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Do not take the Bible very seriously...
If you are a Christian and believe that God didn't do it the way he said He did, when do you start believing that the Bible is true?
After Creation, Adam and Eve in the Garden? At Noah and the Flood? Moses and the Red Sea? Joshua at the Jordan, Jericho or when the Sun went back 10 degrees in the sky? Sampson and the slaughter of the Philistines? David and Golliath? The Ark? Solomon's great Wisdom? Jonah and the fish?
Are you starting to get the picture? When do you start believing what the Word of God says? When you like what it says?
What about The Messiah? Promised one from the beginning. Do you start believing the Bible when it talks about salvation? How about heaven? Maybe you will believe Paul, the Apostle chosen by The LORD to succeed Judas? Or John on Patmos? Do you think he was lying when he wrote The Revelation? Just part of it? Maybe he was only telling the truth about the return?
Make up your mind; be for God or against God.

2006-08-07 13:22:51 · 11 answers · asked by Bimpster 4 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

Sheep and Goats people. Sheep and Goats.

2006-08-07 14:02:21 · update #1

11 answers

Yep, if you choose to believe evolution, you have to believe that at least SOME of the bible is wrong. And if you believe some of it is wrong, that's an admission that the bible is not flawless. And doing that means that the arguement of "Jesus is the son of god because the bible said so" doesn't really work anymore. Which means if you're going to believe it, you're believing based on faith, and not based on dogma.

Hey, that doesn't seem like a bad thing to ME! But then again, I'm agnostic, so what do I know?

2006-08-07 13:28:06 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

To be honest, I believe the Bible was not meant to be taken literally, but to be a collection of stories that teach Judeo-Christian morals. Even in Genesis, with the expulsion of Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden, one can see the principle message is the importance of not undermining the Patriarchy. This story, it seems, was meant to create stability in a very unstable environment for the early Jewish Tribes. In addition, many human beings have dedicated their entire lives to the scriptures since its first incarnation appeared. To this day people spend their entire existence attempting to understand the Bible. The result of such dedication is countless numbers of Christian denominations. The reason for this, I believe, is that each person, complete with their own ideas, influential histories and environments, interprets the bible in a manner which makes sense to them. It is a natural human tendency to attempt to make sense of the world. That is why an Eastern Orthodox Christian may interpret the same material in an entirely different manner from a Southern Baptist or Mormon, etc. Much in the same way two students might differ when interpreting the meaning of Othello in a High school English class.

2006-08-07 13:46:09 · answer #2 · answered by pinacoladasundae 3 · 0 0

I was looking for some quotes to support my answer to this question and I found this:

"The Bible is not a science textbook, nor a biology textbook, nor a geology textbook. Indeed, we have just seen that the Bible includes arithmetic that would not pass muster in New Mexico's elementary school classrooms."

I am a Christian, and I believe the theory of evolution. I believe in Adam and Eve. But I also believe that evolution was probably the tool that God used to create Adam and Eve, the plants and animals and other humans. I have neither the time nor the energy to explain or support my beliefs in this forum, but I wanted to say that the bible and evolution are not mutually exclusive.

2006-08-07 13:30:00 · answer #3 · answered by ziz 4 · 0 0

I'm not a Christian but I have to point out that even if God is real
it doesn't mean the Bible is correct-it was written by many different people thousands of years ago. It has also been translated many times over from it's original text,so no doubt many things have been lost.
Believing or not believing in the Bible doesn't mean you have
to decide to be for or against God. Few things in the world are that black and white.

2006-08-07 13:56:27 · answer #4 · answered by Alion 7 · 0 0

I'm a Christian and therefore I believe there is a higher power which we like to call GOD. How, when, where and why he created us doesn't exactly matter in the grand scheme of things. If we go through life and just follow the teachings of Jesus, then we're in good hands. Ultimately, the only thing that Jesus was trying to tell us all along was to treat other people the way we want to be treated.

2006-08-07 13:29:57 · answer #5 · answered by just42day 3 · 0 0

i changed into raised as a Christian yet I nonetheless settle for evolution. i will describe why. God reported, "enable there be gentle. " And He said the gentle changed into reliable. i'm incredibly certain that once the large Bang exceeded off, there changed into an outstanding style of sunshine. i don't sense the former testomony changed into meant to be taken actually. Adam and Eve are symbolic of society on the time. i imagine it truly is the point in heritage even as guy began to question himself about his personal morals. perhaps human beings the position putting out to be a lot less nomadic than contained in the previous and for this reason had to take accountability for the relationships that they had with others round them. maximum Christians stay by ability of the recent testomony. those are the classes of Jesus. they are elementary morals that all and sundry could stay by ability of.

2016-11-23 15:04:26 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

ok man calm down.

repeat after me, allegory, most of genesis is an allegory.

God didnt write the bible, PEOPLE who were divinely insipired did.

adam and eve is an allegory, the moral is that people will do their own thing instead of obeying God and because of that there will be suffering.

it also explains free will

same thing for revelation, do u actually believe a half slaughterd lamb will destory evil, or do u believe its a symbol of Christ destroying evil by dying on the cross?

its not about believeing the bible, its about interpreting it, not taking it as 100% literal.

2006-08-07 13:30:47 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I believe in animals and people evolved- but did not evolve from another species, mud, primordial ooze.
It is a fact that animals over time change to be survive in their habitat.
Do not say that Christians that believe in evolution do not believe in God. There is evolution that is proven in nature, and then the garbage taught in the schools.

2006-08-07 13:29:35 · answer #8 · answered by IN Atlanta 4 · 0 0

Why is it that many Protestants take Genesis literally, but believe that Jesus was speaking metaphorically when he said "This is my body"?

You can't have it both ways. If you are going to insist that Genesis be taken literally, then you have to believe in transubstantiation.

Otherwise, you are a hypocrite.

2006-08-07 13:34:23 · answer #9 · answered by Ranto 7 · 0 0

http://www.christiananswers.net/
a website that answers even about evolution...
neat site that anybody interested can go to..

2006-08-07 13:32:59 · answer #10 · answered by gurl4korist 1 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers