- Registrado
- 18 de Mar, 2016
I wholly agree with this. You can say most of it is an allegory of faith, rather than just simply true events. This reminds me of a Chinese Tao saying from Laozi:That's why I as a Christian am always cautious about Biblical sources. For one I don't believe the Bible was intended to be taken as literal scientific fact on every single thing it talks about, and likewise there've been so many intentional and unintentional mistranslations, modifications, and retcons. You've got to take many translations into account to piece together a whole picture, still taking it with a grain of salt that the book was written by men, even if inspired by God. Not that there's no truth to it, but I don't believe everything is objectively 100% true because in my view that'd be putting a lot of hubris on the authors to not have the same failings as any other of God's creations, whether He gave them wisdom when they wrote it or not. My two cents anyway.
"Tao that can be spoken is not the real Tao."
I see it the same way with the Bible. How can you be sure the wisdom of human writers are the same wisdom from God? I'm not trying to sound like a heretic, but it's not a bad idea to differentiate between the ideals of God and the shackled insecurities of man.