Dear Dannii
I have an old copy of Peakes Bible Commentary (around 1970 or so) at home that I picked up in a second hand book shop for $10. It has a foreword by the archbishop of Canterbury. In the chapter on Genesis it sets out the two Genesis creation stories side by side to demonstrate the differences and expounds a theory of Genesis as an amalgamation of two sources by a third source. For example, the two sources use different words to refer to god. The second source uses Yahweh, translated in the RSV as Lord God, while the first uses the term god only. The sequence of events is different in chapter 1 to that put forward in chapter 2 and 3 (the split is in the middle of verse 4 of chapter 2). For example in the first story plants were created first and in the second man was created first.
I am not sure if this theory of the genesis of genesis is still in vogue or what stature it has in scholarly circles. Note I said scholarly circles - I am talking published papers in refereed journals here.
I am not aware of a substantive difference between literally and literallistically, except the the suffix ist suggests a personal noun, ie the first implies there is no human agency. A literal reading takes the words at face value without mysticism, allegory or metaphor.
I am not really arguing for anything. I am more responding to two recent events. Firstly, I was sent a copy of book by Ray Galea, basically on the theme of why his sect of protestantism is right and catholics are wrong, and second, two articles published by Dean Jensen in the SMH around World Youth Day, and in a similar vein as to why he is right and catholics are wrong. After years of dealing with smug and self righteous evangelicals, firstly at university and secondly in my wife’s family, it has finally got up my nose and I have taken the opportunity to apply the same blowtorch to protestant beliefs that some protestants apply to catholic beliefs. (Having said that, I am not an apologist for catholicism and don’t subscribe to a number of dogmas).
As an outsider, it is clear to me that there are a number of beliefs held by protestants that are unbiblical and unreasonable. The basis of these beliefs, in my opinion, is most probably Zwingli’s rejection of sacramentalism rather than the post hoc explanations generally put forward.
One example is the true presence in the eucharist. There are good reasons to believe that this was a belief of the early church but this belief is rejected in the Calvinist stream of Protestantism. That rejection requires as a minimum an invocation of metaphor.
However there is a cleft stick here. At other times protestants argue for a literal reading when an allegorical reading seems to me to be strongly supported such as in Genesis for the reasons stated above. This inconsistent application of rules makes me wary, and leads me to treat the purported basis as a post hoc justification of a particular ideological position.
Some other positions that warrant critical examination include the scripture alone position (at best a circular argument), the essential nihilism arising from the faith alone position as demonstrated by the doctrine of predestination, the blindness to biblical references to the importance of personal acts in the faith alone position and the danger of biblical and experiencial idolatry.
I see this thread as an opportunity to discuss the implications of predestination.
cheers
John