lovemuffin
τὸν ἄρτον τοῦ ἔρωτος
To what specific claims are you referring?
The existence of an early polytheistic influence on Genesis, with male and female Gods including Yahweh and Asherah.
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To what specific claims are you referring?
Again, I think the important question is not whether a text lends itself to allegorical interpretation but whether or not it was intended as such.
Sorry Jayhawker I was trying to answer Burl's question before reading the thread. I think all interpretations are possible.
And I think that such a position is absolutely bankrupt.
No. I am saying that there is no reason to doubt that the text had a principle intended meaning. How that meaning gets reframed or repurposed over time and across cultures may well be of interest but it is, from my perspective, an entirely secondary matter.I don't want to strawman your position, so please correct me if I'm wrong, but it appears your view of interpretation is that a text has one objectively true meaning, and that meaning is fixed by the understanding of the author(s) of the text. Is that correct?
On what grounds would one assume Genesis 1:26,27 reflects "an early polytheistic influence on Genesis, with male and female Gods including Yahweh and Asherah"?The existence of an early polytheistic influence on Genesis, with male and female Gods including Yahweh and Asherah.
I already answered this. The text + archaeology.On what grounds would one assume Genesis 1:26,27 reflects "an early polytheistic influence on Genesis, with male and female Gods including Yahweh and Asherah"?
I think it's likely that many, if not most, of these early narratives came from oral traditions and probably weren't exclusive "Breaking News!" put forth by the author(s). Tracing oral traditions back to their origins is undoubtedly in most cases all but impossible.
No. I am saying that there is no reason to doubt that the text had a principle intended meaning. How that meaning gets reframed or repurposed over time and across cultures may well be of interest but it is, from my perspective, an entirely secondary matter.
On what grounds would one assume Genesis 1:26,27 reflects "an early polytheistic influence on Genesis, with male and female Gods including Yahweh and Asherah"?
I already answered this. The text + archaeology.
I don't mind reading your long posts. I think you are the best writer on the forum and I think most people agree with me. Oh my goodness! Look at your post/like ratio.This is an important point that I left out of my last post because I was worried it was overly long already. Thanks for making it.
Seeing the intolerance and hate by Christians in my newsfeed every day, from anti-trans protests to this: http://www.rawstory.com/2016/06/geo...h-at-christian-gathering-let-his-days-be-few/ , I started thinking that a lot of intolerance could be eliminated by a non-literal interpretation of the Bible. This thread is for those of you who practice that to some extent.
Background:
Sola Scriptura, the doctrine that says the Bible is the one, literal, inerrant source of all religious truth, didn't exist in the early Christian church. It was a Protestant invention in the 1500s. Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy do not subscribe to this idea. I greatly admire the apophatic mystic theology of the early Eastern Orthodox church, which owes to mystic experience and not Biblical text.
Sola Scriptura is responsible for science denial, for example the refusal to see the Genesis account of creation as the creation myth that it is, replete with borrowings from Sumerian myth, and just like any other creation myth around the world. Sola Scriptura leads to intolerance against women, gays, and nonbelievers because it refuses to see the Bible as a collection of writings, quite literally written by men who were products of a violent, patriarchal culture, time, and place.
To fully appreciate the Bible, it needs to be contextualized as the mythologized history that it is, and understood anthropologically. When we do this, many of the negatives fall away. Some may say "If you do that, it's not Christianity any more!". No, it's not Christianity as YOU know it, but it is a Christianity. The idea that salvation depends on "correct" belief is a relatively modern one.
Question:
For those of you who do not interpret the Bible literally, how do you interpret it? What shifts in understanding does that produce? How does that change the religion and its message for you? How does the symbolism of the Bible reveal truths to you? Does your practice change the way you relate to others?
Please no preaching about the "only" true Christianity. Thanks.
That's true, some parts are more literal than others.Revelation 7:14 "Washed in the blood of the lamb" isn't taken literally I'm sure, which is associated with a non-literalism that people can accept.
I never said anything about transgender issues- except to note their oppression by religious fanatics--where did that come from? No religious text can be proven to be true--it's all the product of human authors and human interpreters. If you believe your interpretation to be true, that's your belief--but it doesn't make your interpretation factual. I treat religious writings as the cultural expressions I think they are. You can choose to treat them differently, just don't oppress others while you do it.You seem to be saying that the religious beliefs that someone else has are mere mythology. Meaning you're syaing that it's not true.
As for the trans thing, there are people who aren't religious that see transsexuality as a mental illness.
You said "Seeing the intolerance and hate by Christians in my newsfeed every day, from anti-trans protests to this:"I never said anything about transgender issues- except to note their oppression by religious fanatics--where did that come from? No religious text can be proven to be true--it's all the product of human authors and human interpreters. If you believe your interpretation to be true, that's your belief--but it doesn't make your interpretation factual. I treat religious writings as the cultural expressions I think they are. You can choose to treat them differently, just don't oppress others while you do it.
That's true, some parts are more literal than others.
oh, i see. ok. i'm pro "be who you are as long as you don't harm others"You said "Seeing the intolerance and hate by Christians in my newsfeed every day, from anti-trans protests to this:"
It made it sound as if you were pro-trans, as transgender folks will accuse anyone of hate for simply disagreeing with what they do.