I encourage you to research the individual propositions within this entry yourself. In your research, please be aware of the bias of your source material (e.g. religious sites versus sceptic's sites versus material meant for pure scientific/philosophical knowledge).
I'm gearing up for a long one. So prep yourself.
THE QUESTION: How literally are we meant to take the bible?
Even the most fundamentalist fringe minorities will agree that the bible is not meant to be taken literally in the strictest sense of the word, so let's get that out of the way immediately. The bible, like any other literary document, employs the use of metaphors, similes and allegories. Frankly, it would be a waste of time for me to get into the various examples of each which is clearly documented in other areas of the Internet:
So while we can all agree the answer to THE QUESTION is not “absolutely literally”, the problem then becomes which parts do we take literally and which parts do we not. As described in some of the sites above, in some instances, it is rather obvious whether a portion of scripture is meant to be literal or not. All we have to do is to read the portion in question with an understanding of:
- Basic literary devices (refer to first site above)
- The context within which it is presented
- The format (e.g. The Psalms are considered a form of poetry)
- The purpose/background of the author and his/her primary intended audience (e.g. I and II Cortinithians are letters written by Paul, an early Christian Missionary, to the Church in Corinth)
We can therefore all agree that the key to determining whether a verse is literal or not is to determine what meaning the writer intended to convey. Some people contend that once we determine, using the above-listed means, which of the verses are meant figuratively, everything else should be taken quite literally. Therein lies the problem. A country's constitution, for instance, is written with the intention to minimise as far as possible the room for interpretation and doubt, yet, there can be several and varied interpretations of law. By significant contrast, the bible was written with very “flowery” language and therefore the meaning of various passages can be construed in a plethora of ways, the most popular of which is determined in the court of popular opinion as opposed to by precedent in a court of law.
Consider these verses for instance:
“Tremble before him, all the earth. The world also is established that it can’t be moved.” - I Chronicles 16:30
“The sun also rises, and the sun goes down, and hurries to its place where it rises.” - Ecclesiastes 1:5
There are constant references like these to the earth being stationary, fixed on “its foundations” and the sun moving across the sky. The only references to the earth moving and the sun standing still were made when God intervened in earthly events – such as when Joshua begged God to make the sun stand still until they had won their battle (Joshua 10:12-13). On the basis of verses like these, the Church and indeed, the vast majority of people, held a geocentric view – i.e. that at least the sun, if not also the stars and the other planets, orbited the earth which was the centre of the universe.
It was not until Copernicus in the 15th century and Galileo in the 16th that the vast majority shifted to the heliocentric view – i.e. the sun was the centre of the universe. The church even considered Galileo a heretic because of his propositions. A few hundred years later, it became understood that while the earth orbited the sun, the sun was not the centre of the universe, but only of our solar system, with the “stars” actually being distant stars (in the scientific sense of the word), planets, galaxies, asteroids, nebula and the like. Nowadays, most of us (and sadly, I cannot say all) accept that the most recent revelation is the most irrefutable theory, but where did that leave the verses of the bible?
The constant references to the stationary nature of the world had apparently been misunderstood – they were meant to be metaphorical. The references to the sun moving across the sky? Well those were meant to be observational – as in the same way that in modern day we say that the “sun rises” and the “sun sets” when it does no such thing; it only appears to do so – observationally – because of our point of reference.
Now this is in no way meant to suggest that the bible is or is not geocentric – that is an article unto itself – only that popular interpretation of the meaning of various biblical verses changed based on the advancement of science. Neither does this mean that science trumps the bible (necessarily – that is a whole other article). What it does is call into question our interpretation of all other verses and passages in the bible. And I'm not just talking about the ones that can be proved/disproved by science but also those of a more philosophical nature. Consider for a moment that the bible is almost 2,000 years old and has been used as a moral compass for people of different nations throughout this time. Imagine how much culture has changed over that period, with communities caught throughout the snap-shots of time more or less comfortable that their way of life mirrored the philosophy demanded in the bible. Just as we are comfortable of such. What we are doing is just as what cultures before have done and what cultures elsewhere are doing – interpreting the bible through our own narrow moral and cultural prism. Is this interpretation correct? Is this essentially “personal truth” in any way an absolute truth? How much would it have changed if we had known more?
What if we knew – or at least had a better understanding – of the Hebrew words that were interpreted into English for our edification? What if, for example, we traced the lineage of the word “hell” to 2 of the 4 original Hebrew/Greek words – “sheol” which was a place where the dead go whether they be good or evil and “Gehanna” which may more closely resemble the final, though not necessarily “eternal” destination for the wicked. What if we later understood that “sheol” in particular was translated to mean “grave”, “hell”, and “pit” at different times on a basis that is arguably inconsistent within the same bible as well as (less arguably and quite factually) inconsistent across different versions of the bible? How much would this information transform your understanding and belief in hell?
Now this is simply one word, and I point it out because the concept of hell is significant to most, if not all, Christians. I actually intend to write an entire entry dedicated to “hell” and its (mis)conceptions. But like I say – this is just one word. The bible is a compilation, written in an old language in largely poetic verses by dead authors who never had the chance to explain themselves, and then translated by a wide variety of persons who may or may not have interpreted the bible through their own cultural prisms, into a more updated language for us to now interpret. And we have problems interpreting modern books written in English. Even if you do not doubt the infallibility of the Primary Author (God), the Author's human hand (the persons who physically wrote the scriptures), and the Author's varied interpreters (the various versions of the bible), do you also not doubt the infallibility your own interpretation?
At this point, we can introduce the divergence which has always been somewhat present in study of the bible but has strengthened in more modern times. The divergence in question is a split, of sorts, between a Faction A and Faction B. Faction A considers the bible more of a spiritual guide written in a questionable culture, thus preventing every word of the bible from being taken literally but conserving the general deep spiritual meaning of the text. Faction B continues to contend that the bible is a historical, quasi-scientific document which also (and primarily) gives detailed spiritual guidance. Of course, these are not two distinct groups (as there are varying points in between) nor is the origin of Faction A solely (or perhaps at all) based on the problematic nature of interpreting the bible per above.
Let us consider Faction B for a time, because there are a still a few issues that arise when the bible is considered as a literal document. For example, it gives rise to the question – did the Great Flood really happen? Did Jonah really survive 3 days in the belly of a great fish? Others of course. The Great Flood, I will consider quite separately as I wish to dedicate an entire entry (probably as long as this one) to it. The Jonah story, however, let us touch on that for a bit and determine how that story has been viewed by bible literalists to reconcile it to our current understanding of the digestive system of fish and therefore its overall plausibility.
It's a miracle!
Plain and simple. And as for how the miracle precisely worked – that Jonah actually survived in the belly of the whale or that he died and was later resurrected – that is a matter of how the text is read (though the word “sheol” is used, so it is rather solvable), but either can be classified as miraculous. If that's what you believe, then I will have to tackle that in its own entry which will then cover miracles of the Old Testament, miracles of the New Testament, modern miracles, miracles of other cultures in history and in modern times.
Though very much against the odds, it is possible for a man to survive in the belly of a fish.
An interesting theory – and if you want to go with that one, I encourage you to do the research yourselves because I don't give this theory sufficient validity to research it myself. At least not currently. But what it does bring up for me is a more core issue which I do intend to research and write – does God obey the laws of physics? The answer may be less obvious than you think.
It's a parable – not a historical account.
An interesting proposal from a literalist, no doubt. Unfortunately, there is no direct evidence to support this, other than the event being physically impossible (or at the very most, extremely unlikely). The Good Samaritan is a parable – it was presented as a story by Jesus to deliver a key underlying message (Luke 10:25-37). So was the Prodigal Son, The Ten Virgins, The Rich Man and Lazarus. There are quite a few parables which are presented as such. Jonah is not among them. Saying that this account is not historical simply based on its implausibility cycles back to the previous point – will we consider all literal passages as such until they are proven otherwise?
Just to reiterate – I am spelling out the possibilities of interpretation to show the range out there. I do not contend for a moment that whether the story of Jonah and the big fish is a miracle, possible, or simply allegorical, that this necessarily has any impact on the main intention of the author – to provide some deeper, underlying message. As a matter of fact, I am relatively certain that this is where most of us place emphasis. And this leads into a discussion of the bible as a guide – a book of underlying messages where the stories themselves are not and should not be the focus.
While this is a more comforting opinion, this still poses problems, some of which I intend to write further on:
- What are the underlying messages of the Old Testament?
- What are the underlying messages of the New Testament?
- What does the New Testament say about the validity of messages of the Old?
Now quite a few people have condensed the underlying messages of the bible as a whole into a few basic tenets which can be simplified into “do unto others as you would have them do unto you; do what you understand to be right”. Some have advanced even further to say that persons living their lives as such can avoid “hell” - i.e. persons of other religions, etc. While this may sound perfectly reasonable, I think that this is a concept developed to reconcile the idea of a loving God with a God who is proposed to eternally condemn our friends, family, and others who are “not entirely correct” in their spirituality but are basically “good” people who “don't know any better”. While I think this is a very humanistic view, I also think it is fundamentally flawed as it appears to contend that all personal truths are equally “true” and therefore justifiable. This is an extremely dangerous concept which I will like to discuss in another entry.
But returning to THE QUESTION, to what extent should we take the bible literally?
Proposition 1: To the extreme – absolutely not.
Proposition 2: Literally/historically with allowances for where the intention of the author was clearly figurative/metaphoric/allegorical – problematic in several ways, some discussed above, some tabled to be discussed in later entries.
Proposition 3: Not at all – underlying messages to be considered only, but all such messages are equally valid – problematic and (to be) treated similarly as proposition 2.
Proposition 4: Not at all – core underlying messages to be considered only – problematic; see 2 and 3.
I propose, actually, to treat the bible in the same way as we would treat any other literary work:
- Consider the writing in the frame of the cultures in which it was written as well as compiled
- Acknowledge where it advances admirable values and where those values are outmoded, questionable, counterproductive or downright barbaric
The bible is not inherently special (any more than is the Bhagavad Gita, the Qu'ran, the Homeric Hymns, the Book of Mormon, the Talmud, the Book of Shadows, To Kill A Mockingbird, etc) and to treat it as such, I think, can be dangerous. The most dangerous thing about it – as it is with the texts and tenets of most religions – is that there is a supreme deity who wants us to behave in a particular way. As seemingly benign as the doctrine of reciprocity appears to be, even when coupled with “doing what we think is right”, if we are doing this because this is what “God would want of us”, we are making some dangerous assumptions about the mind of a being whose existence is in doubt and whose mind no one can ever claim to know. Anything that starts with “God wants us to...” is the beginning of a slippery slope because it can end (and has ended) literally anywhere the social compass of the society is willing to direct it.
“Religious people are always talking about doing the will of God. It never seems to occur to them that they have very little knowledge of what that will is. They merely assume that they know the will of God, and that it agrees with what they think is right. Of this they have no evidence whatever.” - John Collier, “Religion of an Artist”.