I’ll be honest, I’m struggling right now. I’m Catholic, I love the faith, but I’m struggling with the Bible. When I go to mass, some of the readings I really relate to and like. But…there are some Bible quotes I don’t hear at mass, quotes that I take issue with.
If the Bible is sacred and entirely inspired, how does it talk of
• killing infants
• accepting slavery
• women needing to be silent
• pregnant women being ripped open.
(Edited to remove anti-Christian website link)
%between%
Some, I understand, are taken out of context, but some I really don’t understand how we can keep them as part of our faith, and recognize as “divine” or “inspired”.
Can someone shed light on this? How do we have an inspired, sacred word that directly contradicts what we believe, which is ultimately love? As a Catholic, am I required to believe the entire Bible is divinely inspired? Men put the books together and men wrote the books. I’m really struggling to wrap my head around divine inspiration, given some of the wrong things in the Bible.
My intention isn’t to mislead others, but to gain a better grounding in my own faith. If a nonbeliever points me to some of these verses and asks me to justify why they’re in our sacred book, I don’t have a response.
Also, can anyone provide a comprehensive resource that covers the history of the Bible – how the books were chosen, ordered, versed, who chose them, why, information on the original authors? I’m sure there’s loads of resources, but looking for something for a beginner like me, but still gives a thorough rundown of the history of the Bible.
Thank you!