L
Lost_Wanderer
Guest
You’re chopping up my statement which is intellectual dishonesty at its worst. Review my whole post before you start dicing up other people’s just so you could respond.Not being required does not mean being forbidden. You have said that I am approaching error by believing in the accounts of the OT. Now you say that all the Church says about the matter is that one is not required to believe.
Again, that viewpoint depicts God as an inconsistent God who toys with the cosmos just so He could get what He wants.Or maybe God dealt with the Hebrews in the way which they would be able to understand…
This is not the literalist viewpoint. You cannot give respect to literalism when you’re now on the slope of saying that the way the author’s write is not in accordance to modern sensibilities. Simply put, you’re leaning towards the view of metaphors and hyperbole, the very viewpoint that literalists shun.… or maybe the Hebrews lacked the language to fully describe the difference, or maybe they simply assumed that the reader would also be Hebrew and have the cultural understanding to know the differences…
To say that God acts differently across those ‘different stages’ IS leaning towards heresy. God is consistent. His nature is unchanging. That is core Catholic doctrine. That is in direct contrast to the literalist viewpoint you espouse that insists that God changed the nature of the world in response to the ‘maturity’ of mankind’s development.I do not look at God in the OT and say, oh, boy, He’s so mean and oppressive! I take the view of those who say that humanity itself has gone through the stages of childhood, adolescence, and (maybe) adulthood. God is God the Father, and we are His children. I figure that if God is all-powerful *and *all-good that there is a sense to what He did, and sometimes I can see it, and sometimes I can’t.