Originally posted by thunderbolt
We are all born of original sin. Man sinned against God in the Garden--Adam and Eve. He commanded them not to eat of a particular apple tree. They had every one of their needs met plus total paradise. They didn't have all of the torn feelings we have. The apple tree was called the tree of life. Satan came as a serpent to deceive them into eating the forbidden fruit. He claimed it would give them knowledge and they would be like God. As soon as they ate from the tree, they were immediately aware of their nakedness, good and evil--That's the original sin. God would later confront them about eating of the forbidden tree. He basically said, life would be harder for them--and every generation thereafter-- from that point on. Such as having to work the soil by the sweat of their brows for food, women experiencing pain during child birth and so forth. Also, after this sin, man became mortal beings. Now you know about original sin. Every one of us is descendents of Eve and are born with original sin. That's why we must be born again through Jesus.
So your god was so offended by this disobediance, he saw fit to not only punish the perpetrators but also their descendants for the rest of eternity. Bit harsh wouldn't you think? I guess you god doesn't go for the notion of "let the punishment fit the crime".
Furthermore, only a few chapters later we have god having to make another judgement: what to do with Cain, who has just slain his brother in cold blood.
You might think, if eating the fruit of a forbidden tree is deserving of eternal punishment, what would happen to someone who willfully takes another's life?
Astonishingly, after some stern words and condemning him to be a "restless wanderer" (which he already was anyway), god goes and bestows a mark of protection on him, so that nobody would dare kill Cain.
Holy Smokes! WHat a grave injustice! The desire for knowledge (eating from the tree of knowledge) gets eternal hardship, cold-blooded murder gets divine insurance. What a cruel joker this god is!
And you give me THIS as christian morality? Disgusting!
"okay, okay" the apologists say, "the book of genesis isn't meant to be take literally".
well, what exactly is the moral we are supposed to learn from all this?
secondly, i wish these guys would go and tell Duane Gish and his buddies at the ICR that genesis wasn't meant to be taken seriously - these guys are using a literal interpretation of it to smuggle their Creatonist "science" into school textbooks.