I didn't use all of your examples because I wasn't trying to argue with you line by line. "Dusted" in the post in which you used the word is a synecdoche. What I am saying is that you are confusing categories of speech. I have no problem with saying that the devil is like a snake or like a lion. I believe as much myself. What I have a problem with is your employment of these tools. More below.Oh really? Well if I'm off then why are you using my examples? You don't like the word “dusted?” I don't think you understand what I'm saying. I'm saying that the snake was a figure of speech or "simile" of the devil. The devil is “like” a snake as he is “like” a roaring lion (1 Peter 5:8) or dragon.
As to the first part of this, a metaphor, being a figure of speech, means that the figure is not is the thing in reality; it's qualities are what we find in the reality. Thus, if you take "snake" as a metaphor for Satan, then I go back to my original point against your position here: that means there was no literal snake in the Garden.A metaphor compares two dissimilar objects without using a word “like.” But according to your view the devil was literally a snake. So the Bible is entirely literal with absolutely no metaphors or metonymies or simile. Every single word means what it says and says what it means with no room for private interpretation. To do that would degrade the meaning of the Bible (in your book). Christ was also called a rock (1 cor. 10:4), therefore according to your interpretation Christ was literally a rock. I don't believe that… Ok?
With the second, I have nowhere said that there are not figures of speech in Scripture. I thoroughly believe them to be. And I discover them by the standard rules of speech. I recognize metaphor and hyperbole and the some eighty other figures I'm not going to take the time to type out along with how to identify each one. My point is this: it appears that you are using categories of speech like metaphor in a way that they are not usually used. So I want to know how, for instance, you know when something is a metaphor and when something is "literal". Regarding the general rule of thumb, we might formulate it as the following:
Subject-Predicate statements are to be taken as factual in historical narratives unless otherwise indicated. Unflagged identifications are to be taken as factual in historical narratives always unless previously stated. Subject-Predicate statements are to be taken as figurative if and only if: (1) they conform with the linguistic flags of that category of speech, and (2) the context, both immediately and literary, in which they are found imply the classification.
The onus is on YOU to argue on what possible grounds that the snake in Genesis 3 is figurative. Notice I did NOT say that the snake cannot be symbolic. I believe it is symbolic while at the same time completely literal. The story reads as if a literal snake was in the garden, and a literal snake deceived Eve and was subsequently cursed by God. That this snake points to or is symbolic of Satan is comes from both the context and broader theology, but neither context nor broader theology render this figurative.
If we are going to sit here and show off our knowledge of language, I'll just correct you here. "Bob has to go to the John" is not a synecdoche. It's a euphemism. See, for example, 1 Ki 18:27.Also you forgot about Synecdochic figures of speech. As an example, Bob has to go to the john [bathroom].
You've said you don't take the snake to be literal, but a figure of speech to refer to Satan. That's my point. If you believe that there was an actual snake doing the actual talking, just say so, because that's not how I've understood you. We can move on to some of your other examples.Where did I ever say that the snake was a metaphor?
No, "crawling on the belly" can't be a "figure of speech" for the devil; not, at least, in the confines of Genesis 3. It takes a theological motivation to see Satan in that "figure of speech," which is the point. You seem to have a theologically driven hermeneutic.Why can't crawling on the belly be a figure of speech for the devil? I think it fits his description perfectly… Can animals sin? Why would God curse a snake if it was the devil?
And God cursed the snake because the snake was the animal in the garden that Satan used to trick Eve.
No, I wouldn't have to prove that first. The curse implies it, so much so that you've picked it out yourself without me having to say it. Let's take another curse as an example. Eve was now to have great pains in childbirth. Thus, we can logically infer that Eve would have had little to no pains in childbirth prior to the Fall. Same with the snake.If you want to go that route then you would have to prove to me that snakes literally had legs before the fall and that the structures of their throat can produce human like sounds or words. Are you aware of the human vocal chords and their complexity to produce sounds?
And, yes, while I'm not a doctor, I am aware that human vocal chords are complex, along with the tongue and lips. But what that has to do with anything, you've lost me.
Yes, I've had it the whole time. You think the word "snake" is just symbolic of Satan. Thus, you don't think there was an actual snake doing the talking.Yes, the word "snake" is just symbolic for Satan. You got it...
I suppose if I had a pre-Fallen snake we could make progress in that area, but otherwise I'm not going to deny the Bible because of a perceived miracle. Who knows? Maybe all animals could talk, and that ability was lost after the Fall? Maybe only snakes could talk. Maybe no animal could talk, but rather Satan possessed the animal to make it talk, and Eve didn't know better, or didn't know to be afraid (hey, pre-Fallen world! What is there to fear?). Maybe God opened the mouth of the snake like He opened the mouth of the donkey. The point is that any of these are possibilities. I'm sure there are others.Thats right. Now it is your job to prove to us how snakes had "human like" vocal chords.
Fine, so you aren't reversing your stance. The comment there was directed to Canuckster with reference to his and my interpretation of your position.I'm not reversing my stance Jac. The onus is on you...
Your position, as I understand it, is that you believe that there was no snake doing the talking. The word "snake" is used as some (as of yet unnamed) figure of speech that refers to Satan. You've provided absolutely no linguistic criteria by which you have made this judgment. So, I go back to my original challenge that you still have not answered.
If there is no criteria, but instead we simply take to be symbolic whatever we want to (that is, whatever we think is too fantastic to be believed), then on what do you take the Resurrection to be literal? How do you know it is not symbolic? What would you say to someone who says that it is? What about any miracle? The parting of the Red Sea? Jonah and the "Whale"? The raising of Lazarus? The woman and her never-ending bottle of oil?
I am asking an honest question, Gman. What would you say to the person who says, "The Resurrection of Christ is symbolic in precisely the same way that the snake of Eden is symbolic. Neither really happened; both point to another reality." How, Gman, do you distinguish the two? That's what I have been asking about since the beginning. I'm looking for the criteria on which you make these judgments.
How, Gman, do you come to your conclusions that these things are symbolic (that is, not "literal") within the contexts of historical narratives?