Of course it does, because such errors are just that--errors. If human imperfection can cause errors to creep into the grammar of a text, why can't it cause imperfection to creep into the details of a story? After all, human memory isn't any more perfect than human communication. And if small details in a story are possible, why not larger ones? In other words, if human beings are capable of making mistakes in transmitting God's message, how do you know which part is correct and which part is in error? Even parts that you declare, "Well, I see no faults here. This must be true!" is really, in that case, you believing what you WANT to believe.Jac, let's step away from the word 'flaw' for a moment or even any specific instances. It is my general understanding that scripture is God-inspired but written with human hands and influenced by human experiences. Given that, does this mean scripture must be perfect in all aspects and facets? Does it necessarily follow that if scripture is inerrant then it must also be perfect (not only in the message it conveys, but also in content, grammar, composition, punctuation, etc.etc.)
Or, I can put the matter this way: suppose you come to the text with the possibility that it contains errors. You read a passage and decide whether or not it has a flaw, no matter how big or how small. Who, then, is in the position of authority? You are, because YOU are the one who decides whether or not this passage is or is not in error. But if YOU are in authority, then the Bible has no authority at all.
This is true even in human law. Why, after all, do we have judges? Because a person does something and is charged by the government with breaking a law. They, then, argue that they did NOT break the law, and it is up to the judge to interpret it to decide whether or not this is the case. You see, there has to be an authority other than ourselves. If this is true in human law, how much more true in divine law? And if we get to decide which parts of the Bible are right and which parts are in error, then there becomes NO standard by which we can judge.
This really is an all or nothing issue. Either the Bible is the inerrant, inspired word of God, completely accurate in all its words, or it is just another human book filled with good advice that maybe contains a message from God, but that message is impossible to get to. You can say what you believe that message is, but you can never know, because what you take to be correct, another takes to be an error (if only on the basis of human faultiness).