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You're very welcome!I have opened it in another tab so I can peruse it later. Thanks, my friend!
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You're very welcome!I have opened it in another tab so I can peruse it later. Thanks, my friend!
the only thing I would say here is that there is some text in scripture that shows no markers for parable so it is important to know what is and is not story for teaching a lesson which can only happen through reading for comprehension which seems to be a lost art.
It's not on the UU symbol. I chose an interfaith avatar. If you have a problem with that, you can PM me or a mod. Don't clog a thread where it's not relevant. This is the last time I will discuss the topic of my personal affiliation with you in this thread.Then UU can take that Cross down off of its symbol, if that's what they think of our Scriptures.
UU is a cult, anyway -- but now it's a lying cult.
since this is no where close to what I was saying I will simply respond by asking you to consider the context (one of the common literary rules for comprehension I was referring to) in trying to apply the passage to the topic.If you're talking about things like explaining away the Resurrection as symbolic, I'd agree that that's a bizarre and modern misreading of 1st century Judaism. But a lack of clear markers in the Old Testament didn't prevent Paul from reinterpreting stories as allegorical (Galatians 4:24), so I really think common sense and modern science and archeology should suffice. Literalists and allegoricists coexisted 2000 years ago without screaming "heretic" at each other, so the modern "you're not a Christian if you don't accept a literal 7-day Creation story" is a little anachronistic.
Does the Epic of Gilgamesh stop being worth reading because we're now in the 21st century? I don't think the Bible needs to be a scientific and historical textbook to be relevant for future generations. We like figuring out the way the universe works, so I'm not sure why an omniscient God would give us all the answers instead of letting us learn things for ourselves. And considering that Christianity posits a God who largely taught through parables, I'm honestly baffled by the hostility towards the idea that God always works through stories.
(I personally don't buy dictation models of divine inspiration one way or the other. It's a bit incoherent when viewed in the context of the evolution of religion, not to mention the fact that people claiming to experience the Holy Spirit end up saying wildly different things.)
It is clear from scripture that God's intent was to communicate to us about the eternity that comes through salvation not how the universe came into being. Again, the creation account is a polemic not a scientific treatise as such it communicates clearly what God intended to communicate just because man tries to make it say something different doesn't mean God failed.I'm not saying that it's not worth reading for the literary qualities. I mean that some say that we can't expect the Bible to be accurate about certain things because it was meant for an ancient people who didn't know better, but surely an all powerful god could write a miraculous text explaining everything, and that would be understood by all...
I'm not saying that it's not worth reading for the literary qualities. I mean that some say that we can't expect the Bible to be accurate about certain things because it was meant for an ancient people who didn't know better, but surely an all powerful god could write a miraculous text explaining everything, and that would be understood by all...
The order of events was quite close to modern science? I'd like to know more about that. Even being liberal with what was meant by "day" and you still have fun things like birds coming before land animals.Nobody would have realized that the order of events was quite close to modern science before modern science even existed, so if that is a result of divine inspiration, it's aimed at us, not the Medieval church.
again, this is tradition....when we read Gen. we see that the particles existed for an indefinite amount of time before God pulled them together with His word....In the beginningWell, I have two problems with this. First, you're working under the assumption that everything in the Bible would have been meant for ancient people. Until relatively recently, the takeaway from Genesis 1 was that the universe had not existed forever and that God was sovereign.
The order of events was quite close to modern science? I'd like to know more about that. Even being liberal with what was meant by "day" and you still have fun things like birds coming before land animals.
Sorry, that's what I meant about being liberal with the word, "day." I'm allowing for alternate lengths besides what a surface reading would suggest.I would like to point out that you don't need to be liberal with what was meant by day. The word in Hebrew can also be defined as an era of indeterminate length, so insistence on English literalism is a bit bizarre.
interestingly enough the book I previously spoke of had a discussion of day early on in the book and where as there can be alternate meanings it also becomes important to understand that on day 4 verse 14 the issue of varying time lengths on day is greatly diminished. Thus the text specifies from day 4 on the approximate length of time of a day. Previously there is no indication.Sorry, that's what I meant about being liberal with the word, "day." I'm allowing for alternate lengths besides what a surface reading would suggest.
Well ... looky here:This is the last time I will discuss the topic of my personal affiliation with you in this thread.
All contributors agree that the Bible is riddled with historical errors but nonetheless can serve as an important repository of human truth.
If I'm understanding you correctly, this was close to my understanding of Genesis when I was Christian. The writings were divinely inspired, but were transcribed in the language of the time. God did not grant the writers knowledge beyond their era. Even if he had, they wouldn't have had words to accurately describe much of the scientific phenomena.Nobody would have realized that the order of events was quite close to modern science before modern science even existed, so if that is a result of divine inspiration, it's aimed at us, not the Medieval church. (Though unfortunately, people have coopted it to attack science instead, which is super frustrating.)
If I'm understanding you correctly, this was close to my understanding of Genesis when I was Christian. The writings were divinely inspired, but were transcribed in the language of the time. God did not grant the writers knowledge beyond their era. Even if he had, they wouldn't have had words to accurately describe much of the scientific phenomena.
Can you give us a way you tested it?testing...admittedly not everyone believes that testing is the answer but scripture tells us to test what we are taught and I believe that is important and have been testing it for some 50 years now and found it to be infallible.
...trying to understand the creationist mentality. I've been struggling with this for years. Is anyone prepared to give an honest, clear explanation as to why they believe in creationism?
What is alien to me is how anyone can believe a woodenly literal interpretation Genesis.
And I asked you why you believe the Bible.
Good question.Many believers interpret the Bible differently. What makes you so sure that your interpretation is correct anyway?