Kurn
JUB Addict
Before I graduated from HS I labored through The Books once, cover to cover.
Just before my 20th birthday I experienced a conversion experience and after that over about a ten-year period I read through it 8 times cover-to-cover.
Nine times, plus. Nearly once in Spanish, to date. Maybe I'll get to ten-times total.
I have read KJV version more than twice. That helps you to use Strong's concordance which is one of the world's most awesome reference works.
After a decade of fervor things began to come loose. I knew and remembered more and more and I would notice new discoveries by biologists, geologists, archaeologists, cosmologists and so on, which ended up throwing into doubt any literalist reception of The Books.
Then several bouts with existentialists and other philosophers made me realize that my experience was MY experience. It is far from any Godly intention to impose Orthodoxy; or at least it is un-Godly to do so in the 3rd millenium. One might argue that during parts of the the rough and rougher Middle Ages that some form of authoritarian orthodoxy was desirable. But to say that it still does is to say that Biblical wisdom has had very little effect over the centuries. Rather blasphemous, don't you think?
My philosophical exposures were quite extensive but more recently I've been bringing in the sheaves of modern Biblical literary and textual analysis. Comparative religion as well. I have to say that the existential doubt and its exhortation to freedom and personal hermeneutics finds a corroboration in the honest appraisals that scholar/writers like Bart Ehrman and John Crossan have popularized. If you find out what the Bible's original shoes, original evolution, original context were like, you free yourself from the old-winebag emphases that are so popular nowadays.
I won't theologize any of this further. Many people have been this way before.
In answer to Elvin's question and questions like it: A person could write a book about what the Greek version says about gayness. Several have. There are textual dimensions: Analysing how the "original" documents came together. There are literary dimensions: Analysing what the form of each book means as well as that of phrases, metaphors, historical references, individual poems, etc.
There are the "higher" dimensions: Analysing the Books in the context of the times and occasions in which they were made. So what is the answer to Elvin's question? It's both a "simple" and a complicated question. You can easily spend a decade studying trying to answer it. Or you can just read the relevant passages and puzzle over it. Remember that these Books were in response to people's questions of their time and culture. My short reply is that the people of those days wouldn't understand a lot of what Modern people might talk about. The Biblical viewpoint is a historical reference point, not an answer for our time on some questions. So are we babes lost in the woods? I think if we just decide to wake up and treat each other as right as we know how that in some sense we have "fulfilled" the Biblical religions.
I am very seriously post-Christian, a practitioner of Buddhist meditation and not a hack about anything once you agree with me about everything [j/k].
Just before my 20th birthday I experienced a conversion experience and after that over about a ten-year period I read through it 8 times cover-to-cover.
Nine times, plus. Nearly once in Spanish, to date. Maybe I'll get to ten-times total.
I have read KJV version more than twice. That helps you to use Strong's concordance which is one of the world's most awesome reference works.
After a decade of fervor things began to come loose. I knew and remembered more and more and I would notice new discoveries by biologists, geologists, archaeologists, cosmologists and so on, which ended up throwing into doubt any literalist reception of The Books.
Then several bouts with existentialists and other philosophers made me realize that my experience was MY experience. It is far from any Godly intention to impose Orthodoxy; or at least it is un-Godly to do so in the 3rd millenium. One might argue that during parts of the the rough and rougher Middle Ages that some form of authoritarian orthodoxy was desirable. But to say that it still does is to say that Biblical wisdom has had very little effect over the centuries. Rather blasphemous, don't you think?
My philosophical exposures were quite extensive but more recently I've been bringing in the sheaves of modern Biblical literary and textual analysis. Comparative religion as well. I have to say that the existential doubt and its exhortation to freedom and personal hermeneutics finds a corroboration in the honest appraisals that scholar/writers like Bart Ehrman and John Crossan have popularized. If you find out what the Bible's original shoes, original evolution, original context were like, you free yourself from the old-winebag emphases that are so popular nowadays.
I won't theologize any of this further. Many people have been this way before.
In answer to Elvin's question and questions like it: A person could write a book about what the Greek version says about gayness. Several have. There are textual dimensions: Analysing how the "original" documents came together. There are literary dimensions: Analysing what the form of each book means as well as that of phrases, metaphors, historical references, individual poems, etc.
There are the "higher" dimensions: Analysing the Books in the context of the times and occasions in which they were made. So what is the answer to Elvin's question? It's both a "simple" and a complicated question. You can easily spend a decade studying trying to answer it. Or you can just read the relevant passages and puzzle over it. Remember that these Books were in response to people's questions of their time and culture. My short reply is that the people of those days wouldn't understand a lot of what Modern people might talk about. The Biblical viewpoint is a historical reference point, not an answer for our time on some questions. So are we babes lost in the woods? I think if we just decide to wake up and treat each other as right as we know how that in some sense we have "fulfilled" the Biblical religions.
I am very seriously post-Christian, a practitioner of Buddhist meditation and not a hack about anything once you agree with me about everything [j/k].

