Elfdart wrote:The idea of taking biblical texts literally has always been short bus retarded. Ancient peoples entertained themselves with riddles, cyphers, in-jokes, kennings and all sorts of other wordplay. Combined with music and chanting, that's how pre-literate societies were able to remember their stories over the course of hundreds of years. I doubt that ancient people in the Middle East really believed that a talking snake getting the first woman to eat a certain piece of fruit is the reason we don't live forever and women experience pain in childbirth. The story was about how people lose their innocence and get into trouble when they listen to thoughts that are based on selfish desires. Only the more modern fundie is that fucking stupid.
There's a wonderful piece of medival exegesis on that story (I forget whether it was Christian or Jewish), which argues for its allegorical nature in the following manner:
1/ Snakes can't talk
2/ If you want to say that snakes -could- talk, but were cursed and lost that ability for tempting Man, why isn't this punishment mentioned in the text? It's worse than any other punishment the snake gets!
3/ Therefore snakes can't talk, and could never talk
4/ Therefore the story is an allegory.
I have used this argument to great success. It's one occasion when you can totally destroy an idea without challenging any axiomatic assumptions (literalism, inerrancy, etc)