mycroft, on 2012-December-31, 12:46, said:
I put a challenge in years (many years) ago. Put two tribes down in the desert with a nomadic experience. Give one Genesis 1/2 for a "creation story" and one the current scientific belief. Which one will be understandable, never mind helpful?
Literalist Fundamentalist Christian organizations boggle me to incredulity. When most of the last 2000 years taught by telling stories, and you tell stories and jokes-with-a-point, and the person you claim to worship *clearly* taught by telling stories - there's even a special name for his stories - how could you possibly believe that the rest of the truth only appears by reading literally? Have they ever *talked* to a rabbi?
On the other hand, atheists who argue against Christianity by treating the bible as a math text are either doing it knowing what they're doing (in which case, I am either just as boggled by them, if they don't get it, or if they do get it and are playing rhetorical games, that influences my reading of the rest of their argument), or are labelling all Christians by their most vocal brethren (at least in North America).
And the readers of Dawkins etc are not (at least not completely) self-selected; there are, in fact, proselytizing Atheists (capital A here). And yes, I do find them as annoying as the proselytizing Christians.
I appreciate that many, and I suspect most (outside of certain large areas in the USA) christians are of your general persuasion rather than being fundamentalist. And I further appreciate that for believers such as you appear to be, the bible is more 'story telling' than literal truth.
This begs the question, however.
Are any parts of the bible, New and Old Testaments, 'true' in that they (accurately) portray actual events or statements?
My reading of the Bible suggests that the authors of the various, often inconsistent, parts do not give any explicit clue as to whether a particular passage is intended to be literally true or metaphorical, or allegorical.
If I am correct, then the bible becomes a very shaky foundation upon which to build a belief system.
I have previously suggested, and this is hardly original to me, that we 'create' our gods in our own image. Studies have indeed shown that we attribute to our 'god' (for those of us with one) attitudes that correspond to our own views of morality, rather than shaping those personal views to reflect the teachings of our holy books.
Once one sees the bible as a mix of historical fact and 'story telling' (ie fiction with or without various levels and shades of meaning), the bible becomes a mirror for us to see in it as true that which we would like to be true and to infer from the other passages the meanings that we (or our minister, priest, rabbi, parent, etc) wish to have be valid.
The histories of the churches, including the histories of Islam and Judasism, demonstrate the variation in interpretation of the holy books by different leaders over time, resulting in the schisms that have left the religions splintered and often embroiled in sectarian violence.
Moving on, there is, it seems to me, a huge difference between:
1. Using the philosophical guidance we extract from ancient texts and the teachings of those who have interpreted those texts in the moral conduct of our lives, and
2. Accepting that the creation myth has any legitimacy at all: that there is a Creator, let alone a creator to whom we should pray and who might in some circumstances interfere in our lives.
Frankly, the moral code set out in the bible leaves me cold, and a number of common interpetations of that scare the bejesus out of me, if you'll forgive a terrible turn of phrase. The NT is definitely more in keeping with what I would see as a positive moral guide, but I don't see how one can reconcile the teachings attributed to jesus with the conduct of the god whose son he claimed to be, metaphorically or otherwise.
As for your challenge, it is frankly trivial and I would sincerely hope that you don't see the challenge as at all relevant to whether an educated 21st century individual should accept the biblical creation myth as useful.
I don't know anyone who argues that religious explanations for the existence of the world, or 'us', were silly thousands of years ago.
Let me give you a challenge.
Explain how any passage or passages in the bible led to the invention of the significant working components of the means by which you post here. I assume you are using a computer, but you might be using a smartphone or tablet. Explain how the chips were designed by reference to biblical principles. Explain how the internet was established by the power of prayer, and so on.
To a nomadic, illiterate tribe, genesis would be 'understandable' tho of no apparent practical benefit, while quantum mechanics would neither understandable or useful. But to those responsible for building and maintaining current industrial and post-industrial societies, I respectively suggest that current scientific understanding is more useful, even if the average user of the technology has little understanding of how it works.
What I take from your challenge is simply common sense. To people unable to understand how the universe works other than through the very limited sensory perceptions available to an unequipped, uneducated person, the notion that we are the centre of the universe and that we were created for a purpose, and that we are in our current state because we, as a species, tasted the forbidden fruit of knowledge, etc, all makes some sense. Add to that the power of the astute amongst us to predict such things as the change of the season, and our innate tendency to see causation when there is only correlation, and we can see how prayer could be seen as a useful, if only sporadically effective, tool.
As nomads, maybe we pray that the watering hole will be full when we trek there in the spring, or that such crops as we sow in the spring will germninate. We sow seed. We pray for rain. It rains. Therefore the prayer caused the rain. We prayed to a god (or to spirits of ancestors, etc) and the rain came therefore the god or spirits etc listened, and so on.
That all makes sense but what does it have to do with being a believer in the supernatural now?
'one of the great markers of the advance of human kindness is the howls you will hear from the Men of God' Johann Hari