elliott95
JESUS PRAISER
There are however many Christians who have reached an authentic reading of the text, once they have let go of the idea that the text is anything other than tangentially related to history. Dawkins, Hitchens, Darwin, and all the new atheists could not let go off what we may call that fundamentalist reading, and so their arguments against the Bible are against the fundamentalist interpretation of the Bible.Indeed - the self-conflicted self-contradicting position they adopt not only is a horrible wrench/bend of the Bible text - it does not fit any narrative - evolutionist or bible.
Darwin was unnable to marry the two - so also Dawkins, Provine, Meyers all admit to being unnable to merge the two mutually exclusive views - and so admit almost all atheists and also Bible believing Christians that choose not to wrench the text of Gen 1:2-2:3 in the direction of blind faith evolutionism about "stories easy enough to tell but they are not science" when talking about "stories based on the fossil record...stories of how one thing came from another".
in Christ,
Bob
Contrarily, there is very little that liberal Christian theologians are unwilling to let go of when it comes to a reading of the Bible as a history. But as it turns out, there is often very little left of anything discernibly traditionally Christian in the liberal theology either, for the high sense of morality and ethics become as expendable as the history, in many liberal theologies.
Be that as it may, that leaves those conservatives who have a deep sense of the abiding moral truths and proscribed behaviors of traditional Christianity, but cannot authentically hold on to the fundamentalist interpretation, due to the cognitive dissonance it causes with the indisputable truths revealed by science.
Compounding the problem is the cognitive dissonance caused by such statements as 'evolution is compatible with faith, and yet Adam and Eve are to be regarded as real people'. If by real people, what is being interpreted is historic figures and the biological mother and father of all mankind, the compromise between the two world view becomes an impossible one.
Nevertheless, reading the text on its own terms, neither insisting upon its inerrant historical value, nor bending and contorting it to conform to the latest findings of science, the Wisdom of the Ages, and the traditional theological and spiritual meanings of the text, as they have always been understood, may still shine through.
The real value of the Bible has never been its status as a history book, but as its immeasurable value as the testimony and dialogue between God and his people, the struggles that we have all gone through together, with God and against God even, to discover what is good and what is evil.
That value is not reduced whether or not one has a fundamentalist understanding of scripture. The message of Jonah and the whale is the same either way, whether or not it is a historical account of what really happened. The richness of the story does not depend on the miracle actually taking place. And to try to determine whether the miracle took place or not really goes outside of the text. It add nothing to the story to focus in on that aspect, and miss the deeper meaning of the relationship between justice and mercy in the process.
I have frequently listened to an evangelist philosopher, Dr Bill Craig debate people like Hitchens and other advocates of materialistic naturalism. Invariably, in terms of an objective assessment of the debate, he cleans the floor up with them. He does so by insisting that his proofs for God are not based on a inerrant Scripture (even though he does believe it to be inerrant) and instead focuses on the objective arguments that God is the more reasonable belief, compared to the alternatives.
Unfortunately he did meet his match in his debate with the very liberal member of the Jesus Seminar, Marcus Borg. Very likely he could have won that debate, because arguably believing in the empty tomb and the resurrection of Jesus is the more reasonable hypothesis, given all the evidence.
But how he failed to win that debate was in his insistence that to not believe in the resurrection of the physical body makes faith worthless. By doing so to counter Marcus Borg's claim that what is important is the ongoing personal relationship that he has with the Risen Jesus, he also ironically negated his strongest argument against the atheists. That argument was that the ultimate and most meaningful proof of God was to be found in his personal, salvific relationship with Jesus, the ongoing relationship he experienced as real every day since he had became a born again Christian. Compared to that, it was 'almost folly to focus on all the other proofs' was how he argued for that point against the godless.
But in his counter to Marcus Borg, that argument, his most important and most heartfelt, was thrown out the window, as being worthless unless also believed in the empty tomb.
I suppose for any of us to authentically be here in GT as orthodox Nicene Christians, we really DO need to believe in the empty tomb and the resurrection of the body. Marcus Borg is not an orthodox Christian.
Om the other hand, when it comes to our salvation, it is neither necessary nor sufficient to belief in an inerrant fundamentalist interpretation of the Bible. What is necessary is to know God through a personal, living relationship with Jesus, precisely as Borg had described that relationship to be.
Liberal or conservative, fundamentalist reading or literary reading, the Bible will show us all who Jesus is, who we are having that personal spiritual relationship with in our daily lives, here and now, if only we want him.
And that is all the Bible really needs to be about to be considered to be fully reliable.
In Christ,
Just another Anonymous Poster
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