gwnn, on 2014-April-17, 03:12, said:
No, that is not what I meant. Could we please stop talking past each other?
You said that they asked the wrong question. For the record, here it is:
And the answer I referred to was:
The study did NOT ask what you think it asked, namely "do you live according to the Bible."
Now, you seem to think that taking the Bible literally means following Old Testament law. Here are a just a few ways that I can think of right now how that could not be the case:
So no, taking the Bible literally is not equivalent to putting witches to death. My point was, however, a different one. My point was that your description of Christianity in Germany or in Europe is different to what the study would show us. Correct me if I'm wrong but you were talking about how in Europe/Germany, Christianity did not just rely on the Bible, they rely on new discoveries on science, history, maybe new revelations by God, etc. I still don't see how in this picture, 13% of answerers could possibly say that they think all of the Bible is literally true. Can you?
Now you say "I know that there are people who tell you and me that they live literally following the words of the Bible." Well, yes, but that's not what I said in the first place and it's not just "there are," it is actually about half the Bible-reading population in all the countries of the study who think it should be taken literally. Put simply, about half the Christians anywhere are not the enlightened, meek, moderate Christians that you like to talk about. I know how people like to blow the paedophilia cases in the Catholic church out of proportion, I'm not a fan of that. But in this case I'm afraid the proportion is about 50%. I don't think it is fair of you to just ignore that 50% of Bible readers and just say that they are the exception to the rule. No, they are a very sizable number and it's more like you are the one who are just ignoring them.
gwnn, on 2014-April-17, 03:12, said:
No, that is not what I meant. Could we please stop talking past each other?
You said that they asked the wrong question. For the record, here it is:
And the answer I referred to was:
The study did NOT ask what you think it asked, namely "do you live according to the Bible."
Now, you seem to think that taking the Bible literally means following Old Testament law. Here are a just a few ways that I can think of right now how that could not be the case:
- They think that it is literally true that God told the Jews to kill witches but it was never meant to be a universal law (this is a repeating theme in the following two). Mainly they think that the stories are all 100% true (Methuselah really did live to be 900+) but the laws are contextual.
- They think that the New Testament simply cancels out the Old.
- They think that God still sends new laws through the ruling class (Romans 13). I have heard this one before. This need not mean that God is changing his mind. It might mean simply that he is always optimising the laws to current circumstances. Think how a cylinder can look like a circle, a line, a square, etc. The law would be the same but we just get to see a particular time-dependent projection from it. I know this sounds absurd, but so is the whole idea of biblical literalism. I will stop including this warning to my points from here on.
- They just don't know that the Bible talks about witchcraft because nobody told them and they just read other passages. This is where it's nice to have some snarky atheist friends who cherry pick the bad parts of the Bible. I know they are annoying and I myself am trying to stop talking about these parts but I think it can be a useful counterweight to the pastors who cherry pick the good parts of the Bible.
- They know that witches should be put to death but they do not believe that witches exist any more.
- They know that witches should be put to death but they are waiting for the 13% to grow to 50% or 66%, then they can make proper laws reflecting that.
- They know that witches should be put to death but they are just unwilling to do the job themselves. Maybe they think it is a sin not to put witches to death but after all, they do all sorts of sin.
So no, taking the Bible literally is not equivalent to putting witches to death. My point was, however, a different one. My point was that your description of Christianity in Germany or in Europe is different to what the study would show us. Correct me if I'm wrong but you were talking about how in Europe/Germany, Christianity did not just rely on the Bible, they rely on new discoveries on science, history, maybe new revelations by God, etc. I still don't see how in this picture, 13% of answerers could possibly say that they think all of the Bible is literally true. Can you?
Your first reaction to the study was that you thought that the study was somehow not clean, as if there was a hidden agenda trying to prove that there are more people who take the Bible literally than actually are. Why would this be? I don't know.
Now you say "I know that there are people who tell you and me that they live literally following the words of the Bible." Well, yes, but that's not what I said in the first place and it's not just "there are," it is actually about half the Bible-reading population in all the countries of the study who think it should be taken literally. Put simply, about half the Christians anywhere are not the enlightened, meek, moderate Christians that you like to talk about. I know how people like to blow the paedophilia cases in the Catholic church out of proportion, I'm not a fan of that. But in this case I'm afraid the proportion is about 50%. I don't think it is fair of you to just ignore that 50% of Bible readers and just say that they are the exception to the rule. No, they are a very sizable number and it's more like you are the one who are just ignoring them.
H Czaba,
thank you for sharing this, I really misuderstood your first posts completely, so my answers were surely not appropiate.
No I guess I got your point and can agree with more of your ideas. I still think that much too many people who takes the Bible literally did not have read it by their own- but if you want to challenge this claim, this will be fine, it is a believe, nothing I can proofe at all. I never believed that taking the Bible literally means that you just have to follow the laws of the ancient testamony. But these laws are the ones where anybody should see that these laws are not made for todays society.
.I agree that following the passages your own priest/minister/whoever will show you, will show a shortend picture of the complete book.
But we still disagree on the survey itself. I did not want to claim that they made the questions in a way that you are influenced by the way they asked or the answers you may choose. But: I doubt that asking if someone is taking the Bible literally is a good question to make a survey about this theme. This is a theme where I believe that many people would lie to themselves and to others.
And the question is not clear- at least not in my opinion.
I think you can take the storypart of the Bible in different ways:
First: You may take them as some kind of "campfire stories". Something like: There was a big flood at the Nile and one farmer called Noah survived with his animals because he had a big ferry. After some rounds around from one campfire to the next, the flood had been worldwide and Noah godsend. This happens in reallity and is quite common to stories which happen to be told from one generation to another. Maybe in their "world" the whole world had been floated, because they just know a small part of Egypt? Maybe they have heard from just one survivor?
Maybe the stories are literally true but there had been problems with the translation from hebrew to greek to persian to latin and back.... So maybe Methusalem was just a tribe which survived 900 years, not a person.
Maybe what they wrote came closest to what they thought is the truth.
Maybe they made up stories to make a point. When they write about Jesus, they very often write about his parables and miracles. Maybe they choose this old stories not so much because of their historical truth but for shwoing some point of interesst? If I take the as a lecture to learn, is this still literally?
Are the people aware that they do NOT take the Bible literally if they think that one of these points can be true?
Maybe they think that they take the Bible literally because they take it as a book of stories which are written to let you learn something? That the stories are literally send by God, but that they not need to be 100 % the historical truth?
Of course- as there are Intelligent Design belivers everywhere, there are people who try to take it literally.
But I really think that the question is still misleading and that the answer and the behaviour of the people is different.
DO i just take the Bible literally if I do believe in any single word? And if so, may you tell me, in which Bible I do believe? There are several different translations in German. There are some parts which are just in the catholic part and there are still ongoing discussion whether or not some translations from other translations from transcripts in the Middle Age of ancient and incomplete papyrus are this way or another.
So sorry, I still believe that the question- and the possible answers are not satisfactoring.
But even if we take the numbers of the survey as given: So 13 % still take the Bible literally, so 87 % do not. This is quite a huge number, isn't it? And in my personal experience the numbers of strong believers in the "literally" given Bible is much bigger in the RC church then in the Ev-lut- so maybe in "my enviroment it is way below 10 %. So where do we disagree anyway? And why do you claim 50 % and not 13 %, what do I miss?