God knows all questions:
I agree that God did not ask questions because the answers were unknown.
Of course he knew, I completely agree.
So, as you implied, we have to ask ourselves, "Why DID God ask the question?"
Exegesis - Order Of Operations
But in sorting out a Bible question, we still need to be careful of one more thing - the ORDER OF OPERATIONS for our exegesis.
1.) When we analyze what scripture means to "those hearing the question", we need to make sure we are not analyzing ourselves, the modern readers, but rather the historical audience.
2.) So the first ORDER OF OPERATIONS is to determine the historical audience, and think about what the question meant to THEM.
(In this case it would be Adam and Cain.)
3.) Then, after understanding the question in historical context, we then take that understanding of the passage, and begin to apply that understanding to ourselves, as the modern reader.
4.) That's the rational order of operations for applying Bible principles to ourselves, as modern readers.
This may have been exactly what you meant.
But since this issue is confusing to people in a postmodern culture, I wanted to break it down a bit.
God Bless Brother.
Hope you have a great weekend.
.
I agree that God did not ask questions because the answers were unknown.
Of course he knew, I completely agree.
So, as you implied, we have to ask ourselves, "Why DID God ask the question?"
Exegesis - Order Of Operations
But in sorting out a Bible question, we still need to be careful of one more thing - the ORDER OF OPERATIONS for our exegesis.
1.) When we analyze what scripture means to "those hearing the question", we need to make sure we are not analyzing ourselves, the modern readers, but rather the historical audience.
2.) So the first ORDER OF OPERATIONS is to determine the historical audience, and think about what the question meant to THEM.
(In this case it would be Adam and Cain.)
3.) Then, after understanding the question in historical context, we then take that understanding of the passage, and begin to apply that understanding to ourselves, as the modern reader.
4.) That's the rational order of operations for applying Bible principles to ourselves, as modern readers.
This may have been exactly what you meant.
But since this issue is confusing to people in a postmodern culture, I wanted to break it down a bit.
God Bless Brother.
Hope you have a great weekend.
.
and with Cain - where is your brother?
Cain is being inquired of about the first physically dead human, an human who had God's approval. Abel's body was probably buried - but where was Abel? could physical death hide a man from God?
there is more - but in the immediate context to those the questions were directed to, i think there are very important spiritual implications to what they are being asked.
perhaps even more importantly, both are being given opportunity to confess. Adam is not cursed - he answered God well. Cain is cursed - he answered God wickedly.
we see the same parallel with God's question to Woman, and Cain: He asks what is it they have done? Woman confesses, and is not cursed. Cain answers vainly, not confessing, and is cursed.
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