What I mean by sad is this:The bible was written to be read and understood directly by common people of that time and was not meant to be first interpreted by experts and then to be circulated along with their expert opinion.For this reason it was written in a simple and direct way. 6 days written was meant to be 6 days, Mother meant mother, brother meant brother…- that is it.Subsequently over a perod of time different groups started to interpret the otherwise simple verses to suit their line of thinking or to avoid embarrassment as the verses were seemingly against some subsequent scientific truths,and put a seal that those who are going by the direct meaning of the verses ignoring their writ are groping in darkness and are against God etc.They will invent so many lame excuses,find fault with the language,translation, etc.Poor scripture writers!They will be tuning in their grave seeing the attempt to twist and complicate the simple verses and meaning they wrote and meant !
Definitely not.
It was not meant to be understood by common people who did not have any knowledge of the belief of the apostles, the Church.
That is what we thought later or today. The situation for the early Christians was definitely different than it was, say one thousand five hundred years later.
Today, of course it did not make sense that the common people could not understand the Bible. But that is today, not the early Christians, who probably did not know how to read, except for those privileged few – the Pharisees, priests and the lawyers of the law.
Another thing, the Church which decided the books to be included in the Bible, would know what was written. The basis for them to select the books also based on what was written.
We need to keep intact those reasons for selecting the books that made up the Bible. The Church knew because she was the producer of the Bible. In other word, she was the contemporary of the authors of the Bible.
The Church having existed earlier than the Bible would have in her possession the belief and the knowledge of the apostles, and then from that basis the books in Bible were chosen and compiled.
I am sorry, but your deduction is modern days thinking which does not reflect anything about the Bible at all.
Like I said in my earlier post, there is no mystery in the Bible; it was understood by the Church when she compiled it. Any new understanding of it is saying the Church did not understand the Bible which she wrote and compiled. And that is of course not the way it was.