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Alternative Ways of Reading the Bible

Some people say that the revelation in Jesus can be accepted along with everything else biblical writers say. However, that view is implausible. There are biblical accounts of God doing things that just don’t fit with the kind of God Jesus talked about. There are teachings of Jesus about matters such as loving your enemies that don’t fit with the vengeance biblical writers sometimes represent as appropriate in responding to enemies. It is a futile task to treat all biblical teachings as being on the same level and think that you have to reconcile them into a single whole.

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Building a Better Faith

Defective habits of Bible reading are difficult to overcome, especially when they have been repeatedly supported by authority figures who told you what you were supposed to find. But one of the first steps to reading better is to ask yourself what interpretive key you are using. I think that the best place to look for such a key is in the teaching of Jesus.

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It’s in the Bible

In the churches where I grew up, citing what the Bible said on some topic was regarded as a claim to ultimate authority. It was taken for granted that the Bible couldn’t be wrong about anything, and it was assumed that determining what the Bible taught was relatively unproblematic. People knew, of course, that other Christian groups had different interpretations of what the Bible said, but among the churches I attended there was great confidence that where these other groups taught something different from what we said, they were wrong.

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Did That Really Happen?

Christians from the earliest centuries who recognized that some biblical accounts were problematic tended to suggest that some accounts should not be understood literally, but should be taken as conveying allegorical meanings. Modern readers are generally not inclined to take this approach, but does that mean they have to acknowledge that God does terrible things?

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