Bible vs. Bible

Back in December I wrote a post about a mother (Estelle Walker) who was put on trial for starving her children (who survived). The reason the poverty-stricken mother did this was that, as she read the Bible, God would provide for her. She prayed mightily, but the children still went without food. She was found guilty of child endangerment, and at her sentencing this week the judge, interestingly enough, cited the Bible. Noting that the Bible presents a nurturing image of mothers, the judge, Peter Conforti, said, “The court has read the Bible too. Mothers are told to love their children.” Walker’s attorney cited a “‘delusional disorder’ that caused her to have an overreliance on God,” according to Joe Moszczynski, of the New Jersey Star-Ledger. An overreliance on God, or on the Bible?

This entire sad scenario highlights the danger of viewing the Bible as a magical book of answers. In a scene that is reminiscent of the Scopes Trial, both sides of the case cite the Bible for their actions. Which is correct? Is it not both? Does this not show the problems that arise when considering a lengthy book written over a period of at least a millennium by perhaps a hundred different authors as a uniform source of legal code or ethical conduct? Yet, when swearing to tell the truth, people lay their hand on the self-same Bible while thinking it means something highly idiosyncratic.

As a teacher of Bible I have a great admiration and respect for this problematic book. One of my recurrent concerns is that a storehouse of human experience and wisdom is treated as if it were a font of magic. As if finding a statement in the Bible somehow assures us that our viewpoint is correct. The Bible is used to justify crimes and noble actions. If clergy could have a more enlightened view on just what the Bible is, perhaps believers would not be led to destructive behavior because of simple misunderstandings. Perhaps children would be fed and judges could spend their time judging cases where the Bible simply doesn’t apply.

4 thoughts on “Bible vs. Bible

  1. Henk van der Gaast

    Thanks Steve, The beauty of materialisms security since the late 1900’s is that people now know that magic is magic. It’s their choice not to believe it.

    It’s a bit of a dilemma when someone accuses you of not believing in their god. For me it’s a natural assumption. After all, even if an all knowing god was known to exist, you still don’t have to believe in it.

    It’s never a matter of belief. Everyone’s god is different. Knowing that those 7billion expressions of deity are contradictory makes me very comfortable in enjoying the show but not paying the entry fee.

    Cheers and enjoy your lamb roast tomorrow.

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  2. atimetorend

    “Which is correct? Is it not both?”

    Great point. People say about harsher interpretations of the bible, “That is not what it really means,” because they are applying a filter of common sense to their reading. But unfortunately one person’s common sense is another person’s folly.

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    • Steve Wiggins

      Well said! The Bible, like all religious texts, stands a wide variety of interpretations. My wish is that we could all simply learn to believe and let believe.

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  3. Henk van der Gaast

    Atimorend. I am glad you used the term “common sense” to the reading of the bible. It’s a wise man that realises the term invokes the view of the average.

    Daffynitions for Steves blog;

    Common sense; something mean people use.

    Apologies Steve, statistical jokes kill me!

    Amitorend is absolutely on the ball though, if you say “it makes common sense to” you actually mean “Everyone does this in this manner”. Can you imagine the first ape that picked up a stick saying to him/herself, “no that rabbit is not dead.. nobody kills rabbits with a stick.”

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