THE hierarchy of the Roman Catholic Church has published a teaching
document instructing the faithful that some parts of the Bible are not
actually true.
The
Catholic bishops of England, Wales and Scotland are warning their five
million worshippers, as well as any others drawn to the study of
scripture, that they should not expect �total accuracy� from the Bible.
�We should not expect to find in Scripture full scientific accuracy or complete historical precision,� they say in The Gift of Scripture.
The document is timely, coming as it does amid the rise of the religious Right, in particular in the US.
Some Christians want a literal interpretation of the story of
creation, as told in Genesis, taught alongside Darwin�s theory of
evolution in schools, believing �intelligent design� to be an equally
plausible theory of how the world began.
But the first 11 chapters of Genesis, in which two different
and at times conflicting stories of creation are told, are among those
that this country�s Catholic bishops insist cannot be �historical�. At
most, they say, they may contain �historical traces�.
The document shows how far the Catholic Church has come since
the 17th century, when Galileo was condemned as a heretic for flouting
a near-universal belief in the divine inspiration of the Bible by
advocating the Copernican view of the solar system. Only a century ago,
Pope Pius X condemned Modernist Catholic scholars who adapted
historical-critical methods of analysing ancient literature to the
Bible.
In the document, the bishops acknowledge their debt to
biblical scholars. They say the Bible must be approached in the
knowledge that it is �God�s word expressed in human language� and that
proper acknowledgement should be given both to the word of God and its
human dimensions.
They say the Church must offer the gospel in ways �appropriate
to changing times, intelligible and attractive to our contemporaries�.
The Bible is true in passages relating to human salvation,
they say, but continue: �We should not expect total accuracy from the
Bible in other, secular matters.�
They go on to condemn fundamentalism for its �intransigent
intolerance� and to warn of �significant dangers� involved in a
fundamentalist approach.
�Such an approach is dangerous, for example, when people of
one nation or group see in the Bible a mandate for their own
superiority, and even consider themselves permitted by the Bible to use
violence against others.�
Of the notorious anti-Jewish curse in Matthew 27:25, �His
blood be on us and on our children�, a passage used to justify
centuries of anti-Semitism, the bishops say these and other words must
never be used again as a pretext to treat Jewish people with contempt.
Describing this passage as an example of dramatic exaggeration, the
bishops say they have had �tragic consequences� in encouraging hatred
and persecution. �The attitudes and language of first-century quarrels
between Jews and Jewish Christians should never again be emulated in
relations between Jews and Christians.�
As examples of passages not to be taken literally, the bishops
cite the early chapters of Genesis, comparing them with early creation
legends from other cultures, especially from the ancient East. The
bishops say it is clear that the primary purpose of these chapters was
to provide religious teaching and that they could not be described as
historical writing.
Similarly, they refute the apocalyptic prophecies of
Revelation, the last book of the Christian Bible, in which the writer
describes the work of the risen Jesus, the death of the Beast and the
wedding feast of Christ the Lamb.
The bishops say: �Such symbolic language must be respected for
what it is, and is not to be interpreted literally. We should not
expect to discover in this book details about the end of the world,
about how many will be saved and about when the end will come.�
In their foreword to the teaching document, the two most
senior Catholics of the land, Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O�Connor,
Archbishop of Westminster, and Cardinal Keith O�Brien, Archbishop of St
Andrew�s and Edinburgh, explain its context.
They say people today are searching for what is worthwhile, what has real value, what can be trusted and what is really true.
The new teaching has been issued as part of the 40th anniversary
celebrations of Dei Verbum, the Second Vatican Council document
explaining the place of Scripture in revelation. In the past 40 years,
Catholics have learnt more than ever before to cherish the Bible. �We
have rediscovered the Bible as a precious treasure, both ancient and
ever new.�
A Christian charity is sending a film about the Christmas
story to every primary school in Britain after hearing of a young boy
who asked his teacher why Mary and Joseph had named their baby after a
swear word. The Breakout Trust raised �200,000 to make the 30-minute
animated film, It�s a Boy. Steve Legg, head of the charity,
said: �There are over 12 million children in the UK and only 756,000 of
them go to church regularly.
That leaves a staggering number who are probably not receiving basic Christian teaching.�
BELIEVE IT OR NOT
UNTRUE
Genesis ii, 21-22
So the Lord God caused a deep sleep to fall upon the man, and while
he slept he took one of his ribs and closed up its place with flesh;
and the rib which the Lord God had taken from the man he made into a
woman and brought her to the man
Genesis iii, 16
God said to the woman [after she was beguiled by the serpent]:
�I will greatly multiply your pain in childbearing; in pain you shall
bring forth children, yet your desire shall be for your husband, and he
shall rule over you.�
Matthew xxvii, 25
The words of the crowd: �His blood be on us and on our children.�
Revelation xix,20
And the beast was captured, and with it the false prophet who in
its presence had worked the signs by which he deceived those who had
received the mark of the beast and those who worshipped its image.
These two were thrown alive into the lake of fire that burns with
brimstone.�
TRUE
Exodus iii, 14
God reveals himself to Moses as: �I am who I am.�
Leviticus xxvi,12
�I will be your God, and you shall be my people.�
Exodus xx,1-17
The Ten Commandments
Matthew v,7
The Sermon on the Mount
Mark viii,29
Peter declares Jesus to be the Christ
Luke i
The Virgin Birth
John xx,28
Proof of bodily resurrection
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