W
why_me
Guest
And yet, it does make sense. For example: If god is all knowing, how can he know the trials and wonders of human life if he never experienced it?I agree, it was revolutionary because nobody in Christendom up to that point made such radical and extreme claims. They were so radical that the system as a whole cannot even be considered on the fringe of orthodoxy.
The idea that God the Father was once a man and had to work out his salvation in fear and trembling fits into the realm of Paganism rather than Christianity.
I would much rather have a god that experienced the flesh and understands, than a god that has no idea of what it means to be human. To create a human life does not give understanding of the experience. Experience comes through experience. Hence, the wisdom of a grandmother or grandfather to their grandchildren.