Busterdog and Vossler,
I think you are both honest and committed and not at all like some of the creationist yahoo's we seeing doing serious damage to Christianity over in the Creation and Evolution forum. You are convinced that the way you read Scripture is the correct way to read it, and that way entirely contradicts what modern science is saying.
I don't know that I am doing a better job that AIG or people like that, with whom I sometimes disagree. In fact, I would presume not. However, I think some folks here have done a good job in being clear about the value of a literal word.
What I would suggest is that you consider that we are not talking about pitting God's Word up against Man's Science (a battle we would ALL agree that God's Word wins, hands down). No, the battle is between fallible Man's interpretation of God's Word up against fallible Man's interpretation of God's Nature. Either of these could be wrong, and that truth must be the starting point for any true analysis.
I appreciate what you are saying. However, I will disagree in part. Disagreeing with you, I will at the same time address my alter ego that lives inside of my head at times and tells me to compromise on a host of issues, like giving, day-to-day trust, etc.
If you look at modern religion, particularly with evangelicals, we talk incessantly about Jesus coming back. Well, that certainly begs a big question about what it is that we would do in his presence. Do we act like we want him back? Considering that we are already promised the presence of the Lord and the Holy Spirit, does it not seem that we are operating at what is perhaps an unnecessary deficit?
At some point it seems perfectly logical that the presence of the Christ is sufficient for where we are. We routinely miss this obvious point.
2Cr 12:9 And he said unto me, My grace is sufficient for thee: for my strength is made perfect in weakness. Most gladly therefore will I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me.
Jhn 1:14 And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, (and we beheld his glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth.
Now, I may not avail myself of the presence as I should. Clearly. But, when you question the sufficiency of a literal Word, it seems to me that you are questioning the sufficiency of the Lord's presence. What this Word means is that he meets us and is sufficient for us. I certainly see questioning whether we are doing with that, but I cannot question whether this Word is sufficient. I am sure I am making errors with the Word, but the literal, surface text is there for us, for our needs and deficits. He has come all the way. I dare not reject Him, even if my faith is only as the size of a mustard seed.
Yes, there is a place for hermeneutics and theologians. Often, however, it is to fix men's mistakes, not explain the literal Word. This is part of your confusion, that other function of theologian, dealing with human mistakes. It really only begs the question about whether the basics are just right there, clear as day, in the Word. That is what I see.
With geocentrism, it turned out that it was the fallible human interpretation of Scripture that was wrong, and the fallible view of Nature (science) which was correct. And, so we all just adjusted our view of how a number of Scriptures should be read and went on our merry way, with no damage to Christian thinking at all.
He also corrected Jerusalem with seige engines and tyrants. That didn't make the tyrants theologically accurate. I have seen the argument that science fixed theology. I buy that only in part. Not everyone was deceived. I am sure it happens. God restored national Israel into the hands of secular, nonbelieving Jews as well.
But, Busterdog, one thing you said was telling. You said that you think it is courageous to refuse to submit to consensus. There are a couple of things I would ask about this:
1. What is the consensus view in your church? Your denomination? Is it courageous to submit to that consensus?
2. Do you think it was courageous for the Christians to dig in their heels at the concept of heliocentrism? If so, at what point did that courage become prideful stubbornness?
My Church is probably a split decision in favor of YEC. It will shortly leave the denomination over its nonbiblical view of sexual matters and the authority of the literal word. (See New Wineskins movement of Presby Church) Most cosmology issues don't take courage for the laity like me. Quitting a denomination (PCUSA) will. Other applications of the literal Word will.
Geocentrism is not a Biblical concept, nor is the flat earth. Probably this is not the place to get into that.