S
simpleas
Guest
I quoted that the CCC explains genesis 3 uses figurative language and how I interpreted that to mean.Pardon me.
That sounds like some popular writers who are annoyed by simple truths so they are pushing readers into doubting some aspect of their faith. Or pushing them to substitute more user-friendly ideas which would replace or update some annoying teachings.
Here is an interesting quote from a newspaper article many years ago regarding CCC 390. “It recognizes that Genesis is figurative language," Obviously, the article is still on the internet.
The real CCC 390 in the universal Catechism of the Catholic Church, Second Edition
**CCC 390 **The account of the fall in *Genesis *3 uses figurative language, but affirms a primeval event, a deed that took place at the beginning of the history of man. Revelation gives us the certainty of faith that the whole of human history is marked by the original fault freely committed by our first parents.
Perhaps, you could clarify if Original Sin, is real or not real. However, that means going back to the Genesis 2 account and skipping some fascinating stuff that flies around on the internet.
It means a figure of speech, and I don’t know how to understand that.
I know for example with this figure of speech :
When it’s raining very heavily, one might use the term ’ It’s raining cats and dogs’
It’s a figure of speech, it’s not literally raining cats and dogs…
When thinking of the account in Genesis 3, the CCC is saying it’s a figure of speech, so we don’t take the snake as literally speaking or do we? Because if we don’t then why would we take any of the dialogue between the snake, humans and God as written by the author as literal words spoken between them, and the actions.
I just don’t know where the figure of speech is meant to be in the account.