(March 10, 2024 at 1:39 am)Belacqua Wrote: There's another old tradition of how to read the Bible, that probably goes against modern people's expectations.
I learned this from reading William Blake, but he got it from a minority mystical strain of Christianity which includes Jacob Boehme, Theresa of Avila, and others of that type.
For them, it is a key point that God and the world are far beyond what a finite human mind can understand. (At least, under normal circumstances.) Therefore any book which gave us the impression that we had everything figured out would be false. Worse, it would make us stupider by convincing us we know more than we do. So it's crucial for them that the Bible remain unresolved, open-ended, and infinitely interpretable. If you thought you'd figured out the truth behind it all, you'd be wrong.
A while back someone was trying to persuade me that he knew the real meaning of the symbolism in the Adam and Eve story. He was completely sure that he knew its one and only message, and that every other reading was simply wrong. (Even though his reading was different from that of Maimonides and many others.) In my opinion he was making a modern type of error, interpreting in a da Vinci Code kind of way, to think that each symbol points to exactly one decoded message.
It seems more reasonable to me to take those stories as provocations which we respond to. How we respond tells us as much about ourselves (and our relationship to God, if you believe that sort of thing) as it does about ancient authors.
Any story could serve the function. But the Bible stories have centuries of added meaning, so that when you read it you're not just reading an ancient text, but all of the weight that has been added to it since by its many genius interpreters.
Considering everything in the bible (the ludicrous parts) you trying too hard to justify the bible as relevant.........
... and failing.
Being told you're delusional does not necessarily mean you're mental.