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- Apr 18, 2010
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Sadly far too many modern believers take their holy books far too literally.I would assume most average practitioners of a faith don't take it literally but only use the holy books as guidelines and interpret the texts in a way that makes most sense to their lives - hence all the branches of major religions.
Atheist here though, this is all based on what I've heard.
And we all know that no Christians sin. Human trafficking is a big problem in some parts of the US, and I guarantee those involved are not predominantly Muslim.Christians would not engage in human trafficking. Human trafficking is a sin.
I would say it doesn't matter whether Noah's flood really happened. That's not the point. The story exists to explain something about God and his relationship with humanity. It is a fable, and calling it such in no way demeans its message. That is the job of people who insist on seeing it as a historical truth, thereby missing the spiritual truth.I also find there is a lot of human arrogance regarding "facts", asserting things as true that 20 years from now will change. When it comes to pre-history and holy books, such as the Bible, I see no reason to try and resolve its accounts with "facts", as the facts are not static; but I find the spiritual principles to be timeless. The timelessness is hard for others to grasp, even if they recognize it to a degree, which is why they are always trying to reconcile it to their particular society. They see value in it, but they don't grasp it well enough to not take it too literally, which presents obvious conflicts.
So I don't regard the Bible as a scientific nor historical book, although that doesn't mean I think it is a book of fables. I simply don't believe history and science to be static either, but rather very contextual and shifting as our collective perspective shifts (and this is certainly true of religion also, which I don't equate with the Bible or spirituality itself; see above about people trying to "reconcile"). It is something of a paradox that to understand the spiritual principles in the Bible outside of its context, you have to first grasp it within its context. It is something of a paradox in that to believe, you have to admit that humans (including yourself) don't really know much at all.
For example... Did Noah's flood really happen? Well, I don't know. I wasn't there. The way people understood and presented things back then is pretty different from how reality is interpreted now. The current & past facts become irrelevant, but the spiritual lesson stands. There is no need to reconcile present understanding of the physical world and history with the past understanding of the physical world and history. So when it comes to belief, I believe fully in the Bible as a book of spiritual truths. I have no need to believe it as "factual" in a physical sense, as that would miss the point of it anyway.
The problem with holy books is that they all have internal contradictions. Some verses support one course of action, while others support the exact opposite. See how easily both the Bible and Quran, for example, can be used to support violence and persecution on the one hand, and charity and compassion on the other. Which behavior a believer demonstrates is thus more a function of the believer than the book, including all the factors that shaped him/her as a person (e.g. culture, upbringing, friends/mentors, hardships, etc.)
Religious motivations are especially effective in the hands of demagogues and despots precisely because they cannot be vetted rationally, and instead play on the very real fears and emotions of the people they are used to influence.