Three hundred-plus years separate what most of us think of as Greek philosophy and the NT. Some of the words cannot be used interchangeably without qualification or commentary. Like "car" or "gun" across American history. Except in some cases worse. Logos, for example, understood as referring to order in the universe, came to be grounded in Christian thought in one man, Jesus. Perhaps like saying that Newton is gravity, or relativity Einstein. An outrage on sense and meaning. But this not so much words as history of ideas and changes in thinking.Some of the Greek words in the Bible could be crossing with some of the philosophical concepts often appearing in the ancient Greek philosophical texts — Corvus
I both get this and don't get this, but in that division I find only my own understanding which in circumstances like these I've learned the virtues and benefits of at least bracketing.For then, to defend their utterly foolish and obviously untrue statements, they will try to call upon Holy Scripture for proof and even recite from memory many passages which they think support their position, although they understand neither what they say nor the things about which they make assertion.
Exactly. Which is why outsiders who are not thusly embedded cannot hope to have a meaningful experience with the Bible. Similar goes for other ancient texts.Reading the Bible has never really been a question of understanding a literal account, it is embedded in a 'community of discourse, faith and practice', within which it is meaningful. — Wayfarer
Exactly. The fact that at the time, the majority of the population was illiterate actually helped this state of affairs and probably made the whole experience of listening to sermons more meaningful for the people. (Note that the Roman Catholic Church was not in favor of simple people reading the Bible because the probability of misunderstanding was too great.)In original Christianity, those who heard that were never expected to understand it. They were expected to believe it. There was no question of ‘interpretation’. Interpretation was having an opinion, which is what ‘heresy’ means.
We live in a different world now. We wonder about what it means. But in the original setting, it was simply recited by the priests, and you simply listened to it. — Wayfarer
It is vital to read the Bible in the right spirit, with faith and humility.It would be difficult to imagine that one can understand the Bible without knowing the rich meanings of the old, exotic or even plain words in it, when it even says that God has given the language, so that men could study with it their way to know him. — Corvus
It is vital to read the Bible in the right spirit, with faith and humility.
Understanding specific old words like "ephah" is, for the most part, irrelevant.
Without the right spirit, one can be a scholar in ancient languages, and still miss the point of the ancient text. — baker
I am confident that actual religious people will say it's the other way around. — baker
IOW, you're someone who wants to read and understand the Bible on his own terms, quite cut off from the religious tradition it is part of.
Why on earth would anyone want to do that?? — baker
Interesting how?Many people are interested in the ancient texts be it bible or literature, because they are interesting in many ways. — Corvus
Interesting how?
Unless we're talking about a simple curiosity (or more like: attempts to relieve one's existential boredom), the pull one feels toward an acient text surely has something to do with the historical reception and influence of said text. — baker
And churches filled with old seminarians force-fed their Greek who now want nothing to do with it, having never really learned it nor experienced its pleasures as such. Or again in short, patience - and some persistence. — tim wood
But what, and this I care about, do you think [Augustine] meant? — tim wood
Augustine affirms that ordinary 24-hours days “are not at all like [the "days" of Genesis 1], but very, very different.” In Augustine’s view, God creates all things simultaneously, and the 'Seven Days" construct in Genesis 1 is an accommodation in which “the Scriptural style comes down to the level of little ones [i.e. children] and adjusts itself to their capacity.” Specifically, Augustine affirms that the ordering of Genesis is not according to temporal sequence but rather the ordering of angelic knowledge. Thus, Augustine not only distinguished the days of Genesis 1 from ordinary 24-hour days, he also distinguished God’s initial creative act from his subsequent activity in creation:
When we reflect upon the first establishment of creatures in the works of God from which he rested on the seventh day, we should not think either of those days as being like these ones governed by the sun, nor of that working as resembling the way God now works in time; but we should reflect rather upon the work from which times began, the work of making all things at once, simultaneously.
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Augustine wrestled with the nature of the light in days 1-3 before the creation of the luminaries on day 4. Noting the phrase “let them be for signs and for seasons, and for days and years” in Genesis 1:14, he asked, “who can fail to see how problematic is their implication that times began on the fourth day, as though the preceding three days could have passed without time?” This problem greatly vexed Augustine. Ultimately, he identified the pre-solar light of day 1 with the spiritual/angelic creation. — Ortlund
Thank you for the answer. Part of it echoes an old threadThey must be interpreted allegorically to be understood. — Wayfarer
From Wiki: Interpretation of Biblical texts… is realized through
peshat (literal or plain meaning, lit. "plain" or "simple"),
remez (deep meaning, lit. "hints"),
derash (comparative meaning, from Hebrew darash—"to inquire" or "to seek"), and
sod(hidden meaning or philosophy, lit. "secret" or "mystery").
Or as follows:
DEPARTMENT...HEBREW...REVEALS . . .BELONGS TO . . .
Peshat... פשט... Simplest meanings... World of Action
Remez... רמז... Hinted meanings... World of Formation
Derush... דרוש... Deeper meanings... World of Creation
Sod... סוד... Secret meanings... World of Emanation — tim wood
This problem greatly vexed Augustine. Ultimately, he identified the pre-solar light of day 1 with the spiritual/angelic creation. — Ortlund
The most read book on the planet cannot be pointless. And I agree that most books require some interpretation at least. But the claim of divine origin on the one hand, combined with the claim that you cannot know what it means but I must interpret it for you - usually for a fee - is an absurdity we can all do without once it's acknowledged.Yeah, well, you have to be interested in it otherwise I agree it's pointless. — Wayfarer
when much of it is plainly figurative or allegorical. — Wayfarer
It tells more about the reader and interpreters' spiritual and mental makeup / history than the Bible verses being quoted or interpreted in many cases, and that is why it could be regarded as Existential philosophising in some sense I suppose. — Corvus
Which is why it seems to me that the Bible left on it own doesnot give us a faith or religion. It gives us innumerable ones. Even the Catholic claim that their Church interprets for them is based on their interpretation of the "pope in the Bible" stuff in order to have something to start with — Gregory
I would be interested in learning the old Hebrew, Greek, Latin and Aramaic words in the bible, and that's what I meant by the literal understanding of the bible. It has nothing to do with matching the contents of the bible with the real world events or happenings, and drawing some bizarre analogies from them. — Corvus
But there is more!Interesting how?
Unless we're talking about a simple curiosity (or more like: attempts to relieve one's existential boredom), the pull one feels toward an acient text surely has something to do with the historical reception and influence of said text.
— baker
The Bible is not just a religious text. It is linked to ethics, literature, anthropology, sociology, and cultural studies. The Bible is also a huge topic for Philosophy of Religion. Some books in the Bible such as Psalms and Job has huge significance in Literature, and people read and study them for the literal merits. — Corvus
The question was, why do the non-religious read it.There is no restrictions saying, only the religious people must read the Bible.
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