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03-11-2005, 10:09 AM | #1 |
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Biblical interpretations: Old and New
Since I have mostly second-hand acquaintance with the bible, I would like some help from those of you who are more familiar with it. What I'm looking for are as many examples as possible of "new" interpretations of dubious biblical incidents by those believing in biblical inerrancy. E.g., what's the latest most widely accepted fundie explanation for Joshua stopping the sun. Wasn't there also something about the angels sounding their trumpets from the "four corners of the earth?" I imagine the four corners are now generally regarded as being simply figures of speech, but that's what I'm looking for--old views taken at face value in contrast to entirely new interpretations now widely accepted by fundies.
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03-13-2005, 02:40 AM | #2 |
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Well, I have pondered about "the day the sun stood still". Obviously it is an intercalation. It's just like the expertise of this board and the Leap Year. When Joshua was written they had a 364 day calendar and a 17 1/2 day addition every 14 years called the Veadar. When they had the Veadar did the sun stand still?
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03-13-2005, 07:31 AM | #3 | |
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Click --->here<--- for other "answers" and denials by our Christian believers concerning for corners. This has some "answers" as far as the sun stopping. |
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03-13-2005, 12:34 PM | #4 |
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Thanks to Offa and Dissident Agrressor for your help.
To Offa: I'm still not certain how a different calendar system would explain a sun stoppage. To DA: Good suggested sites. The notion of "language of appearance" isn't one I've encountered before. Evidently, the argument is that the bible was written to be understood by the people of that day, so existing beliefs had to be catered to in order for scripture to be understood. The implication, of course, is that the writers knew better. That's intriguing since it does seem to be a challenge to inerrancy. |
03-13-2005, 02:11 PM | #5 | ||
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03-13-2005, 02:18 PM | #6 | |
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03-13-2005, 02:41 PM | #7 |
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I've now encountered several views of what "corners" actually meant back at the time the passage was written. Many thanks for the suggestions.
What I would like to know, now, is what a learned reader of that document would then have assumed was meant by "corners." Would he/she immediately recognize them as the cardinal points of the compass? The solstices and equinoxes? As another way of saying "everywhere"? Or would the view have been that the earth was flat, square and had four corners? I'm also looking for more of these early "facts" that are now regarded differently by believers in biblical inerrancy. |
03-13-2005, 04:24 PM | #8 | |
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03-13-2005, 08:07 PM | #9 |
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In Catholicism the sun stops twice in every year. The first time is when morning does not follow the night on which Christ was born and the second time is when evening does not follow the day on which Jesus rose from the death. It has nothing to do with the alleged movement of the sun but with the apparent illumination of our day by the sun -- which obviously is not true if darkness prevailed at Christmas until after the second night, or if daylight prevailed at Easter until the end of the second day.
It is just a play on the illusion of sense perception that needs a mind to interpret the message received by the senses. Ie, we look with our eyes but see with our mind. |
03-14-2005, 08:18 AM | #10 |
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My favorite notion to explain Joshua's solar object demands came from jdlongmire (I'm not sure if it was his own idea or got it elsewhere). A time bubble around Canaan, kept them out of sync during the night the sun stood still. Just like out of a host of Sci-Fi books. It also makes it virtually impossible to argue against. Who's to say an all powerful god can't play with time…kind of a neat package. I have no clue if this is considered a reasonable defense in fundy circles.
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