One of the major problems I have with fundamentalist creationism is the claim that it is a "literal" interpretation of Genesis. Well, watch me deconstruct the idea of "literalism"...
When one reads a text, an interpretation is always required in order to make judgments about the text, and in order to add the contents of the text to one's personal knowledge. However, texts are not self-interpreting. One always has to make value judgments about the meaning of the content, as well as addressing one's presuppositions about how a text is intended by the author to be interpreted. Therefore, in order to obtain a "literal" reading of a text, one must understand not only the content of the text, but also the intention of the author of the text.
Now let's apply this understanding to the Genesis accounts. Many will argue that a "literal" reading of these accounts will necessitate that one arrive at some conclusion including the notion of 6 24-hour periods of creation. Yet is this necessary? Again, it is only a necessary, "literal" reading if one can definitively show that the text was intended by the authors to be understood in keeping with the aforementioned interpretation. However, if the biblical authors do not intend the first two chapters of Genesis to be a "scientific" description of the method and mechanism of creation, but were rather attempting to express a theological idea, I think it is quite plausible to assert (given the established criterion) that a metaphorical/hymnodic reading of the first two chapters of Genesis is actually a literal interpretation of the text.
So then, I believe the first two chapters of Genesis were intended by the authors to be a theological discourse about the power of God and immanant involvment of the divine nature in the cosmos, not a pre-modern scientific description of an event (events) that the writers themselves did not even witness. However, because I feel that this interpretation was that which was actually intended by the authors, I believe it is legitimate for me to say that my metaphorical interpretation of the Genesis accounts is a "literal" interpretation of the text.
What does everyone think of this?
When one reads a text, an interpretation is always required in order to make judgments about the text, and in order to add the contents of the text to one's personal knowledge. However, texts are not self-interpreting. One always has to make value judgments about the meaning of the content, as well as addressing one's presuppositions about how a text is intended by the author to be interpreted. Therefore, in order to obtain a "literal" reading of a text, one must understand not only the content of the text, but also the intention of the author of the text.
Now let's apply this understanding to the Genesis accounts. Many will argue that a "literal" reading of these accounts will necessitate that one arrive at some conclusion including the notion of 6 24-hour periods of creation. Yet is this necessary? Again, it is only a necessary, "literal" reading if one can definitively show that the text was intended by the authors to be understood in keeping with the aforementioned interpretation. However, if the biblical authors do not intend the first two chapters of Genesis to be a "scientific" description of the method and mechanism of creation, but were rather attempting to express a theological idea, I think it is quite plausible to assert (given the established criterion) that a metaphorical/hymnodic reading of the first two chapters of Genesis is actually a literal interpretation of the text.
So then, I believe the first two chapters of Genesis were intended by the authors to be a theological discourse about the power of God and immanant involvment of the divine nature in the cosmos, not a pre-modern scientific description of an event (events) that the writers themselves did not even witness. However, because I feel that this interpretation was that which was actually intended by the authors, I believe it is legitimate for me to say that my metaphorical interpretation of the Genesis accounts is a "literal" interpretation of the text.
What does everyone think of this?