C
clem456
Guest
Couple of points.
The difference is not between literal reading and contextual reading. *All of scripture *must be read in context. Christ is the key to that context, Christ is the hermeneutical key to unsealing the scrolls. (Pope Benedict Verbum Domini)
Q. When is the bible meant to be taken in a straightforward literal fashion?
A. When it is *meant to be taken *in a straightforward literal fashion.
Sounds like a smart aleck answer but through reading, prayer, and submission to the Church, we can have a common and true reading of scripture.
What is the intention of the author?
What is God trying to reveal to us? It takes, as Pope Benedict says, “a degree of expertise”.
Thank God we have the living Magisterium!
Perhaps the greatest difficulty in reading scripture is the confusion between the literal sense of scripture and a fundamentalist, or literalist, reading of scripture. The literal sense is not the same thing as a literalist reading of scripture. The literal does not mean merely historically, factually true, although there are elements of these in the literal sense. Fundamentalism takes words written by inspired human authors from centuries ago, and imposes narrow modern understandings on the words, out of all context.
The difference is not between literal reading and contextual reading. *All of scripture *must be read in context. Christ is the key to that context, Christ is the hermeneutical key to unsealing the scrolls. (Pope Benedict Verbum Domini)
Q. When is the bible meant to be taken in a straightforward literal fashion?
A. When it is *meant to be taken *in a straightforward literal fashion.
Sounds like a smart aleck answer but through reading, prayer, and submission to the Church, we can have a common and true reading of scripture.
What is the intention of the author?
What is God trying to reveal to us? It takes, as Pope Benedict says, “a degree of expertise”.
Thank God we have the living Magisterium!
Perhaps the greatest difficulty in reading scripture is the confusion between the literal sense of scripture and a fundamentalist, or literalist, reading of scripture. The literal sense is not the same thing as a literalist reading of scripture. The literal does not mean merely historically, factually true, although there are elements of these in the literal sense. Fundamentalism takes words written by inspired human authors from centuries ago, and imposes narrow modern understandings on the words, out of all context.