- Oct 16, 2004
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Here's what you seem to be doing.Vance said:If the Genesis text of Adam and Eve read literally, I would then read the references in the NT to them as references to literal characters. But, if Adam and Eve are not literal in Genesis, then they are not in the NT either.
(1) I vance, take Genesis to be mythical
(2) I take 8 invisible realities literally based largely on NT texts, because these NT texts seem to be predominantly literal.
(3) But when these NT texts speak of Adam and Eve, I suddenly start taking them mythically. Why? Because Genesis is mythical.
Isn't this a reverse hermeneutic? You are using a mythical text as the authority over a literal text? Isn't it supposed to be the other way around? That is to say, you believe in these 8 realities where mentioned in the NT because you see these NT texts as literal truth. Right in the midst of these literal NT texts appears references to Adam and Eve. This would, by consistency, suggest a literal Adam and Eve. The literal texts would be the most reliable commentary on the mythical texts (because the facts of mythical texts are less certain by the very nature of mythology). If we used your hermeneutic (making myth authoritative over literal texts), we end up believing all kinds of myths, and at the same time, disbelieving all kinds of literal truths and historical facts! At least that's how I see it.
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