there are a number of errors in this account, but i’m not sure i have either the time or the inclination to provide exhaustive correctives…
AnAtheist:
At that point He gives a soul to those creatures, transforming them real humans. ***Each ***soul has the following properties:
apart from the first property (i.e. eternity), all of the properties you list are properties of
persons, which are understood as the
union of body
and soul.
to be sure, the soul is understood as the seat of the rational and volitional faculties of the person, but still -
people have obligations, not souls.
AnAtheist:
It is eternal and leaves the body after death.
yes. and will be rejoined with the body thereafter.
AnAtheist:
It is expected to follow a certain code of conduct set by Him.
this isn’t exactly right: moral norms aren’t effective because god says to follow them - god says to follow them because they’re effective.
divine command morality (the view that something is wrong or right because god says so) seems to me to be self-referentially invalidating: to say “one ought to do x because god says so”
assumes “one ought to follow god’s commands”. but why should one do
that?
so. god sets the code of conduct in a similar fashion to the way he sets up other laws, like gravity, or, perhaps more to the point, biophysical laws regarding nutrition and health: human nature is such that it is inclined toward a fulfillment of its rational animality that can only be achieved in a certain way - namely by doing what’s good for it. and what’s good for it is a function of the way it and the world work together. just like nutrition is a function of the way our bodies work together with their environment.
which means that we’re “expected” to follow the code of conduct in the same way that we’re “expected” to be healthy: if what you want is to be healthy, then you are going to have to eat the right foods in the right proportion; in a similar way, if what you want is to be a good person, then you are going to have make the right choices for the right reasons.
what god is doing when he tells us what to do, so to speak, is telling us what’s (morally) good for us, since - like most good parents - he knows what’s best for us better than we do.
AnAtheist:
Every single soul has already broken the code, because the first two souls did so.
no. humanity pays for the original sin of adam and eve in the same way that, for example, a child might pay for its parents’ dissolute lifestyle choices by inheriting a genetic defect. only this, of course, is a
spiritual defect.
AnAtheist:
It is necessary for every soul to recognise that, to repent, and to ask God for forgiveness for breaking the code, so that it may be saved from the punishment.
no. one does not ask for forgiveness for original sin, since it is not a sin one has committed. if you’re
asking for baptism at all, then you are presumably of an age, however, to be asking for other sins that you
have committed.
at any rate, to ask for baptism is to ask god to heal the spiritual damage inherited from our first parents.
this is, of course, a more or less gross oversimplification. but still - it’s closer to the truth than you’re original synopsis.
as for the rest of the summary, it seems to have been formulated in such a manner as to suggest that the christian story is more or less inherently implausible. and i’m not sure how to address something as vague as that other than to point out that it doesn’t seem that way to me at all - it seems like
precisely the way an infinite being would have arranged things…