Jason
Again, this seems to be a backpeddling from what Christians believed for thousands of years as well as the apostles that wrote the New Testament. Much of their theology is based on a literal read of creation, Adam, Eve, the Fall, the Flood and so on. References in the New Testament indicate that these events were believed LITERALLY. Not one person has answered my question about Adam and Eve, the Fall and the resulting need for Christ. This is Christianity 101. The apostle Paul's arguments for a literal savior are rooted in a literal read of the scriptures he had then. If the flood was not literal was Adam and Eve? if not was the Exodus? How about Abraham and the covenant? What about Jesus? Was he real? The son of God literally? Did he need to save us or is this all just figurative. Did he die for your sins and rise from the dead? If you start dismantling what is literal and what is not where does it stop?
You are meshing two separate time frames, Jason. I'll step up to the plate and take my best swing here.
Show me New Testament evidence of any kind that demonstrates that the authors of the New Testament, Apostles and Christ himself presented the Flood, The Fall, Adam and Eve in literal terms. Show me where they said it actually happened and that there is no question that they weren't referring to ancient allegory.
And if you think you can demonstrate without a doubt that they were teaching in terms of reality, then does it occur to you that while Paul, etc. may have accepted it as historical, that Jesus was simply teaching in terms of the culture he was appealing to?
Abraham, I'm thinking was literal but there is no proof for Abraham that I know of unless you count two graves that supposedly hold his remains.
Jesus, I think yes was literal.
Did he die for our sins and rise from the grave, yes I think so. I see nothing
in the time frame that wrote in protest of Christianity. When the Gospels were authored, I see no other type of writing that discredits them. Of course there was alot going on in 1st Century times.
There is no proof of the Exodus unless it is viewed in terms of another time frame where some folks seem to think it fits nicely.
You ask what happens when you start to chip away at literalism. Jason Bourne, I'm shocked by that question. Do you seriously take the entire Bible literally?
The Bible is a collection of books, Jason. Are you saying that we need to look at the entire body of work in an either/or view?
How so?
Would you place that same stipulation on the Revelation? If the Revelation is symbolic do you you think the rest of the Bible needs to be viewed symbolically? Are the Table of Tribes symbolic?
The Bible is many things. If Christians have taught literalism throughout then maybe Christians should THINK ABOUT what they're reading and learn about the culture it was written in and for. The biggest mistake that Christians make is not studying the ancients. We know next to nothing about Hebrew customs and culture.
Jersey Girl
(not shouting at you, too lazy to bold any more)