Let's see... Are snakes easy to find? Do they run or craw in the grass? And what about that hissing sound and those sharp teeth? I wonder if.. No, couldn't be.
So the snake is symbolic of a snake? Isn't that the same as saying that the snake is a literal snake?
Did I ever say that Adam and Eve where symbolic?
Just trying to be consistent with your hermeneutic. There is nothing in the narrative of Gen. 2-3 that suggests that the snake is any different from Adam or Eve. After all, Eve talks to the snake, and all three cursed. So it would follow that if one was symbolic, then they all should be symbolic, else God couldn't not have cursed all three.
Unless, of course, the snake was a real snake. Or, another way you could look at it is by saying Adam and Eve were real people but the entire event is ficticious. A noble myth, we could say . . . a historical fiction, thus using real people to tell a story that never happened to teach a moral truth. Or, in other words, a good old fashioned allegory. Of course, if you take THAT view, I'm forced to wonder why you take Adam and Eve to be historical in the first place, but I suppose you'll then appeal to the geneologies. More on that below.
Symbolic in my book... By if you need to take that as literal then that is your prerogative I guess.
Ok, so what were they symbolic of?
What about the parting of the Red Sea? Was that symbolic or a real event?
Or she went back to the city and then it was destroyed. Where else in the Bible do you see people turning into pillars of salt? I don't think we are talking about Narnia here. I believe the destruction of the city to be a true event just like Noah's local flood.
Where else in the Bible to we see a man push over the pillars of a temple with his bare hands other than in the story of Sampson? Is that symbolic, that is, non-historical? Where else other than Jonah do we see a man swallowed by a great fish? Is that symbolic? Where else, other than in the life of Jesus, do we see water turned into wine? Is that symbolic? Where else, other than Jesus, do we see a man resurrected (not rescusitated)? Is that symbolic? Where else, other than in the life of Paul, do we see a man who had been killing believers become a great witness for God? Is that symbolic?
Or let's take one of your own examples here. Where else, other than in S&G, do we see cities destroyed by fire and brimstone? Yet you take that as literal. So if that destruction, which occurs nowhere else in Scripture, is literal, then why cannot Lot's wife's judgment, which likewise occurs nowhere else in Scripture, also be literal?
On what basis have you decided it is symbolic?
I don't find that to be very funny Jac.....
It wasn't a joke. I was asking a real question. How do you know that Jesus wasn't symbolic? I am dead serious. On what basis have you decided that He is a historical character?
We should probably ask and learn from scholars or professionals that research this stuff would be a good start. Also, since this is a Jewish book, I don't think we should be scared to ask a Rabbi what they might think too. Why should we as protestants hold back on asking what a Catholic priest or a Jewish Rabbi might have to say about it?
I'm all up for finding out what their interpretations are, just as I am interested in finding out what their hermeneutic is. The only way to validate an interpretation--be it Catholic, Jewish, Egalitarian, Liberal, Conservative, Protestant, Evangelical, or whatever perspective you want--is to examine the means by which the interpretation was come to. That is, we ask them about their hermeneutic. So I am asking you about yours.
On what basis do you decide what is literal and what is symbolic?
And why not? How does that distort the message from getting across? Is taking the text literal or figuratively going to negate the message?
Yes. Absolutely. If the message is that these things happened historically, and you deny that by saying they are just mythical symbols, then you have negated the message. But even beyond that, if you don't have a consistent basis on which to decide what is symbolic and what is historical, then someone could come along and say that things that YOU think are historical (i.e., the existence of Jesus) is actually symbolic, and how could you tell them that they were wrong? They are using YOUR method, i.e., deciding rather arbitrarily what is historical and symbolic.
Very well, so then I'll take the Cross to be symbolic. It is symbolic of suffering in general. Therefore, the main point of the story is that, through suffering, we transcend unto salvation. Jesus, then, becomes an example that we are to follow in obedience, as He said, "take up your cross and follow Me." Paul repeated this challenge by saying that through our faith (which I will take to be a symbol of commitment to the same God that Jesus was committed to) we can suffer with Christ so that we will be made mature. I, therefore, will proclaim that salvation comes when I suffer successfully. I then enter into "heaven," which I will also take to be symbolic of the right state of mind. It is that state that Paul talked about when he said that he had learned to be content in all things.
Thus, the Cross, faith, and heaven are not historical. They are symbolic of greater truths. So on what basis, using YOUR hermeneutic (we all know that anyone who holds to a normal reading of the text would rightly disagree) when you find fault with my view?
I'm not making fun. I'm honesty trying to find out the basis for how you interpret Scripture, because it all sounds rather arbitrary to me.