> is your god’s omnipresence like a quantum energy field ... Is that close at all?
Probably not a bad analogy, though all analogies fail eventually when pressed too hard. But on the surface, the analogy makes sense.
There are also quantum analogies to the Trinity. The first is called superposition, where subatomic particles are able to exist in two states simultaneously. Get that—that very same things existing in two separate states at the same time. The second is that of nonlocality and entanglement. The principle here is that objects in far reaches of the universe seem to "know" about each other's states, and yet these separate particles can behave as a single entity.
For another potential scientific "validation" of such possibilities, in 2017 a group of quantum scientists (University of Science and Technology of China in Shanghai) successfully teleported a photon from Earth to a satellite in orbit. It's called quantum entanglement. As far as our discussion here, quantum entanglement means that the two quantum objects share a wave function and share the same identity, even when separated. What happens to one happens to the other—wherever it exists. They are more than identical twins, the article said, "the two are one and the same." Apparently, according to the article, when they interact with matter on Earth they lose certain aspects of entanglement, but in the vacuum of space, they can extend infinitely (eternally). It's just interesting.
> But I still don’t understand the purpose of an earthly temple for a god whose temple is the entire universe.
First of all, humans engage better in a tactile/visual environment than in a purely abstract one. Secondly (and I think more importantly), there are significant symbols that can only be expressed by physical means (sacrifice and scapegoat) that made the presence of a physical temple worth the theological risk of compromise (a compromise that certainly happened, since humans are so...doggone... human. But the Temple also succeeded in expressing those theological truths that are so valuable.
> How is that progress, in what way is it better?
The symbolism matters. If I want to torture and hang an effigy of President Trump in my basement, I could do that, but it would be more effective in a public square somewhere, and even more poignant on Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington, D.C.
The centrality of the Temple spoke against some popular and common polytheistic concepts in the ancient world, and Israel's unique sacrificial system to some important theology truths. There was a point to all of it.
> Even knowing what they did though, the description of the tabernacle and later temple I’ve always heard sounded nothing like it was designed to imitate even what they knew of the cosmos.
The Temple had decor of a Garden (pomegranates, almond trees, etc). In the ancient Near East, gardens were associated with deity blessings (which I can understand in the middle of such harsh desert climates). Gardens were built next to temples, and that's where people could go to meet with their gods. Solomon's temple reflected those images to speak of a place of God's presence, blessing, and mediation for His people.
> So, do you believe the genesis account of creation actually happened?
Dr. John Walton has published some perspectives on Genesis 1-2 that are making a huge impact around the Christian world (
https://www.amazon.com/Lost-World-Genesis-One-Cosmology/dp/0830837043/ref=sr_1_1?crid=30EM809D36EII&dchild=1&keywords=john+walton+the+lost+world+of+genesis+one&qid=1601842550&sprefix=john+walton+the+los%2Caps%2C157&sr=8-1). I like his approach. What his analyses of the text have shown are that Gn. 1-2 are accounts of *functional* creation, not that of material creation. In the Bible there is no question that God is the creator of the material universe (and there are texts that teach that), but that's not what Genesis 1-2 are about. They are about how God brought order and functionality to the material universe that was there. And it is just as much a **literal** approach to the text as the traditional. Let me try to explain VERY briefly.
Gn. 1.1 is a heading, not an action. Then, if it's a text about material creation it will start with nothingness, but if it's a text about bringing order, it will start with disorder, which is what Gn. 1.2 says.
The first "day" is clearly (literally) about a
period of light called day, and a
period of light called night. It is about the sequence of day and night, evening and morning, literally. Therefore, what Day 1 is about is God ordering the universe and our lives with the function of TIME, not God creating what the physicists call "light," about which the ancients knew nothing.
Look through the whole chapter. It is about how the firmament functions to bring us weather (the firmament above and below), how the earth functions to bring forth plants for our sustenance, how the sun, moon, and stars function to order the days and seasons. We find out in day 6 the function of humans: to be fruitful and multiply, to rule the earth and subdue it. Walton contends that we have to look at the text through ancient eyes, not modern ones, and the concern of the ancients was function and order. (It was a given that the deities created the material universe.) The differences between cultures (and creation accounts) was how the universe functioned, how it was ordered, and what people were for. (There were large disagreements among the ancients about function and order; it widely separates the Bible from the surrounding mythologies.)
And on the 7th day God rested. In the ancient world when a god came to "rest" in the temple, he came to live there and engage with the people as their god. So it is not a day of disengagement, but of action and relationship.
In other words, it's a temple text, not an account of material creation. There was no temple that could be built by human hands that would be suitable for him, so God order the entire universe to function as his Temple. The earth was ordered to function as the "Holy Place," and the Garden of Eden as his "Holy of Holies". Adam and Eve were given the function of being his priest and priestess, to care for sacred space (very similar to Leviticus) and to be in relationship with God (that's what Genesis 2 is about).
> What sets YHWH apart
I would assert that the Genesis story is markedly different in nature and purpose than any of the ancient mythologies, separating it from them. Mythographies are not interested in portraying events (history), but want to show how the cosmos works and how it got that way. A myth is an attempt to explain reality from theological vantage point, and are not meant to connect those stories, as stories, with events in the real world.
It also helps to understand that ancient historiography was not meant to relate what "really happened" the way we moderns approach historiography. T.M. Bolin has shown that we are often interested in historical reconstruction, whereas the ancient Israelites were interested in truth-telling literature. Glassner says, "The Mesopotamians had no profession of historian as we understand it today, nor its methods or perspective. As they saw it, the problem was not critical assessment of sources, nor was the question, fundamentally, knowing how and in what causal sequence events considered unique had occurred. The primary task was to choose, according to a definite focus of interest, among the carefully collected data from past events, certain facts that, from that point of view, had acquired universal relevance and significance." So the Genesis story is "event-oriented, truth-telling literature," but doesn't work the same way as modern historiography does.
In other words, Walton says, "mythography has a different referent than historiography, yet is considered no less real. It may, however, be considered to pertain to a different plane of reality. ... each has a different focus in its expression of reality." I would argue that the stories of Genesis are ancient historiography as distinct from ancient mythography, with a different purpose, referent, approach, format, ideology, and literary form. That's what sets YHWH apart.
Regarding Genesis 2-3, Romans 5.12-21 and 1 Cor. 15.45-49 let us know that Adam is considered to be historical, but the Bible's primary interest in him is archetypal—representing the whole human race. (Please notice I didn't say allegorical or metaphorical.) As we go back to Genesis, we can see the archetypal elements of the narrative that clue us in to its raison d’être. The elements of the literature emphasize God’s power, desire for relationship, care, warnings, provision, and purposes. We learn of Adam’s intelligence, moral awareness (and therefore culpability), his role and function in relation to God, earth, and other humans, his mortal nature, and the spiritual choice laid before him with its consequences. The primary archetypal elements are mortality, morality, and the choice of self vs. God—elements that are essential human struggles from time immemorial to the present.
The story is not necessarily one of material origins, but one of relational origins: Human is capable of a relationship with God. Will humans choose God and the path of fellowship and life, or will they choose self and the path of separation and destruction? These paths still lie before each one of us as we determine the course of our own lives by the choices that we make.