Jersey Girl wrote:
I do not know if I am Orthodox Christian or if I can supply that view. If you'll take an answer for a mixed up Christian who doesn't know what doctrinal day it is, then here goes...
Oh I can assure you you are not very Orthodox :-)
I think it safe to say that there are some Christians who believe that Jesus was chosen as Savior before the world and humans were created. If that is so, then God created us knowing that we were NOT God, NOT divine, and would definitely fall. Thus, the need for a predetermined Savior.
Ok.
Some. This seems an important point. It this one of those essential things to believe or one that Christians can now disagree on but still love and accept each other?
There are some Christians who believe that God is OUTSIDE of creation
Some?
and always WAS outside of creation because he cannot be in the presences of evil (if you will). Which might explain why in the Genesis story, we see a God who is positioned away from Adam and Eve and the only evidence we have that he is there is his voice.
If Jesus was predestined to be the Savior of mankind and if human beings were destined to fall because of our imperfect nature, then the Garden story could be literal or metaphorical.
Hmmm. I see reading ahead in this thread that there are a couple poster-Huck and Aristotle, that seem to buy into this. But hey they are both Ex LDS so they may just be all mixed up! Ha!
I see no problem taking the story as literal. If you see some reason not to take it literally, I'd like to know what it is.
Well I have a problem based on what science says, taking it literally. And it seems to me one must take it literally or the need for Jesus crumbles. To not do so I think flies in the face of what historic Christianity hass taught and seems more like a modification by liberal thinking Christians in order to maintain faith in Jesus while accepting what science is disproving.
But...if the Garden story is metaphorical, then you can take the geneaologies and throw them out the window which doesn't bode well for the line of David.
Or Jesus.