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I say belittle because it says he had to rest, if he's all powerful, then fatigue, of any sort would make him/her just very powerfull.

2006-07-19 17:10:16 · 9 answers · asked by jallygood 2 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

9 answers

You took a leap of faith there. The Bible says he is all powerful. Therefore could he just have wanted to take a day off? We do every once in a while.

2006-07-19 17:14:27 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No. It says "God rested." Which is different than "He had to rest." The point is that He was setting an example for us. The seven days of creation establish the week.
If you think about it, there's no reason in nature for our lives to be built around a one week period. There are no week-long astronomical cycles. We don't have seven fingers or toes. But it's about the right time for a (longer than one day) work cycle - if it's interspersed with at least a day of rest. God's plan makes sense, and His design is for a purpose. He was setting the example for us with the day of rest.

2006-07-20 00:16:20 · answer #2 · answered by dougdell 4 · 0 0

Well dude, the story is supposed to be like a way for us simpletons to sort of relate the enormity of the act of creation to like terms we could understand before we learned all the science stuff, ya know. I'm fatigued by answering your question man.

2006-07-20 00:16:29 · answer #3 · answered by opinionated 2 · 0 0

He did not rest because He was tired, But because He finished creating and He wanted to kick back and enjoy His wonderful marvelous creation.

2006-07-20 00:16:40 · answer #4 · answered by Mr. Agappae 5 · 0 0

Christians would never be so bold as to question God taking a day of rest. They just accept. You should too.

2006-07-20 01:44:38 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No means to offend anyone that believes in the bible or anything.
I'm catholic, well more like agonstic.
But I still believe the Bible contradicts itself a lot.
Or maybe the people who wrote it and what not.

2006-07-20 00:17:51 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well, after I make something awesome, I like to sit back and admire it for a while! I think he was just admiring his work!

2006-07-20 00:15:04 · answer #7 · answered by Terisu 7 · 0 0

He rested in the sense that he ceased from creating.

2006-07-20 00:14:31 · answer #8 · answered by johnusmaximus1 6 · 0 0

Belittles God? LOL. You must be joking. If it belittles anything, it belittles human intelligence, and glorifies gullibility.

In biblical times, people thought that the earth and heaven were all that there was... and that the earth was essentially a 'terrarium' (you might want to look that up). They thought that the sky was a solid object, called the 'firmament', and that the sun, moon, and stars were affixed to it. So, essentially, heaven is 'on the other side of the sky'.

The story of Genesis is comprised of the myths, superstitions, fairy tales and fantastical delusions of an ignorant bunch of wandering Bronze Age goat herders, lifted from the oral traditions of other cultures, and crafted into a tale that incorporated some of their own folk tales and pseudo-history. This collection of ignorance provides the basis for the Abrahamic cults of desert monotheism... Judaism, Christianity and Islam.

The cosmological aspects of Genesis are perfectly understandable, if you contemplate it in the proper context. At the time the bible stories were concocted, the perception was that the earth was the object and the center of creation. Why? Because they had no reason to think otherwise. Today, as we advance science, we stand upon the shoulders of all the scientists that came before. Back then there were no shoulders to stand upon... so they did the best they could with what they had... their senses.

* They had no concept of 'outer space', and so they conceived that in the beginning all there was were dark waters.

* They had no concept of 'nothingness'. Remember, the concept of 'zero' wasn't invented (discovered?) until thousands of years later. With that in mind, the term 'void', as it is employed in Genesis, can not refer to 'nothingness'... it can only be applied in its alternative definition, which is 'empty'. So, the waters were dark, formless and empty (devoid of content).

* They thought that all of creation consisted of the earth and an unseen 'heaven', and they thought that the sky was a 'thing'... a substantive 'firmament' that was created by god to separate the waters and differentiate earth from heaven, when both were created.

# They had no idea that Earth was a planet, orbiting the sun.

# They had no idea that there is no firmament... that the sky is not a 'thing'.

(If you don't believe that they thought the sky was an object, consider the Tower of Babel, that they were building to reach heaven. Apparently, God ALSO thought that the sky was an object, since it concerned him so much that he confounded their speech, so as to disrupt their project and keep them from reaching his domain. God must be pretty much of a dumbass, if he doesn't even know the actual configuration of the universe that he created. So much for the 'inerrant' bible.)

* They thought that the sun was a light that god had placed upon the 'firmament' to differentiate night from day.

# They had no idea that the sun is a star... the center of our solar system.

# They had no concept of 'stars' in the same sense that we understand them today.

* They had no idea that night and day were a consequence of the earth's rotation.

* They thought that the moon was a light that god had caused to travel across the firmament to enable man to differentiate the seasons.

# They had no concept of the moon as a satellite.

* They thought that the stars were tiny lights that god had placed upon the firmament to provide for omens. (Some thought that the stars were 'holes' in the firmament that allowed the 'light of heaven' to shine through.)

# They had no idea that the stars were suns, just like our own sun.

# They thought the eyeball-visible planets (Mars, Venus, Jupiter, Saturn) were 'wandering stars'.

# They had no idea that the planets were actually sun-orbiting bodies, just like earth.

* They had no idea that the earth, itself, is a planet.

# They had no clue as to the actual nature of the earth, our solar system, the place of our solar system in the galaxy... or even of the existence of our galaxy. (Up until very recently, we didn't even know that there were other galaxies. Our galaxy, when it was first known that there actually WAS a galaxy, was thought to be the whole universe.) From their perspective, the 'earth' and 'heaven' (i.e., whatever existed on the other side of the sky) represented all that there was.

Basically, they viewed the world as a 'terrarium'. (You might want to look that up.)

I do not say this things to disparage what they thought back then. They were trying to do what science is trying to do today... trying to understand reality. Today, we have technology and disciplined meta-procedures (scientific method) to help us extract answers from nature.

Back then, they did not.

Today, we have 'theories' to provide consistent explanations for what we are able to observe in nature, supplemented and validated by the additional information that we are able to extract from nature by means of our technology, our disciplined methods and our intellectual tools (mathematics, logic). Most of our theories are incomplete, so we continue to work on them... because we know that they are incomplete.

Back then, they did not have disciplined methods, and they did not have the technology to extract answers from nature. The only information they had access to was what they could see with their own eyeballs. There was no technological knowledge base or scientific context in which to interpret their observations, so they had to appeal to their imaginations... and the 'supernatural'... in order to make sense out of what they saw. Actually, what they really achieved was deluding themselves into thinking that they knew the truth. Amazingly, over time, this delusion has become codified, institutionalized, and incorporated... complete with franchises.

Basically, Genesis can be thought of as a 'theory', concocted by people who were constrained by lack of technology, methodology and intellectual tools... but they sure weren't constrained by lack of imagination.

Today, we try to interpret Genesis in the context of what we know to be true of the universe... galaxies, stars, planets, moons, gravity, orbits, inclination of the earth's axis, planetary rotation, etc. They problem is that Genesis can't be interpreted in terms of those things, because Genesis was written by men, based on oral traditions, and those men did not know about those things. They could only write about what they could see and what they could guess about the reasons that lay behind what they saw. In any event, it provided them with a mechanism to quell the innate anxiety that comes with fretting about how and why they came to be here.

They guessed wrong.

So... I think that the cosmological aspects of Genesis require a literal interpretation... no metaphors... no allegory... no hidden meaning. The key, though, is in understanding that the literal interpretation does not lead to a description of the way things are... it leads to a description of the way they thought things are. It leads to a naive description of reality, concocted by people who were doing the best they could with what they had.

It is absolutely appalling, though, to realize that hundreds of millions of people, TODAY, including participants in this forum, BELIEVE that this ignorant bovine excrement is actually TRUE.

2006-07-20 00:16:52 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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