This topic probably has come up many times before, but I couldn't find any threads on it. Stories such as Noah's Arch, are they to be taken literally? Does it make us lesser of Christians if we take it symbolically?
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No, they are not intended to be taken literally. In fact, at the time in which the Bible was written the concept of literal history hadn't entered mainstream thought. Ease of re-telling and excitement took priority over factuality. What is important are the moral and spiritual messages and the lessons on how to live a decent life.This topic probably has come up many times before, but I couldn't find any threads on it. Stories such as Noah's Arch, are they to be taken literally? Does it make us lesser of Christians if we take it symbolically?
Even though they pretty clearly did not?Some is symbolic, some is literal. I do take things like Noah's Ark and the parting of the Red Sea and other such things as things that did literally happen.
Even though they pretty clearly did not?
The land animals simply couldn't fit. The biomass of all 'kind's, even being generously defined, would not fit on a boat made from the technology of the time.Support for that claim?
The land animals simply couldn't fit. The biomass of all 'kind's, even being generously defined, would not fit on a boat made from the technology of the time.
Almost all aquatic and plant life would be rendered extinct.
The narrative says that only eight related people survived, effectively restricted the human Y-chromosome to just one genotype. After 4000 years, we would have very little variation in modern Y-chromosomes, which contradicts reality.
The Bible: Symbolic or Literal?
This topic probably has come up many times before, but I couldn't find any threads on it. Stories such as Noah's Arch, are they to be taken literally? Does it make us lesser of Christians if we take it symbolically?
The land animals simply couldn't fit. The biomass of all 'kind's, even being generously defined, would not fit on a boat made from the technology of the time.
Almost all aquatic and plant life would be rendered extinct.
The narrative says that only eight related people survived, effectively restricted the human Y-chromosome to just one genotype. After 4000 years, we would have very little variation in modern Y-chromosomes, which contradicts reality.
I think that will do, for now. Too much Y-chromosomal variation, extant aquatic and plant life, and simple practicle impossibilities.
Well, as a really easy one, it wasn't the Red Sea.
I think that most of the Bible is to be taken literally. Including Jonah and Noah's story, but I'm sure many people will disagree with me.This topic probably has come up many times before, but I couldn't find any threads on it. Stories such as Noah's Arch, are they to be taken literally? Does it make us lesser of Christians if we take it symbolically?