Thama wrote:The convenient thing about symbolism and metaphor is that if the reader or commentator come to the text with the predetermination that it is accurate, it can be used to patch together virtually any inaccuracy or contradiction that could possibly exist in the text. See above:
Observed inconsistency: It was in violation of the law
THEREFORE
Conclusion: Vision, not reality
The premise that must exist for this conclusion to be drawn, however, is that the text itself is neither inaccurate nor incongruent.
The convenient thing about communication about virtually anything is that you can misread it if you so choose by choosing to make it literal. For example, I could respond to your first sentence in this post by pointing out that it is ludicrous to suggest that a patch of some kind can be used to bind together intellectual statements.
The ability to discern metaphor from literalism is something we do routinely. If you assumed a literal understanding of everything the world would be a very confusing place:
"My dogs are calling me." (Her pets are murdering her?)
"After I said that, he exploded at me and went crazy." (spontaneous combustion?)
"I can't figure this damned thing out." (The object is going to hell?)
All languages use this kind of metaphor. From context I'm pretty sure Ezekiel is not telling us to cook with dung but is trying to drive in a point. I consider this a passage where to assume it's literal is to be deliberately naïve.