Well, my question obviously wouldn't include parables ("simple stories used to illustrate a moral or spiritual lesson, as told by Jesus in the Gospels."), an exception that could be included in the category of "
raining cats and dogs," as explained by this Bible literalist.
Question: "Can / Should we interpret the Bible as literal?"
Answer: Not only can we take the Bible literally, but we must take the Bible literally. This is the only way to determine what God really is trying to communicate to us. When we read any piece of literature, but especially the Bible, we must determine what the author intended to communicate. Many today will read a verse or passage of Scripture and then give their own definitions to the words, phrases, or paragraphs, ignoring the context and author’s intent. But this is not what God intended, which is why God tells us to correctly handle the Word of truth (
2 Timothy 2:15).
Although we take the Bible literally, there are still figures of speech within its pages. An example of a figure of speech would be that if someone said "it is raining cats and dogs outside," you would know that they did not really mean that cats and dogs were falling from the sky. They would mean it is raining really hard.
There are figures of speech in the Bible which are not to be taken literally, but those are obvious. (See
Psalm 17:8 for example.)
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