I understand what you mean, you're not saying that it didn't happen, you're saying that to a reader of the bible nowadays it doesn't matter if it actually happened or not, because it contains a powerful spiritual message either way.
Exactly. But again bear in mind I'm not saying "It didn't literally happen": what I'm saying is, for one: it's impossible to know
how it literally happened. There are too many unknowns, too many variables. People can draw lines in the sand and say "My literal interpretation is how it
must have happened" but these people are only deceiving themselves. There is just no way to be sure. Was the flood global? Local? Both sides have the reasons for their literal understanding, but no side can be sure of it. And what does it matter, anyway?
If a man had a dream of an ark, and said "God spoke to me"; then later someone writes down "And God spoke to him, and said 'Build an ark'" the story is still
true. I use the phrase "God says to me..." all of the time, and it is true; but not meaning that I'm hearing an audible voice. Then again, if a man hears an audible voice, and writes it down, that's also true. Then you have the parable. The parable of the sower is
true even though, not literal. Is the story of Job literally true? If there was no literal Job, and a man was guided by the Spirit to write the story as a parable: does that make it false? No, it is still true; just as any parable is true, but not literal.
But the crux of the thread is that, the literal has no real function except in creating the analogue of the spiritual truth being conveyed through the allegory. When I ask "What good is the literal understanding?" it is a question of, why does the literal even matter to anyone? It does nothing at all, but create a spiritual allegory which is the
true intent of the Word of God. The
true Word of God is spiritual in understanding, not literal.
All that the literal understanding does (when taken as the only understanding) is, cause division in the churches and accusations of 'heresy' against each other, cause division in the world by demanding people believe the literal understanding when they have no means whatsoever of actually experiencing or verifying the myriad conflicting literal understandings, causes rifts between thinking persons who cannot believe in literal talking snakes and global floods, and, most insidiously, it robs people of the spiritual understanding, the
real truth of worth.
Another thing that bothers me is this: If those things never happened, then the disciples would have had to imagine all the things they wrote. How do see this?
I'm not saying they never happened, but that it's not possible to know through these writings,
how it literally happened. It could be that none of it happened, and it would make no difference to the spiritual understanding that is the important thing. It is the spiritual understanding, it is the very information transmitted off of the pages of the scripture and into the mind and heart that is causing the spiritual transformation of the reader. That information is
true regardless of whether or not, literally happened. It is the very Word of God that matters, and that transforms; it is not belief in literal events of the past that no one can truly know, that transforms; it is the very
spirit of the Word that is doing the transforming. Romans 10:6-8
Again, I'm not in any way saying "These things did not literally happen"; I am saying, how these things happened have no positive profit or function except as understood by way of parable. A story containing truth. The scripture says that Jesus never spoke to the masses except by way of parable. That Christ is the Word of God. Thus the Word of God speaks to the masses by way of parable. And just as it says Christ would give understanding to His disciples in private; the Holy Spirit gives understanding to the sincere seeker, in private. While the rest of the masses turn the bible sideways, peering and wondering "How does this man give us His flesh to eat?" This is the difference between the
natural man and the
spiritual man: 1 Corinthians 2:14. The former comprehends the spiritual Word literally, falling short of the spiritual understanding.
But the Word of God is spirit: John 6:63: and I propose that when the mind of the world begins to comprehend the Word of God purely in the Spirit, we will have this: Revelation 19:11-13, Revelation 19:15-16 because that sharp sword is what
divides asunder soul and spirit: Hebrews 4:12: that is, dividing the literal from the spiritual; which is what it means to "rightly divide the Word of God": 2 Timothy 2:15: to divide the carnal mind of understanding, from the spiritual mind of understanding; and cast away the literal understanding as profitless, and be "immersed in the Spirit"