It's logical possibility. But it is NOT a logical necessity. It is a non sequitur.Coke Bear said:No. The argument is extremely logical. You just don't believe it.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
None of what you are saying here necessitates a literal interpretation. As I keep saying, you are making non-sequiturs.Did Jesus repeat he argument 6 times here and keep elevating the language each time that he was met with shock and discuss here?BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
For example, Jesus does not correct the wrong thinking of the woman at the well, who thought Jesus was talking about literal water that she can draw from a well and drink, when he was talking about the Holy Spirit. Neither does he correct the thinking of those who misinterpreted him when he said "Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up". They thought he meant the literal temple, but he meant the temple that was his body. In both these cases, Jesus left it as a mystery to those who heard it and didn't correct them. You obviously can not conclude that their respective literal interpretations were correct, simply because Jesus didn't correct them. And I can give the same kind of argument for each item in your list.
How many times Jesus repeats something doesn't make the interpretation literal. He could be emphasizing the same figurative meaning. You're making another non sequitur.