BridgeConsoleMasher wrote: ↑Sun Jan 10, 2021 5:52 pm
This all being said, I'm still particularly uncertain why you are debating the historical accuracy of instances such as the flood involving Noah's Arc or the materialistic reimagining of Yeshua. I don't find it very hard to find their social significance, most defensible as fables/metaphors for rather humanely extraordinary yet tangibly ordinary social phenomena.
I'm tired and I'm prolly gonna muddle this, I need to throw this out.
Depends on what is meant by that, the role of the symbolic and how "reality" meshes up with symbolism. That the symbolism can be more real than the materialistic perspective we're used to seeing things through. It's not an easy nor small thing to go into.
It took me awhile to grasp and largely revolves around the fact that the world is too complex for each one of us to individually navigate through taking the whole in. Things need to be simplified, but those simplifications are not falsities, they are distilling down the essence of what really matters that is "more real than real".
An example of that is that I could ask you to show me the nation you live in. I'm assuming it's America where you're at. You could go and point to a random location and I could say that's just the sky, or a mountain or some natural feature. You take me to city hall or the police station and point to it and I could say those are just buildings. You could point to your flag and I could say it's just a bit of cloth with some coloured lines and 50 stars on it.
You can't show me America, and yet America is everywhere around you. Inhabiting it, it surrounds you and it actually lives
within through how much of the culture you have absorbed. There is a spirit there in the same sense that sports teams have spirit.
It's in this context that we can say "Japan bombed America on Dec. 7th 1941 at Pearl Harbour and America crossed the Pacific waging war until Japan was defeated." America and Japan didn't do these things; millions of people, machines and munitions did, but we don't say it's silly to say such a thing (Though I have seen people make such ultra0literalist quips) because we understand what is being said in such encapsulating language.
So did Noah's Flood happen? Yes and no. Not from a materialist and literalist Ken Ham perspective, but within that story contains what matters in what is trying to be conveyed, and that isn't simply touching on something like the rising sea levels of the pre-historical world, which is again another materialist and literalist perspective, though that isn't entirely wrong. The fact is that may be one of many things contained in that story, as is the metaphorical matter of allowing chaos to build eventually brings a flood of disaster upon you (and more, above all tying into the rest of the Bible and how self-referential it is).
There is also the simple, evolutionary function of what has survived and how much is packed into the Bible. It's why I like Genesis so much. You can feel tens of thousands of years of human existence fly by on a few pages, billions go by on the first page in a way that expresses itself most importantly to human understanding. That is comparable to asking in 10,000 years which is more important to knowing about WWII? The sum total information we have about the war, or a story which distills the gist of what is really important about the war into something that will actually last that long, because nothing voluminous will survive that long.
Does that mean such a story would be false? I'd only say so with a modern mindset towards things being deliberate products of minds with an angle set. That is not what the Bible is to me. No matter the intent of the authors, it all comes together to produce something of coherence from the incoherence of many hands. For me, that is the hand of God moving over the waters.
And if someone is going to say that X contradicts Y so how can I say it's coherent, then I'm sorry, you're looking at it too much from a modernist perspective, which I why the Bible is so misunderstood. Look on it as a dream. You can say this part of a dream didn't mesh with this other part and it doesn't make sense, but the important thing is what you took away from the depth and impression of the dream. I've had some very potent dreams whose "sense" I don't care about. They've been about figures marching up to me and lecturing me on the part I'm playing in impairing my mental health, which is then counter-argued by others making contrary points which I take as an internal dialogue I'm having with myself.
I could go on, but I'll leave it at this, I fear I'll just get lost in rambling.
Pageau can be annoying to grasp and it's been awhile since I watched these:
The first one stands out for me given an experience I had months back. I found a frog in town around midnight walking home, hopping through the neighbourhood. I heard the nearby pond kilometers off with all the other frogs ribbiting he was going towards to mate with. I thought it would probably take him days to get there, if he ever did. He'd have roads with cars trying to squish him, yards with fences, cats trying to kill him and the highway to finally cross. I decided it would take me half an hour to take him close enough to the pond to know he was safe because we need all the frogs we can in this world given their declining populations and I'd lose about a mere hour of my night if I did so. So I did.
While I was doing so, I realized the roads were littered with earthworms. Every couple feet was a worm. I'm the kind of person that picked them up when I go past and toss them into bushes or onto grass so they won't dry out and die or get picked off when daylight comes. Going along, I realized I could spend all night and the following day picking up worms and how that wasn't what I should do. I couldn't save them all and that would distract me from my intention of bringing that frog to his friends. I ignored the worms and kept going, dropped the frog off and went back home.
Now why is this important? I'm studying to be a counselor. I have to know my boundaries and that I can't actually help anyone who doesn't want help themselves. That night, I could look on through strict materialist eyes and say it was coincidence and there's no meaning to it all, but what will make a bigger impact (and a more positive one, too) is me recognizing that symbolic lesson that night and keeping it in mind. Rationality has it's place, but it can't exclude the rest, especially since not all of irrationality is evil and silly.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l9Ibs67ke6c&list
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1w7TQ1K ... 5f&index=3