Meriweather
Not all who wander are lost
- Oct 21, 2014
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We had been discussing his thought that the great majority of people were taking the Bible literally. We were getting nowhere, and all I can figure is that he was using statistics of fundamentalists and applying them to all, while I was using statistics (that he then misquotes) of Catholics and/or all Christian sects.I’d say the percentage is 0% but the percentage of people who pretend to believe it might be around 20%. There is no way any human is capable of believing such radical nonsense.
He seems to have this theory that before the twentieth century, "ignorant" people took the Bible literally. From what I read, is that pre-20th Century before people started taking polls, the general consensus is that most were of the mind that the Bible gave its own clues as to when it was to be taken literally, and when not.
A great example of people not taking the Bible literally is the Jefferson Bible. It showed an example of what some were thinking in Jefferson's lifetime. When there was a push to publish it in the early 1900s, there were those who were outraged and wanted it suppressed, and those (including ministers) who wanted it printed.
While I doubt there is no one at all who takes the Bible literally, I have no doubt that some do and some have in the past. That the Jefferson Bible (Gospels accounts is more precise) was published despite protests suggests that even in early days the majority did not take every word literally.