A proposition occurred to me based on:
Surrendering, submitting, giving up that which is precious to show subservience to another.
Human-Divine Relationship
Deity is all-powerful. Humans are but playthings at the mercy of an all-powerful temperamental deity whose wrath must be appeased to ensure crops, a good hunt, food, survival.
Hunter-Gatherer Mentality
Every single body is of vital importance because of its role in the hunt and battle.
Conclusion
Given this context and mentality, it would have served the larger good to placate the deity by showing the ultimate subservience by sacrificing the most vital possession of the tribe--one of its members, a human body.
Comments
I cannot yet see the link between the above and the sacrifice of the God of gods. If we understand sacrifice as described above, might it be seen as God's covenent with his people?
Presupposition: There are two players--God and humanity. Since time immemorial, humanity has been proving its subservience to an all-powerful deity as described above.
God is saying to himself: This is crazy! I love these people. I MADE them--I made them in my own image. I've shown my love in so many ways--I've given them fertility, crops, good hunts, survival in a harsh environment, but they still don't get it. WHY?
Finally, God realizes: The only language humans understand is sacrificing one of their own. Perhaps if I sacrifice one of my very own--my Son--perhaps then they will understand that I love them.
It works! Humans finally understand that: God loves us. It matters not to God how stupid and blundering we are, nor how many bad decisions and mistakes we make, God loves us all the same. Our sins are forgiven!
To Sum Up
It is okay for us humans to be who we are. It does not matter whether God exists. What matters is that we love each other and cooperate for the survival of our species and our planet. Propogating religion with its rules and traditions and rituals is but a continuation of attempts at placating a wrathful God, which nullifies God's sacrifice.
But it was not completely in vain.
1. For the most part, humanity no longer feels the need to kill a living body--whether human or animal--to please God.
2. Humans got the message that God loves them and forgives their sins.
From what I have been able to learn/observe so far, this seems to be a universal phenomenon for the most part. I don't know if animal sacrifice continues to be practiced by any society or not, but it is no longer the rule of the day by humanity as a whole. Perhaps this is what changed approximately at Jesus' death--give or take a century or two. I wonder what your thoughts are on this.
- meaning of sacrifice,
- divine-human relationship,
- hunter-gatherer mentality.
Surrendering, submitting, giving up that which is precious to show subservience to another.
Human-Divine Relationship
Deity is all-powerful. Humans are but playthings at the mercy of an all-powerful temperamental deity whose wrath must be appeased to ensure crops, a good hunt, food, survival.
Hunter-Gatherer Mentality
Every single body is of vital importance because of its role in the hunt and battle.
Conclusion
Given this context and mentality, it would have served the larger good to placate the deity by showing the ultimate subservience by sacrificing the most vital possession of the tribe--one of its members, a human body.
Comments
I cannot yet see the link between the above and the sacrifice of the God of gods. If we understand sacrifice as described above, might it be seen as God's covenent with his people?
Presupposition: There are two players--God and humanity. Since time immemorial, humanity has been proving its subservience to an all-powerful deity as described above.
God is saying to himself: This is crazy! I love these people. I MADE them--I made them in my own image. I've shown my love in so many ways--I've given them fertility, crops, good hunts, survival in a harsh environment, but they still don't get it. WHY?
Finally, God realizes: The only language humans understand is sacrificing one of their own. Perhaps if I sacrifice one of my very own--my Son--perhaps then they will understand that I love them.
It works! Humans finally understand that: God loves us. It matters not to God how stupid and blundering we are, nor how many bad decisions and mistakes we make, God loves us all the same. Our sins are forgiven!
To Sum Up
It is okay for us humans to be who we are. It does not matter whether God exists. What matters is that we love each other and cooperate for the survival of our species and our planet. Propogating religion with its rules and traditions and rituals is but a continuation of attempts at placating a wrathful God, which nullifies God's sacrifice.
But it was not completely in vain.
1. For the most part, humanity no longer feels the need to kill a living body--whether human or animal--to please God.
2. Humans got the message that God loves them and forgives their sins.
From what I have been able to learn/observe so far, this seems to be a universal phenomenon for the most part. I don't know if animal sacrifice continues to be practiced by any society or not, but it is no longer the rule of the day by humanity as a whole. Perhaps this is what changed approximately at Jesus' death--give or take a century or two. I wonder what your thoughts are on this.