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Another thread to discuss the Bible.

Please remember the rules of the Religion Moderator as this topic is discussed.

1 posted on 04/18/2007 11:20:12 AM PDT by Salvation
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To: Salvation

Both.

The issue is to distinguish between the allegory and the fact.

Did the Good Samaritan REALLY exist, or was he a personality created to illustrate a point? In the long run, does it matter?

If you are a Christian, you believe Christ rose from the dead, ascended into heaven, Satan as a real entity, the fact that Christ was the Son of God, that he redeemed us by His death and suffering, plus the personalities and facts of the Old Testament.

But there is a lot of allegory in the Bible and a lot of material which needs to be taken in a figurative sense rather than a literal one.


174 posted on 04/19/2007 2:01:00 PM PDT by ZULU (Non nobis, non nobis Domine, sed nomini tuo da gloriam. God, guts and guns made America great.)
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To: Salvation
"We" in the article refers to a specific group, and there'll be a specific answer, or at least on answer will be a lot more likely than others.

Post the article on the Internet, and there isn't much of a "we" left. However one answers the question, somebody else will answer differently, and it's more common that people irritate others in to taking the opposite position than that someone brings others around to a point of view through reason and argument.

175 posted on 04/19/2007 2:01:37 PM PDT by x
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To: Salvation

We should take the Bible seriously.


188 posted on 04/19/2007 8:53:47 PM PDT by streetpreacher (What if you're wrong?)
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To: Salvation

It is overly simplistic to ask whether we take the Bible literally or figuratively.

The Bible should be examined in the idiom under which it would have been intended and understood for its original audience. This requires an enormous amount of scholarship in ancient literature, history, philosophy, culture, and world religions. Each original audience would have had a very specific reaction to each specific writing.

Asking whether the Bible should be taken literally or figuratively is like asking whether one should load one’s toner cartidge with green toner or red toner. One needs a full range of color, and it needs to be adapted to the original intention of the photographer.

If you would like some excellent preaching and teaching, visit the sermon store at Redeemer.com and download the 21 free sermons. I bought an iPod just so I could listen to this guy.


190 posted on 04/19/2007 10:15:57 PM PDT by Silly (plasticpie.com)
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To: Salvation; wideawake; sandyeggo
Some may write off the whole Bible as being merely symbolic or allegorical, while others take every word as the kind of literal truth you get when you say something like, "The fire is hot." Symbolically, that same fire represents the power, warmth, and enthusiastic fervor poured into Christians by the Holy Spirit. You can approach the flame literally or figuratively, but either way, the fire is "true."

No one in the world has ever, does now, or will ever, interpret the every single word of the Bible as being of the same sense as "the fire is hot." This is a straw man created to justify the rejection of things recorded in the Bible that are outside the purview of modern science and outside our own experiences (the six day creation, the age of the ancients, Noah's Flood, the Tower of Babel, etc.).

It's a good thing those liberal German Protestants discovered how primitive and exclusively allegorical the Bible is. What would Catholics have done without them?

205 posted on 04/20/2007 9:00:30 AM PDT by Zionist Conspirator (Please pray for the refu'ah shelemah of Yehudah Ben Rivqah, father of Binyamin Jolkovsky.)
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To: Salvation
[ Should We Take the Bible Literally or Figuratively? ]

Both.. as you do with any book with metaphors in it..

Taking it as one or the other misses the point of the whole book..
Knowing which is metaphor and which is literal is not always easy.. sometimes very easy..

229 posted on 04/20/2007 3:27:54 PM PDT by hosepipe (CAUTION: This propaganda is laced with hyperbole....)
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