Not everything the Bible has to say should be literally interpreted. But that doesn't make it less powerful.
All these years later, I'm learning that understanding the literal meaning of the Bible is a more nuanced adventure than my college friends and I imagined. We'd been blithely unaware that there is more than one genre in the Bible, or that literary context profoundly matters to meaning. We didn't understand that when we read ancient Hebrew prose poems (like Genesis 1), wisdom literature (like Proverbs), or apocalyptic literature (like Revelation) as if they were science textbooks, we were actually obscuring their meaning.
For me, the most negative consequence of all that well-intentioned
literalism was the conviction that Yahweh, having given us his straightforward
Word, was completely comprehensible. This paradigm both diminished my perception
of God and set up my faith for crisis when I discovered aspects of God that
remain stubbornly shrouded in mystery. Read more
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