I feel that the idea of an original sin that causes all humans to be born corrupted — Andrew4Handel
But if you do not do what is right, sin is crouching at your door; it desires to have you, but you must rule over it. (4:7)
Therefore, just as sin entered the world through one man, and death through sin, and in this way death came to all people, because all sinned (Romans 5:12)
Keeping steadfast love for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, but who will by no means clear the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children and the children's children, to the third and the fourth generation.” (Exodus 34:7)
‘The Lord is slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love, forgiving iniquity and transgression, but he will by no means clear the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children, to the third and the fourth generation.’ (Numbers 14:18)
I will make you into a great nation, and I will bless you; I will make your name great, so that you will be a blessing. I will bless those who bless you and curse those who curse you; and all the families of the earth will be blessed through you. (Genesis 12:2-3)
Fathers shall not be put to death because of their children, nor shall children be put to death because of their fathers. Each one shall be put to death for his own sin. (Deuteronomy 24:16)
The Hebrew Bible advocates personal responsibility. Sin can get the best of you, but you have some say as to whether it does or does not. Paul, however, seems to abdicate responsibility - we are powerless against sin and in need of grace. — Fooloso4
Its funny, but who gets to decide what "sin" is? In the Hebrew Bible, sin tends to be tied to error in following Mosaic law. — schopenhauer1
This idea can come from Gnostic ones originally that the physical world is simply considered "bad" due to the Demiurge's rule over it. Ideas of these kind were floating around in the Greco-Roman period. Paul probably took them and incorporated it to his new theology and interpretation. — schopenhauer1
as Wilfred McClay points out in a brilliant essay called “The Strange Persistence of Guilt” for The Hedgehog Review, religion may be in retreat, but guilt seems as powerfully present as ever.
Technology gives us power and power entails responsibility, and responsibility, McClay notes, leads to guilt: You and I see a picture of a starving child in Sudan and we know inwardly that we’re not doing enough.
“Whatever donation I make to a charitable organization, it can never be as much as I could have given. I can never diminish my carbon footprint enough, or give to the poor enough. … Colonialism, slavery, structural poverty, water pollution, deforestation — there’s an endless list of items for which you and I can take the rap.”
McClay is describing a world in which we’re still driven by an inextinguishable need to feel morally justified. Our thinking is still vestigially shaped by religious categories.
And yet we have no clear framework or set of rituals to guide us in our quest for goodness. Worse, people have a sense of guilt and sin, but no longer a sense that they live in a loving universe marked by divine mercy, grace and forgiveness. There is sin but no formula for redemption.
The only reliable way to feel morally justified in that culture is to assume the role of victim. — David Brooks
How can a new born baby be a sinner? — Bodhisattva
This is an interesting question. Cain's sin was not a violation of Mosaic Law since this was prior to the Law. Adam and Eve's disobedience was not called a sin. Perhaps the reason is that prior to knowledge of good and bad they were innocents and could not be held responsible for what they did not know. On the other hand, Eve saw that the fruit of the tree was desirable for gaining wisdom (3:6). How could she see that if without having knowledge of good and bad? — Fooloso4
I have wondered about Paul's influences - was it the influence of Hellenism or some strand of Judaism or some combination? According to Acts, Saul was a student of Gamaliel, but we do not find in the lineage of that teaching, beginning with his grandfather Hillel, what Paul came to preach. Contrary to that teaching, Saul did not display the kind of tolerance they advocated. Was Paul's conversion responsible for his teachings about sin? Was his aversion to the body idiosyncratic? To what extent might it have been rhetorical, geared to an audience that was familiar with Hellenistic teachings about the corruption of this world? A way of persuading them to seek salvation in Christ before it was too late? A story of cosmic forces beyond their control? — Fooloso4
I'd like to preface this with the fact that I don't believe any of this happened — schopenhauer1
... he pretty much hijacked the Jesus Movement sect, — schopenhauer1
... competing factions of its before the Council of Nicea. — schopenhauer1
Christian animosity toward and propaganda against the Jews in the New Testament are the direct result of this schism. I suspect that Jesus would have been appalled by Paul's teachings, and even more so if he knew he would be made a God by Paul's followers. — Fooloso4
In my opinion, Arius' arguments had a far more convincing Biblical grounding than Athanasius'. — Fooloso4
it's like apples and oranges — schopenhauer1
The problem I always had is it is this: just how is that supposed to work ontologically? How, ontologically, does Adam and/or Eve doing something get passed on to us? — Terrapin Station
The first thing that should be noted is that there is no mention of original sin in the creation story. The first mention of sin occurs in Genesis 4 when God says to Cain: — Fooloso4
Brooks suggests this explains the ferocity of many of the debates, or brawls, between different ideological profiles in today's America. More here. — Wayfarer
But I think being cast out of the Garden of Eden is equivalent to it. — Andrew4Handel
I don't think sophistication and subtly is how religion reaches the masses. — Andrew4Handel
I think Ecclesiates is the Book of the bible that is most nuanced and realistic about the human predicament but as far as I can see not widely embraced in mainstream Christianity. For example it was never discussed in a a bible reading in the churches I grew up in. — Andrew4Handel
That is to say, the world becomes imbued with a metaphysically sinful nature which humans have some sort of connection with since the Adam and Eve story. — schopenhauer1
God states why they were banished from the Garden and forbidden to return. It was not because they sinned but because of what they would become if they had been allowed to remain. — Fooloso4
That it is a reflection of the predicament of the human condition, of which self-awareness and willfulness are essential ingredients. — Wayfarer
I'm curious about why you believe that sin doesn't figure in this story. What they did experience was 'shame' - that after having eaten, Adam and Eve knew they were naked, and sought to cover themselves with figleaves. I would have thought that this sense of shame would be intimately connected with 'sin'. — Wayfarer
Sin was not thought as something that tainted humanity, — schopenhauer1
The [Genesis] story says nothing about shame. — Fooloso4
That’s exactly the Augustinian doctrine of original sin - that all mankind is tainted by the original sin, transmitted by the act of procreation, and only absolved by faith in Christ. Sin as missing the mark is one etymology, but the idea of 'abrogating the law' is more consistent with the Jewish emphasis on keeping the law. This idea was later generalised to account for mans' overall condition of 'fallen-ness' which is the meaning of the 'original sin'.
Anyway my comment was more a modern, or revisionist, attempt at interpreting the myth in realist terms, because I accept that 'the myth of the fall' says something real about the human condition. It's not simply 'myth' in the sense of being a fallacious account now displaced by scientific knowledge. But on the other hand, if you accept, as I do, the scientific accounts of the development of the species then any interpretation has to be reconcilable with that, so it has to speak symbolically but realistically about the human condition - which I believe it does. — Wayfarer
However, the original conception of sin, was not the one painted by Paul/Augustine but was more practical- which is to say, whether one is transgressing the Law or not. Sin was equated with simply not keeping the Law properly or violating it. — schopenhauer1
However, 'law' here is not simply a civil code, but divine command; the Mosaic law. So, perhaps less elaborated in the OT than the NT, but nevertheless, of the same order. (Although I do understand that 'sin' is the most politically incorrect concept in the English language :-) ) — Wayfarer
Paul on the other hand, conceived of the idea of Original Sin, so humans can have some unescapable tainted metaphysical aspect, that only his conception of a savior/dying/resurrecting god can redeem through this act. This conception was meant to overthrow the original conception of sin as transgressing the Laws of Moses/Torah/commandments/Jewish law, etc. — schopenhauer1
However he doesn't actually say what the sins are we are supposed to have committed. — Andrew4Handel
Gen 1:25: - before the fall - 'Adam and his wife were both naked, and they felt no shame.' — Wayfarer
Gen 3:7: - after 'having eaten' - 'Then the eyes of both of them were opened, and they realized they were naked; so they sewed fig leaves together and made coverings for themselves'. — Wayfarer
I don't buy that interpretation - the advent of self-consciousness, and therefore shame, seems much nearer the mark to me. — Wayfarer
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