Originally Posted by
geoff
05dc5s: The reference to Day and Night would be for good and evil. Knowing that He created good angels and also those who would rebel. Not much is given in detail about the "war" in heaven or the rebellion of Lucifer. As far as God saying "let's create man in "our" image...the Christian God is presented in three forms; God the Father, God the Som, and God the Holy Spirit. If you read the genesis account, you see God speaking things into existence, you have the reference of Day, and the reference of the Spirit hovering over the waters. They are all one and the same being, yet three different manifestations. Much like there is liquid water, ice, and vapor. God created man in "their" image in this fashion...man is a body, spirit, and soul. Much like Jesus is the body, God is the spirit, and the Holy Spirit is the soul. That is why I said before God created man (a problem), He created Himself the solution (Jesus). Further revel attain in the gospel of John says that "in the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God." John 1:1. This was the disciple revealing Jesus as the Word and Christ. You see then, got created a solution to man sinning even before He created man.
I had to go back and retread the Genesis account to look for the discrepancy you were trying to point out. There are not two separate creation accounts. The creation account lists God creating sea creatures on the 5th day and then man and every other beast on the 6th. Chapter 2 then describes in detail God creating Eden and putting trees and life in it. He then brings the beasts to Adam for him to name. God then sees Adam is lonely and creates Eve as a "help mate". This is not two separate accounts of creation; it is just further detailing to the beginning of man and all life. There are no inconsistencies.
I do put emphasis on the Old Testament even though this is a "Jesus thread", and rightly so. Jesus Himself said that He did not come to abolish the Law, but to fulfill it. The Old testament is Gods first covenant with man. Man could not keep it. The prophets told of a new covenant that was to come, brought by the Messiah. That's just what Jesus did. He made Himself a sacrifice for the sins of men, so that they may be free from sin and the Law. For the Law brought forth the realization of sin and death as the punishment. No man could keep the Law for all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God. You see, under the Law, men would bring a sacrifice once a year to the high priest. The sacrifice "covered" the sins of men and pushed them forward until the next year. Under the New Covenant, Jesus lived a sinless life and then took all the sins of man upon Himself and sacrificed His life so that we might live. Jesus fulfilled all the requirements of the Law and took it upon Himself to be the Lamb slain for mankind. Our sins are then forgiven and wiped away, not covered or pushed forward. One last thing, Jesus did not due away with Mosaic Law. He said to follow two commandments, to love your God with all your heart, soul, mind, and stregnth; and to love your neighbor as yourself. If one could keep these two commandments, then he/she would fulfill all the Law.
I'm not really sure what your trying to say in your last paragraph, but I will answer to the best of my understanding. First, I'm not claiming the Bible was written by one single man at one sit down. There are many authors and literary styles. That's why each book in the Bible has a separate title. Each individual author was given his own revelation and received a portion of the "story". The ideals though remain the same as does the over all message. One simply reads from beginning to end and sees it flow from one section into the other. Of course it is up to the individual to figure bad and good. We are all instilled by God with a conscience. What many atheist so wrongly assume is that Christians are somehow robotic and live strictly to the Bible. We Christians are to go beyond that. We have a personal relationship with God and grow spiritually through prayer, fasting, and the Holy Spirit. The Bible tells us where we came from and tells of Gods love for us, it also guides us morally and gives us comfort in our daily lives. It is a big part of faith, but not faith in its entirety. Prayer and reflection upon prayer is what forms faith and the Christian as an individual. I will admit that faith requires action and unbelief does not. Me doing what I am doing on this site is not an action to proclaim my faith to others. I do not need acceptance or affirmation from people I have never met. I have and will continue to have faith regardless of what others think of me or make me out to be. My purpose here is to provide a clear image of what Christianity is and should be. The pure image of faith and Christ has been clouded and obscured by corrupt churches, scandals, perversion, and hypocrisy. The image or impression that modern Christianity has left is not a true reflection of God, Jesus, faith, or the Bible. I have admired also that I myself am not a true representation of it either. I am flesh and blood and flawed. I have faults, I sin, and have an imperfect nature. All I aim to do is guide people past the cloudiness and to Jesus. You may see it as primitive or in vain, but God has helped a few on here find faith again through my words. Even one soul is worth ridicule and jokes my friend. I force no man on here to believe what I do, I simply provide an opportunity to discover faith for themselves.