All in all, the Bible does not inspire confidence if you think about it. And why would it? It's an unholy mess of assumptions.
(Going by only what I’ve read of the Bible so far)
It totally discourages independent thinking, except for God’s chosen leaders, very slightly.
First dad tried killing humanity to improve on it, then tried killing his son (himself?) to see if that would help. Didn't work out. Yup, sounds legit.
Again, though, I *don’t* believe it, and I like the stories.
I can understand that such a book would corrupt the minds of many people. I find it interesting to read because it’s almost like God himself had started from a primitive position on basic morals. You would assume that God was omniscient at the beginning, but from what I’ve read so far, it seems he hasn’t developed his critical thinking skills yet.
So he was basically testing it on us? Fuck that. The message is that he knows everything.
Is it, though? I thought the main message was, “I (God) am most important,
follow me and receive blessings, or you have sinned and you will be punished or put to death”
I really think that he does not know everything, nor at the beginning does the Bible hint that. If God did, he would not reason with Moses and Aaron not to kill some of the camps of people. He would not go on killing rampages because of their murmurings. God would already realise that the people were understandably upset because they were told to move out of their homes, and faced starvation along the way. It looks like he’s learning basic morals and people skills along the way to me. It’s as if Moses and Aaron have more people skills than God does at the beginning, hence their trying to reason with him and find other ways for God to stop killing so many people.