The objection of her father and others is this:
God commanding one group of human beings to kill other innocent human beings, and taking that passage of scripture in fundamentalist literalist fashion.
That’s the issue. It’s an issue of the proper interpretation of scripture in context, and a proper notion of what inspiration is.
No one disputes God’s omnipotence.
Precisely. And good on you @goout, for recommending that video by Bishop Barron. He is fantastic on this issue.
@Jen7, I sympathize deeply with your perspective and that of your father. If the Bible is approached in the same way that one would approach a history text or the L.A. Times, then yes, problems will abound with trying to wrestle with it. As I read through the comments above from Catholics trying to be helpful and from @Mike_from_NJ, it saddens my little heart because literalism is taken for granted as a legit approach to the sacred writings.
If I may, in addition to seconding any video from Bishop Barron on this issue, I’d like to offer a couple of others that I have found very helpful on this issue. Here’s
one. It’s by an Orthodox scholar, but he gives a wonderful talk on how the early fathers of the church approached the Bible, and it was pretty much light-years away from simplistic literalism.
Prior to the scientific revolution, for centuries upon centuries, the church fathers read the Old Testament allegorically. They looked for Christ in the text, and read it allegorically. As an example, Origen, Sts John Chrisostom and Abert the Great all read “in the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth,” to mean “in
Christ, (who is himself the beginning—John 1) God created the heavens and the earth…” All the greatest minds of the first 1300 years of church history were after what they thought of as a
true reading, and so should we be. That is to say, they were looking for whatever spiritual truths and insights could be gleaned from the writings.
Another scholar, David Bentley Hart, is also extremely useful in these regards, though he is quite ‘heady’ (intellectual) and may be a bit much for a beginner. Perhaps you would care to watch (though it might be a bit much for your father). In
this video, Hart does a masterful job of explaining how the fathers universally approached the sacred scriptures for almost 1.5 millennia and what went wrong with that approach in the West during the transition out of the Middle Ages into the Modern Era. It’s great stuff.
Oracular literalism is garbage. As your father is easily seeing, approaching the OT in this way is vacuous. Folks like your father and @Mike_from_NJ see this plainly. It makes you wonder why we don’t…
All the best to you and your dad!