I don't think the problem is the Bible in and of itself. After all, TEs also read the Bible and believe in it.Didaskomenos said:This article is very interesting and contains a lot of truth. I think Berry's prognosis of the bottom issue of creationism needs a practical context to be understood fully.
The problem is the Bible. That's it. The bottom issue is authority. So many Christians value the idea that they just open a book and within it is found literally everything God says about everything. This "whole truth" is immediately understandable, and requires really no critical thinking.
The problem is in how creationist read the Bible. And, in reading the Bible, they do equate the mechanism of creation with the existence of God. As Berry said, if God didn't create as a literal reading of Genesis 1 says, then God didn't create and doesn't exist. We see this in tying the Adam and Eve story to Jesus and salvation. How many times have we seen a variant on "If Adam didn't exist, then there was no original sin, no need of Jesus dying on the cross, and no salvation". Or "if you don't believe the Bible in Genesis, you don't believe that Jesus was resurrected."
True they do this. So, is the false connection between the how of creation and the existence of God a result of the literalism or is the literalism a result of the connection?a methodology for hermeneutics they foolishly and arrogantly consider "spiritual". It's just so much easier to accept the Bible as a homogenous whole than it is to use the mind to contextualize each portion and rely on the Spirit to illuminate the truth contained in its various parts.
I think the connection is a result of the literalism. First creationism decides that only a literalistic interpretation will do, then creationism makes the false connection. However, the reason creationism can't back away from the false connection is that literalism has taken the next step: it has turned literalism itself into a god. To question literalism then means blasphemy -- attacking the god. This explains why we so often see literalists claiming that non-literalists don't believe in God. In a sense, they are correct. Non-literalists don't believe in the literalist god -- a literal interpretation of the Bible.
I would go farther. The interpretation has become the god.And this is why they feel that the spiritual truth underlying Scripture is assaulted when silly, superficial, non-contexual interpretations are debunked. They have them inextricably intertwined.
Looking at the history of Fundamentalism -- and most literalists are fundamentalists -- I see that it did arise as a reaction to Higher Criticism and hermeneutics. The opposition to evolution was almost an afterthought. If you read the chapter titles of The Fundamentals, you find that most of them are against hermeneutics.
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Parthenon/6528/fundcont.htm
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