Darth Wong wrote:Since the Bible contradicts itself on numerous points (and please don't tell me you're one of those people who thinks there are no contradictions in the Bible), isn't it impossible to follow it without disregarding parts of it?
It depends what contradictions you have in mind. Even as an inspired text, it was still written and translated by fallible men. This means certain contradictions do occur, as far as I can see:
- Minor historical details, especially in the chronology of events
- Details which are of no importance to the main, God-inspired point (like pi being roughly 3 instead of 3.14159...as if measurements were exact enough to replicate pi in the first place)
- Differences in commandments between the Old and New Testaments--these are contradictions at face value, but since we're talking about two different recipients to two different Laws, it's not the problematic sort of contradiction.
Nothing, as far as I know of, contradicts the thrust of any part of the Bible--this is what I think "God-breathed" is really about. God gave His message directly to human beings, so any important message wouldn't be screwed up. No one's going to write "remember the Sabbath and keep it Holy" and mean "do whatever the hell you want on Saturday". Similarly, I'd trust the authors at what they set out to do. On the Historical books, I'd be confident that the authors would check their history. In the Gospels, which are eyewitness accounts decades after the fact, I'd expect them to agree on the words of Christ, which were preached and re-preached by the apostles and validated by one another. But with the specific chronology (I know there's quite a bit of discrepancy in the Resurrection story), that doesn't bother me, or even surprise me.
The exception to this, is, of course, anything written by someone claiming to be a Prophet. Unlike Moses recording the history and laws of Israel, or the Gospel writers recollecting the teachings and actions of Jesus, the prophets did not speak about God, but directly from Him. If there are any contradictions within the prophets, that would be a serious problem, in my book.
Edit: Just to add a qualifier: A disconcerting contradiction in the words of God would not need to be made hyper-literal before being a contradiction. I've seen plenty of Christians and atheists do this with verses referring to the earth as a "circle" or the "sun rising". The fact that some Christians can actually draw flat-earth or geocentric implications from that is laughable. By the way, to all the flat-earthers out there (no one here I'm sure), if you want to take "circle" that literally, you'd need to make a case for a 2-D universe. A "flat earth" would be a cylinder as long as it has any depth, and God clearly said "circle".