Originally posted by trev
It is correct to say that Jesus taught in parables, and therefore they are to be interpreted rather than taken as fact.
It is correct to say that Jesus taught in parables, and therefore they are to be interpreted rather than taken as fact.
However Genesis chapters 1 and 2 are written as fact and not as a story or parable and therefore should be taught as fact
, likewise the book of Revelation is written as future prophecy and should likewise be treated as events that will happen in the future , although allowance needs to be made for John's difficulty in describing things that had no names in his time.
The symbolism in Revelation, which can't be taken literally because it is after all "symbolism", clearly refers to the Roman Empire and would have been understood very well as such by ancient Christians.
As the Catholic refuses to teach these sections of the bible as fact, they lose credibility and membership to churches who teach the whole bible is true.
As the Anglican (ie Church of England) is even more wishywashy on the bible they suffer even more from loss of membership, as do much of the Lutheran, Uniting (ie Methodist, Congregational etc)
Churches which believe the bible is true will keep their relevance, others will lose it.
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