Jamesfirecat wrote:Jews wouldn't feel as betrayed by the Message as Christians would.
I say this because the "Christian God" is the loving caring soft hearted god of the New Testament who sends down his own son to preach to us about how we should get along, and loving each other is more important than making sure we eat food that has been handled in a "holy" way etc, etc... we tend to want to forget about the Old Testament to a certain degree, much like fans of "The Dark Night" would prefer not to talk about "Batman and Robbin" unless its to point out differences...
You're missing something.
From the Jews' point of view, this is the god they've suffered countless atrocities, millenia of oppression, and constant obedience to a complex and sometimes painful set of religious laws for. When it would have been
so ridiculously easy to just say "Screw it, let's find a new god," too. They very much kept up their end of the bargain here; they have a right to expect not to be completely cast aside
as a people like this.
So they'd likely react with a "WHAT? You ass! We had a covenant, damn it!"
Now, some individual Jews will probably not react this way, and instead will be all like "this is just another test, like pretty much the entirety of Jewish history." But then again, so will some Christians, and some Muslims.
JN1 wrote:He wasn't rational at all. He believed it was his 'Holy Duty' to kill a prominent atheist, who he believed was amongst those responsible for Humanity being condemned to Hell. Getting into Heaven by his act was not on his mind at the time.
He wasn't rational... but in a real sense he was
right. After all, in the backstory Yahweh got tired of humans about when they stopped being as obedient as he'd like; if there had been more people like that random lunatic acting on their random lunacy back in the day, the Message never would have happened because the people who got Yahweh bored of humanity would have been being killed off rather than allowed to play around and annoy him.
Which is not to say that humanity would have been better off- but it's interesting to reflect that the guy who killed Dawkins had deduced
exactly why the Message happened. It's just that he reacted by blaming what
he saw as the villains (other humans, since God can't be the bad guy, right?), with himself as the victim, rather than seeing all humanity as the victim the way that mainstream survivor society did.