Dondi said:
So in order to be acceptable to G!D, we need to be 100%?
that's not actually what i'm saying. it's not about being "acceptable" - we are all inherently "acceptable" (no salvation or original sin) except that we also have additional obligations imposed upon us, those governing proper relationships that are between humans and those that are between humans and the Divine, both rational and transcendental and both noahide and the 606 extra jewish commandments, between the positive (248 "thou shalts") and the negative (365 "thou shalt nots"). we have no intermediary between ourselves and G!D (although prophets and patriarchs have in the past acted as intercessors, pleading or criticising. the point is not that we will inherently fall short of perfection; we know that, it's already built into the sacrificial system through guilt-offerings and sin-offerings. it's more that the intention with which the sacrifice is offered, the spirit of it and wider social context is far more important. you can't redeem an unrighteous society through an act of sacrifice no matter how holy - you have to actually do the groundwork in the society first, the atonement and repentance, for the sacrifice to have the desired effect of being pleasing to G!D - otherwise it's pure hypocrisy.
How do we know when we got there? If I'm at 99%, am I somewhat acceptable to G!D, or is there a deep chasm between me and G!D?
the point is you will never know - you find out after you die, presumably, depending on whether you "inherit your portion in the World to Come". the tradition is full, however, of stories of those you might think were "unacceptable", well below 10%, as it were and were considered as gaining their "portion", both jews and non-jews. consequently the idea that everyone requires some measure of atonement and
teshuvah is undisputed.
In some Christian circles, even one sin is enough to ban you from G!D, pointing out that is took only one sin to banish Adam and Eve from the Garden.
OK, well, we don't see the garden episode as banning them "from G!D", nor do we consider that anyone is totally incapable of turning their life around. even pharaoh had free-will - so the "one sin", while hypothetically possible, is in practice nonsense. nobody commits one sin without associated others. it's far less unforgiving at the same time as shifting the burden of responsibility onto the individual.
I said:
in offering up food sacrifices of any kind, people were offering some of their most prized assets - thus making an point of submission to their god(s).
there is an element of that, but there is also the point that the priests and levites had to eat somehow, having no land or means of support other than by the various portions allotted to them from sacrifices and offerings - out of which they also had to feed the poor and at the same time be responsible for the "reporting structure", as it were; if sacrifices were properly carried out and nothing bad happened, this was indicative that the system was producing the desired outcomes.
The issue being that, regardless of the god's response, you were making the effort to try and do the right thing, by keeping the interests of a higher being above your own material welfare.
well, it's not only the interests of the Divine, it's in everyone's interest that everyone be happy with the system, plus it's not like the Divine actually *needs* it.
In which case, reading the incidence of Abraham almost sacrificing his son, and also Jesus as a sacrificial body, take on extended meanings that would perhaps have made a lot more sense to those involved blood sacrifice practices.
correct - except that the near-sacrifice of isaac is the paradigm for our concept of sacrifice and jesus is, from our perspective, reverse-engineered for post-hoc justification.
But we never did have Jesus to offer, we didn't own him or possess, so how is He a sacrifice for us? Jesus is not something that we produced with our own hands or had in our possession, like a bull or a sheep. So the idea of Jesus as a sacrifice from ourselves to God doesn't make sense in that regard.
quod erat demonstrandum i hope, particularly in that we now, as prophesied, "compensate for the bull-offerings with our lips" i.e. prayers.
b'shalom
bananabrain