Hugh: but you can hardly expect to want to go to heaven for following your conscience, and yet condemn me for not following mine.
Hugh, I did not condemn you for following your conscience. And I do not believe that it is following your conscience that saves a person.
Curiously, you quote 2 Peter - "Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation." To me this justifies the Catholic Church's teaching against the primacy of individual conscience, but insists upon the collective interpretation "where two or three are gathered together in my name". Perhaps you disagree.
No, Hugh! NO interpretation - individual or collective is the measure of correct doctrine. It is SCRIPTURE itself - as if you read the rest of that 2 Peter 1, in which Peter is explaining that he and the apostles "have the prophetic word more fully confirmed" - he is speaking of Jesus, Whom is the CONFIRMATION of the "prophetic word," as he informs the very sentence before. He also directly asserts that NO word of prophecy came from ANYONE's interpretation, but that "men spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit." So, these MEN did not decide what was God's word, nor did they interpret it and then write it down. Instead, they WROTE what God inspired, of which they clearly assert that none of these words were from the will of men. You do not see in the New Testament the apostles pouring over words inspired by God, and then debating or voting on the meaning of such so as to interpret them.
Hugh: Just as RickD has been inquiring of me how I reconcile my scientific and religious beliefs, can I ask you something? How do you know that the bible is not just a collection of stories gathered together to illustrate a way of living, with a bit of folk history thrown in? What makes you think the bible is the word of God?
Because what those whom witnessed the events of the Gospel and who also saw the risen Christ say about Scripture. And, to a man, the Gospel writers are consistent upon the origins of Scripture. They record, in the Gospel, that Jesus not only validated the entire writings of the Old Testament to be Scripture, but He also said they were a pre-curser which ALL pointed to Him. So, this Gospel, which all the writers agree about Jesus, records His birth, ministry, death and resurrection. And the apostles all KNEW whether or not Jesus had appeared to them, post Resurrection. So, the ONLY reason one has to believe Jesus was who He said He was is because of what is recorded in the Gospels and the New Testament. So, if these are reliable about Jesus, Who and WHAT He was (God in the flesh!), then we have every reason to believe it is God-given and understandable. But if it were NOT true - if even the New Testament is full of false stories about whatever issues, and certainly if the need for us to have faith in Christ is all made up - why would any of us care? Why would it matter?
Hugh, do you believe that Jesus came to fulfill ALL of the Old Testament as He says, and that He came to DIE to fulfill it - do you believe He came to fulfill a body of work that He validates as Holy and as God's word to man, and yet it is filled with inaccuracies and laughable fabrications of fantasy? Again, why believe ANY of it???!!! And if you doubt major parts of it - how do YOU know - or any of us - know which parts are true and which are purely from human imagination? Because Scripture itself REDUNDANTLY claims to be God-given and breathed. And if it is not - what does it say about a supposedly all-powerful and loving God who allowed His precious words to man - words Jesus DIED for - to be blended with a pack of lies and ridiculous stories? Could He not protect His word? Is His word, while important enough "to DIE for," nonetheless so worthless that He allowed it to become horribly corrupted and blended with so many stories of pure fiction? What sense does that make? So, Hugh, why do you believe the parts where God becomes a man, and He, a God, allows His creations to brutally beat Him, spit on Him, crucify Him in agony - but then this man comes back to life, asserts we must be saved to gain Heaven - WHY, Hugh, believe ANY of that, if you think most of Scripture is bogus - or, at least, if you think it's not true as those reading plain language would understand it. And if it's not understandable - WHAT GOOD IS IT???!!! And what does it REALLY mean? And why either falseSo, this supremely intelligent Being, Whom came to die for us, to fulfill His Word, doesn't want us to truly understand most of it? Does that make any sense at all?
Hugh, I'm not saying you don't believe Scripture is God-given. But there are MAJOR issues of picking and choosing which parts you think should only be figuratively understood, and which are merely allegorical or symbolic. And to be credible, you must apply a consistent hermeneutic as to how you decide which is which. Your statement: "How do you know that the bible is not just a collection of stories gathered together to illustrate a way of living, with a bit of folk history thrown in? What makes you think the bible is the word of God?" makes me think you really don't believe the stories are factual, or understandable as written. Again, why believe you must be saved? Why believe God became a man? Why believe He died a hideous death and came back to life again? Why believe it is crucial to one's eternity to believe that? All of these are crucial things to understand and believe - but they SOUND absolutely fantastical - like wild stories. Why believe then EITHER?