Do you really want me to look these up? I would have figured by now, we have established that nearly all these issues come from either one of two things:
- A poor translation - or...
- Taken out of context.
Yeah, sure.
So who killed Goliath?
Were plants created before or after man?
I have seen too many poor excuses for dealing with such inconsistencies. They are atrociously artificial and ad hoc in most cases.
They only speak to people who need to convince themselves that scripture is inerrant.
What, you mean like the pillars of the earth? It was hardly anything at all to figure out that they were spiritual pillars, as defined by the actual word used. Again, a poor translation.
No, I mean something more along the lines of asserting that the creation of the animals in Gen. 2 was a second creation, or that the verb means "had formed" not "formed".
This saves the "inerrancy" of the text by twisting the text out of shape. We would be better off simply acknowledging that the contradiction in the order of creation exists and leaving it at that.
Or, as I like to think of it, by going and researching the originals. Rather than simply acception what is handed to you, and adjusting everything around it.
Strange. Seems to me that is the only basis on which to accept inerrancy. You have to simply accept what is handed to you---including the interpretations that your religious authorities offer you--and adjust everything around you to it.
Wait, what?
You mean, flawless instructions, are useless, because we cannot be sure of what they mean?
So do the "flawless" instructions concerning baptism permit or forbid baptising the children of believers?
So for example, when I open my computers instruction manual and it tells me to pair up some DIMMs in memory banks 0 and 1, I will be confused because I won't know what it's talking about.
Exactly. I find computer manuals extremely confusing precisely because I don't know what they are talking about.
And I expect any explanation of creation that requires a 21st century knowledge base of geology, physics and biology would be as confusing to Bronze Age prophets as computer manuals are to me.
Whereas if it weaved a poetic story, with lots of metaphors and similies, I would be better equipped to fathom out where I can plug in my 'pulsing knowledge banks', and where I find the 'recepticles of history'.
Well I have no idea what pulsing knowledge banks or recepticles of history are, but the poetic story is a very efficient communicator of basic theology.
What is the foundation of God you talk about?
Hmmm. I am tempted to ask you the same question Jesus asked Nicodemus. (John 3:10) Do you not understand that we worship a living God and a risen Christ? We are not dependent solely on ancient texts to know them. Indeed, an ancient text, however valuable, cannot be a substitute for knowing God. It can only tell us about God and about long ago encounters of God with his people.
Absolutely incorrect.
I had faith in God before I realised the Bible was without flaw.
I am glad to hear that. But then, what does inerrancy add? Especially an inerrancy to which we have no access, lacking the original documents and lacking an agreed interpretation of the text? I find it an abstract and meaningless concept. I reject it for much the same reason I reject the doctrine of transubstantion. It tries to explain too much on the basis of too little evidence and turns the mystery of inspiration/sacrament into a mere mechanism.
The reason that I feel it is important, is because if there was something which is in error, or directly contradicted, how is it we can assume other things are correct?
We don't assume. We study and search and investigate. We pray for guidance and we follow our best logic and our best instincts in trust that we are rightly guided. And we remain open to the possibility that it is those who disagree with us that are in the right.
That's a good quote. To be honest I there are areas I find that true, so I really don't have much issue with it, other than the definite article. But I still support inerrancy. In fact, I can relate speaking to people about possible issues in the Bible, where they feel it's incorrect or wrong, and to see their eyes light up when I point out the real truth, is quite reassuring for them. Suddenly it all becomes possible. That would never happen if I had to agree with them, and still try and relate faith. It is of the utmost importance in sharing God with others.
Well, we each have our own experiences. I still think it is building faith on an incorrect foundation, and so leaves people vulnerable, though I wouldn't slight their present faith on that basis. I would just hope that they can come to a more sure foundation before this one gives out on them. Because one day they may in fact come up against an error or contradiction in scripture they can't wave away.