Comments

  1. Wowbagger, Designated Snarker says

    Plus he already knows what’s going to happen and did all of those things knowing how they’d turn out.

    This is what happens when you begin with whole bunch of not-especially-compatible mythologies cobble them together and then, as the years go by, try to integrate multiple philosophical approaches to ethics without bothering to think through the long-term consequences – you wind up with a Frankenstein’s monster of a belief system, and one that’s so poorly held together it comes apart in a gentle breeze.

  2. congenital cynic says

    But you’re ignoring the Sophisticated Theology™you need to understand this.

  3. PDX_Greg says

    Well God, I guess I do owe some thanks for original sin, if you can flex the tiniest modicum of your omnipotence to prove you are real, Well, actually not, since I would still want to squeeze your entire omnipresence through a perpetual motion meatgrinder to bring an end to your egocentric ultra-dickishness. Seriously, you need help.

  4. robro says

    Makes perfect sense to me: if you’ll believe this, then you’ll willingly tithe 10% of your worth to one of my guys for revealing this profound TRUTH to you. I’m reasonably sure that was the idea at the time the mess was cobbled together, and it’s certainly true today.

  5. Pierce R. Butler says

    Finally, about 36 hours after that magnanimous self-sacrifice, he took it all back.

    And bugged out with a false promise to return real soon.

  6. jagwired says

    Plus he really hates leavening. Two of the ten commandments forbid the use of it:

    4. The feast of unleavened bread shalt thou keep. Seven days thou shalt eat unleavened bread, as I commanded thee, in the time of the month Abib: for in the month Abib thou camest out from Egypt.

    8. Thou shalt not offer the blood of my sacrifice with leaven; neither shall the sacrifice of the feast of the passover be left unto the morning.

    and let’s not forget…

    10. Thou shalt not seethe a kid in his mother’s milk.

    or the fact that if you’re a Jew, he wants some of the skin from your penis.

  7. Randomfactor says

    Finally, about 36 hours after that magnanimous self-sacrifice, he took it all back.

    The check bounced due to insufficient fundamentalism.

  8. robro says

    jagwired — Ah, I see these are the 10 that were “actually written on stone.” The others were spoken out loud. Of course. Who knew. Thanks…I knew there were several versions but had missed these.

    Love the verse before the start of those ten: “And I [God, as I pass] will take away mine hand, and thou shalt see my back parts: but my face shall not be seen.” In other words, God showed Moses his ass. Shweet.

    Re that piece of skin on the penis: I’ve recently been reading about the castrated and resurrected god Attis, consort of Cybele (the Great Mother), whose birth was celebrated on December 25th. His mendicant priests castrated themselves in imitation of their guy to receive the mysteries. Perhaps circumcision (symbolic castration) seemed like a lower price to pay for the mysteries in that day. As a Roman citizen, the Archigalli of Rome (the head priest of Attis) could not castrate himself so he had to do a symbolic thing.

  9. theoreticalgrrrl says

    That’s not accurate. God didn’t create man and woman with original sin. He created them in an earthly garden paradise. They’re allowed to eat from all the trees in the garden of Eden, except the Tree of Knowledge, because as God says, “for on the day you eat of it you shall surely die.”
    Then the serpent comes in and tells Eve, “You will not certainly die” and “God knows that when you eat from it your eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good and evil”.
    Eating from the Tree of Knowledge is what caused “original sin”.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adam_and_Eve

    So, the lesson is: knowledge is bad and you must always obey authority.
    Make more sense?

  10. says

    @theoreticalgrrrl #14 – “They’re allowed to eat from all the trees in the garden of Eden, except the Tree of Knowledge” which God put at the center of the Garden, all by itself in a little meadow, with neon signs pointing to it and blinking, “Do not eat this luscious, incredibly yummy fruit. Or else!”

  11. jagwired says

    robro,

    Yeah, in that case sign me up for the symbolic castration too. It was also probably a little bit better at propagating their cult than actual castration would have been.

    You know, I could actually get behind the fundies erecting their ten commandment monuments at courthouses, if they actually used the written in stone version. It would be funny to see all the “WTF is that?” expressions.

  12. Crip Dyke, Right Reverend Feminist FuckToy of Death & Her Handmaiden says

    @theoreticalgrrrl:

    So, the lesson is: knowledge is bad and you must always obey authority.

    You forgot: God lies, the serpent tells the truth.

  13. Al Dente says

    theoreticalgrrrl @14

    Yahweh set up Adam and Eve to fail and then punished them (and their descendents) for doing what he knew they’d do. Of all the Christianists the Calvinists have it right, their god is a real asshole who hates his creation.

  14. Rey Fox says

    Meanwhile, Francis Spufford’s daughter is reading this, and the mother of all awkward dinner conversations is coming.

  15. says

    theoreticalgrrrl:

    God didn’t create man and woman with original sin.

    Well, yeah, he did. Either El Shaddai is omniscient or not, and according to the bible, he is, so he already knew what was going to go down.

    They’re allowed to eat from all the trees in the garden of Eden, except the Tree of Knowledge, because as God says, “for on the day you eat of it you shall surely die.”

    That wasn’t all there was to it, though. A reading of Genesis reveals that El Shaddai was most nervous about A&E discovering the tree of life and eating off that one, which would have been bad, because they’d be gods, too! Oh no!

    3:22 And the LORD God said, Behold, the man is become as one of us, to know good and evil: and now, lest he put forth his hand, and take also of the tree of life, and eat, and live for ever:

    3:24 So he drove out the man; and he placed at the east of the garden of Eden Cherubims, and a flaming sword which turned every way, to keep the way of the tree of life.

    Now El Shaddai did make the claim that if A&E ate from the tree of knowledge, they would die that same day, but in Genesis 5:5:

    And all the days that Adam lived were nine hundred and thirty years: and he died.

  16. Pierce R. Butler says

    robro @ # 12: Perhaps circumcision (symbolic castration) seemed like a lower price to pay for the mysteries in that day.

    Rome consisted of an utterly insignificant village, at most, at the time when the Hebrews/Jews adopted their penis-cutting fetish.

  17. catlover says

    PZ:
    That is the most awesome, beautifully concise take-down of Christianity I have ever read! LOVE it! Where did you find it?

    #3 — Wowbagger — Designated Snarker:
    (Love your nym!)
    “a Frankenstein’s monster of a belief system, and one that’s so poorly held together it comes apart in a gentle breeze”
    VERY well put! Wonderful images!

    #4 — Daz: Experiencing a Slight Gravitas Shortfall:
    (Love your nym, too!)
    Thank you very much for the link to that stunning video. I would love to get a transcript of it. “Theoretical Bullshit” is incredibly brilliant!!

  18. says

    I have never, ever understood how Jesus dying was supposed to be for our sins or how this was supposed to absolve us in any way.. It is such a foreign concept to me and I have never had a good explanation from someone that made a lick of sense to me.

  19. robro says

    Pierce R. Butler @ #22 — Regardless of the state of Rome whenever and wherever the practice of circumcision first began (neither Rome nor Israel probably existed when that happened), it might have still seemed like a lower price to pay compared to castration for those seeking “knowledge,” salvation, and the promise of resurrection during Roman times, common themes among all the cults floating around the Roman world.

  20. randay says

    #3 Wowbagger “Plus he already knows what’s going to happen and did all of those things knowing how they’d turn out.” #21 Caine. You should know this one from Ecclesiastes 3:

    “14 I know that, whatsoever God doeth, it shall be for ever: nothing can be put to it, nor any thing taken from it: and God doeth it, that men should fear before him.

    15 That which hath been is now; and that which is to be hath already been; and God requireth that which is past.

    16 And moreover I saw under the sun the place of judgment, that wickedness was there; and the place of righteousness, that iniquity was there.

    17 I said in mine heart, God shall judge the righteous and the wicked: for there is a time there for every purpose and for every work.”

    So god is going to judge the righteous and the wicked even though it already knows who they will be. Not only that, it created and requires them.

  21. says

    The whole thing feels to me a bit like my first D&D game where the idea I had for the story and setting in the beginning was really different from what I wound up wanting to tell and what the players moved the setting towards so there were a lot of awkward awkward retcons and quietly brushing early setting elements under the rug hoping no one brings them up again because they never existed damn it.

  22. Thumper; Immorally Inferior Sergeant Major in the Grand Gynarchy Mangina Corps (GGMC) says

    @Travis #24

    Blood sacrifice. Modern Christians don’t like to admit that the early stages of their religion still practiced sacrifice, so they ignore the fact that such symbolism has made it’s way into their myths. Jesus’ death is quite obviously a human sacrifice to placate the Big Guy. Of course it all becomes even more complicated when the ridiculous and illogical idea of the Trinity gets introduced.

  23. Markus Schäfer says

    Ingdigo Jump:

    The whole thing feels to me a bit like my first D&D game where the idea I had for the story and setting in the beginning was really different from what I wound up wanting to tell and what the players moved the setting towards so there were a lot of awkward awkward retcons and quietly brushing early setting elements under the rug hoping no one brings them up again because they never existed damn it.

    Exactly how I’ve come to see the creation of the christian myth, too :)

    Oh, and don’t forget that over the years other gamemasters with only a loose or no adherence to the established narrative took over for periods of time.

  24. Anri says

    “…also, I made sure I was Pretty Much White™ so as not to scare the bigots.”

    Now that’s planning!

    . . .

    Ingdigo Jump @ 28:

    The whole thing feels to me a bit like my first D&D game where the idea I had for the story and setting in the beginning was really different from what I wound up wanting to tell and what the players moved the setting towards so there were a lot of awkward awkward retcons and quietly brushing early setting elements under the rug hoping no one brings them up again because they never existed damn it.

    It’s worth noting that (at least in the edition I’m most familiar with) the given origin of a fair percentage of the more fantastic beasts in AD&D is explicitly “Magic Man Done It”.

  25. theoreticalgrrrl says

    @Caine, Fleur du mal

    Well, I ain’t no biblical scholar, just remembering stuff I was taught in Sunday School.

    We were told that Adam and Eve disobeying God is the reason sin and death exist. I remember being upset as a child by this because all animals were nice and nonviolent before the fall so I coulda had a pet tiger. How cool would a pet tiger be? One that wouldn’t try to maul or eat you?? But A & E had to mess that all up.

  26. says

    theoreticalgrrrl #34

    I think Caine’s point was that God is supposed to be perfect (omni-this, that ‘n’ everything). If he’s perfect, and he creates beings who sin, then he has to have intended that they should sin, as a perfect being could not, by definition, make mistakes.

  27. theoreticalgrrrl says

    Daz @35

    I think biblical scholars will argue that God gave man and woman free will, so he can’t stop what we choose to do, even if he wanted to.

  28. eveningchaos says

    Whenever I try to evaluate the dogmas within Christianity, I find myself comparing these crazy rules, rituals, and myths to a poorly designed role playing game system. It’s like D & D created by idiots.

  29. zmidponk says

    It’s not quite complete because, as far as I can make out, ‘sinning’ is actually breaking the rules that God supposedly set in place, with any punishment for sinning also doled out by God, so He sacrificed Himself to Himself in order to save mankind from the punishment He was threatening for breaking the rules He had set in place.

  30. randay says

    #36 Free will is incompatible with the idea of the Xian god which is said to be omniscient.

  31. says

    Since fundies often tout prophecy as proof of Jesus’ pre-ordained messiah-dom, as well as free will as a way to get around God’s having to have perfectly created imperfect beings, it’s worth noting that free will is also incompatible with prophecy, which needs a fixed, unchangeable timeline in order to work.

  32. raven says

    I think biblical scholars will argue that God gave man and woman free will, so he can’t stop what we choose to do, even if he wanted to.

    Free will is incompatible with the idea of the Xian god which is said to be omniscient.

    What TG wrote also conflicts with the main superpower of the xian god. He is supposed to be all powerful. Their god can poof anything, anytime, anywhere.

    It’s also incompatible with being a perfect being or being a benign god. That last one isn’t a problem for the fundies. Their god is a Sky Monster, created in their own image.

  33. Tony! The Immorally Inferior Queer Shoop! says

    theoreticalgrrrl:
    Those Biblical scholars may not fully understand omniscience then.
    If their deity is truly all knowing and all powerful, then he knew everything that was ever going to happen, from the moment he created time until he ends it. So five minutes prior to Genesis 1:1, he already knew A&E were going to eat from the tree. Yet, even knowing that, he creates everything and proceeds to watch Adam and Eve do exactly what he knew they would do, and then punishes them??!!

  34. raven says

    Those Biblical scholars may not fully understand omniscience then.

    She probably meant Theologians or xian apologists, not that there is much difference between them.

    Biblical scholars usually say the bible is mostly fiction. They disagree on which parts and how much of it is fiction.

    The omniscience god put two naive people into a magic garden with the Trees of Knowledge and Life and a smart, walking, talking snake. What did he think was going to happen? An idiot could have figured that one out.

    Adam and Eve were set up to fail right at the start. And why were the magic trees in the garden anyway? God, the all powerful Sky Fairy, could have put them on Jupiter or Kpax IV, 50 million light years away.