NobleMouse
We have nothing, if not belief in the Lord
- Sep 19, 2017
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If you can support this view from scripture, I'm willing to listen - so far it is conjecture at this point. Again, in the presence that Jesus cited these events in successfully defending arguments from scribes/pharisees intended to try to trap him, as well as in future reference to real events that would come to pass (His death and resurrection and His second coming - which I assume you believe will also happen) the more reasonable conclusion is that these are real events.He made it reasonably clear that when He quoted or referred to Scripture he was quoting scripture, not directly referring to the events which gave rise to Scripture. He used Scripture exactly as a modern clergyman would use Scripture, whether a liberal or a hard-core fundamentalist. So no, you have no way of knowing if His use of Scripture amounted to an endorsement of your interpretation, that the Bible is the literal, inerrant, perspicuous and self-interpreting product of divine plenary verbal inspiration. None of thse doctrines were heard of before the Reformation and its introduction of the pernicious notion of Sola Scriptura; certainly they were unknown in Jesus' day.
Provide scriptural support to the contrary - I'm all ears.A baseless and offensive slur--as is to be expected.
What I gave was my opinion, I cannot speak for how you interpret the opinions of others.That is certainly not the impression you and your coreligionists give, rather, one gets the feeling that you think it is the only important thing about it--as if the Bible was intended to give us a 100% factually accurate and complete history of the world from creation to the last trump.Which is exactly what the rest of Christendom finds in it, and we don't need your interpretation to get us there.
If you believe the Bible is about real persons and events, how many generations do you feel were skipped then between Adam and Christ? Would literally have to be thousands upon thousands - seems unlikely.But that is not your claim, which is not about the events described in the Bible, but about the text of the Bible itself. I certainly would not maintain that the Bible contains no history or that the stories were not based on real persons and events.
Can you support that one would not naturally interpret, say a day (yom) as not being a day by reading the text or that Jonah wasn't really in the belly of a great fish for 3 days, or that the flood of Noah's time really wasn't intended to blot out all the life on land? I suggest walking into a Sunday school classroom with young children and reading these passages to them and see if their first reaction is that the days were really "billions of years", that the reference to Jonah was just a myth, or that the flood certainly didn't happen and there was never an ark with 2 of every kind of animal, that it is just an artifact of creation myths from other cultures of the time - this will probably give you the most "pure" answer. Then you can go to a college campus and see how the views have changed. It's not because the Bible changed in what it is saying between age 7 and 20, it's because these kids are being influenced between point A and point B to interpret it differently.Another slur. I'm sorry, but I think your interpretation is shallow and theologically inadequate and would not subscribe to it under any circumstances, even if all the conclusions of modern science about our origins were to be overturned tomorrow.
Go read the commentaries of study bibles on these passages - see if they're all saying none of this really happened and that they should just be treated as allegory/figurative. Here's just one source on Jonah 1:17 to get the ball rolling:
http://biblehub.com/commentaries/jonah/1-17.htm
Look at all the shallow and theologically inadequate commentary...
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