It may seem like a silly question, but I think that it is a legitimate one. Several of the forums in which I have read and participated have dealt with issues that come back to how literal one takes scripture. So, how literally do you take scripture? Over the next couple of posts, I submit to you some quotes that capture how I feel:
There is much more to the this writing that the above quote (it came from a book); I submitted what I felt most accurately illustrated my thoughts and contributed to this topic.The Rev. Christopher L. Webber said:...the Bible is not a set of instructions that can give us simple answers to all questions or a text with which to prove points. In the first place, the guidance the Bible gives was provided for a society very different from ours and still in the early stages of growth in knowledge of God's love. The existence of such instructions as to stone a disobedient son (Deut. 21:18-21) should give us pause in simply quoting the Bible to justify our actions. Sometimes Jesus himself overrode scriptural commandments with new commands, as in the Sermon on the Mount [reference omitted]. So, when we find the Bible saying, "An eye for an eye and a tooth for tooth," we can read it as a bloodthirsty law to be ignored (which makes large parts of the Bible irrelevant), an unchanging standard to be enforced in our modern penal code (which puts us back to a pre-Christian world), or we can learn through further study that this command was a step forward for a world whose usual rule was unlimited vengeance (e.g., a life for an eye), and that it was a rule superseded in its turn by Jesus' injunction to turn the other cheek [reference omitted].
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...the Bible is not a rule book. If God had wanted us to have a rule book, surely a better one could have been provided than this. The Bible is something quite different; we go to it not to find specific words to answer our questions but to find the Word who created us and knows our need before we ask.
The Bible is a collection of writings produced at various times and places over a span of more than a thousand years in which we can see what God has done through individuals and through the history of nations and peoples.
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[when we say the Bible is the]"rule and ultimate standard of faith," it does not mean that every word of the Bible contains the same authority. Martin Luther once spoke of the Bible as being like the manger at Bethlehem: containing the Christ Child but surrounded by much straw. That seems overly harsh, but most Christians would agree that they find the Twenty-third Psalm more valuable than the Fifty-eighth and the fifth chapter of Matthew of more help than the third chapter of Leviticus. And even straw serves a purpose: Mary would have been reluctant to place the newborn baby on bare planks, and even the "strawiest" parts of the Bible provide context and setting for the rest.