Elia
Well-known member
Bs"dWhy not?
If you start doing that you can right away throw the whole Bible overboard, because you can then all the time say: "Yes it says A, but I say it is a figurative reference to B."
Bs"dWhy not?
If you start doing that you can right away throw the whole Bible overboard, because you can then all the time say: "Yes it says A, but I say it is a figurative reference to B."
Bs"dI mean, yeah, you could. But that would be irrational.
I'd rather take what is meant as literal as literal, and what is figurative as figurative.
And I would recognize that sometimes some things that are literal are figurative of other things. Not all the time, but sometimes, especially in scripture.
For example: Isaac is a type of Christ.
Isaac was a literal person. He literally went with his father up Mount Moriah, and Abraham literally almost killled him there, but was stopped by God, and presented with a literal ram caught in a literal thicket.
However, Isaac is also figurative of Christ. Christ went up Mount Moriah, and WAS killed, and upon His head was a crown made of thorns, the Lamb of God.
Those figurative things you can believe, or not.
The Muslims believe that the suffering servant is Mohammed.
You can believe whatever you want, but of course it doesn't prove anything.
Bs"dI believe every word in the Bible, not just some.
And they're wrong, of course, but what does that have to do with anything being discussed here?
Do you recognize that some literal things can be figurative of other things?