Is the Bible Literally True?
No, of Course Not!
Most people could
care less whether it is or it isn't. If you're reading this, however, you
probably care at least enough to read this.
To me, the Bible is
important. It is for me the sacred story of the origins of my faith. In light
of this, I could no more feel as if it were unimportant than a follower of
Hinduism would feel the Bhagavad Gita is unimportant.
I do not believe,
however, that the Bible is a Divinely-dictated book or a sacred text without
error.
That
was the beginning to an article by [Dr. Steve McSwain] on [The Huffington Post]
that was published on [March 14, 2014], and I highly recommend reading the rest
of the article—regardless of whether or not you currently could NOT care less about
what Dr. McSwain has to say. For you
should care a lot about what others have to say about our Heavenly Father and
the trueness of His Holy Scriptures.
Alas,
do you not find it quite telling that such a learned person as Dr. McSwain
could open with such a stupid line? For
it is could not care less—not could care less.
No,
I do not mean to be insulting—certainly not in regards to messing up a
line. For I do it quite often, and it
upsets me greatly when my mistakes are not realized until after they have been
published.
Nonetheless,
the use of stupid is most appropriate when someone knows not what they are
saying, much in the same way as when someone is in a drunken stupor. Such is the case with this article by Dr.
McSwain—be assured.
Yes,
historical accounts of significant events by mere human eyewitnesses are
important as educational resources, but do we not have a tendency to see what
we want to see (and read what we want to read)?
Subsequently, it is entirely possible for two different people to see
vastly different things when watching an event unfold before their eyes, and
even in cases when two different people see the same thing and write exactly
the same things about it, two different people can read those accounts and come
to (sometimes drastically) different conclusions.
Therefore,
how can anything contained in our Heavenly Father's Holy Bible be of any great significance
if it is merely a collection of ancient stories by people not so unlike ourselves? More importantly, how can we truly understand
what His Holy Scriptures are meant to convey without the witness of His Holy Spirit to
explain what is truly what? This is what
Dr. McSwain is missing. May it not be
his fault.
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