JehovahsWitness wrote:
Elijah John wrote:
Seems the
prophets of Israel did not get the memo.
They envisioned a YHVH who was above sacrifice. See Micah 6.6-8, Hosea 6.6, Mark 12.33, Jeremiah 7.20-23, etc. Blood sacrifice was a superflous vestige of a barbaric past.
MARK 12:33 (NIV)
To love him with all your heart, with all your understanding and with all your strength, and to love your neighbor as yourself is more important than all burnt offerings and sacrifices.�
To say that YHWH is above sacrifice implies to me that you are trying to say that God does not value sacrifice, however Mark 12:33 sayys that love is "more important" than burnt offerings and sacrifices" meaning that
they were indeed important (albeit less so than love). Thus we can conclude that sacrifice is indeed important to God.
JW
That is certainly one interpretation, that love is
more important, but since that is the case, then doesn't that make blood sacrifice unnecessary?
Several verses render sacrifice superflous....
at best. Some verses indicate God does not "eat flesh" or "drink blood". He does not require, nor does He
desire blood sacrifice. God's repudiation of animal blood sacrifice in the OT is never tied to the trading one type of sacrifice for another, human for animal, the blood of the Messiah for the blood of lambs and goats.
It is not the blood of the Messiah that renders animal sacrifice superfluous or repulsive to God, but more enlightened ideas of what God wants,
instead. Things like love of God and neighbor, reciprocal forgiveness, thanks and praise, obedience, knowing God ("knowledge of God"), and realizing that the ultimate
Spirit has no need to drink blood or eat flesh.
And then there's this.
. I desire mercy, NOT sacrifice.
...not "I desire mercy
with sacrifice" or "I desire mercy
in addition to sacrifice".
Also, if Pauline blood-theology is correct, what Jesus believed, and what Jesus taught, why didn't Jesus take that opportunity in the Mark episode to say something to the effect of "don't worry about making animal sacrifices anymore, my impending death on the cross will make you right with God".?
Instead, there are many important cases where Jesus taught simple repentance and the mercy of the Father, with no mention of the need for blood sacrifice of
any kind, human or animal.
The metaphor of the merciful Father is incompatible with the notion of a Deity who requires bloodshed in order to forgive. The bloodthirsty Deity is a
Pagan notion, not a Monotheistic one.