the sacrifice of animals really meant. because it seems you are criticizing a different issue. sacrificed animals by a standard were also consumed.So I've reached listening to Leviticus from the audio of the New World Translation... and I find it quite atrocious that this Divinity demands sacrificing animals, sprinkling their blood, and burning them for Eir satisfaction. Why does YHWH even demand this?
Even when Christians say that Jehovah's Son, Jesus Christ, completed this need for sacrificial offerings, it still comes back to why the heck Jehovah would require them in the first place.
In my religion, Krishna says that even a leaf, flower, fruit or a little water (of which we can share and partake) is acceptable to Him, for He partakes in the love and devotion of that offering, and not the substance. And yet, Jehovah's blood offerings are quite ghastly to me. What was the purpose of expiating sins through the killing of animals? :cover:
It's really about eating meat. All life is suppose to belongs to God and is sacred, and you just couldn't take a life of an animal thoughtlessly. You had to honor the life of that animal and the God who gave that animal life. It was a reminder that something alive and sacred was killed so you may eat and live.
I'm still waiting for a serious reply. Having grown up with the Bible, it is one of the more disturbing things that I usually just took as part of the Scripture without really thinking about the details.
Thinking about from that perspective, Cain's may not have been accepted because he didn't do it willingly. He may have seen Able doing it and rushed to get his in, without thinking what the motive was behind Abel's sacrifice.Go back to Genesis.
Cain made an offering of 'the fruit of the ground'.
Abel made an offering of his 'flock and the fat thereof'.
Animal sacrifices had begun and were favored over vegetation.
Why?...the book does not say.
It does continue into dialog wherein God is asking Cain....
'why are you angry?....why has your countenance fallen?'
(even though God had just favored Abel's offering.)
From the very start of God's relationship with Man...
misgivings and misconception were at hand.
Why make any offering?
Genesis makes no mention, a cause for Cain to make offering.
Neither is Abel commanded to do so.
They simply do.
No indication is given as to why a blood offering is more pleasing.
But the dialog between God and Cain goes on....
'If you do well, shall you not be accepted?
and if not then sin awaits at the door.'
(this is the first mention of 'sin'.)
As if to imply....the sacrifice of Cain could have been accepted.
Something not mentioned, stopped that from happening.
The book does not make explanation.
I suspect it had something to do with Cain's sense of 'self'.
Still there is no apparent cause,for any such gesture of sacrifice....
other than drawing God's attention.
Thinking about from that perspective, Cain's may not have been accepted because he didn't do it willingly. He may have seen Able doing it and rushed to get his in, without thinking what the motive was behind Abel's sacrifice.
I guess for me, the problem is that I could not wrap my head around Middle-Eastern culture's common slaughtering of animals and the usage of blood in particular ways (besides the grain, wine, and other kinds of offerings), such as placing it on the right earlobe, and the right thumb, and sprinkling it all about the altar, while eating some of the fat, and burning the rest of it, making a pleasant odour before Jehovah.
Maybe that is because Bedouins and Hebrews, and even muslims who also sacrifice lambs, have a lot in common. I believe Mt Sinai was in Saudi.