T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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432.1 | | CVG::THOMPSON | DCU Board of Directors Candidate | Fri Apr 10 1992 21:27 | 11 |
| I always assumed that chapter 2 was the long version of what happened
the 6th day. That God origionally created one man. Later he decided
that for one reason or an other He should create a second man type
person to keep the first company. As He had already created two sexes
for the animals He decided to make the second man-type female.
The use of the name Adam as a generic name for people, or tribe it
you will, sounds logical.
Alfred
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432.2 | | SA1794::SEABURYM | Zen: It's Not What You Think | Fri Apr 10 1992 21:27 | 13 |
|
Playtoe:
First, let me say that what you have written is
quite interesting and thought provoking.
Second, even though what you wrote is based a
literal interpretation of what the Bible says,
I have a feeling the literalist are gonna be
all over you on this one.
Mike
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432.3 | | VIDSYS::PARENT | The girl in the mirror | Sat Apr 11 1992 19:13 | 7 |
|
Playtoe,
Interesting. What's the question or point your trying to make?
Allison
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432.4 | Let us reason together... | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Mon Apr 13 1992 15:01 | 61 |
| Re 2
Hi Mike:
Actually, it was a "literalist" that provoked me to question this
conference on this matter. A minister friend of mine came over
Saturday morning (last weekend) at 7:30 and we were together talking
til 6:00 a.m. the Sunday morning, when he left to go to church and then
home...I'm serious, and I've done this sort of thing before. That's
the nature of my ministry, spending "quality time" with others and
exchanging views.
This friend, was black, had attended two years of seminary school. I
find it most amazing that the socalled "literalist" can infer meanings
of scripture which AREN'T supported by scripture, like "the sons of
God" in Genesis 6, being "evil demons" or "materialized, women
imprenating, fallen angels" (when nowhere in the bible does it every
say an angel imprenated a woman, nor that they materialized and married
humans, and there is scripture against that thought. On the other
hand, where there is clear scripture to support an unsual idea, like
"the androgynous original man" the literalist can't believe it, can't
receive man as being "androgynous", or that God can be refered to as
having a "sex" (male or female)...
re 3
Allison:
If it serves to "provoke thought", that is the point. If those who
have been so provoked would care to share and discuss their thoughts
that would be excellent. If you are afraid of being disagreed with, if
it offends you to be reproved, instead of being thankful, then you
shouldn't open up to others...but if you want to learn and grow, one
can ONLY do so by discussing ideas with others...you cannot learn from
yourself things and perspectives you haven't heard of, and how can you
hear without some else to tell you of them? (does that phrase sound
familiar?)
Anyway, I think it is imperative that we Christians come on one accord.
The differences of "denominations" is superficial, which can be
corrected once we all find that "accord". The literalist vs the
fundamentalist vs the esotericist, the evolutionist vs the creationist,
etc, are primary to denominational differences. Do *I* possess the
correct view? Well, I don't think my view is at all complete, but I
think I do have a very good handle on the "correct" view fundamentally.
And that is due to the fact that it begins in Egyptian roots...a root
which those who do not understand will have problems understanding
scripture. If you don't understand the depth and breadth of wisdom the
men to whom God revealed the Word possessed you cannot understand the
Word they wrote. If you don't possess the knowledge of mathematics
necessary to understand the formulas Einstein uses in his theory you
cannot understand the implications and usages of his theory of
Relativity.
So, I'm attempting to inspire that "accord", at least in
interpretation, through reason and consistency in the standards used to
interpret scripture...certain standards, particularly the "literalist"
is not valid, as the men of God, even Jesus, was not literalist...Jesus
said himself he spoke in parables to the masses.
Playtoe
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432.5 | Please expand the base note | VIDSYS::PARENT | The girl in the mirror | Mon Apr 13 1992 16:29 | 24 |
|
Playtoe,
Thanks for the reply. I don't feel challenged by your conclusion. I
think what you have presented is insufficient in detail for me to
challenge. Conceptually you present parallels to my thinking regarding
the origin of the world and humans.
Your friend who cannot conceive of androgyny is more interesting to me
as that is the predominent thought process. This may be attributed to
many people feeling that androgyny respresents the absence of male and
female rather than the presence of both. I encounter this frequently
so it attracts my attention. In my life the questions of origins and
gender are significant and interesting to me.
Why did you write this and ask the question at the end?
< shouldn't open up to others...but if you want to learn and grow, one
< can ONLY do so by discussing ideas with others...you cannot learn from
< yourself things and perspectives you haven't heard of, and how can you
< hear without some else to tell you of them? (does that phrase sound
< familiar?)
Allison
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432.6 | | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Mon Apr 13 1992 20:21 | 44 |
| re: 5
First:
>> Why did you write this and ask the question at the end?
<< hear without some else to tell you of them? (does that phrase sound
<< familiar?)
I was speaking of the fact that I was merely paraphasing, "How can they
believe in whom they have not heard and how can the hear without a
preacher."...nothing more.
To expand of the basenote:
Many people believe the Adam and Eve story happened in the recent 5,000
to 20,000 years ago. And that Noah's flood happened as well within
this time period and that the world was repeopled within the last
20,000 years or so...I say HOGWASH, and that's too literal.
First, the ADAM & EVE story is the OLDEST story known to man, and did
not originate with the Hebrews, as a matter of fact the HEBREWS weren't
even a people until long after Noah's flood according to Genesis! So
that shows that the story could not have been originate by them as much
as Moses could not have written the story of his burial and afterwards.
Adam & Eve are, for me, allegories of the beginning of human life on
the planet. "Androgynous" man speaks to the early development of the
human germ seed. The anthorpomorphism of this event is necessary for
the digestion of the masses...but MAN did not look like a man that we
know today. Which is why I believe that man did not evolve from apes,
but was always a MAN-seed, and just happened to evolve through a stage
where he resembled the ape, even as he was once a fish and and then a
lizard of sorts and evolved up to the point of SETH, "when men began to
call upon the name of the lord." The amount of time this took is
unknowable, though science speculates millions of years...this is Gods
way of "created man from the dust and breathed into him the breath of
life"...a most natural and not mystical event. For me Religion and
science do not disagree, but you need to know science and you need to
know the mind of and the extent of wisdom of the bible writers.
The literalist, IMO are a lazy bunch, who take the easy way out.
Playtoe
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432.7 | | JURAN::VALENZA | Note the mama! | Wed Apr 15 1992 16:47 | 67 |
| Here is a quote from the Jewish author Arthur Waskow, in his book
"Godwrestling". He offers a Jewish interpretation of the Adam and Eve
myth that ties in to this discussion. I have posted this quote
elsewhere, at other times; it represents only part of a much longer
discussion.
To begin with: who was Adam? We have been taught to think that he
was male and that the woman was created from his rib; but the
tradition did not always think so. The tradition had to face a text
that said, "And God said: 'Let us make Adam in Our image, after Our
likeness; and let them have dominion...'" Them? What "them"? Our
image, our likeness? What "Our"? And the tradition had to face a
text that said, "And God created Adam in His own image, in the image
of God created He him; male and female created He them." What
"him", what "them"? And finally the tradition faced a text that
said, "In the day that God created Adam, in the likeness of God made
He him; male and female created He them, and called their name Adam,
in the day when they were crated." Called *their* name Adam?
There were several ways to explain these baffling ambiguities, these
shifts from "him" to "them" and back again, this frightening
reference by God to "Our own image," as if God were plural--God
forbid! Some of the rabbis collapsed the question by saying these
texts were simply summaries of the familiar story of the rib and
Eve--and this became the main line of interpretation. Some rabbis
had a darker, nightmare vision. They imagined a woman created
before Eve, created from the earth, the "Adamah," and therefore
equal to the male Adam. They imagined this woman, Lilith, "the
night one," insisting on her equality and freedom--to the
destruction of Adam's peace and dignity. These rabbis feared free
womanhood, and they saw Lilith become a demon, devourer of children,
destroyer of men. And this dark fear colored hundreds of years
of Jewish history--dark days and darker nights when men and women
feared the furious energy of free and passionate womanhood.
But there were still other rabbis. Jeremiah Ben Eleazar and Samuel
ben Nachman, may they be remembered for a blessing to our
generation, said that Adam was male and female in one person.
And to my own eyes this is the only way the text makes sense. God
in one moment "Our," in the next "His"; Adam in one moment "them,"
in the next "him." To me this sounds like an effort to express
"two-in-one"; to say with all the clumsiness of human language that
which humans had no word for; to describe what they could only
envision because there was no place to see it: a non-dualistic
duality, a unity of opposites, androgyny. And the Torah even
reveals to us the difference in the understandings of this unified
duality from God's standpoint and from our own. For God from the
outside, to the human observer, looks utterly One: in His Image,
says the Torah from the outside. But from inside God knows that the
Unity contains all opposites: "in Our image," says God's own voice
speaking about God's own Self.
So let us hear the story in in this way: God makes an androgynous
Human in the image of an androgynous God. And then God decides it
is not good for the Human to be alone. Perhaps it is the Human who
thinks so first, learning from the procession of male and female
beasts that go past him to be named, that it is not good to be
alone. But if it is Adam who notices, it is God who agrees...
So the original Adam, the androgynous Adam, is divided. So that
each human might have a counterpart, the two sides of Adam, male and
female, are separated. Not a rib but a side (they are the same word
in Hebrew, as Samuel ben Nachman pointed out) is taken to make the
woman; the other side becomes the man...
-- Mike
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432.8 | | SWAM1::DOTHARD_ST | PLAYTOE | Wed Apr 15 1992 20:47 | 14 |
| re 7
Yes....I'm glad to hear it.
I think it truly is the most reasonable interpretation of the
scripture, even though one may not believe it's true...but then again
we are not suppose to lean to our own understanding but to the
understanding of God...
Yes, "Study to show thyself approved, a workman how needeth not be
ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth...." yesss, we've got to
STUDY that Word...
Playtoe, In the Spirit of Truth
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