T
Telstar
Guest
Maybe I’m being a little too optimistic, but I tend to believe that there were always some descendants of Adam and Eve that held onto the truth, and believed that there was only one God. Even if it was a very small minority, I truly believe they were there. I also believe that they worshiped Him in some way. As the population of the earth grew, there had to be some small remnant that remained faithful. God certainly would not have abandoned anyone that made an effort to seek Him out, even if it was just to ask for His blessings in some crude way.You’re right. I just have always had this idealistic view that the Jews were monotheistic from day one, which I need to purge from my mind. All of the information I’ve gotten so far from this thread, and through some independent research of my own, has really made me rethink the whole issue. In a strange way, I find the idea of the henotheistic Jews slowly being nurtured to truth very beautiful. It’s like how parents teach their children about the world.
God has always loved us. We’re the poor, lost little creatures that He made in His own image. So, to think that He wouldn’t have made Himself known to anyone, seems impossible to me. If we believe that God has always had a plan, and we have always been a part of that plan, then why would we ever think He would leave us on our own for so long? I believe that small remnant were among the earliest Jewish people. I believe there were always at least some people among them, who always held onto the truth about there only being one God, and remained faithful to Him, even when some of them strayed away to worship false gods. The Jews do trace their lineage all the way back to Adam, don’t they? Maybe I’m wrong, but I don’t think so.