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It is a form of idolatry, because it places one's ideas and beliefs about truth, as the Truth itself. It elevates one's beliefs as equal to the truth of God. How many times do some ask, "Do you believe in God and the Bible", as if they were co-equals? I see that question posed that way, more times than I could count.Literalism is not only a manifestation of ignorance, it also is pretty much a form of idolatry. The Bible is not perfect, nor is any translation of the Bible somehow a replica of the original manuscripts.
With permission of @ElishaElijah, who is new to the forum, I want to reproduce his opinion here:
In Arkansas inflicts child abuse on its school children
Evolution vs. creationism threads tend to attract only non believers on the evolution side even so most people who identify as Christian are not creationists/literalists. But it seems there is a lot of potential debate between the two Christian camps. So, please, discuss/debate.
Do you mean that literally?It is a form of idolatry, because it places one's ideas and beliefs about truth, as the Truth itself. It elevates one's beliefs as equal to the truth of God. How many times do some ask, "Do you believe in God and the Bible", as if they were co-equals? I see that question posed that way, more times than I could count.
Yes of course. That is literally what they are doing. But saying that, is not literalism. That's just stating facts. Literalism on the other hand, does not look at facts.Do you mean that literally?
That wasn't the question. The question was: "do you think of other people, who don't share your literalism but identify as Christian, as fake Christians?"As mentioned by @Hockeycowboy, I don't think that any Christians takes the entire Bible as literal but I think you are talking more about "In the beginning"
Obviously the title "Arkansas inflicts abuse" because the insert Creationism is sensationalist reporting.
There is a broad spectrum of possibilities but I think the essence is simply that we believe God created man as we know him and that mankind didn't "evolve". There is just to little information listed in the Bible which permits multiple possibilities on how it all happened along with different possibilities on time-tables.
So, regardless on how the whole of the earth came into being, I am of the camp that I am not a monkey's uncle but rather created from a real Adam and Eve so, in that sense, I am a literalist.
Fooled me. And, fortunately, monkey's ain't that ugly.I am of the camp that I am not a monkey's uncle
Sorry.That wasn't the question. The question was: "do you think of other people, who don't share your literalism but identify as Christian, as fake Christians?"
But some can be real rascals.Fooled me. And, fortunately, monkey's ain't that ugly.
If there is too little information listed in the Bible, then why make it a doctrinal belief statement? Why deliberately deny the science, when the Bible contains "too little information" about the subject?There is a broad spectrum of possibilities but I think the essence is simply that we believe God created man as we know him and that mankind didn't "evolve". There is just to little information listed in the Bible which permits multiple possibilities on how it all happened along with different possibilities on time-tables.
We are all created by God, and that makes all of us related, whether you accept science or reject it for some reason other than the data. I believe in God, and I embrace science. I believe we are related to other primates, as well as insects, fish, and birds. It says so in Genesis.So, regardless on how the whole of the earth came into being, I am of the camp that I am not a monkey's uncle but rather created from a real Adam and Eve so, in that sense, I am a literalist.
Especially when they weren't too "discrete" when we took our young kids to the Detroit Zoo many moons ago. True story, btw.But some can be real rascals.
Then don'tIt is not OK to force any view on others. Especially children.
adopted the protestant canon as their source
If there is too little information listed in the Bible, then why make it a doctrinal belief statement? Why deliberately deny the science, when the Bible contains "too little information" about the subject?
Christians throughout the ages, major figures in Christian history that helped shape and form its history living during its first few centuries, such as Origen, didn't read the Genesis account as literal. And they did not even have the benefit of modern science. Why do modern fundamentalists then read it literally, as if it should be read as literal history and a literal account of origins, as opposed to allegory and metaphor, is the real question.
Can you answer that question for the rest of us? It cannot be because it says so in the Bible, since I don't read that, nor did a number of the early Christian church fathers, reading the same texts as you. What makes your reading true, and the rest wrong?
We are all created by God, and that makes all of us related, whether you accept science or reject it for some reason other than the data. I believe in God, and I embrace science. I believe we are related to other primates, as well as insects, fish, and birds. It says so in Genesis.
My advice is to begin with the scripture of History. That is the background for every other kind of knowledge, and it can give you comfort and stability in the storm. The books of the bible fit into a healthy education and are life giving. They are a testimony to peace and to love. History is not all about competition. Its not about breeding or survival or dynasties. Millennia ago someone cared about you, and that is worth finding out about.How, then, can we follow a bible that we know is wrong?
That is generalizing to too many people, and when Pres. Bush said it he included N. Korea which is not Muslim. He was talking about fascism, not Muslims....I hope. Anyways he is not all Christians and is also not thought to be a great thinker.Christians would fire that canon at Iraqi Muslims, then claim to be "fightin' evil" or "fightin' the Axis of Evil."
Why put these questions to me? I'm not going to condemn Christians. They are not 'The evil ones who created war'.Has it ever occurred to Christians that they are the evil ones who created war, created torture camps, and have defied God to do so?
I point out that the bible is a library not a book. It is a collection of poetry, sayings, anthologies, analogies and stories. It is Ok for one thing to be wrong, such as an argument of Paul's. Its Ok, because you can go "Hey that is wrong."If part of the bible is wrong, then the veracity of the entire bible is called into question. What part is right? What part is wrong?
Maybe God does not intend anything? One of the works in the NT (1Peter) says that the prophets seek to learn the secrets of God in order to reveal them to others. We tend to think God approaches and speaks to prophets, but maybe that is not how things actually work? A man who trusts a prophet has chosen to do so. It sounds to me like God's secrets are not as easy to come by as we'd like, but as with quack medicines and diets we are easily baited into purchasing useless pills sometimes. I don't think Christians are the only ones, and I think History backs me up on this. To say that 'God' wants to believe the whole bible or not sounds like a diet pill gig.Either God intended us to believe in the whole bible, or intended us not to believe at all.
What it does goes to show, is that literalism was not a part of early Christianity the ways that modern fundamentalists seems to want people to believe it was. There was a lot of diversity back then, and Origin, among others of that time, who considered a literalist reading to be something worthy of ridicule, which is what he was responding to showing how it couldn't be literal.Origen, I'm sure you know, had his own interpretation of Genesis 1 being spiritual and Genesis 2 being natural. But when you come right down to it, does he really know too? It remains his interpretation.
I would say it accurately reflects the human condition through the metaphor of the Garden of Eden. But I would not call it history in the sense of what really happened in history. It's imaginary, yet true. It is not necessary for Adam and Eve to have been literal human beings, in order for the story to be the truth about us.The Bible, in my view, isn't a compendium on creation but rather the history of man.
Well, that can be true of course. Take for instance the narrative stories about Jesus. I believe Jesus was a real person historically. But stories of him walking on water, are by design, theological truths, to convey meaning. Whether that actually occurred, is beneath the point of its inclusion in the story.What if there was some literal aspects to it and yet had some metaphorical meaning also? Or metaphorical with some literal information?
This is unfortunate that you don't have an understanding of how science works at this point, after so long on this forum with such aware members who correct Christians all the time about this. In reality, science was there. They are looking at, examining, testing, the items that literally were there! That rock is not 5 minutes old. It's 3 million years old, and existed 3 million years ago. They don't speculate, and then call that science. Science and theology, are entirely different things.No one was there when it all happen so, even in science, there are different theories on creation that people subscribe to and some more dogmatic than others.
The way you worded this, is that because of how you read the Bible, evolution cannot be true. That is making a truth claim. Other than your reading of the Bible, why should you dismiss the scientific Theory of Evolution? I can't think of any other reason, other than it challenges your belief in God the way that you hold it. But is that a bad thing? I see that as a good thing, personally, to have our notions about God stretched, modified, and or dropped altogether. That as an exercise, keeps Faith healthy. Can you agree with that, at least in principle?Which part of what I have said makes my reading true? (Since I have specified on how creation started)
While there are differences in human beings from the other animals in the world, humans are in fact still animals. We follow the same basic designs as all the rest of the animals, within our classification system. We all have a bilateral body plan, we have a spinal column, a brain, blood, etc, etc. etc. There is no way we are not created from the same stuff. There is no way we are not part of the animal kingdom.Happy that you believe in God and I do accept science for what it has to offer and what it discovers (the universe truly is an amazing creation and there is so much that man has and will discover - as scripture references.)
I agree that we are all creation is created by God. Both Genesis 1 & 2 says that mankind was created from the ground but how the animals were created isn't specified. Science is always correcting itself and has many theories that change from time to time.
So, my position is that we are not related to the animal kingdom. We exercise dominion over those areas and are to take care of those areas.
With permission of @ElishaElijah, who is new to the forum, I want to reproduce his opinion here:
In Arkansas inflicts child abuse on its school children
Evolution vs. creationism threads tend to attract only non believers on the evolution side even so most people who identify as Christian are not creationists/literalists. But it seems there is a lot of potential debate between the two Christian camps. So, please, discuss/debate.
Who is they?Then don't