Hello.
The creator is not a human. Yes he came in human form when the time was right, but the creator who created the human being has a greater ‘mind’ and I have no idea how to answer your questions…
We can answer the questions through our own experience of Love, Simpleas. As I had said before, if something about our Father sounds unloving, then we can put it in the “mystery” category. We can present something this way “I know this may not sound like Love, but this is what is taught.”
Apologies, I assumed we were discussing Jesus dying on the cross for the sin of Adam, not other reasons why Jesus gave his life for us. I know there are other ways of thinking and understanding the revelation mystery.
According to the Catholic understanding in many places, Jesus saving the world is for the original sin of the first man.
I do agree though, that people may come to know God through others living now, God living through them, and they may never have heard about original sin or Adam.
What I am saying is that not only could a person who chose Baptism never have heard of original sin, but that his own need for salvation from slavery or despair supplants any need for a scripture lesson from Genesis. “God is Love” is already a mysterious enough concept, and the person who commits to Love, is in relationship with Love, has found a salvation that may be completely without any regard to notions of original sin.
And how does this person proceed in Love? Does she approach people seeing their beauty and worth, loving without condition, or does she see something bad in people, perhaps believing that people “deserve” a permanent punishment from God, even though it can be shown that people misbehave because of ignorance or blindness? And then, in which direction does the doctrine of original sin sway her approach?
These are very important questions, right?
Jesus’ ministry in the Gospels is centered on the real suffering, real despair, real resentment/hatred, real physical and spiritual maladies that people experienced. There was no reason to sell a story about Adam or some great break in friendship between God and man. Instead, Jesus showed us that
God is our loving Father, a friend always waiting, always understanding, always forgiving. God’s love for us is a constant, not dependent on our behaviors.
I don’t know, you’d have to ask him…
Seriously though, yes I know original sin can be problematic, I do wonder how many people actually sit down and think about it, and even then, it would be easier to not bother, because various questions arise that just never be satisfied.
Whatever the answers are, we can rest assured that when we see with eyes of Love, through the eyes of Christ, then we can be satisfied. Words don’t matter as much as the love behind the words.