How do they fail?Waco1947 said:These acts fail the test of historicity but What's a gospel writers could care less about the actual hisstericity and cared more about the good news of Jesus Christ which is that he is God's Son and that God's reign is here.Oldbear83 said:No.Waco1947 said:Mythical rather than metaphorical. Jesus is a historical but the stories about him probably mythical like the virgin birth.ShooterTX said:Parables are obviously parables. So I guess if you don't like the historic or literal words... you just decide that it is some sort of metaphorical story?RMF5630 said:ShooterTX said:
I'm curious about this.
If you remove the Bible as a reliable, truthful text; then where does your understanding of Jesus come from? The words of Jesus, as recorded in the Bible, make the claim that the Bible is true and "the Word of God". How can we use the writings about Jesus in the New Testament as a basis for religion, if we also discount the words of Jesus in the New Testament, when he describes the validity of the Old Testament?
So where is this alternative source for knowing/understanding God & Jesus?
Curious, why does the Bible have to be a literal historical text to have value for religious or philosophical believe?
Jesus talked in parables. Why wouldn't the Gospels follow that model? Paul's writinfs and the Acts of the Apostles seem more historical in nature. But wouldn't they use stories to make points?
Do I believe the Old Testament verbatim? I would say no, like any document that started from oral tradition, there is hyperbole to make a point. Did the walls of Jericho literally fall? Or did the Jews win a battle they shouldn't have? Doesn't change the lesson.
But, I am a Catholic and according to many going to hell for following a false prophet, right?
I do love this Board, not afraid to tackle the tough subjects. Historical accuracy of Bible, abortion. Trump. Heck of a week...
So are the words of Jesus metaphorical or literal text? Was the life of Jesus literal or not?
How do you decide which parts are literal and which are not?
Jesus talked about Noah and the Ark in Matthew 24... was he a liar? Or maybe Jesus never said those words? If so, what let's you know which words of Jesus are literal and which are untrue?
There is no historicity to any of these events but their historicity is not their point. There point is, and this is the key, is to engendered faith in God. Their intent is to say God is love and sent the Son to show us love. Literalism is gone.
The Bible is a book of many lessons, including that miracles happen.
I understand this is difficult for someone to accept, if they understand nothing beyond what their senses tell them, but this is important:
We are more than just animals, more than brute instinct and matter.
Every life matters, because each and every human being is a miracle, designed and created for a unique identity and purpose, and part of Life is discovering that purpose and identity, and crafting our own contribution to Creation.
The Bible accounts show God is in control, to the point that Jesus can turn water to win, make the blind see, walk on the seas, and raise the dead. That these things are done for love and hope in no way makes them less real.
The gospels never pretend to be about history. They are not a historical record, memories, or newspaper accounts. The gospels were written do engender faith and to make them do anything else rob them of their power, Especially with secular folk. The church will continue to shrink in membership membership and power and authority as long as we ask people to believe impossible doctrines of traditional faith. A new theism is called for. Gravity is a son of a gun because it defies "God's control and people know it.
I'll wait for an answer but won't get one.
Salute the Marines - Joe Biden