I’ve been doing a lot of research into Judaism. They seem to encourage asking tough questions and taking the answers seriously, which is good.

After reading a bit of the Torah, it got me thinking, why aren’t there any references to people who could not have been known to its followers at the time? No mention of East Asians or Native Americans. Did God just forget about them when he talked through Moses? Or he thought they weren’t important enough to mention?

Then it got me thinking some more. What about science? Wouldn’t it be effective to convince followers of legitimacy if a religion could accurately predict a scientific phenomenon before its followers have the means of discovering it? Say, “And God said, let there be bacteria! And then there was bacteria.” But there is nothing like that. Anywhere, as far as I can tell. Among any religion.

I’m not a theologian and I’m always interested in learning more, so any insights would be helpful.

Edit: A lot of responses seem to be saying “people wouldn’t have had a use for that knowledge at the time” seem to be parroting religious talking points without fully understanding their implications. Why would God only tell people what they would have a use for at the time? Why wouldn’t he give them information that could expand the possibilities of what they were capable of? Why does it matter if people had a word for something at the time? Couldn’t God just tell them new words for new things? If God was only telling them things that were relevant to them at the time, why didn’t He say so? Also, how come he doesn’t come back and tell us things that are relevant now, or at least mention that he isn’t coming back?

  • Flax@feddit.uk
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    I am a Christian.

    First and foremost, the Bible isn’t a science textbook. The main focus of the Bible is essentially how we need a saviour and that the saviour is coming (the old testament). And then the Gospels of the New Testament is when the saviour comes, and the Epistles are how we should respond.

    The Old Testament contains the prophecy of Isaiah, which states that a saviour will come:

    Isaiah 9:6-7

    For unto us a child is born, unto us a son is given: and the government shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall be called Wonderful, Counsellor, The mighty God, The everlasting Father, The Prince of Peace. Of the increase of his government and peace there shall be no end, upon the throne of David, and upon his kingdom, to order it, and to establish it with judgment and with justice from henceforth even for ever. The zeal of the LORD of hosts will perform this.

    Isaiah 53:3-12 KJV

    [3] He is despised and rejected of men; a man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief: and we hid as it were our faces from him; he was despised, and we esteemed him not. [4] Surely he hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows: yet we did esteem him stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted. [5] But he was wounded for our transgressions, he was bruised for our iniquities: the chastisement of our peace was upon him; and with his stripes we are healed. [6] All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one to his own way; and the LORD hath laid on him the iniquity of us all. [7] He was oppressed, and he was afflicted, yet he opened not his mouth: he is brought as a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her shearers is dumb, so he openeth not his mouth. [8] He was taken from prison and from judgment: and who shall declare his generation? for he was cut off out of the land of the living: for the transgression of my people was he stricken. [9] And he made his grave with the wicked, and with the rich in his death; because he had done no violence, neither was any deceit in his mouth. [10] Yet it pleased the LORD to bruise him; he hath put him to grief: when thou shalt make his soul an offering for sin, he shall see his seed, he shall prolong his days, and the pleasure of the LORD shall prosper in his hand. [11] He shall see of the travail of his soul, and shall be satisfied: by his knowledge shall my righteous servant justify many; for he shall bear their iniquities. [12] Therefore will I divide him a portion with the great, and he shall divide the spoil with the strong; because he hath poured out his soul unto death: and he was numbered with the transgressors; and he bare the sin of many, and made intercession for the transgressors.

    Generally, the viewpoint I will give is that this prophecy was definitely written before Jesus came (we even have a physical copy of it that predates Christ’s birth) and that it prophesied Jesus perfectly. I’d point to the New Testament and how the eyewitness accounts are written as eyewitness accounts, and those eyewitnesses are reliable and even died for what they saw. Essentially, Christianity hinges on the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ, NOT scientific claims which are irrelevant.

    however

    For a period in history, scientists believed the universe had eternally existed. The idea of a “beginning” was seen as religious dogma and hubris. Until the big bang was discovered. Now it’s normal that people believe there was a beginning. Some would point out that the patterns in the genesis creation narrative do add up, albeit not literal 24 hour days (such as light coming first, dry land, plants, animals, then humans. I even heard a theory that the plants could have cleared a mist causing the cosmos to become visible. But there is a symmetrical pattern there.) although I believe that the whole point of that is just “God is the creator. And He saw it was good.” It would be very off if it started going into molecular biology or atomic physics. Especially since this narrative was likely captured via oral tradition.

    Some would claim that Job describes a water cycle and other observations before it would have been known about. Although I wouldn’t hinge my faith on this as people back then may have been more observant than we give them credit for.

    Job 36:26-28

    Behold, God is great, and we know him not; the number of his years is unsearchable. [27] For he draws up the drops of water; they distill his mist in rain, [28] which the skies pour down and drop on mankind abundantly.

    Earth being suspended in space:

    Job 26:7

    He stretches out the north over the void and hangs the earth on nothing.

    Also a creature is mentioned, some may say it was a dinosaur being described.

    Job 40:15-20

    [15] “Behold, Behemoth, which I made as I made you; he eats grass like an ox. [16] Behold, his strength in his loins, and his power in the muscles of his belly. [17] He makes his tail stiff like a cedar; the sinews of his thighs are knit together. [18] His bones are tubes of bronze, his limbs like bars of iron. [19] “He is the first of the works of God; let him who made him bring near his sword! [20] For the mountains yield food for him where all the wild beasts play.

    However, again, I think people trying to view religious texts as a scientific textbook are looking at it wrong. We don’t need God to explain the natural world to us. We can observe it for ourselves. What we cannot observe are things like what happens after death, right and wrong, etc. The idea that, at least from a Christian perspective, that Christianity and natural science are two completely different things is wrong. Christianity isn’t about science. It’s about Christ and His salvation plan for us. It would be really out of place for the Bible to just become a scientific textbook. God is concerned with greater things- notably, how to save our soul.

    Lastly, it is worth mentioning: early scientists were motivated to study science as they believed it was God’s creation and they wanted to understand it. If there was a lawgiver, then there must be laws (of science), they thought.

    • JTskulk@lemmy.world
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      11 hours ago

      This was a lot of words just to say “no”.

      The Big Bang isn’t necessarily seen as the “beginning” of the universe, it’s really just the idea that if we rewind time, all the galaxies that we see currently see moving away from each other would be in the same location. The universe could be eternal and cyclical; the big bang could just be the beginning of the last cycle.

      OP’s question is something I’ve though about myself. It would be so easy for a God talking to a person to just drop one tiny factoid to be verified later. You could say germs exist, you could say the planets orbit the sun, you could mention atoms, disease, almost anything. Instead God told a man to murder his own son to win a bet over nothing with someone he doesn’t even like because “trust me bro”. Jews and Muslims still won’t eat pork because they couldn’t figure out how to safely cook it 2000 years ago.

      There is one honorable mention: Hinduism states that the age of the universe is about 4.32 billion years. Today scientists believe that the universe is about 13.79 billion years old.

  • Tattorack@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Occam’s razor:

    Humans created religion. These things aren’t found in any religious texts because people, with their superstitions and limited knowledge, made these religious texts.

    Just look at more “modern” religions, like scientology, drawing on elements of science-fiction for its mythos.

  • Hazzard@lemmy.zip
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    I’ll give two answers to this question, from the perspective of a Christian reading the Old Testament/Torah.

    Wouldn’t it be effective to convince followers of a religion if a religion could accurately predict a scientific phenomenon before its followers have the means of discovering it?

    This is interpretative, but if there is a God, he seems big on free will. Why give humanity the option to sin in the garden at all? Why not just reveal himself in the sky each morning? Why even bother creating a universe that can be explained without him? There’s an abundance of easy ways God could make himself irrefutable, and yet in the Bible he makes us “in His image”, and offers us choices like that tree in the garden.

    Furthermore, why even create us to sin in the first place? My interpretation of the Torah is that God is big on relationship, and that free will is a key part of that. Just like a human relationship based on a love potion is kinda creepy, and a pale imitation of something real, it seems like God doesn’t want to be irrefutable.

    I think that’s the more relevant answer to your question, but I’ll also give the only example that comes to mind of the Bible seemingly imparting “scientific knowledge”, which is to look at the laws around “cleanliness”. Someone else already mentioned some “unclean” animals, but if you read more, they pretty consistently seem like good advice around bacteria. Some examples of times you need to “purify” (essentially take a bath) that seem like common sense now:

    • being around dead bodies
    • touching blood that’s not yours
    • having your period
    • etc.

    Reading this as a modern person aware of germs, many of these “laws” seem like they would have kept the death rate of faithful Jews a lot lower than their neighbours in that day.

  • Fandangalo@lemmy.world
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    Let’s say you’re arguing in good faith. What if I offered you a different conception of God?

    You’re reading the Torah. Have you read the Gnostic gospels? They are early Christian texts & beliefs, some that run roughshod over the beliefs in Judaism. Some Gnostics believed YHWH was a false God, because why would God say, “You must believe in me?” Or why would he genocide the earth with a flood?

    Other people have said it, but religion is made by humans. However, what if God was more like the Dao/Tao? Maybe it’s not a person (that’s a human notion), but more like a spring or fountain? Like a source of goodness? Or it’s a foundational substrate for metaphysical realities?

    You say, “Why has no holy text predicted what science has revealed?” To me, it sounds like, “Why hasn’t a pig flown?” I think the critique misaligns religion with a goal.

    Science reveals the physical world to us. We know there’s an inherent gap between what we observe and some sort of capital T Truth. We could be brains in a vat, a demon could have us hostage, etc. Religion lives in the gap, and I’d say it can reveal things. What it reveals isn’t about the physical world, though.

    When I read a Bible verse, a Buddhist Sutra, or hear an Islamic Surah, it connects me to our species. I go to church for the people, the community. The values resonate with me, and I think my family & kids are better off because of that environment. I have science to explain the physical world.

    I’m a Unitarian Universalist, so I look at religion in my own way (was an atheist for 20 years prior). Have you tried reframing God as not “old man in the clouds?” If you have, does that framing change how you read the Torah?

    P.S. Check out some of the discussion of quantum science and consciousness. Some are arguing that consciousness is the metaphysical reality. Everything may be conscious, but certain conditions may need to be met for the emergence of it in physical reality. Some people have also theorized that all electrons are the same. Some fun theories out there.

  • Kissaki@feddit.org
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    After reading a bit of the Torah, it got me thinking, why aren’t there any references to people who could not have been known to its followers at the time? No mention of East Asians or Native Americans. Did God just forget about them when he talked through Moses? Or he thought they weren’t important enough to mention?

    It’s difficult to answer if your premise is that the Torah is truthfully the word of god.

    If you take a neutral, or opposite viewpoint, it’s very simple and obvious to answer. If people created the Tora, and they either had no knowledge or no interest during the creation process, it’s obvious why they are not mentioned.

    Wouldn’t it be effective to convince followers of legitimacy if a religion could accurately predict a scientific phenomenon before its followers have the means of discovering it?

    This makes me think of shamans using powdered materials to create colorful sparks when thrown into a fire. It’s entirely based on existing material and physical phenomenon, but through knowledge and ignorance, can be used as a tool of misguidance and misinterpretation.

    Why wouldn’t he give them information that could expand the possibilities of what they were capable of?

    You’re asking so many questions that throughout so many religions and gods can not be answered. You get more and more confused.

    If you shift the perspective, and don’t assume a god as a premise, I think it’s fairly obvious to answer. If instead of asking “why did god do it this way” you ask “if this exists now, how did it reach this today through history, why is it presented the way it is, and who originally created it an why”, will you reach a conclusion of “god did it because x”, or something else?


    It is good that you are asking these questions. What does it mean if there are such uncertainties about these religious documents? What value do they hold? Who gives them their value? And why? How was it in the past, and how is it today?

    What are alternative explanations? What is more fundamentally true vs arbitrary or artificial meaning? What views are more likely, what claims are more likely truthful, what is complete or incomplete, what is selective or encompassing, what served personal, community, political purposes vs what are fundamental truths?

  • HurricaneLiz@hilariouschaos.com
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    1 day ago

    Check out www.lawofone.info. The first few sessions (they’re short) say what happened in ancient Egyptian and South American cultures when aliens came and tried to share the simple thought that “we are all one.” Shit devolved into human sacrifice. Apparently we can’t handle anything even approximating religion.

  • RBWells@lemmy.world
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    Not religious texts specifically, but books in general - human imagination often creates something that is later discovered or invented. So I don’t know why it would not be true of older books.

  • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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    Yes, but it’s not what you’re thinking, and they could be known at the time, just not through scientific method, but we had to rediscover them.

    In Abrahamic religions the eating of pork is prohibited because pork is an “unclean” animal, and indeed pork is one of the most dangerous meats to consume when not cooked properly. This could be divine knowledge, or people simply realizing that those who ate pork got more sick than those who didn’t.

    Another example is about meditation and other mental health from oriental religions. The science to back up that is very recent but they have been doing it for thousands of years and have been claiming all of the benefits that we’re now discovering. But also this could have slowly evolved by observing yourself which is a lot of what meditation is about, so who could have thought that self inspection would allow you to understand yourself better?

    So at the end of the day I don’t think there’s any example of what you’re looking for, because anything we know now they could have guessed back then and would not necessarily be divine knowledge. Accurate precognition would be an example of something we would have no explanation for, but that has never happened, most prophecies are abstract and open to interpretation.

    • Auli@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      But tons of people are pork with nothing happening do it’s a bullshit hypothesis.

      • Nibodhika@lemmy.world
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        20 hours ago

        Yes, and lots of people eat raw chicken and nothing happens to them, I guess you also think Salmonella doesn’t exist, or that we would be unable to figure that out, because of that. Lots of people can do something without it affecting them negatively and that still be a bad idea. And it’s also possible for someone keeping tabs to notice these sorts of correlations.

    • uienia@lemmy.world
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      In Abrahamic religions the eating of pork is prohibited because pork is an “unclean” animal, and indeed pork is one of the most dangerous meats to consume when not cooked properly.

      Yet plenty of people ate pork and didn’t suffer any noticeable setback. This is a myth, or rather some kind of apologetics aimed at attempting a rational explanation at something which wasn’t decided by rationality.

      • Tangent5280@lemmy.world
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        Wrong, it could be based on plenty of solid, evidence based objectives and cultural materialisms that sadly might be lost to time, atleast from the context of these religions.

        Some armchair historians have theorised that sweating remove toxins from the body and pigs that dont sweat very well might be bad to eat because of toxin accumulation in their bodies, but this has been debunked some time ago. Toxins don’t accumulate to significant levels, neither does sweating remove them in any meaningful manner.

        The strongest indicator is that this idea that pigs = dirty comes from abrahamic religions that all developed in the middle east and the levant - arid, inhospitable regions with precious water sources.

        Also important to note is that this idea also did NOT originate independently in other regions where water and the vegetative life it spawns, was more plentiful.

        There are some valid concerns when raising pigs in arid climates:

        • Food hygiene: Meat, especially non-lean meat, spoils quickly in hotter climates. Further pigs eat anything including garbage, waste, and carrion meat, spoiled or otherwise, meaning higher chance of parasite/ disease transmission.

        plenty of people ate pork and didnt have any noticeable setback Yeah, but if enough people from your village puke+shits themselves to death every once in a while after eating pork, and you can’t find any other valid reason, you might just blame the pork.

        • Shitty sweat glands: Pigs have very ineffective sweat glands that are really shitty at keeping them cool. Instead, pigs cool themselves down by wallowing in water or mud. In a desert setting were water and mud are rare if at all available, pigs tend to get very hot and resort to wallowing whatever is closely available - which as it turns out, especially in an animal pen, is pigshit.

        • Food economy: Pigs are both omnivorous and need more water and shelter than other desert livestock like goats or sheep - desert animals survive on less water, and have fur coats that protect them from the harsh sun. In a place where resource conservation was a necessity, it is costlier and harder to raise pigs and the returns from them was consequently less.

        • Symbolic: Okay this is not a very strong evidence based approach but people watching pigs eat their own shit and wallow in them makes people not want to associate with it.

        Now in regions with ample rainfall and forests, keeping pigs is easy. Just stay near a river or pond and you’re good. Pigs are even capable of foraging for food in forests themselves, though a pig farmer that lets his pigs do that will lose a bunch to wild animals and other people. Pigs are efficient converters of food into meat, and they can pretty much eat human leftovers and byproducts that come from farming, which you were doing anyway.

        Take for example Europe and China: Both have had pigs as cornerstones in their diets. Europe survived winter months with preserved pig products like hams and sausages. In China, pigs are even more important. It’s practically unavoidable and their cuisine reflects that.

        Now one might raise a relevant question: If abrahamic religions, due to their locations of origin, hates pork, why doesn’t Christianity, an abrahamic religion, place as much focus on avoiding it? I can’t be sure of the answer to this one; Jesus in the new testament does say that every animal under the sun is game for food: the old testament does prohibit pig as food, but the new testament overwrites the old. My best bet is that Christianity, with it’s apostles travelling all over the world, spread into and flourished in non-arid regions - and given that the new testament removed the restriction on pork, it also flourished as a food source under it.

      • Øπ3ŕ@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 day ago

        Don’t even get me started on the broadcloth bullshit that is the entire section of “oriental” 🤢 “medicine”.

        FFS.

  • JeeBaiChow@lemmy.world
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    3 days ago

    In the same way as Nostradamus predicted events? Probably. In the same way as what we define as science? No.

  • CarbonIceDragon@pawb.social
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    I suspect you might get examples of things that sort of resemble a later discovery that someone believing the religion in question might interpret as divine revelation of that thing. Some of the christians in my family like to take the “let there be light” thing and claim that it’s talking about the big bang, anecdotally.

    I think I remember some religion out there having a concept that resembles microorganisms, before such organisms were discovered, I think Jainism but I’m not confident about that.

    • Deconceptualist@leminal.space
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      Some of the christians in my family like to take the “let there be light” thing and claim that it’s talking about the big bang, anecdotally.

      But that’s probably not even right. In my understanding, the Big Bang wasn’t actually bright, because the first phase of the universe was a superhot but opaque quantum soup. Even the weak nuclear force took time to become distinct from the electromagnetic force. I don’t know if energy packets of a combined electroweak field count as photons exactly.

      Regardless, the first light as we know it (in the sense that it could traverse the universe) wasn’t until a few hundred million years after the Big Bang, when the whole mess had cooled enough to become transparent. We now call that initial light the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation.

    • Sasha [They/Them]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      I got a free copy of the Qur’an last year and it’s packed with stuff like this, it’s kinda annoying because I just wanted to understand the actual text. It’s all the same stuff I’ve seen Christian creationists talk about, obviously false if you understand the basics but it’ll probably deceive lots of people who don’t.

        • Sasha [They/Them]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          When I say the basics, I mean understanding logic and reasoning and what constitutes scientific evidence. Much of it is word association at best, the example that comes to mind is the claim that the pillars of creation prove that creationism is true.

          In one example in my copy of the Qur’an, they point to a journalist using the word smoke to discuss the state of the early universe as proof that the Qur’an predicted modern cosmology because heaven was smoke before Allah commanded it to exist. It’s an unproven claim, they’ve just drawn a vague connection and decided that counts as evidence.

  • Truscape@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    No. There’s far more examples of scientific advancement discovery being shot in the knees by theocratic groups than the alternative. Religion is a social tool used for shaping human interpretations of their role within human society, not a legitimate way to enhance our understanding of the world.

    I would go as far as to say that having a strong association with a religious organization is an incredible detriment to any technological or scientific advancement.