Ark Guy said:
tell me seebs, why should I believe that all men have sinned and fall short of the Glory of God?
Because you can observe it in the world around you with your own senses.
Now considering the leopards spots scenario....why would God present an untruth as truth? Why would God write a flaw into his account of creation? What other flaws does the bible contain?
That's a very interesting question.
One way to approach it is to look at the reasons for which we have the concept of "analogy" and "allegory". Often, when a concept is difficult to understand, presenting related concepts may be easier. One of the people in the parenting forum commented, once, that there was a period in her children's life when they learned that definite times were different from indefinite ones, so if you said something was "soon", they would keep asking when it would happen, but if you said "Tuesday", they would stop. They didn't know whether "Tuesday" was in five minutes, or in a year; they just knew it was sometime in the future, and that it wouldn't get sooner by them asking.
The question, I think, is this. We have a bunch of words describing the creation of the universe. How can we best understand them? There are many layers of meaning here; for probably three thousand years, maybe longer, the Jews have studied these words, and found many meanings in them.
What appears to be the most important part of the story is the depiction of the relationship between humanity and God; God is Creator, we are created. God is perfect, we are not. God is unable to perceive people if they hide from him.... Wait, what? That doesn't make any sense. Why does God ask Adam where he is? He presumably knew. What does this tell us? It tells us that God knows more than He lets on; that He sometimes encourages us to work through things ourselves.
The next question is, of these many interpretations, which one is the "right" one? Is only one of them true? Are all of them true?
For two or three thousand years, we understood these messages about the nature of our relationship with God to be crucial, and the way it was presented, a very poetic and rigidly structured story with all the markers of mythology, to be irrelevant to those questions.
Then, people came up with the idea of inverting this; instead of focusing on the foundational messages about the nature of God, they say, we should focus on the interpretation of this story as plain literal truth, ignoring all the symbolism, ignoring the
meaning, ignoring the entire reason God put this there.
Why, I ask, should we
care how the universe came to be? What bearing does it have on our salvation? None at all. We are here, now; God is here, now. We can be saved or not. The past is not that important. But the message of Genesis is important; it tells us who God is.
Was the resurrection a flaw that will be discovered later on?
I don't think so.