I still have yet to hear satisfactory explanations of what exactly those
purposes are and for what they were
intended.
This is part of the difficulty with the OT… if any one of
THESE, for example, cannot be justified… religion fails.
Even if it
is more than commands (which obviously it is as it contains stories and quasi-history as well), we’re still at a loss regarding why god commanded:
- to stone non-virgins on their wedding night on their father’s door step
- not to eat four legged insects
Dei Verbum and one of the early Leo’s stated that 1)
nothing is uninspired in the bible and that 2) god inspired to be written
only what he wanted and
no more
So…
- nothing superfluous
- everything explicitly inspired by god
But we have the above and everything at the link. Even ‘through the eyes of the NT’ this seems a bit more than one can explain away.
Which is why I predict something akin to:
- we cannot know the mind of god and all his mysterious ways
- god created everything so whatever he wants to do is moral
There are a couple of problems with what you have written above.
First is the fact that you say you have heve not heard any “satisfactory explanations” for the OT. This indicates that you have heard explanations, just not ones that you will accept.
Second, and more significant, is the error of trying to apply a single, and modern, moral viewpoint to situations more than 2500 years old. This happens when questions come up of How God could allow this, or Why did God order that…
The Bible, as a whole, is the story of God leading His people from chaotic, animal, sinful behavior toward order and law and Love. In each stage, fromt he mysterious mists of the Genesis accounts, to the Covenant with Abraham through to Moses and so on, God moves his people toward greater control over their actions by placing more rules around them.
Early on, vengence was allowed and was basically uncontrolled, later, Laws governed who what and how vengance could be applied. Still later it became more “legalized” until finally in the NT, Christ basically forbade vengence altogether. The same for many other forms of personal and social behavior. We may not agree with a particular outlook, or law, but we can hardly place ourselves in that time and place to make a fair judgement on it either.
Vengence is just one example of how God works through the OT times and into the NT covenant.
Non-theistic scientists might look at this same thing and call it “social evolution” and not “God based” but that is another matter. The fact remains that the Bible contains a record of that growth.
Now to the reference to:
- nothing superfluous
- everything explicitly inspired by god
There is no contradiction here. God wishes us to know where we came from, and how His loving care has brought us up from the depths of condemnation into the light of salvation. From the “law of the Jungle” to the “Law of Love”.
I’m sorry to have disappointed you in what you “predicted” to see in response.
Well - no I’m not - - -
God
is mysterious and we cannot “know” all of his ways, but we can discern from the various resources available to us, the truth of his loving and slavic plan for us.
We can do this just as a scientist can sift down through the layers of the earth and try to make sense out of the seemingly disconnected and even contradictory bits of evidence he finds in the soil. He may not be able to resolve all of the contradictory evidence and there certainly will be gaps in his understnding of what occurred in the distant past, but that will not prevent him from trying to make sense of the data to fit what he already “knows” (that the earth is ancient and things evolve etc…)
All it take is the desire to see it and to fit the pieces together in honesty and truth.
Peace
James