OK, so you d
on't like Samuel...
What about Numbers,
Deuteronomy, Book of Joshua, Exodus? Where God orders genocides of the Canaanites, the Amorites, the Midianites, the complete extermination of the people ruled by Sihon king of Heshbon and the people under Og king of Bashan, the new born males of Egypt (whilst hardening Pharaoh's heart not to agree to His orders)?
Let alone the killings of all people, animal and plants in the world, because he ...changed his mind?
(Gen 6:6 "And the Lord was sorry that he had made man on the earth..") The most ridiculous explanation.
I do not believe that God ordered any of those things and I do not believe that God changed His mind.
Gen 6:6
"And the Lord was sorry that he had made man on the earth..") I agree that is a ridiculous explanation.
God is infallible so God does not make mistakes, so God cannot be 'sorry' for anything He did.
Frankly, I do not know what to make of the Old Testament, let alone the New Testament, which is another subject. All I can say is that I am grateful that I do not need to rely upon the Bible for the truth from God!
Baha'i views of the Bible vary widely. My views lie in the middle area. There is the possibility that the Bible contains the Word of God, but only in a particular sense of the phrase 'Word of God' or in particular texts. I believe that the Bible is a collection of the writings of independent and human authors, so it is not necessarily historically accurate.
Introduction
Although Bahá'ís universally share a great respect for the Bible, and acknowledge its status as sacred literature, their individual views about its authoritative status range along the full spectrum of possibilities. At one end there are those who assume the uncritical evangelical or fundamentalist-Christian view that the Bible is wholly and indisputably the word of God. At the other end are Bahá'ís attracted to the liberal, scholarly conclusion that the Bible is no more than a product of complex historical and human forces. Between these extremes is the possibility that the Bible contains the Word of God, but only in a particular sense of the phrase 'Word of God' or in particular texts. I hope to show that a Bahá'í view must lie in this middle area, and can be defined to some degree.
Bahá'í teachers and scholars both have an interest in solving this problem. It should be noted at this point that the problem of Biblical authority addressed here is logically prior to that of Biblical interpretation, and the defining of a Bahá'í view is logically prior to engaging in inter-religious dialogue.
Conclusion
The Bahá'í viewpoint proposed by this essay has been established as follows: The Bible is a reliable source of Divine guidance and salvation, and rightly regarded as a sacred and holy book. However, as a collection of the writings of independent and human authors, it is not necessarily historically accurate. Nor can the words of its writers, although inspired, be strictly defined as 'The Word of God' in the way the original words of Moses and Jesus could have been. Instead there is an area of continuing interest for Bahá'í scholars, possibly involving the creation of new categories for defining authoritative religious literature.
A Baháí View of the Bible
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Below is the Baha'i position on the Bible according to the Guardian of the Baha'i Faith, Shoghi Effendi:
The Bahá'ís believe what is in the Bible to be true in substance. This does not mean that every word recorded in that Book is to be taken literally and treated as the authentic saying of a Prophet.
...The Bahá'ís believe that God's Revelation is under His care and protection and that the essence, or essential elements, of what His Manifestations intended to convey has been recorded and preserved in Their Holy Books. However, as the sayings of the ancient Prophets were written down some time later, we cannot categorically state, as we do in the case of the Writings of Bahá'u'lláh, that the words and phrases attributed to Them are Their exact words
(9 August 1984 to an individual believer)
The Bible: Extracts on the Old and New Testaments