alexandriaisburning
Well-Known Member
I simply asked what your notion of historicity, to use your word, would impose upon you the understanding of this specific passage? Set aside all your excuses and explanations of other's biases and lack of understanding historicity and just answer the question. Surely you've read the Scriptures and as you read the words that are printed your mind gains some sort of understanding of what those words mean. Now, you may not understand what the author intended them to mean, but you do have an understanding. What is it?
I already explained what I think it means in my previous response. I don't think the words are confusing, or that they are "code" for something else, or that they are necessarily intended to be a "metaphor" for something else (metaphor, of course, in the modern sense of the word). Like all narratives, it invites us to conjure to mind images so that we might place ourselves in the author's mind and communicate in the same mental space. My contention is simply that just because a story has "events" in it does not necessarily mean that the "events" are meant to be understood as having "absolute-happenedness", as modern assumptions about historicity would force us to believe.
Yet even in the midst of our modern biases for historicity, we nonetheless do precisely the same thing with "story" and "myth" that I am suggesting. For example, consider the "cherry tree" myth regarding George Washington. We know, of course, that on the basis of historicity it is not a recounting of actual events (and interestingly enough, the original author of the myth created it intentionally, not out of ignorance!), but rather an anecdote the communicates a moral message.
Despite its obvious lack of historicity, the myth endures in our collective understanding because 1.) it is a good story that appeals to us and 2.) it has entrenched itself within the cultural consciousness through repetition. Does the lack of historicity invalidate the myth as "truth" or "useful" or whatever other adjective might be applied? And is it at least possible that its actual nature as myth is what ingratiated it within our understanding?
Again, the rationalization of the modern, western mind is trained to eschew that which is not "historical". Nonetheless, despite our ever-present biases, the value of mythos still permeates our consciousness.
Upvote
0