mikwut wrote:This is just not true. A figurative reading of Genesis has been around much longer than Darwin's original groundbreaking theory. So, "they" didn't come up with it just for apologetic purposes. It is quite easy to tell the difference between something figurative and literal, do you really think even the ancients believed in a talking a snake? And, as I originally stated the texts themselves don't present themselves as literal because they differ. I just don't accept theists really engaging in such arbitrary way as you present above.
Let's see. Do you believe in:
A talking donkey?
Moses literally parted the Red Sea?
Fiery serpents came down and infected people, and those who gazed upon the symbol Moses raised up were cured?
God was disappointed with Saul because after slaughtering every man, woman, and child of some people who were "trespassing" on Israel's land, he kept back some of the cattle to sacrifice?
God ordered Abraham to slaughter ritually his son, and burn his carcass on an altar?
God killed all homo sapiens on Earth in a great flood, saving only Noah and his family?
Everyone spoke the same language until they tried to build a tower to God, and so God invented all these various languages and changed the wiring in peoples' brains so they suddenly thought and spoke differently from each other, leading to the dissolution of the building effort, and a scattering of the people*?
Lot was considered righteous for offering his own daughters to be raped by a crowd of people, in order to save two angels from God from the same fate?
God actually killed the firstborn male of every Egyptian household, or indeed every household in Egypt that didn't paint the door of their house with lamb's blood?
Jesus turned water into wine?
Jesus spit in some dirt, made mud with it, put it on some blind guy's eyes, and suddenly his blindness was cured?
God actually stopped the Earth rotating on its axis (or slowed it down considerably) in order to give the Israelites more daylight to complete the slaughter of their enemies in a battle?
Do you believe these things happened? Or are they merely figurative? I'm really curious where you draw the line between "what really happened" and "what didn't really happen but which is supposed to infer some important and true principles to our minds".
*and of course the companion belief that one family of these people had their language spared so God could have them build some wooden submarines (tight like unto a dish) lit by glowing rocks, filled with eating/pooping animals, driven by nothing more than winds and currents, yet keeping together in a little formation, to get to the American continent?