tryphena rose
Daughter of the Most High
- Jun 3, 2019
- 328
- 513
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Female
- Faith
- Christian
- Marital Status
- Married
Upvote
0
Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.
I know. But it's obvious when it's supposed to be figurative for the most part. And Genesis obviously isn't.
I've never understood why God creating everything in six literal days has ever been an issue. To me it's like, what took Him so long? Rather than that's impossible.
I know. But it's obvious when it's supposed to be figurative for the most part. And Genesis obviously isn't.
The New Testament seems to favor a literal view. And even the Old Testament. The Sabbath commandment in Exodus chapter 20 is a good example.is it literal? I don't think the text answers that but it certainly is figurative. the OP has a lot of interpretation in it that I don't think the account can support, even in a literal/figurative vacuum.
No worries, bro. - lol
I was looking for your quote about saying these figurative truths were "sacramental". (not sure if I said that right) Could you explain the sacramental aspect? Thanks.I should have included that humanity is created in the image of God, in that list ( I included it in the similar list a few posts above (#383). It is interesting that is revealed, but we aren't told in the text what that means, exactly. Still, I think it's another important revealed truth.
The question of the thread was only about the creation account.
How did Moses know what happened?
I was looking for your quote about saying these figurative truths were "sacramental". (not sure if I said that right) Could you explain the sacramental aspect? Thanks.
Other than the elements for Communion/Eucharist, I don't know of anything as sacramental. (off hand) So, your statement puzzles me a bit.
How did Moses know what happened at Creation? Moses was not there.
My Opinion is each day was a revelation to Moses which he wrote in his own language.
Is there an Egyptian account of Creation?
if we say Moses wrote it then he does so 2500 years after the event. I'm not so certain the pressing question of post-exodus Hebrews was regarding what the literal details 2500 years ago was and I'm not so sure the account answers that too. I think they were more in need of an ordained account that unified them and didn't vary from a thousand tents (but perhaps that's too level-headed of me).The New Testament seems to favor a literal view. And even the Old Testament. The Sabbath commandment in Exodus chapter 20 is a good example.
Thanks for the detailed explanation. That helps a lot.We can draw a distinction between general sacramentality and the specific institutions of the church we call "sacraments." Something is sacramental in part because it communicates God and makes God present. In other words, the sacramental communicates spiritual realities that transcend the thing itself.
Christ specifically instituted baptism and Eucharist as sacraments. These are specific ways that we meet God (being washed/being fed), where we experience God's presence. The elements communicate spiritual realities and in that sense are sacramental. It's not just water, but sacramental water. Something spiritual is happening through it.
This may explain something I have noticed in the Bible. I wanted to do a topic on it, but seemed like dangerous territory. (even for me - lol)And certainly, the scriptures communicate God and God's presence. They communicate spiritual realities, and in grasping these we are drawn into the divine presence.
But just as sacramental water is more than just the water, the spiritual realities the scriptures communicate can transcend the "flesh" or history recounted in the text.
This is why the early church commentators showed little interest in the one true meaning of a given text. The scriptures are multivalent, communicating layers and layers of spiritual meaning. The Exodus is not just about the wandering Hebrews, but about Christ and human redemption. The Song of Solomon is not just a song about lovers, but about mystic desire for and union with God. Even Jesus takes a sacramental reading of Moses's serpent as a typology of his crucifixion.
This all seems second nature to us, but it began with the early commentators and the way they approached the scriptures as sacramental. This partly explains their penchant for an allegorical interpretation. God is communicating more than the face value of the text.
Even literalists recognize this.This is why the early church commentators showed little interest in the one true meaning of a given text. The scriptures are multivalent, communicating layers and layers of spiritual meaning. The Exodus is not just about the wandering Hebrews, but about Christ and human redemption. The Song of Solomon is not just a song about lovers, but about mystic desire for and union with God. Even Jesus takes a sacramental reading of Moses's serpent as a typology of his crucifixion.
Moses descended from the mountain with the TCs written in stone. And even if he did write about it later, he communicates his understanding of the relationship to the creation account. The Sabbath was to be observed because it came from the creation week. (6 days of work, followed by 1 day of rest)if we say Moses wrote it then he does so 2500 years after the event. I'm not so certain the pressing question of post-exodus Hebrews was regarding what the literal details 2500 years ago was and I'm not so sure the account answers that too. I think they were more in need of an ordained account that unified them and didn't vary from a thousand tents (but perhaps that's too level-headed of me).
the literal discussion I think looks at the account backwards, first, it approaches it as literal then tries to fit the words in a literal vacuum which I think causes us to miss the point. The account is there for a purpose and in order to understand if it literal or not, I think we need to understand the purpose of the account first and then see how a literal view is compatible with that purpose rather than forcing the account to be literal just because our western mindsets demand its. The account is there to fill a void we just need to figure out what that void is.
This may explain something I have noticed in the Bible. I wanted to do a topic on it, but seemed like dangerous territory. (even for me - lol)
In the New Testament there are references made to OT texts that are either misquoted or misused based on their obvious meanings. Being from a more literalist background, this was rather troubling. I concluded something near to what you are saying. They were finding other spiritual meanings. Or, the original meaning was not what we thought. Except, sometimes it was the opposite. Quite puzzling. Here's an example.
All sorts of problems here. Gave gifts, or received gifts? (for starters) "This is why it says..." No it doesn't! - lol
Ephesians 4:7-8 NIV
But to each one of us grace has been given as Christ apportioned it. 8 This is why it says:
“When he ascended on high,
he took many captives
and gave gifts to his people.”
Psalm 68:18 NIV
When you ascended on high,
you took many captives;
you received gifts from people,
even from the rebellious—
that you, Lord God, might dwell there.
God sets the conditions and we follow them not because they are literal but because God tells us too. God's followers repeat these things not because they are literal but because God said them. The account has some litteral problems such as light being created before a source of light, and it its also written in a chiastic struture, a form of Hebrew poetry. This focus moves away from the literal and more into figurative language. The op asks if it's literal or figurative. As for the former that seems less evident, but the later is most certainly true. So why do we get stuck on the literal when It's the figurative that has far greater meaning?Moses descended from the mountain with the TCs written in stone. And even if he did write about it later, he communicates his understanding of the relationship to the creation account. The Sabbath was to be observed because it came from the creation week. (6 days of work, followed by 1 day of rest)
Saint Steven said: ↑
The New Testament seems to favor a literal view. And even the Old Testament. The Sabbath commandment in Exodus chapter 20 is a good example.
This is actually the norm. The Biblical authors weren’t history professors. They were trying to make points about God and our relationship to him. They used history and tradition, but shaped it to make their points. In the OT, Kings, Deut, and Chronicles cover much of the same ground, but each tells the story in a different way, as appropriate to the challenges faced by Israel when they were writing. Even Matthew, Mark and Luke are trying to make specific points, and use the common traditions about Jesus differently. Sometimes specific historical points are also adapted.This may explain something I have noticed in the Bible. I wanted to do a topic on it, but seemed like dangerous territory. (even for me - lol)
In the New Testament there are references made to OT texts that are either misquoted or misused based on their obvious meanings. Being from a more literalist background, this was rather troubling. I concluded something near to what you are saying. They were finding other spiritual meanings. Or, the original meaning was not what we thought. Except, sometimes it was the opposite. Quite puzzling. Here's an example.
All sorts of problems here. Gave gifts, or received gifts? (for starters) "This is why it says..." No it doesn't! - lol
Ephesians 4:7-8 NIV
But to each one of us grace has been given as Christ apportioned it. 8 This is why it says:
“When he ascended on high,
he took many captives
and gave gifts to his people.”
Psalm 68:18 NIV
When you ascended on high,
you took many captives;
you received gifts from people,
even from the rebellious—
that you, Lord God, might dwell there.
Even literalists recognize this.
It seems to me that those with a figurative view don't apply it to everything in the Bible. And those with a literal view don't apply it to everything in the Bible.
Perhaps the biggest battle ground, if you will, on this subject is the Genesis account. Perhaps the whole book of Genesis.
Those with a figurative view seem to be split on how much of Genesis is to be taken figuratively. Some concede that Abraham was (may have been) a real person, for instance. Or Jacob and the Israelites. But then deny the Exodus account. Say what?