JustDave
Well-known Member
Isn't Bible apologetics, which I understand is actually taught under the title of "Apologetics" in seminaries as a way of changing the meaning of Biblical stories and Christ's parables to fit with current knowledge and acceptable societal norms? Isn't that oral tradition at work today? Possibly not, as I'm not an expert.
We have TV evangelists making millions of dollars by pouring out their ideas of what the scriptures mean, and it's hard to believe that the oral traditionists of the past were any different than the modern day "experts." It seems to me that accepting the accuracy of the oral tradition is a matter of faith (regardless of the written documentation you have referred to) as there is no way to check for accuracy since there are no records of the original thoughts and insights. We have at best written records of oral traditions as they were when they were finally recorded.
But all that aside, the Bible says what the Bible says. Sure you can spin the text in anyway you want, but it's all there claiming to be a record of God's inerrancy. What are we to do when parts of it are contrary to scientific discovery and modern ethics?
Obviously, you @David777 have drawn your own conclusions on what is acceptable doctrine and what is not, and I would even consider that as a step forward. But the King James Version, adopted as the modern standard by English speaking clergy is a rewriting of the Bible influenced by 17th Century politics and beliefs. True, many of the original documents of the Bble still exist in the original language, but who refers to them, and in my opinion, why bother, anyway? We are talking about a religion based on philosophies of antiquity.
We have TV evangelists making millions of dollars by pouring out their ideas of what the scriptures mean, and it's hard to believe that the oral traditionists of the past were any different than the modern day "experts." It seems to me that accepting the accuracy of the oral tradition is a matter of faith (regardless of the written documentation you have referred to) as there is no way to check for accuracy since there are no records of the original thoughts and insights. We have at best written records of oral traditions as they were when they were finally recorded.
But all that aside, the Bible says what the Bible says. Sure you can spin the text in anyway you want, but it's all there claiming to be a record of God's inerrancy. What are we to do when parts of it are contrary to scientific discovery and modern ethics?
Obviously, you @David777 have drawn your own conclusions on what is acceptable doctrine and what is not, and I would even consider that as a step forward. But the King James Version, adopted as the modern standard by English speaking clergy is a rewriting of the Bible influenced by 17th Century politics and beliefs. True, many of the original documents of the Bble still exist in the original language, but who refers to them, and in my opinion, why bother, anyway? We are talking about a religion based on philosophies of antiquity.