Dear allBoth in different places
I agree with PeacaHeaven that the bible is both literal and symbolic.
It uses a lot of figures of speach as well which have to be understood as just that, figures of speech (metaphor being a big favourite of God's).
Christ loved parables as a teaching method, and we quite easily understand these to be just that - stories like Aesop's fables, which have a moral message.
Most Prophecy uses symbols (beasts, horns, seals, virgins, harlots) to represent literal things. You would be mistaken to take these symbols literally.
A lot of the Old Testament story is totally literal.
I take the creation story of Genesis to be true, that God did renew the earth 6000 years ago, in 7 literal days, that God did literally rest on the sabbath day, that Eve did eat of a literal tree and persuaded Adam to do the same. But if God tells me one day that the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil was just a metaphor as was the Tree of Life, as was the garden of Eden - it will not utterly phase me. I believe 100% that they were literal even though I see the "serpent" as being a symbol for Satan, a fallen but splendid looking Archangel. I do not believe Eve talked to a snake such as we know today, since only after her sin was Satan ordered onto his belly. As you can see, I have in my own mind integrated the symbolic and literal elements of this story into one whole which satisfies me. But I would doubt there are two Christians alive today who reading through the Bible would agree on everything as to being literal or symbolic.
I think God uses symbols like "serpent" or "dragon" because it is a lot quicker than saying "fallen archangel, viz. Lucifer who became Satan". Also, serpent tells us certain qualities of Satan (poisonous, subtle).
Regards
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