R
ricmat
Guest
Hello Zundrah. Co-incidentally, I just bought an Oxford Catholic Study Bible, 2nd Edition. There is a “readers guide” at the beginning, and frankly, I can’t believe what I’m reading. The writers seem to want to tear down and demolish every aspect of believability in the OT. They say that all the stories of the OT were fabrications based on previously existing myths, which were assembled hundreds or thousands of years after the fact to justify present circumstances. The plagues of Egypt - well, after all, Egypt was always having plagues. Nothing special there. They go out of their way to prop up the absence of evidence, and the evidence which does exist is explained away. Etc. Etc. The authors seem to be more interested in singing glory and praise to their own scholarship, their “objectivity”, their “debunking” of myths which have enslaved people for thousands of years. They should be ashamed of themselves. This readers guide is like an anti-bible glued to the front of a real bible.So we can believe that Christs miracles were real but just not those back in the OT? Is that how it is? We cannot question Christ but we can play with the OT?
I would have expected some concession of the form - “even though the originators of some of these writings may have been pagans from previous generations, it is obvious that the Holy Spirit was working through them as well as the Hebrew authors, so the works themselves are inspired…” but I haven’t found anything like that yet.
So far as your question about where do we draw the line…it the OT is a total fabrication, then how can the NT be any good as well? I’m afraid to go to the NT section of the readers guide based on the OT sections.
I don’t know who those authors are, but I think they will have much to answer for. We see here on CAF “Catholic Theologians” who subscribe to the "it is all myth because our scientific analyses have so determined. " point of view. God help us and our Church.