C
Contarini
Guest
Only if you find it appealing and compelling. And there are all sorts of reasons why people sometimes do. If you don’t, it is not my purpose here and now to persuade you otherwise. Perhaps some day it will grab you. Perhaps it won’t. (Objectively, the strongest starting point is the resurrection of Jesus. But that would be another thread, and one that has been frequently discussed anyway.)Why should an open-minded person accept what the Church considers Tradition?
But in the meantime you could be less cavalier and arrogant in telling Christians what rules we are supposed to follow in interpreting our own Scriptures, just as I refrain from telling Muslims and others how to interpret their sacred texts.
Note that in Exodus 20:18-21 the people are terrified and beg Moses to mediate between them and God. So Rebecca is right–the text does in fact make a break after the Ten Commandments. (Though I suspect that she’s mostly following Tradition in singling out the Ten Commandments–and quite rightly too.) In fact, it doesn’t say that they heard or understood what God said–it seems to imply that they just saw a lot of smoke and heard a lot of noise.It’s not clear. RebeccaJ says that God’s giving of the Ten Commandments was God communicating with Moses.
The Ten Commandments are told to Moses as part of his speech that runs from Exodus 20 through 24.
Again, bear in mind that I’m accepting (as Rebecca may not) the basic claims of historical criticism that these texts were almost certainly written much later in the form we have them. I do not take any of this to be “literal” in the sense of a transcript of something that was really said (in Hebrew? which almost certainly didn’t exist at the time?) in either the thirteenth or fifteenth century B.C.
I take it as a highly stylized, symbolic narrative written centuries later to embody convictions that had grown up (under the guidance of the Holy Spirit) in the Jewish community about how God had revealed Himself to them.
So you believe that this literally happened? And you’re an atheist? This makes absolutely no sense.That includes such things as that it’s ok to manslaughter your slaves, that slaves are property, and that sorcerers should be killed. You and she should determine what was and was not spoken by God and in turn tell everyone why it’s so “clear” that it’s legendary.
The idea of an atheist who doesn’t accept basic historical criticism is kind of flabbergasting to me. It takes the OP’s claim about atheism and fundamentalism to new levels
It is historically implausible that these texts date from the second millennium B.C.Why isn’t it historically plausible for God to have given his speech in Exodus 20-24 in the span of time between when the Israelites escaped Egypt and before Moses climbed Mount Sanai.
For a fairly brief and accessible summary of historical-critical views on the OT (actually in a pretty modest, conservative form), with a few idiosyncratic opinions that I find fascinating and fairly plausible about who wrote some of the books, see Richard Elliott Friedman’s Who Wrote the Bible.. These days, most scholars probably take a more “minimalist,” skeptical view than that. But of course, on the other hand most Christians hold to a more conservative view. So Friedman is a good place to start. (Kitchen’s The Historical Reliability of the Old Testament is a conservative alternative.)
Of course, no one reads the Bible in a vacuum. . . . .These assumptions that you say I’m imposing come from simply reading the Bible.
But again, you prove the OP’s point. As a 21st-century person, you think you can just pick up a very ancient text and figure out when it was written by reading it, without paying any attention to the scholarship. If that isn’t a fundamentalist approach, I don’t know what would be:shrug:
Why, as an atheist, would you reject the conclusions of most critical scholars? I get why many conservative Christians and Jews do this. But why would you?I have to ask any Christians following this thread, do you think based on the reading of the Bible for it to have possibly occurred while the Israelites were wandered the desert?