yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Why you’re probably reading the Bible wrong | Rob Bell | Big Think


3m read
·Nov 3, 2024

Yeah, oftentimes when people talk about sacred texts, for many people the sort of thing that you say to show how serious you are is “Well, you know, we take it literally.” That actually has caused an extraordinary amount of destruction in the world. So I begin with, I try to take it LITERATELY.

So if it’s a poem, then it’s a poem. And if it’s a letter, who wrote it, and when did they write it, and who are they writing it to? What was the world like at that time? If it was history but the writer is kind of winking along the way like “This is what I’m really saying,” then you take it with that subtlety and nuance and even humor.

So all religious texts have to be interpreted, and the really dangerous thing is when someone says “I’m not giving you my opinion. I’m just telling you what it says.” Because that’s actually their opinion! If you deny human agency it generally leads to some sort of oppression or exploitation.

So everything gets way more interesting when you start reading it literately because you then don’t have to do those awkward explanations. One of the greatest examples of this is there’s this ancient story about Jonah who gets swallowed by a fish. Not a whale, a fish. Because that’s what it says in the ancient text.

And so the question often becomes a debate on whether or not a guy really got swallowed by a fish. And you have the literalists going “it says he got swallowed by a fish, he got swallowed by a fish.” And then you have the others going “no, it’s a larger metaphor.”

But what’s interesting: as the story begins, the Assyrians were the worst neighbors. They were the cruel oppressors who had made life miserable. And so this man Jonah is told to go and bless Nineveh, and Nineveh was the capital of Assyria.

So the story begins with a man being told “go bless your worst most heinous enemy.” And he doesn’t. He goes the other direction. He runs away, which I think the original audience would have cheered this man Jonah on. “You go the other direction! Whatever you do don’t go bless the person who has made your life a living hell.”

So he eventually gets on a boat. There’s a storm, and he’s thrown overboard and he’s swallowed by a fish. I think the power of the story is not arguing about whether or not he was swallowed by a fish. I think the story was told to a group of people to confront them with how they cannot forgive their worst enemy.

And will the past and the wounds that you have suffered define you and hold you back, or can you forgive? Can you move towards your enemy, not with violence, but with love? Do the things that have happened to us define us, or is there a love that can transcend even this?

So this would be a classic example to me where there’s an ancient text and a story where you can in your attempt to defend it literally actually avoid the more interesting questions of the heart that I think are the questions the storyteller is trying to get at.

And yes, in our world to this day, taking some of these texts literally has caused so much violence. You read the ancient text. You also use your mind. You listen for what new thing might be happening in the world. You read it as a fully orbed experience, and then it actually gets quite inspiring.

More Articles

View All
You Don’t Lose People. You Return Them | Stoic Philosophy
In the Star Wars prequels, we see the romance between Jedi Knight Anakin Skywalker and Queen of Naboo Padmé Amidala and how the overly attached Anakin suffers from an extreme fear of losing Padmé. His attachment and fear are so strong that he’s willing to…
Harmonic series and 𝑝-series | AP®︎ Calculus BC | Khan Academy
For many hundreds of years, mathematicians have been fascinated by the infinite sum which we would call a series of one plus one-half plus one-third plus one-fourth, and you just keep adding on and on and on forever. This is interesting on many layers. O…
Sunni and Shia Islam part 1 | World History | Khan Academy
We’re now going to talk about the main division that emerges in Islam shortly after the death of Muhammad, and that division is between Sunnis and Shias. This division even exists today, where roughly 90% of the world’s 1.5 or 1.6 billion Muslims are Sunn…
Craig Cannon on Podcasting with Adora Cheung
Welcome! I am Adore Chun. I’m a partner at Y Combinator, and I am here interviewing Craig Kenan. How’s it going? Good, how are you doing? I’m doing very well, great! Thanks for being here and for being on your own podcast. No problem! I had a great ti…
15 Things That Scream “I’m pretending to be Upper Class”
Put your guest bag and your Gucci belt away and pay attention. All right? If you care if someone thinks you’re rich, you’re not that rich, so let’s be honest about this. Here are 15 things that scream, “I’m pretending to be upper class.” This is the third…
Volumes of cones intuition | Solid geometry | High school geometry | Khan Academy
So I have two different three-dimensional figures here. I have a pyramid here on the left, and I have a cone here on the right. We know a few things about these two figures. First of all, they have the exact same height. So this length right over here is…