Hello Solarwave, Ebia & Refurbished.
Thanks for replying. (Sorry about my impolite messaging. I'll address that from now on.)
Just picking up on several items from the last two pages.
While the symbolic and metaphoric meanings of some passages are up for interpretation surely the historical reportage of events, people and places is not?
Well, yes it is. At least there is considerable controversy about the historical nature of some passages and some events. Even genealogies are not strictly factual. We know from Egyptian and Sumerian sources that it was customary to give a king or other notable person a symbolic age, whatever their actual age of death was, as a token of honour.
Surely that way undermines the value of the Gospels as accurate documents of historic events and converts them to a collection of tales that might be true and which you can interpret as you like?
People who are not terribly familiar with the use of symbol in theology, literature and the arts vastly overestimate the elasticity of interpretation. Symbols actually have significant stability and staying power through many cultural changes. That is one of the things that led Carl Jung to propose the existence of collective mental archetypes. Another modern take on this phenomenon is the concept of memes (analogous to genes, but mental).
Creative thinkers, writers, painters, etc. do not use symbols so that they can be interpreted in any way you like, but to call up the traditional meaning of the symbol as applying to a current situation.
For most of the history of the Church, the prevailing mode of interpretation was to read the text as an allegory. Whether or not it was also understood as history, it was given allegorical sense as well. But the terms of the allegorical interpretation was not left to individual exegetes. The Church Fathers and theologians worked out the official allegorical meanings of each text and taught these to their students.
So, am I right in thinking that the historical authenticity and reality of Jesus is fully accepted by Christians? They believe that he was a real person who was born, lived and died in what is now Israel, about two thousand years ago.
Yes.
The Gospel accounts of his life are taken to be accurate reportage of real events involving real people in real places.
That is more debatable, especially among scholars of a Jesus Seminar inclination.
This accuracy and realism is what persuades many that he was not just a man but the Son of God.
No, I wouldn't phrase it that way at all. He was just as real to the Pharisees as to the disciples, but they didn't see him as the Son of God.
A Christian who puts their faith in Jesus becomes a "new creation" and is "born again" of the Holy Spirit. Are these metaphorical concepts or are they actual and real events that happened in the lives of true believers?
Spiritual events are real, but they are necessarily described in symbolic language.
Take the Apostle Paul. His conversion event is documented in the Book of Acts. Is this meant to be taken metaphorically?
Depends what you mean by "metaphorical". If to you "metaphorical" means nothing real happened, then no. But we are dealing with a spiritual reality, so the language must be in the nature of symbol. The conversion event is real; the description of the conversion event could be metaphorical.
The change of his name from Saul to Paul, his ministry to the Gentiles,
These go together. "Saul" is Hebrew; "Paul" is Greek. Makes sense to use a Greek name when ministering in Greek communities.
Assuming so perhaps the next step would be to examine why he died on the cross? As you will have read earlier in this thread, I contend that Christ's death and resurrection (real, historical events) are God's response to the real and historical event where our relationship with Him was broken.
I agree. But I don't think that reality requires a real Garden of Eden or a real tree and snake. Nor a particular man and woman.
The Apostle Paul referred to parts of the Old Testament not just for teaching purposes but also to remind early Christians that Moses and the 12 tribes of Israel were real, historical people. In 1 Corinthians 10: 1 - 13 Paul lists events that befell the Israelites and uses these incidents to teach and encourage those in Corinth.
Have you really, really read this passage? Consider, for example v. 2 "and all were baptized into Moses in the cloud and in the sea" (Cf John 3: 5 "No one can enter the kingdom of God without being born of water and spirit.")
Or the next verses "and all ate the same spiritual food and all drank the same spiritual drink for they drank from the spiritual rock that followed them and the rock was Christ."
Paul is not simply listing events; he is turning them into allegories of Christ. He does this often--which is why the early and medieval Church considered allegory the proper way to understand scripture. And it is the allegory as much as the remembrance that becomes the source of teaching and encouragement.
It seems quite clear to me that Paul genuinely believed that he was talking about historical facts, not just stories about his nation's past.
Neither Paul nor his audience would have recognized the distinction you are making here. A nation's history was identical with a nation's stories about its past.
If Paul was certain about his history here, what about when he refers to Jesus as "The Last Adam"?
Paul at his allegorical best.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Last_Adam
Why should he take the contents of the Books of Exodus, Leviticus, Deuteronomy, etc. as Israel's history but not the Book of Genesis?
Genesis describes the lives of Israel's patriarchs and founders.
Or why would Paul accept the writings about Noah and Abraham as historical fact but not that about Adam and Eve?
Why must some passages be seen as stories to provide meaning when Paul most likely considered them as historical records?
Again you are making a distinction here Paul would not have made. For Paul, history was not a matter of records; it was about providing meaning. The stories which provide meaning are what Paul would consider history.
We moderns try to separate the two. We want to record the history accurately in terms of who did what when, but we invest no meaning in it. To most ancient peoples there is no point in history without meaning; so history was recounted as stories in which the meaning is clear.
No, we should not discriminate among the books of the bible. Genesis is no less historical than Exodus, but by the same token Exodus is no more historical than Genesis. Leviticus is probably an idealized record of temple worship and social rituals written after Nebuchadnezzar's destruction of the temple and the cessation of worship there. There is no place in scripture, including the gospels, where a firm, clear line can be drawn between history (as moderns define it) and legend.
This is not to say there is no history in the bible, but that even when there is, it is so wrapped around with legend and symbol that it is next-to-impossible to divide one from the other.
Can you see my approach here, Ebia?
Where did Paul apply the historical / non-historical line?
Basically he didn't. It is a line he would not recognize as existing.
However, I would contend that 99% of Israel's population at that time would have been unable to read or write, relying on the spoken word to understand God's holy words.
Illiteracy is not the same thing as ignorance. Relying as we do on written records, we leave our memories untrained and vastly underestimate the capacity of the human mind to learn a great deal, and with a great deal of sophistication, without learning to read and write. Many ancient teachers, such as Socrates, deplored the growing impact of the written word on education, considering it inferior as a mode of education to the living relationship of teacher and disciple.
You can find examples of the same attitude in the early church, where Papias and others preferred to hear a living apostle or one of his disciples to reading a text. The episcopal tradition of bishops (apostolic succession) is another reminder of the importance of safeguarding the faith by entrusting the teaching to a direct transmission from one generation to another, person to person.
Jesus, of course, practised this tradition of oral teaching with his disciples. We have no writing from him and only two texts that tell us he was literate.
2. Today there are thousands of millions who cannot read or write, have no access to education and little hope of gaining any.
That is why they get their theology from sermons, oral lessons and hymns. Just as most of the first generation of Christians did.
Would they believe if they had to understand that some of the Bible is meant to understood metaphorically, some of it should be considered as an elaborate theological tract and some of it allegorical?
Actually some of the most inventive allegory comes from people just like these.
To me it seems more likely that the historical facts of Jesus' life, death and resurrection will speak powerfully to them. He offers them hope and a way out of their lives of poverty, oppression and despair. If they follow the same, simple path as Peter and John, new life can be theirs.
Except the hope does not come directly from the historical facts of Jesus' life, death and resurrection. It comes from the proclamation of the gospel which sets these events in a context of meaning. The facts of Jesus' life, death and resurrection are embedded in a story--and the meaning which gives hope is in the story.
Even the disciples had to learn the story before they understood the events they witnessed. (Luke 24:32)
A man really overcame death. It's a fact. Believe in it and you can too.
But, you see, that is not the gospel. The gospel is that Christ overcame sin and reconciled us to God. You don't get that from the mere fact that he died.
I take on board your point about different / multiple authors, but would it be too black-and-white of me to suggest the following?
Given that all the books of the Bible have something to say about God's relationship with man is it going too far to say that God has a hand it what has been written there?
Not precisely. To inspire someone to write is not the same as taking a hand in the writing. The biblical writers were truly authors, not secretaries.
And it doesn't mean you won't get a variety of perspectives from the writers either. Sometimes even contradictory.
To put this another way, would God ensure that only ideas and concepts that bring the reader closer to Him are included, whereas those that do not are excluded?
That seems to assume that what brought ancient Israelites closer to God and what brings a 21st century American closer to God are the same thing.
Does this bring us closer to God?
"Happy shall they be who pay you back for what you have done to us!
Happy shall they be who take your little ones and dash them against a rock!"
If not why is it there?
Agreed, there's a wealth of differences between different parts of the Bible, but since God is one, unified, timeless deity wouldn't the various facets of these books reflect a unified whole?
The process of canonization would do that. The bible is a selection of books from a much larger corpus of literature--even of religious literature. Those who decided on the canon used criteria which would impose a sense of unity on the message of the whole.
Literalism is taking every word to be true, whatever the outcome.
No it is not. It is taking every word in its most basic non-figurative meaning. To identify "literal" as "true" does the disservice of identifying "figurative" as "false".
Both literal and figurative language can be true and both literal and figurative language can be fictive. Jesus' parables are fiction that is true, would you not agree?
Time and again there are connections made between snakes and Satan.
Look up "meme".
By taking their words and then looking backing at the Genesis narrative the snake / devil issue makes much more sense. If this is being metaphorical then so be it!
It is definitely being metaphorical. Literally, a snake cannot be anything other than or more than a snake. As soon as you introduce the idea that it is something else, that is metaphor.
Even then I would still contend that Jesus, Paul and John would not have seen the story of Eve and the snake in only metaphorical terms.
For them to do so would have undermined the reality of the message they were preaching. If sin entered into the world by another means (not Eve and the snake) and the only account of this event was a story involving possibly fictitious characters then where does this leave us?
Same place we always find ourselves: creatures separated from our Creator by our sin.
Doesn't this change from historical to metaphorical weaken what the Bible says about Jesus and his message?
Only if you devalue metaphor.
Why don't you explain how you think the Israelites understood Genesis? If you can make a good case I'd be very interested to read it.
What part of Genesis? It is not all the same.